It is certain my
conviction gains infinitely,
the moment another soul
will believe in it.
Novalis.
To Mr. and Mrs. G. F.
W. Hope with grateful affection after many years of friendship
When this novel first
appeared in book form a notion got about that I had been bolted away with. Some
reviewers maintained that the work starting as a short story had got beyond the
writer's control. One or two discovered internal evidence of the fact, which
seemed to amuse them. They pointed out the limitations of the narrative form.
They argued that no man could have been expected to talk all that time, and
other men to listen so long. It was not, they said, very credible.
After thinking it over
for something like sixteen years, I am not so sure about that. Men have been
known, both in the tropics and in the temperate zone, to sit up half the night
'swapping yarns'. This, however, is but one yarn, yet with interruptions
affording some measure of relief; and in regard to the listeners' endurance,
the postulate must be accepted that the story was interesting. It is the
necessary preliminary assumption. If I hadn't believed that it was interesting
I could never have begun to write it. As to the mere physical possibility we
all know that some speeches in Parliament have taken nearer six than three
hours in delivery; whereas all that part of the book which is Marlow's
narrative can be read through aloud, I should say, in less than three hours.
Besides -- though I have kept strictly all such insignificant details out of
the tale -- we may presume that there must have been refreshments on that
night, a glass of mineral water of some sort to help the narrator on.
But, seriously, the
truth of the matter is, that my first thought was of a short story, concerned
only with the pilgrim ship episode; nothing more. And that was a legitimate
conception. After writing a few pages, however, I became for some reason
discontented and I laid them aside for a time. I didn't take them out of the
drawer till the late Mr. William Blackwood suggested I should give something
again to his magazine.
It was only then that I
perceived that the pilgrim ship episode was a good starting-point for a free
and wandering tale; that it was an event, too, which could conceivably colour
the whole 'sentiment of existence' in a simple and sensitive character. But all
these preliminary moods and stirrings of spirit were rather obscure at the
time, and they do not appear clearer to me now after the lapse of so many
years.
The few pages I had
laid aside were not without their weight in the choice of subject. But the
whole was re-written deliberately. When I sat down to it I knew it would be a
long book, though I didn't foresee that it would spread itself over thirteen
numbers of 'Maga'.
I have been asked at
times whether this was not the book of mine I liked best. I am a great foe to
favouritism in public life, in private life, and even in the delicate
relationship of an author to his works. As a matter of principle I will have no
favourites; but I don't go so far as to feel grieved and annoyed by the
preference some people give to my Lord Jim. I won't even say that I 'fail to
understand . . .' No! But once I had occasion to be puzzled and surprised.
A friend of mine
returning from Italy had talked with a lady there who did not like the book. I
regretted that, of course, but what surprised me was the ground of her dislike.
'You know,' she said, 'it is all so morbid.'
The pronouncement gave
me food for an hour's anxious thought. Finally I arrived at the conclusion
that, making due allowances for the subject itself being rather foreign to
women's normal sensibilities, the lady could not have been an Italian. I wonder
whether she was European at all? In any case, no Latin temperament would have
perceived anything morbid in the acute consciousness of lost honour. Such a
consciousness may be wrong, or it may be right, or it may be condemned as
artificial; and, perhaps, my Jim is not a type of wide commonness. But I can
safely assure my readers that he is not the product of coldly perverted
thinking. He's not a figure of Northern Mists either. One sunny morning, in the
commonplace surroundings of an Eastern roadstead, I saw his form pass by -
appealing - significant - under a cloud - perfectly silent. Which is as it
should be. It was for me, with all the sympathy of which I was capable, to seek
fit words for his meaning. He was 'one of us'.
He was an inch, perhaps
two, under six feet, powerfully built, and he advanced straight at you with a
slight stoop of the shoulders, head forward, and a fixed from-under stare which
made you think of a charging bull. His voice was deep, loud, and his manner
displayed a kind of dogged self-assertion which had nothing aggressive in it.
It seemed a necessity, and it was directed apparently as much at himself as at
anybody else. He was spotlessly neat, apparelled in immaculate white from shoes
to hat, and in the various Eastern ports where he got his living as
ship-chandler's water-clerk he was very popular.
A water-clerk need not
pass an examination in anything under the sun, but he must have Ability in the
abstract and demonstrate it practically. His work consists in racing under
sail, steam, or oars against other water-clerks for any ship about to anchor,
greeting her captain cheerily, forcing upon him a card -- the business card of
the ship-chandler -- and on his first visit on shore piloting him firmly but
without ostentation to a vast, cavern-like shop which is full of things that
are eaten and drunk on board ship; where you can get everything to make her
seaworthy and beautiful, from a set of chain-hooks for her cable to a book of
gold-leaf for the carvings of her stern; and where her commander is received
like a brother by a ship-chandler he has never seen before. There is a cool
parlour, easy-chairs, bottles, cigars, writing implements, a copy of harbour
regulations, and a warmth of welcome that melts the salt of a three months'
passage out of a seaman's heart. The connection thus begun is kept up, as long
as the ship remains in harbour, by the daily visits of the water-clerk. To the
captain he is faithful like a friend and attentive like a son, with the
patience of Job, the unselfish devotion of a woman, and the jollity of a boon
companion. Later on the bill is sent in. It is a beautiful and humane
occupation. Therefore good water-clerks are scarce. When a water-clerk who
possesses Ability in the abstract has also the advantage of having been brought
up to the sea, he is worth to his employer a lot of money and some humouring.
Jim had always good wages and as much humouring as would have bought the
fidelity of a fiend. Nevertheless, with black ingratitude he would throw up the
job suddenly and depart. To his employers the reasons he gave were obviously
inadequate. They said 'Confounded fool!' as soon as his back was turned. This
was their criticism on his exquisite sensibility.
To the white men in the
waterside business and to the captains of ships he was just Jim -- nothing
more. He had, of course, another name, but he was anxious that it should not be
pronounced. His incognito, which had as many holes as a sieve, was not meant to
hide a personality but a fact. When the fact broke through the incognito he
would leave suddenly the seaport where he happened to be at the time and go to
another -- generally farther east. He kept to seaports because he was a seaman
in exile from the sea, and had Ability in the abstract, which is good for no
other work but that of a water-clerk. He retreated in good order towards the
rising sun, and the fact followed him casually but inevitably. Thus in the
course of years he was known successively in Bombay, in Calcutta, in Rangoon,
in Penang, in Batavia -- and in each of these halting- places was just Jim the
water-clerk. Afterwards, when his keen perception of the Intolerable drove him
away for good from seaports and white men, even into the virgin forest, the
Malays of the jungle village, where he had elected to conceal his deplorable
faculty, added a word to the monosyllable of his incognito. They called him
Tuan Jim: as one might say -- Lord Jim.
Originally he came from
a parsonage. Many commanders of fine merchant-ships come from these abodes of
piety and peace. Jim's father possessed such certain knowledge of the
Unknowable as made for the righteousness of people in cottages without
disturbing the ease of mind of those whom an unerring Providence enables to
live in mansions. The little church on a hill had the mossy greyness of a rock
seen through a ragged screen of leaves. It had stood there for centuries, but
the trees around probably remembered the laying of the first stone. Below, the
red front of the rectory gleamed with a warm tint in the midst of grass-plots,
flower-beds, and fir-trees, with an orchard at the back, a paved stable-yard to
the left, and the sloping glass of greenhouses tacked along a wall of bricks.
The living had belonged to the family for generations; but Jim was one of five
sons, and when after a course of light holiday literature his vocation for the
sea had declared itself, he was sent at once to a 'training-ship for officers
of the mercantile marine.'
He learned there a
little trigonometry and how to cross top-gallant yards. He was generally liked.
He had the third place in navigation and pulled stroke in the first cutter.
Having a steady head with an excellent physique, he was very smart aloft. His
station was in the fore-top, and often from there he looked down, with the
contempt of a man destined to shine in the midst of dangers, at the peaceful
multitude of roofs cut in two by the brown tide of the stream, while scattered
on the outskirts of the surrounding plain the factory chimneys rose
perpendicular against a grimy sky, each slender like a pencil, and belching out
smoke like a volcano. He could see the big ships departing, the broad-beamed
ferries constantly on the move, the little boats floating far below his feet,
with the hazy splendour of the sea in the distance, and the hope of a stirring
life in the world of adventure.
On the lower deck in
the babel of two hundred voices he would forget himself, and beforehand live in
his mind the sea-life of light literature. He saw himself saving people from
sinking ships, cutting away masts in a hurricane, swimming through a surf with
a line; or as a lonely castaway, barefooted and half naked, walking on
uncovered reefs in search of shellfish to stave off starvation. He confronted
savages on tropical shores, quelled mutinies on the high seas, and in a small
boat upon the ocean kept up the hearts of despairing men -- always an example
of devotion to duty, and as unflinching as a hero in a book.
'Something's up. Come
along.'
He leaped to his feet.
The boys were streaming up the ladders. Above could be heard a great scurrying
about and shouting, and when he got through the hatchway he stood still -- as
if confounded.
It was the dusk of a
winter's day. The gale had freshened since noon, stopping the traffic on the
river, and now blew with the strength of a hurricane in fitful bursts that
boomed like salvoes of great guns firing over the ocean. The rain slanted in
sheets that flicked and subsided, and between whiles Jim had threatening
glimpses of the tumbling tide, the small craft jumbled and tossing along the
shore, the motionless buildings in the driving mist, the broad ferry-boats
pitching ponderously at anchor, the vast landing- stages heaving up and down
and smothered in sprays. The next gust seemed to blow all this away. The air
was full of flying water. There was a fierce purpose in the gale, a furious
earnestness in the screech of the wind, in the brutal tumult of earth and sky,
that seemed directed at him, and made him hold his breath in awe. He stood
still. It seemed to him he was whirled around.
He was jostled. 'Man
the cutter!' Boys rushed past him. A coaster running in for shelter had crashed
through a schooner at anchor, and one of the ship's instructors had seen the
accident. A mob of boys clambered on the rails, clustered round the davits.
'Collision. Just ahead of us. Mr Symons saw it.' A push made him stagger
against the mizzen-mast, and he caught hold of a rope. The old training-ship
chained to her moorings quivered all over, bowing gently head to wind, and with
her scanty rigging humming in a deep bass the breathless song of her youth at
sea. 'Lower away!' He saw the boat, manned, drop swiftly below the rail, and
rushed after her. He heard a splash. 'Let go; clear the falls!' He leaned over.
The river alongside seethed in frothy streaks. The cutter could be seen in the
falling darkness under the spell of tide and wind, that for a moment held her
bound, and tossing abreast of the ship. A yelling voice in her reached him
faintly: 'Keep stroke, you young whelps, if you want to save anybody! Keep
stroke!' And suddenly she lifted high her bow, and, leaping with raised oars
over a wave, broke the spell cast upon her by the wind and tide.
Jim felt his shoulder
gripped firmly. 'Too late, youngster.' The captain of the ship laid a
restraining hand on that boy, who seemed on the point of leaping overboard, and
Jim looked up with the pain of conscious defeat in his eyes. The captain smiled
sympathetically. 'Better luck next time. This will teach you to be smart.'
A shrill cheer greeted
the cutter. She came dancing back half full of water, and with two exhausted
men washing about on her bottom boards. The tumult and the menace of wind and
sea now appeared very contemptible to Jim, increasing the regret of his awe at
their inefficient menace. Now he knew what to think of it. It seemed to him he
cared nothing for the gale. He could affront greater perils. He would do so --
better than anybody. Not a particle of fear was left. Nevertheless he brooded
apart that evening while the bowman of the cutter -- a boy with a face like a
girl's and big grey eyes -- was the hero of the lower deck. Eager questioners
crowded round him. He narrated: 'I just saw his head bobbing, and I dashed my
boat- hook in the water. It caught in his breeches and I nearly went overboard,
as I thought I would, only old Symons let go the tiller and grabbed my legs --
the boat nearly swamped. Old Symons is a fine old chap. l don't mind a bit him
being grumpy with us. He swore at me all the time he held my leg, but that was
only his way of telling me to stick to the boat-hook. Old Symons is awfully
excitable -- isn't he? No -- not the little fair chap -- the other, the big one
with a beard. When we pulled him in he groaned, "Oh, my leg! oh, my
leg!" and turned up his eyes. Fancy such a big chap fainting like a girl.
Would any of you fellows faint for a jab with a boat- hook? -- I wouldn't. It
went into his leg so far.' He showed the boat- hook, which he had carried below
for the purpose, and produced a sensation. 'No, silly! It was not his flesh
that held him -- his breeches did. Lots of blood, of course.'
Jim thought it a
pitiful display of vanity. The gale had ministered to a heroism as spurious as
its own pretence of terror. He felt angry with the brutal tumult of earth and
sky for taking him unawares and checking unfairly a generous readiness for
narrow escapes. Otherwise he was rather glad he had not gone into the cutter,
since a lower achievement had served the turn. He had enlarged his knowledge
more than those who had done the work. When all men flinched, then -- he felt
sure -- he alone would know how to deal with the spurious menace of wind and
seas. He knew what to think of it. Seen dispassionately, it seemed
contemptible. He could detect no trace of emotion in himself, and the final
effect of a staggering event was that, unnoticed and apart from the noisy crowd
of boys, he exulted with fresh certitude in his avidity for adventure, and in a
sense of many-sided courage.
After two years of
training he went to sea, and entering the regions so well known to his
imagination, found them strangely barren of adventure. He made many voyages. He
knew the magic monotony of existence between sky and water: he had to bear the
criticism of men, the exactions of the sea, and the prosaic severity of the
daily task that gives bread -- but whose only reward is in the perfect love of
the work. This reward eluded him. Yet he could not go back, because there is nothing
more enticing, disenchanting, and enslaving than the life at sea. Besides, his
prospects were good. He was gentlemanly, steady, tractable, with a thorough
knowledge of his duties; and in time, when yet very young, he became chief mate
of a fine ship, without ever having been tested by those events of the sea that
show in the light of day the inner worth of a man, the edge of his temper, and
the fibre of his stuff; that reveal the quality of his resistance and the
secret truth of his pretences, not only to others but also to himself.
Only once in all that
time he had again a glimpse of the earnestness in the anger of the sea. That
truth is not so often made apparent as people might think. There are many
shades in the danger of adventures and gales, and it is only now and then that
there appears on the face of facts a sinister violence of intention -- that
indefinable something which forces it upon the mind and the heart of a man,
that this complication of accidents or these elemental furies are coming at him
with a purpose of malice, with a strength beyond control, with an unbridled
cruelty that means to tear out of him his hope and his fear, the pain of his
fatigue and his longing for rest: which means to smash, to destroy, to
annihilate all he has seen, known, loved, enjoyed, or hated; all that is
priceless and necessary -- the sunshine, the memories, the future; which means
to sweep the whole precious world utterly away from his sight by the simple and
appalling act of taking his life.
Jim, disabled by a
falling spar at the beginning of a week of which his Scottish captain used to
say afterwards, 'Man! it's a pairfect meeracle to me how she lived through it!'
spent many days stretched on his back, dazed, battered, hopeless, and tormented
as if at the bottom of an abyss of unrest. He did not care what the end would
be, and in his lucid moments overvalued his indifference. The danger, when not
seen, has the imperfect vagueness of human thought. The fear grows shadowy; and
Imagination, the enemy of men, the father of all terrors, unstimulated, sinks
to rest in the dullness of exhausted emotion. Jim saw nothing but the disorder
of his tossed cabin. He lay there battened down in the midst of a small
devastation, and felt secretly glad he had not to go on deck. But now and again
an uncontrollable rush of anguish would grip him bodily, make him gasp and
writhe under the blankets, and then the unintelligent brutality of an existence
liable to the agony of such sensations filled him with a despairing desire to
escape at any cost. Then fine weather returned, and he thought no more about
It.
His lameness, however,
persisted, and when the ship arrived at an Eastern port he had to go to the
hospital. His recovery was slow, and he was left behind.
There were only two
other patients in the white men's ward: the purser of a gunboat, who had broken
his leg falling down a hatch- way; and a kind of railway contractor from a
neighbouring province, afflicted by some mysterious tropical disease, who held
the doctor for an ass, and indulged in secret debaucheries of patent medicine
which his Tamil servant used to smuggle in with unwearied devotion. They told
each other the story of their lives, played cards a little, or, yawning and in
pyjamas, lounged through the day in easy- chairs without saying a word. The
hospital stood on a hill, and a gentle breeze entering through the windows,
always flung wide open, brought into the bare room the softness of the sky, the
languor of the earth, the bewitching breath of the Eastern waters. There were
perfumes in it, suggestions of infinite repose, the gift of endless dreams. Jim
looked every day over the thickets of gardens, beyond the roofs of the town,
over the fronds of palms growing on the shore, at that roadstead which is a
thoroughfare to the East, -- at the roadstead dotted by garlanded islets,
lighted by festal sunshine, its ships like toys, its brilliant activity
resembling a holiday pageant, with the eternal serenity of the Eastern sky
overhead and the smiling peace of the Eastern seas possessing the space as far
as the horizon.
Directly he could walk
without a stick, he descended into the town to look for some opportunity to get
home. Nothing offered just then, and, while waiting, he associated naturally
with the men of his calling in the port. These were of two kinds. Some, very
few and seen there but seldom, led mysterious lives, had preserved an undefaced
energy with the temper of buccaneers and the eyes of dreamers. They appeared to
live in a crazy maze of plans, hopes, dangers, enterprises, ahead of
civilisation, in the dark places of the sea; and their death was the only event
of their fantastic existence that seemed to have a reasonable certitude of
achievement. The majority were men who, like himself, thrown there by some
accident, had remained as officers of country ships. They had now a horror of
the home service, with its harder conditions, severer view of duty, and the
hazard of stormy oceans. They were attuned to the eternal peace of Eastern sky
and sea. They loved short passages, good deck-chairs, large native crews, and
the distinction of being white. They shuddered at the thought of hard work, and
led precariously easy lives, always on the verge of dismissal, always on the
verge of engagement, serving Chinamen, Arabs, half-castes -- would have served
the devil himself had he made it easy enough. They talked everlastingly of
turns of luck: how So-and-so got charge of a boat on the coast of China -- a
soft thing; how this one had an easy billet in Japan somewhere, and that one
was doing well in the Siamese navy; and in all they said -- in their actions,
in their looks, in their persons -- could be detected the soft spot, the place
of decay, the determination to lounge safely through existence.
To Jim that gossiping
crowd, viewed as seamen, seemed at first more unsubstantial than so many
shadows. But at length he found a fascination in the sight of those men, in
their appearance of doing so well on such a small allowance of danger and toil.
In time, beside the original disdain there grew up slowly another sentiment;
and suddenly, giving up the idea of going home, he took a berth as chief mate
of the Patna.
The Patna was a local
steamer as old as the hills, lean like a greyhound, and eaten up with rust
worse than a condemned water- tank. She was owned by a Chinaman, chartered by
an Arab, and commanded by a sort of renegade New South Wales German, very
anxious to curse publicly his native country, but who, apparently on the
strength of Bismarck's victorious policy, brutalised all those he was not
afraid of, and wore a 'blood-and-iron' air,' combined with a purple nose and a
red moustache. After she had been painted outside and whitewashed inside, eight
hundred pilgrims (more or less) were driven on board of her as she lay with
steam up alongside a wooden jetty.
They streamed aboard
over three gangways, they streamed in urged by faith and the hope of paradise,
they streamed in with a continuous tramp and shuffle of bare feet, without a
word, a murmur, or a look back; and when clear of confining rails spread on all
sides over the deck, flowed forward and aft, overflowed down the yawning
hatchways, filled the inner recesses of the ship -- like water filling a
cistern, like water flowing into crevices and crannies, like water rising
silently even with the rim. Eight hundred men and women with faith and hopes,
with affections and memories, they had collected there, coming from north and
south and from the outskirts of the East, after treading the jungle paths,
descending the rivers, coasting in praus along the shallows, crossing in small
canoes from island to island, passing through suffering, meeting strange
sights, beset by strange fears, upheld by one desire. They came from solitary
huts in the wilderness, from populous campongs, from villages by the sea. At
the call of an idea they had left their forests, their clearings, the
protection of their rulers, their prosperity, their poverty, the surroundings
of their youth and the graves of their fathers. They came covered with dust,
with sweat, with grime, with rags -- the strong men at the head of family
parties, the lean old men pressing forward without hope of return; young boys
with fearless eyes glancing curiously, shy little girls with tumbled long hair;
the timid women muffled up and clasping to their breasts, wrapped in loose ends
of soiled head-cloths, their sleeping babies, the unconscious pilgrims of an
exacting belief.
'Look at dese cattle,'
said the German skipper to his new chief mate.
An Arab, the leader of
that pious voyage, came last. He walked slowly aboard, handsome and grave in
his white gown and large turban. A string of servants followed, loaded with his
luggage; the Patna cast off and backed away from the wharf.
She was headed between
two small islets, crossed obliquely the anchoring-ground of sailing-ships,
swung through half a circle in the shadow of a hill, then ranged close to a
ledge of foaming reefs. The Arab, standing up aft, recited aloud the prayer of
travellers by sea. He invoked the favour of the Most High upon that journey,
implored His blessing on men's toil and on the secret purposes of their hearts;
the steamer pounded in the dusk the calm water of the Strait; and far astern of
the pilgrim ship a screw-pile lighthouse, planted by unbelievers on a
treacherous shoal, seemed to wink at her its eye of flame, as if in derision of
her errand of faith.
She cleared the Strait,
crossed the bay, continued on her way through the 'One-degree' passage. She
held on straight for the Red Sea under a serene sky, under a sky scorching and
unclouded, enveloped in a fulgor of sunshine that killed all thought, oppressed
the heart, withered all impulses of strength and energy. And under the sinister
splendour of that sky the sea, blue and profound, remained still, without a
stir, without a ripple, without a wrinkle -- viscous, stagnant, dead. The
Patna, with a slight hiss, passed over that plain, luminous and smooth,
unrolled a black ribbon of smoke across the sky, left behind her on the water a
white ribbon of foam that vanished at once, like the phantom of a track drawn
upon a lifeless sea by the phantom of a steamer.
Every morning the sun,
as if keeping pace in his revolutions with the progress of the pilgrimage,
emerged with a silent burst of light exactly at the same distance astern of the
ship, caught up with her at noon, pouring the concentrated fire of his rays on
the pious purposes of the men, glided past on his descent, and sank
mysteriously into the sea evening after evening, preserving the same distance
ahead of her advancing bows. The five whites on board lived amidships, isolated
from the human cargo. The awnings covered the deck with a white roof from stem
to stern, and a faint hum, a low murmur of sad voices, alone revealed the
presence of a crowd of people upon the great blaze of the ocean. Such were the
days, still, hot, heavy, disappearing one by one into the past, as if falling
into an abyss for ever open in the wake of the ship; and the ship, lonely under
a wisp of smoke, held on her steadfast way black and smouldering in a luminous
immensity, as if scorched by a flame flicked at her from a heaven without pity.
The nights descended on
her like a benediction.
A marvellous stillness
pervaded the world, and the stars, together with the serenity of their rays,
seemed to shed upon the earth the assurance of everlasting security. The young
moon recurved, and shining low in the west, was like a slender shaving thrown
up from a bar of gold, and the Arabian Sea, smooth and cool to the eye like a
sheet of ice, extended its perfect level to the perfect circle of a dark
horizon. The propeller turned without a check, as though its beat had been part
of the scheme of a safe universe; and on each side of the Patna two deep folds
of water, permanent and sombre on the unwrinkled shimmer, enclosed within their
straight and diverging ridges a few white swirls of foam bursting in a low
hiss, a few wavelets, a few ripples, a few undulations that, left behind,
agitated the surface of the sea for an instant after the passage of the ship,
subsided splashing gently, calmed down at last into the circular stillness of
water and sky with the black speck of the moving hull remaining everlastingly
in its centre.
Jim on the bridge was
penetrated by the great certitude of unbounded safety and peace that could be
read on the silent aspect of nature like the certitude of fostering love upon
the placid tenderness of a mother's face. Below the roof of awnings,
surrendered to the wisdom of white men and to their courage, trusting the power
of their unbelief and the iron shell of their fire-ship, the pilgrims of an
exacting faith slept on mats, on blankets, on bare planks, on every deck, in
all the dark corners, wrapped in dyed cloths, muffled in soiled rags, with
their heads resting on small bundles, with their faces pressed to bent
forearms: the men, the women, the children; the old with the young, the
decrepit with the lusty -- all equal before sleep, death's brother.
A draught of air,
fanned from forward by the speed of the ship, passed steadily through the long
gloom between the high bulwarks, swept over the rows of prone bodies; a few dim
flames in globe- lamps were hung short here and there under the ridge-poles,
and in the blurred circles of light thrown down and trembling slightly to the
unceasing vibration of the ship appeared a chin upturned, two closed eyelids, a
dark hand with silver rings, a meagre limb draped in a torn covering, a head bent
back, a naked foot, a throat bared and stretched as if offering itself to the
knife. The well-to-do had made for their families shelters with heavy boxes and
dusty mats; the poor reposed side by side with all they had on earth tied up in
a rag under their heads; the lone old men slept, with drawn- up legs, upon
their prayer-carpets, with their hands over their ears and one elbow on each
side of the face; a father, his shoulders up and his knees under his forehead,
dozed dejectedly by a boy who slept on his back with tousled hair and one arm
commandingly extended; a woman covered from head to foot, like a corpse, with a
piece of white sheeting, had a naked child in the hollow of each arm; the
Arab's belongings, piled right aft, made a heavy mound of broken outlines, with
a cargo-lamp swung above, and a great confusion of vague forms behind: gleams
of paunchy brass pots, the foot-rest of a deck-chair, blades of spears, the
straight scabbard of an old sword leaning against a heap of pillows, the spout
of a tin coffee-pot. The patent log on the taffrail periodically rang a single
tinkling stroke for every mile traversed on an errand of faith. Above the mass
of sleepers a faint and patient sigh at times floated, the exhalation of a
troubled dream; and short metallic clangs bursting out suddenly in the depths
of the ship, the harsh scrape of a shovel, the violent slam of a furnace-door,
exploded brutally, as if the men handling the mysterious things below had their
breasts full of fierce anger: while the slim high hull of the steamer went on
evenly ahead, without a sway of her bare masts, cleaving continuously the great
calm of the waters under the inaccessible serenity of the sky.
Jim paced athwart, and
his footsteps in the vast silence were loud to his own ears, as if echoed by
the watchful stars: his eyes, roaming about the line of the horizon, seemed to
gaze hungrily into the unattainable, and did not see the shadow of the coming
event. The only shadow on the sea was the shadow of the black smoke pouring heavily
from the funnel its immense streamer, whose end was constantly dissolving in
the air. Two Malays, silent and almost motionless, steered, one on each side of
the wheel, whose brass rim shone fragmentarily in the oval of light thrown out
by the binnacle. Now and then a hand, with black fingers alternately letting go
and catching hold of revolving spokes, appeared in the illumined part; the
links of wheel-chains ground heavily in the grooves of the barrel. Jim would
glance at the compass, would glance around the unattainable horizon, would
stretch himself till his joints cracked, with a leisurely twist of the body, in
the very excess of well-being; and, as if made audacious by the invincible
aspect of the peace, he felt he cared for nothing that could happen to him to
the end of his days. From time to time he glanced idly at a chart pegged out
with four drawing-pins on a low three-legged table abaft the steering-gear
case. The sheet of paper portraying the depths of the sea presented a shiny
surface under the light of a bull's-eye lamp lashed to a stanchion, a surface
as level and smooth as the glimmering surface of the waters. Parallel rulers
with a pair of dividers reposed on it; the ship's position at last noon was
marked with a small black cross, and the straight pencil-line drawn firmly as
far as Perim figured the course of the ship -- the path of souls towards the
holy place, the promise of salvation, the reward of eternal life -- while the
pencil with its sharp end touching the Somali coast lay round and still like a
naked ship's spar floating in the pool of a sheltered dock. 'How steady she
goes,' thought Jim with wonder, with something like gratitude for this high
peace of sea and sky. At such times his thoughts would be full of valorous
deeds: he loved these dreams and the success of his imaginary achievements.
They were the best parts of life, its secret truth, its hidden reality. They
had a gorgeous virility, the charm of vagueness, they passed before him with an
heroic tread; they carried his soul away with them and made it drunk with the
divine philtre of an unbounded confidence in itself. There was nothing he could
not face. He was so pleased with the idea that he smiled, keeping perfunctorily
his eyes ahead; and when he happened to glance back he saw the white streak of
the wake drawn as straight by the ship's keel upon the sea as the black line
drawn by the pencil upon the chart.
The ash-buckets
racketed, clanking up and down the stoke-hold ventilators, and this tin-pot
clatter warned him the end of his watch was near. He sighed with content, with
regret as well at having to part from that serenity which fostered the
adventurous freedom of his thoughts. He was a little sleepy too, and felt a
pleasurable languor running through every limb as though all the blood in his
body had turned to warm milk. His skipper had come up noiselessly, in pyjamas
and with his sleeping-jacket flung wide open. Red of face, only half awake, the
left eye partly closed, the right staring stupid and glassy, he hung his big
head over the chart and scratched his ribs sleepily. There was something
obscene in the sight of his naked flesh. His bared breast glistened soft and
greasy as though he had sweated out his fat in his sleep. He pronounced a
professional remark in a voice harsh and dead, resembling the rasping sound of
a wood-file on the edge of a plank; the fold of his double chin hung like a bag
triced up close under the hinge of his jaw. Jim started, and his answer was
full of deference; but the odious and fleshy figure, as though seen for the
first time in a revealing moment, fixed itself in his memory for ever as the
incarnation of everything vile and base that lurks in the world we love: in our
own hearts we trust for our salvation, in the men that surround us, in the
sights that fill our eyes, in the sounds that fill our ears, and in the air
that fills our lungs.
The thin gold shaving
of the moon floating slowly downwards had lost itself on the darkened surface
of the waters, and the eternity beyond the sky seemed to come down nearer to
the earth, with the augmented glitter of the stars, with the more profound
sombreness in the lustre of the half-transparent dome covering the flat disc of
an opaque sea. The ship moved so smoothly that her onward motion was imperceptible
to the senses of men, as though she had been a crowded planet speeding through
the dark spaces of ether behind the swarm of suns, in the appalling and calm
solitudes awaiting the breath of future creations. 'Hot is no name for it down
below,' said a voice.
Jim smiled without
looking round. The skipper presented an unmoved breadth of back: it was the
renegade's trick to appear pointedly unaware of your existence unless it suited
his purpose to turn at you with a devouring glare before he let loose a torrent
of foamy, abusive jargon that came like a gush from a sewer. Now he emitted
only a sulky grunt; the second engineer at the head of the bridge-ladder,
kneading with damp palms a dirty sweat-rag, unabashed, continued the tale of
his complaints. The sailors had a good time of it up here, and what was the use
of them in the world he would be blowed if he could see. The poor devils of
engineers had to get the ship along anyhow, and they could very well do the
rest too; by gosh they -- 'Shut up!' growled the German stolidly. 'Oh yes! Shut
up -- and when anything goes wrong you fly to us, don't you?' went on the
other. He was more than half cooked, he expected; but anyway, now, he did not
mind how much he sinned, because these last three days he had passed through a
fine course of training for the place where the bad boys go when they die --
b'gosh, he had -- besides being made jolly well deaf by the blasted racket
below. The durned, compound, surface-condensing, rotten scrap- heap rattled and
banged down there like an old deck-winch, only more so; and what made him risk
his life every night and day that God made amongst the refuse of a breaking-up
yard flying round at fifty-seven revolutions, was more than he could tell. He
must have been born reckless, b'gosh. He . . . 'Where did you get drink?'
inquired the German, very savage; but motionless in the light of the binnacle,
like a clumsy effigy of a man cut out of a block of fat. Jim went on smiling at
the retreating horizon; his heart was full of generous impulses, and his
thought was contemplating his own superiority. 'Drink!' repeated the engineer
with amiable scorn: he was hanging on with both hands to the rail, a shadowy
figure with flexible legs. 'Not from you, captain. You're far too mean, b'gosh.
You would let a good man die sooner than give him a drop of schnapps. That's
what you Germans call economy. Penny wise, pound foolish.' He became
sentimental. The chief had given him a four-finger nip about ten o'clock --
'only one, s'elp me!' -- good old chief; but as to getting the old fraud out of
his bunk -- a five-ton crane couldn't do it. Not it. Not to-night anyhow. He
was sleeping sweetly like a little child, with a bottle of prime brandy under
his pillow. From the thick throat of the commander of the Patna came a low
rumble, on which the sound of the word Schwein fluttered high and low like a
capricious feather in a faint stir of air. He and the chief engineer had been
cronies for a good few years -- serving the same jovial, crafty, old Chinaman,
with horn-rimmed goggles and strings of red silk plaited into the venerable
grey hairs of his pigtail. The quay-side opinion in the Patna's home-port was
that these two in the way of brazen peculation 'had done together pretty well
everything you can think of.' Outwardly they were badly matched: one dull-eyed,
malevolent, and of soft fleshy curves; the other lean, all hollows, with a head
long and bony like the head of an old horse, with sunken cheeks, with sunken
temples, with an indifferent glazed glance of sunken eyes. He had been stranded
out East somewhere -- in Canton, in Shanghai, or perhaps in Yokohama; he
probably did not care to remember himself the exact locality, nor yet the cause
of his shipwreck. He had been, in mercy to his youth, kicked quietly out of his
ship twenty years ago or more, and it might have been so much worse for him
that the memory of the episode had in it hardly a trace of misfortune. Then,
steam navigation expanding in these seas and men of his craft being scarce at
first, he had 'got on' after a sort. He was eager to let strangers know in a
dismal mumble that he was 'an old stager out here.' When he moved, a skeleton
seemed to sway loose in his clothes; his walk was mere wandering, and he was
given to wander thus around the engine-room skylight, smoking, without relish,
doctored tobacco in a brass bowl at the end of a cherrywood stem four feet
long, with the imbecile gravity of a thinker evolving a system of philosophy
from the hazy glimpse of a truth. He was usually anything but free with his
private store of liquor; but on that night he had departed from his principles,
so that his second, a weak-headed child of Wapping, what with the
unexpectedness of the treat and the strength of the stuff, had become very
happy, cheeky, and talkative. The fury of the New South Wales German was
extreme; he puffed like an exhaust-pipe, and Jim, faintly amused by the scene,
was impatient for the time when he could get below: the last ten minutes of the
watch were irritating like a gun that hangs fire; those men did not belong to
the world of heroic adventure; they weren't bad chaps though. Even the skipper
himself . . . His gorge rose at the mass of panting flesh from which issued
gurgling mutters, a cloudy trickle of filthy expressions; but he was too pleasurably
languid to dislike actively this or any other thing. The quality of these men
did not matter; he rubbed shoulders with them, but they could not touch him; he
shared the air they breathed, but he was different.... Would the skipper go for
the engineer? ... The life was easy and he was too sure of himself -- too sure
of himself to . . . The line dividing his meditation from a surreptitious doze
on his feet was thinner than a thread in a spider's web.
The second engineer was
coming by easy transitions to the consideration of his finances and of his
courage.
'Who's drunk? I? No,
no, captain! That won't do. You ought to know by this time the chief ain't
free-hearted enough to make a sparrow drunk, b'gosh. I've never been the worse
for liquor in my life; the stuff ain't made yet that would make me drunk. I
could drink liquid fire against your whisky peg for peg, b'gosh, and keep as
cool as a cucumber. If I thought I was drunk I would jump overboard -- do away
with myself, b'gosh. I would! Straight! And I won't go off the bridge. Where do
you expect me to take the air on a night like this, eh? On deck amongst that
vermin down there? Likely -- ain't it! And I am not afraid of anything you can
do.'
The German lifted two
heavy fists to heaven and shook them a little without a word.
'I don't know what fear
is,' pursued the engineer, with the enthusiasm of sincere conviction. 'I am not
afraid of doing all the bloomin' work in this rotten hooker, b'gosh! And a
jolly good thing for you that there are some of us about the world that aren't
afraid of their lives, or where would you be -- you and this old thing here
with her plates like brown paper -- brown paper, s'elp me? It's all very fine
for you -- you get a power of pieces out of her one way and another; but what
about me -- what do I get? A measly hundred and fifty dollars a month and find
yourself. I wish to ask you respectfully -- respectfully, mind -- who wouldn't
chuck a dratted job like this? 'Tain't safe, s'elp me, it ain't! Only I am one
of them fearless fellows . . .'
He let go the rail and
made ample gestures as if demonstrating in the air the shape and extent of his
valour; his thin voice darted in prolonged squeaks upon the sea, he tiptoed
back and forth for the better emphasis of utterance, and suddenly pitched down
head- first as though he had been clubbed from behind. He said 'Damn!' as he
tumbled; an instant of silence followed upon his screeching: Jim and the
skipper staggered forward by common accord, and catching themselves up, stood very
stiff and still gazing, amazed, at the undisturbed level of the sea. Then they
looked upwards at the stars.
What had happened? The
wheezy thump of the engines went on. Had the earth been checked in her course?
They could not understand; and suddenly the calm sea, the sky without a cloud,
appeared formidably insecure in their immobility, as if poised on the brow of
yawning destruction. The engineer rebounded vertically full length and
collapsed again into a vague heap. This heap said 'What's that?' in the muffled
accents of profound grief. A faint noise as of thunder, of thunder infinitely
remote, less than a sound, hardly more than a vibration, passed slowly, and the
ship quivered in response, as if the thunder had growled deep down in the
water. The eyes of the two Malays at the wheel glittered towards the white men,
but their dark hands remained closed on the spokes. The sharp hull driving on
its way seemed to rise a few inches in succession through its whole length, as
though it had become pliable, and settled down again rigidly to its work of
cleaving the smooth surface of the sea. Its quivering stopped, and the faint
noise of thunder ceased all at once, as though the ship had steamed across a
narrow belt of vibrating water and of humming air.
A month or so
afterwards, when Jim, in answer to pointed questions, tried to tell honestly
the truth of this experience, he said, speaking of the ship: 'She went over
whatever it was as easy as a snake crawling over a stick.' The illustration was
good: the questions were aiming at facts, and the official Inquiry was being
held in the police court of an Eastern port. He stood elevated in the
witness-box, with burning cheeks in a cool lofty room: the big framework of
punkahs moved gently to and fro high above his head, and from below many eyes
were looking at him out of dark faces, out of white faces, out of red faces,
out of faces attentive, spellbound, as if all these people sitting in orderly
rows upon narrow benches had been enslaved by the fascination of his voice. It
was very loud, it rang startling in his own ears, it was the only sound audible
in the world, for the terribly distinct questions that extorted his answers
seemed to shape themselves in anguish and pain within his breast, -- came to him
poignant and silent like the terrible questioning of one's conscience. Outside
the court the sun blazed -- within was the wind of great punkahs that made you
shiver, the shame that made you burn, the attentive eyes whose glance stabbed.
The face of the presiding magistrate, clean shaved and impassible, looked at
him deadly pale between the red faces of the two nautical assessors. The light
of a broad window under the ceiling fell from above on the heads and shoulders
of the three men, and they were fiercely distinct in the half-light of the big
court-room where the audience seemed composed of staring shadows. They wanted
facts. Facts! They demanded facts from him, as if facts could explain anything!
'After you had
concluded you had collided with something floating awash, say a water-logged
wreck, you were ordered by your captain to go forward and ascertain if there
was any damage done. Did you think it likely from the force of the blow?' asked
the assessor sitting to the left. He had a thin horseshoe beard, salient
cheek-bones, and with both elbows on the desk clasped his rugged hands before
his face, looking at Jim with thoughtful blue eyes; the other, a heavy,
scornful man, thrown back in his seat, his left arm extended full length,
drummed delicately with his finger-tips on a blotting-pad: in the middle the
magistrate upright in the roomy arm-chair, his head inclined slightly on the
shoulder, had his arms crossed on his breast and a few flowers in a glass vase
by the side of his inkstand.
'I did not,' said Jim.
'I was told to call no one and to make no noise for fear of creating a panic. I
thought the precaution reasonable. I took one of the lamps that were hung under
the awnings and went forward. After opening the forepeak hatch I heard
splashing in there. I lowered then the lamp the whole drift of its lanyard, and
saw that the forepeak was more than half full of water already. I knew then
there must be a big hole below the water-line.' He paused.
'Yes,' said the big
assessor, with a dreamy smile at the blotting- pad; his fingers played
incessantly, touching the paper without noise.
'I did not think of
danger just then. I might have been a little startled: all this happened in
such a quiet way and so very suddenly. I knew there was no other bulkhead in
the ship but the collision bulkhead separating the forepeak from the forehold.
I went back to tell the captain. I came upon the second engineer getting up at
the foot of the bridge-ladder: he seemed dazed, and told me he thought his left
arm was broken; he had slipped on the top step when getting down while I was
forward. He exclaimed, "My God! That rotten bulkhead'll give way in a
minute, and the damned thing will go down under us like a lump of lead."
He pushed me away with his right arm and ran before me up the ladder, shouting
as he climbed. His left arm hung by his side. I followed up in time to see the
captain rush at him and knock him down flat on his back. He did not strike him
again: he stood bending over him and speaking angrily but quite low. I fancy he
was asking him why the devil he didn't go and stop the engines, instead of
making a row about it on deck. I heard him say, "Get up! Run! fly!"
He swore also. The engineer slid down the starboard ladder and bolted round the
sky- light to the engine-room companion which was on the port side. He moaned
as he ran....'
He spoke slowly; he
remembered swiftly and with extreme vividness; he could have reproduced like an
echo the moaning of the engineer for the better information of these men who
wanted facts. After his first feeling of revolt he had come round to the view
that only a meticulous precision of statement would bring out the true horror
behind the appalling face of things. The facts those men were so eager to know
had been visible, tangible, open to the senses, occupying their place in space
and time, requiring for their existence a fourteen-hundred-ton steamer and
twenty-seven minutes by the watch; they made a whole that had features, shades
of expression, a complicated aspect that could be remembered by the eye, and
something else besides, something invisible, a directing spirit of perdition
that dwelt within, like a malevolent soul in a detestable body. He was anxious
to make this clear. This had not been a common affair, everything in it had
been of the utmost importance, and fortunately he remembered everything. He
wanted to go on talking for truth's sake, perhaps for his own sake also; and
while his utterance was deliberate, his mind positively flew round and round
the serried circle of facts that had surged up all about him to cut him off
from the rest of his kind: it was like a creature that, finding itself
imprisoned within an enclosure of high stakes, dashes round and round,
distracted in the night, trying to find a weak spot, a crevice, a place to
scale, some opening through which it may squeeze itself and escape. This awful
activity of mind made him hesitate at times in his speech....
'The captain kept on
moving here and there on the bridge; he seemed calm enough, only he stumbled
several times; and once as I stood speaking to him he walked right into me as
though he had been stone-blind. He made no definite answer to what I had to
tell. He mumbled to himself; all I heard of it were a few words that sounded
like "confounded steam!" and "infernal steam!" -- something
about steam. I thought . . .'
He was becoming
irrelevant; a question to the point cut short his speech, like a pang of pain,
and he felt extremely discouraged and weary. He was coming to that, he was
coming to that -- and now, checked brutally, he had to answer by yes or no. He
answered truthfully by a curt 'Yes, I did'; and fair of face, big of frame,
with young, gloomy eyes, he held his shoulders upright above the box while his
soul writhed within him. He was made to answer another question so much to the
point and so useless, then waited again. His mouth was tastelessly dry, as
though he had been eating dust, then salt and bitter as after a drink of
sea-water. He wiped his damp forehead, passed his tongue over parched lips,
felt a shiver run down his back. The big assessor had dropped his eyelids, and
drummed on without a sound, careless and mournful; the eyes of the other above
the sunburnt, clasped fingers seemed to glow with kindliness; the magistrate
had swayed forward; his pale face hovered near the flowers, and then dropping
sideways over the arm of his chair, he rested his temple in the palm of his
hand. The wind of the punkahs eddied down on the heads, on the dark-faced
natives wound about in voluminous draperies, on the Europeans sitting together
very hot and in drill suits that seemed to fit them as close as their skins,
and holding their round pith hats on their knees; while gliding along the walls
the court peons, buttoned tight in long white coats, flitted rapidly to and
fro, running on bare toes, red-sashed, red turban on head, as noiseless as
ghosts, and on the alert like so many retrievers.
Jim's eyes, wandering
in the intervals of his answers, rested upon a white man who sat apart from the
others, with his face worn and clouded, but with quiet eyes that glanced
straight, interested and clear. Jim answered another question and was tempted
to cry out, 'What's the good of this! what's the good!' He tapped with his foot
slightly, bit his lip, and looked away over the heads. He met the eyes of the
white man. The glance directed at him was not the fascinated stare of the
others. It was an act of intelligent volition. Jim between two questions forgot
himself so far as to find leisure for a thought. This fellow -- ran the thought
-- looks at me as though he could see somebody or something past my shoulder.
He had come across that man before -- in the street perhaps. He was positive he
had never spoken to him. For days, for many days, he had spoken to no one, but
had held silent, incoherent, and endless converse with himself, like a prisoner
alone in his cell or like a wayfarer lost in a wilderness. At present he was
answering questions that did not matter though they had a purpose, but he
doubted whether he would ever again speak out as long as he lived. The sound of
his own truthful statements confirmed his deliberate opinion that speech was of
no use to him any longer. That man there seemed to be aware of his hopeless
difficulty. Jim looked at him, then turned away resolutely, as after a final
parting.
And later on, many
times, in distant parts of the world, Marlow showed himself willing to remember
Jim, to remember him at length, in detail and audibly.
Perhaps it would be
after dinner, on a verandah draped in motionless foliage and crowned with
flowers, in the deep dusk speckled by fiery cigar-ends. The elongated bulk of
each cane-chair harboured a silent listener. Now and then a small red glow
would move abruptly, and expanding light up the fingers of a languid hand, part
of a face in profound repose, or flash a crimson gleam into a pair of pensive
eyes overshadowed by a fragment of an unruffled forehead; and with the very
first word uttered Marlow's body, extended at rest in the seat, would become
very still, as though his spirit had winged its way back into the lapse of time
and were speaking through his lips from the past.
'Oh yes. I attended the
inquiry,' he would say, 'and to this day I haven't left off wondering why I
went. I am willing to believe each of us has a guardian angel, if you fellows
will concede to me that each of us has a familiar devil as well. I want you to
own up, because I don't like to feel exceptional in any way, and I know I have
him -- the devil, I mean. I haven't seen him, of course, but I go upon
circumstantial evidence. He is there right enough, and, being malicious, he
lets me in for that kind of thing. What kind of thing, you ask? Why, the
inquiry thing, the yellow-dog thing -- you wouldn't think a mangy, native tyke
would be allowed to trip up people in the verandah of a magistrate's court,
would you? -- the kind of thing that by devious, unexpected, truly diabolical
ways causes me to run up against men with soft spots, with hard spots, with
hidden plague spots, by Jove! and loosens their tongues at the sight of me for
their infernal confidences; as though, forsooth, I had no confidences to make to
myself, as though -- God help me! -- I didn't have enough confidential
information about myself to harrow my own soul till the end of my appointed
time. And what I have done to be thus favoured I want to know. I declare I am
as full of my own concerns as the next man, and I have as much memory as the
average pilgrim in this valley, so you see I am not particularly fit to be a
receptacle of confessions. Then why? Can't tell -- unless it be to make time
pass away after dinner. Charley, my dear chap, your dinner was extremely good,
and in consequence these men here look upon a quiet rubber as a tumultuous
occupation. They wallow in your good chairs and think to themselves, "Hang
exertion. Let that Marlow talk."
'Talk! So be it. And
it's easy enough to talk of Master Jim, after a good spread, two hundred feet
above the sea-level, with a box of decent cigars handy, on a blessed evening of
freshness and starlight that would make the best of us forget we are only on
sufferance here and got to pick our way in cross lights, watching every
precious minute and every irremediable step, trusting we shall manage yet to go
out decently in the end -- but not so sure of it after all -- and with dashed
little help to expect from those we touch elbows with right and left. Of course
there are men here and there to whom the whole of life is like an after-dinner
hour with a cigar; easy, pleasant, empty, perhaps enlivened by some fable of
strife to be forgotten before the end is told -- before the end is told -- even
if there happens to be any end to it.
'My eyes met his for
the first time at that inquiry. You must know that everybody connected in any
way with the sea was there, because the affair had been notorious for days,
ever since that mysterious cable message came from Aden to start us all
cackling. I say mysterious, because it was so in a sense though it contained a
naked fact, about as naked and ugly as a fact can well be. The whole waterside
talked of nothing else. First thing in the morning as I was dressing in my state-room,
I would hear through the bulkhead my Parsee Dubash jabbering about the Patna
with the steward, while he drank a cup of tea, by favour, in the pantry. No
sooner on shore I would meet some acquaintance, and the first remark would be,
"Did you ever hear of anything to beat this?" and according to his
kind the man would smile cynically, or look sad, or let out a swear or two.
Complete strangers would accost each other familiarly, just for the sake of
easing their minds on the subject: every confounded loafer in the town came in
for a harvest of drinks over this affair: you heard of it in the harbour
office, at every ship-broker's, at your agent's, from whites, from natives,
from half-castes, from the very boatmen squatting half naked on the stone steps
as you went up -- by Jove! There was some indignation, not a few jokes, and no
end of discussions as to what had become of them, you know. This went on for a
couple of weeks or more, and the opinion that whatever was mysterious in this
affair would turn out to be tragic as well, began to prevail, when one fine
morning, as I was standing in the shade by the steps of the harbour office, I
perceived four men walking towards me along the quay. I wondered for a while
where that queer lot had sprung from, and suddenly, I may say, I shouted to
myself, "Here they are!"
'There they were, sure
enough, three of them as large as life, and one much larger of girth than any
living man has a right to be, just landed with a good breakfast inside of them
from an outward-bound Dale Line steamer that had come in about an hour after
sunrise. There could be no mistake; I spotted the jolly skipper of the Patna at
the first glance: the fattest man in the whole blessed tropical belt clear
round that good old earth of ours. Moreover, nine months or so before, I had
come across him in Samarang. His steamer was loading in the Roads, and he was
abusing the tyrannical institutions of the German empire, and soaking himself
in beer all day long and day after day in De Jongh's back-shop, till De Jongh,
who charged a guilder for every bottle without as much as the quiver of an
eyelid, would beckon me aside, and, with his little leathery face all puckered
up, declare confidentially, "Business is business, but this man, captain,
he make me very sick. Tfui!"
'I was looking at him
from the shade. He was hurrying on a little in advance, and the sunlight
beating on him brought out his bulk in a startling way. He made me think of a
trained baby elephant walking on hind-legs. He was extravagantly gorgeous too
-- got up in a soiled sleeping-suit, bright green and deep orange vertical
stripes, with a pair of ragged straw slippers on his bare feet, and somebody's
cast-off pith hat, very dirty and two sizes too small for him, tied up with a
manilla rope-yarn on the top of his big head. You understand a man like that
hasn't the ghost of a chance when it comes to borrowing clothes. Very well. On
he came in hot haste, without a look right or left, passed within three feet of
me, and in the innocence of his heart went on pelting upstairs into the harbour
office to make his deposition, or report, or whatever you like to call it.
'It appears he
addressed himself in the first instance to the principal shipping-master.
Archie Ruthvel had just come in, and, as his story goes, was about to begin his
arduous day by giving a dressing- down to his chief clerk. Some of you might
have known him -- an obliging little Portuguese half-caste with a miserably
skinny neck, and always on the hop to get something from the shipmasters in the
way of eatables -- a piece of salt pork, a bag of biscuits, a few potatoes, or
what not. One voyage, I recollect, I tipped him a live sheep out of the remnant
of my sea-stock: not that I wanted him to do anything for me -- he couldn't,
you know -- but because his child- like belief in the sacred right to
perquisites quite touched my heart. It was so strong as to be almost beautiful.
The race -- the two races rather -- and the climate . . . However, never mind.
I know where I have a friend for life.
'Well, Ruthvel says he
was giving him a severe lecture -- on official morality, I suppose -- when he
heard a kind of subdued commotion at his back, and turning his head he saw, in
his own words, something round and enormous, resembling a sixteen-hundred-weight
sugar-hogshead wrapped in striped flannelette, up-ended in the middle of the
large floor space in the office. He declares he was so taken aback that for
quite an appreciable time he did not realise the thing was alive, and sat still
wondering for what purpose and by what means that object had been transported
in front of his desk. The archway from the ante-room was crowded with
punkah-pullers, sweepers, police peons, the coxswain and crew of the harbour
steam-launch, all craning their necks and almost climbing on each other's
backs. Quite a riot. By that time the fellow had managed to tug and jerk his
hat clear of his head, and advanced with slight bows at Ruthvel, who told me
the sight was so discomposing that for some time he listened, quite unable to
make out what that apparition wanted. It spoke in a voice harsh and lugubrious
but intrepid, and little by little it dawned upon Archie that this was a
development of the Patna case. He says that as soon as he understood who it was
before him he felt quite unwell -- Archie is so sympathetic and easily upset --
but pulled himself together and shouted "Stop! I can't listen to you. You
must go to the Master Attendant. I can't possibly listen to you. Captain Elliot
is the man you want to see. This way, this way." He jumped up, ran round
that long counter, pulled, shoved: the other let him, surprised but obedient at
first, and only at the door of the private office some sort of animal instinct
made him hang back and snort like a frightened bullock. "Look here! what's
up? Let go! Look here!" Archie flung open the door without knocking.
"The master of the Patna, sir," he shouts. "Go in,
captain." He saw the old man lift his head from some writing so sharp that
his nose-nippers fell off, banged the door to, and fled to his desk, where he
had some papers waiting for his signature: but he says the row that burst out
in there was so awful that he couldn't collect his senses sufficiently to
remember the spelling of his own name. Archie's the most sensitive shipping-master
in the two hemispheres. He declares he felt as though he had thrown a man to a
hungry lion. No doubt the noise was great. I heard it down below, and I have
every reason to believe it was heard clear across the Esplanade as far as the
band-stand. Old father Elliot had a great stock of words and could shout -- and
didn't mind who he shouted at either. He would have shouted at the Viceroy
himself. As he used to tell me: "I am as high as I can get; my pension is
safe. I've a few pounds laid by, and if they don't like my notions of duty I
would just as soon go home as not. I am an old man, and I have always spoken my
mind. All I care for now is to see my girls married before I die." He was
a little crazy on that point. His three daughters were awfully nice, though
they resembled him amazingly, and on the mornings he woke up with a gloomy view
of their matrimonial prospects the office would read it in his eye and tremble,
because, they said, he was sure to have somebody for breakfast. However, that
morning he did not eat the renegade, but, if I may be allowed to carry on the
metaphor, chewed him up very small, so to speak, and -- ah! ejected him again.
'Thus in a very few
moments I saw his monstrous bulk descend in haste and stand still on the outer
steps. He had stopped close to me for the purpose of profound meditation: his
large purple cheeks quivered. He was biting his thumb, and after a while
noticed me with a sidelong vexed look. The other three chaps that had landed
with him made a little group waiting at some distance. There was a
sallow-faced, mean little chap with his arm in a sling, and a long individual
in a blue flannel coat, as dry as a chip and no stouter than a broomstick, with
drooping grey moustaches, who looked about him with an air of jaunty
imbecility. The third was an upstanding, broad-shouldered youth, with his hands
in his pockets, turning his back on the other two who appeared to be talking
together earnestly. He stared across the empty Esplanade. A ramshackle gharry,
all dust and venetian blinds, pulled up short opposite the group, and the
driver, throwing up his right foot over his knee, gave himself up to the
critical examination of his toes. The young chap, making no movement, not even
stirring his head, just stared into the sunshine. This was my first view of
Jim. He looked as unconcerned and unapproachable as only the young can look.
There he stood, clean-limbed, clean-faced, firm on his feet, as promising a boy
as the sun ever shone on; and, looking at him, knowing all he knew and a little
more too, I was as angry as though I had detected him trying to get something
out of me by false pretences. He had no business to look so sound. I thought to
myself -- well, if this sort can go wrong like that . . . and I felt as though
I could fling down my hat and dance on it from sheer mortification, as I once
saw the skipper of an Italian barque do because his duffer of a mate got into a
mess with his anchors when making a flying moor in a roadstead full of ships. I
asked myself, seeing him there apparently so much at ease -- is he silly? is he
callous? He seemed ready to start whistling a tune. And note, I did not care a
rap about the behaviour of the other two. Their persons somehow fitted the tale
that was public property, and was going to be the subject of an official
inquiry. "That old mad rogue upstairs called me a hound," said the
captain of the Patna. I can't tell whether he recognised me -- I rather think
he did; but at any rate our glances met. He glared -- I smiled; hound was the
very mildest epithet that had reached me through the open window. "Did
he?" I said from some strange inability to hold my tongue. He nodded, bit
his thumb again, swore under his breath: then lifting his head and looking at
me with sullen and passionate impudence -- "Bah! the Pacific is big, my
friendt. You damned Englishmen can do your worst; I know where there's plenty
room for a man like me: I am well aguaindt in Apia, in Honolulu, in . . ."
He paused reflectively, while without effort I could depict to myself the sort
of people he was "aguaindt" with in those places. I won't make a
secret of it that I had been "aguaindt" with not a few of that sort
myself. There are times when a man must act as though life were equally sweet
in any company. I've known such a time, and, what's more, I shan't now pretend
to pull a long face over my necessity, because a good many of that bad company
from want of moral -- moral -- what shall I say? -- posture, or from some other
equally profound cause, were twice as instructive and twenty times more amusing
than the usual respectable thief of commerce you fellows ask to sit at your
table without any real necessity -- from habit, from cowardice, from
good-nature, from a hundred sneaking and inadequate reasons.
'"You Englishmen
are all rogues," went on my patriotic Flensborg or Stettin Australian. I
really don't recollect now what decent little port on the shores of the Baltic
was defiled by being the nest of that precious bird. "What are you to
shout? Eh? You tell me? You no better than other people, and that old rogue he
make Gottam fuss with me." His thick carcass trembled on its legs that
were like a pair of pillars; it trembled from head to foot. "That's what
you English always make -- make a tam' fuss -- for any little thing, because I
was not born in your tam' country. Take away my certificate. Take it. I don't
want the certificate. A man like me don't want your verfluchte certificate. I
shpit on it." He spat. "I vill an Amerigan citizen begome," he
cried, fretting and fuming and shuffling his feet as if to free his ankles from
some invisible and mysterious grasp that would not let him get away from that
spot. He made himself so warm that the top of his bullet head positively
smoked. Nothing mysterious prevented me from going away: curiosity is the most
obvious of sentiments, and it held me there to see the effect of a full
information upon that young fellow who, hands in pockets, and turning his back
upon the sidewalk, gazed across the grass-plots of the Esplanade at the yellow
portico of the Malabar Hotel with the air of a man about to go for a walk as
soon as his friend is ready. That's how he looked, and it was odious. I waited
to see him overwhelmed, confounded, pierced through and through, squirming like
an impaled beetle -- and I was half afraid to see it too -- if you understand
what I mean. Nothing more awful than to watch a man who has been found out, not
in a crime but in a more than criminal weakness. The commonest sort of
fortitude prevents us from becoming criminals in a legal sense; it is from
weakness unknown, but perhaps suspected, as in some parts of the world you
suspect a deadly snake in every bush -- from weakness that may lie hidden,
watched or unwatched, prayed against or manfully scorned, repressed or maybe ignored
more than half a lifetime, not one of us is safe. We are snared into doing
things for which we get called names, and things for which we get hanged, and
yet the spirit may well survive -- survive the condemnation, survive the
halter, by Jove! And there are things -- they look small enough sometimes too
-- by which some of us are totally and completely undone. I watched the
youngster there. I liked his appearance; I knew his appearance; he came from
the right place; he was one of us. He stood there for all the parentage of his
kind, for men and women by no means clever or amusing, but whose very existence
is based upon honest faith, and upon the instinct of courage. I don't mean
military courage, or civil courage, or any special kind of courage. I mean just
that inborn ability to look temptations straight in the face -- a readiness
unintellectual enough, goodness knows, but without pose -- a power of
resistance, don't you see, ungracious if you like, but priceless -- an
unthinking and blessed stiffness before the outward and inward terrors, before
the might of nature and the seductive corruption of men -- backed by a faith
invulnerable to the strength of facts, to the contagion of example, to the
solicitation of ideas. Hang ideas! They are tramps, vagabonds, knocking at the
back-door of your mind, each taking a little of your substance, each carrying
away some crumb of that belief in a few simple notions you must cling to if you
want to live decently and would like to die easy!
'This has nothing to do
with Jim, directly; only he was outwardly so typical of that good, stupid kind
we like to feel marching right and left of us in life, of the kind that is not
disturbed by the vagaries of intelligence and the perversions of -- of nerves,
let us say. He was the kind of fellow you would, on the strength of his looks,
leave in charge of the deck -- figuratively and professionally speaking. I say
I would, and I ought to know. Haven't I turned out youngsters enough in my
time, for the service of the Red Rag, to the craft of the sea, to the craft
whose whole secret could be expressed in one short sentence, and yet must be
driven afresh every day into young heads till it becomes the component part of
every waking thought -- till it is present in every dream of their young sleep!
The sea has been good to me, but when I remember all these boys that passed
through my hands, some grown up now and some drowned by this time, but all good
stuff for the sea, I don't think I have done badly by it either. Were I to go
home to-morrow, I bet that before two days passed over my head some sunburnt
young chief mate would overtake me at some dock gateway or other, and a fresh
deep voice speaking above my hat would ask: "Don't you remember me, sir?
Why! little So-and-so. Such and such a ship. It was my first voyage." And
I would remember a bewildered little shaver, no higher than the back of this
chair, with a mother and perhaps a big sister on the quay, very quiet but too
upset to wave their handkerchiefs at the ship that glides out gently between
the pier-heads; or perhaps some decent middle-aged father who had come early
with his boy to see him off, and stays all the morning, because he is
interested in the windlass apparently, and stays too long, and has got to
scramble ashore at last with no time at all to say good-bye. The mud pilot on
the poop sings out to me in a drawl, "Hold her with the check line for a
moment, Mister Mate. There's a gentleman wants to get ashore.... Up with you,
sir. Nearly got carried off to Talcahuano, didn't you? Now's your time; easy
does it.... All right. Slack away again forward there." The tugs, smoking
like the pit of perdition, get hold and churn the old river into fury; the
gentleman ashore is dusting his knees -- the benevolent steward has shied his umbrella
after him. All very proper. He has offered his bit of sacrifice to the sea, and
now he may go home pretending he thinks nothing of it; and the little willing
victim shall be very sea-sick before next morning. By-and-by, when he has
learned all the little mysteries and the one great secret of the craft, he
shall be fit to live or die as the sea may decree; and the man who had taken a
hand in this fool game, in which the sea wins every toss, will be pleased to
have his back slapped by a heavy young hand, and to hear a cheery sea-puppy
voice: "Do you remember me, sir? The little So-and- so."
'I tell you this is
good; it tells you that once in your life at least you had gone the right way
to work. I have been thus slapped, and I have winced, for the slap was heavy,
and I have glowed all day long and gone to bed feeling less lonely in the world
by virtue of that hearty thump. Don't I remember the little So-and-so's! I tell
you I ought to know the right kind of looks. I would have trusted the deck to that
youngster on the strength of a single glance, and gone to sleep with both eyes
-- and, by Jove! it wouldn't have been safe. There are depths of horror in that
thought. He looked as genuine as a new sovereign, but there was some infernal
alloy in his metal. How much? The least thing -- the least drop of something
rare and accursed; the least drop! -- but he made you -- standing there with
his don't-care-hang air -- he made you wonder whether perchance he were nothing
more rare than brass.
'I couldn't believe it.
I tell you I wanted to see him squirm for the honour of the craft. The other
two no-account chaps spotted their captain, and began to move slowly towards
us. They chatted together as they strolled, and I did not care any more than if
they had not been visible to the naked eye. They grinned at each other -- might
have been exchanging jokes, for all I know. I saw that with one of them it was
a case of a broken arm; and as to the long individual with grey moustaches he
was the chief engineer, and in various ways a pretty notorious personality.
They were nobodies. They approached. The skipper gazed in an inanimate way
between his feet: he seemed to be swollen to an unnatural size by some awful
disease, by the mysterious action of an unknown poison. He lifted his head, saw
the two before him waiting, opened his mouth with an extraordinary, sneering
contortion of his puffed face -- to speak to them, I suppose -- and then a
thought seemed to strike him. His thick, purplish lips came together without a
sound, he went off in a resolute waddle to the gharry and began to jerk at the
door-handle with such a blind brutality of impatience that I expected to see
the whole concern overturned on its side, pony and all. The driver, shaken out
of his meditation over the sole of his foot, displayed at once all the signs of
intense terror, and held with both hands, looking round from his box at this
vast carcass forcing its way into his conveyance. The little machine shook and
rocked tumultuously, and the crimson nape of that lowered neck, the size of
those straining thighs, the immense heaving of that dingy, striped green-and-
orange back, the whole burrowing effort of that gaudy and sordid mass, troubled
one's sense of probability with a droll and fearsome effect, like one of those
grotesque and distinct visions that scare and fascinate one in a fever. He
disappeared. I half expected the roof to split in two, the little box on wheels
to burst open in the manner of a ripe cotton-pod -- but it only sank with a
click of flattened springs, and suddenly one venetian blind rattled down. His
shoulders reappeared, jammed in the small opening; his head hung out, distended
and tossing like a captive balloon, perspiring, furious, spluttering. He
reached for the gharry-wallah with vicious flourishes of a fist as dumpy and
red as a lump of raw meat. He roared at him to be off, to go on. Where? Into
the Pacific, perhaps. The driver lashed; the pony snorted, reared once, and
darted off at a gallop. Where? To Apia? To Honolulu? He had 6000 miles of
tropical belt to disport himself in, and I did not hear the precise address. A
snorting pony snatched him into "Ewigkeit" in the twinkling of an
eye, and I never saw him again; and, what's more, I don't know of anybody that
ever had a glimpse of him after he departed from my knowledge sitting inside a
ramshackle little gharry that fled round the corner in a white smother of dust.
He departed, disappeared, vanished, absconded; and absurdly enough it looked as
though he had taken that gharry with him, for never again did I come across a
sorrel pony with a slit ear and a lackadaisical Tamil driver afflicted by a
sore foot. The Pacific is indeed big; but whether he found a place for a
display of his talents in it or not, the fact remains he had flown into space
like a witch on a broom- stick. The little chap with his arm in a sling started
to run after the carriage, bleating, "Captain! I say, Captain! I
sa-a-ay!" -- but after a few steps stopped short, hung his head, and
walked back slowly. At the sharp rattle of the wheels the young fellow spun
round where he stood. He made no other movement, no gesture, no sign, and
remained facing in the new direction after the gharry had swung out of sight.
'All this happened in
much less time than it takes to tell, since I am trying to interpret for you
into slow speech the instantaneous effect of visual impressions. Next moment
the half-caste clerk, sent by Archie to look a little after the poor castaways
of the Patna, came upon the scene. He ran out eager and bareheaded, looking
right and left, and very full of his mission. It was doomed to be a failure as
far as the principal person was concerned, but he approached the others with
fussy importance, and, almost immediately, found himself involved in a violent
altercation with the chap that carried his arm in a sling, and who turned out
to be extremely anxious for a row. He wasn't going to be ordered about --
"not he, b'gosh." He wouldn't be terrified with a pack of lies by a
cocky half-bred little quill-driver. He was not going to be bullied by "no
object of that sort," if the story were true "ever so"! He
bawled his wish, his desire, his determination to go to bed. "If you
weren't a God- forsaken Portuguee," I heard him yell, "you would know
that the hospital is the right place for me." He pushed the fist of his
sound arm under the other's nose; a crowd began to collect; the half-caste,
flustered, but doing his best to appear dignified, tried to explain his
intentions. I went away without waiting to see the end.
'But it so happened
that I had a man in the hospital at the time, and going there to see about him
the day before the opening of the Inquiry, I saw in the white men's ward that
little chap tossing on his back, with his arm in splints, and quite light-headed.
To my great surprise the other one, the long individual with drooping white
moustache, had also found his way there. I remembered I had seen him slinking
away during the quarrel, in a half prance, half shuffle, and trying very hard
not to look scared. He was no stranger to the port, it seems, and in his
distress was able to make tracks straight for Mariani's billiard-room and
grog-shop near the bazaar. That unspeakable vagabond, Mariani, who had known
the man and had ministered to his vices in one or two other places, kissed the
ground, in a manner of speaking, before him, and shut him up with a supply of
bottles in an upstairs room of his infamous hovel. It appears he was under some
hazy apprehension as to his personal safety, and wished to be concealed. However,
Mariani told me a long time after (when he came on board one day to dun my
steward for the price of some cigars) that he would have done more for him
without asking any questions, from gratitude for some unholy favour received
very many years ago -- as far as I could make out. He thumped twice his brawny
chest, rolled enormous black- and-white eyes glistening with tears:
"Antonio never forget -- Antonio never forget!" What was the precise
nature of the immoral obligation I never learned, but be it what it may, he had
every facility given him to remain under lock and key, with a chair, a table, a
mattress in a corner, and a litter of fallen plaster on the floor, in an
irrational state of funk, and keeping up his pecker with such tonics as Mariani
dispensed. This lasted till the evening of the third day, when, after letting
out a few horrible screams, he found himself compelled to seek safety in flight
from a legion of centipedes. He burst the door open, made one leap for dear
life down the crazy little stairway, landed bodily on Mariani's stomach, picked
himself up, and bolted like a rabbit into the streets. The police plucked him
off a garbage-heap in the early morning. At first he had a notion they were
carrying him off to be hanged, and fought for liberty like a hero, but when I
sat down by his bed he had been very quiet for two days. His lean bronzed head,
with white moustaches, looked fine and calm on the pillow, like the head of a
war-worn soldier with a child-like soul, had it not been for a hint of spectral
alarm that lurked in the blank glitter of his glance, resembling a nondescript
form of a terror crouching silently behind a pane of glass. He was so extremely
calm, that I began to indulge in the eccentric hope of hearing something
explanatory of the famous affair from his point of view. Why I longed to go
grubbing into the deplorable details of an occurrence which, after all,
concerned me no more than as a member of an obscure body of men held together
by a community of inglorious toil and by fidelity to a certain standard of
conduct, I can't explain. You may call it an unhealthy curiosity if you like;
but I have a distinct notion I wished to find something. Perhaps,
unconsciously, I hoped I would find that something, some profound and redeeming
cause, some merciful explanation, some convincing shadow of an excuse. I see
well enough now that I hoped for the impossible -- for the laying of what is
the most obstinate ghost of man's creation, of the uneasy doubt uprising like a
mist, secret and gnawing like a worm, and more chilling than the certitude of
death -- the doubt of the sovereign power enthroned in a fixed standard of
conduct. It is the hardest thing to stumble against; it is the thing that
breeds yelling panics and good little quiet villainies; it's the true shadow of
calamity. Did I believe in a miracle? and why did I desire it so ardently? Was
it for my own sake that I wished to find some shadow of an excuse for that
young fellow whom I had never seen before, but whose appearance alone added a
touch of personal concern to the thoughts suggested by the knowledge of his
weakness -- made it a thing of mystery and terror -- like a hint of a
destructive fate ready for us all whose youth -- in its day -- had resembled
his youth? I fear that such was the secret motive of my prying. I was, and no
mistake, looking for a miracle. The only thing that at this distance of time
strikes me as miraculous is the extent of my imbecility. I positively hoped to
obtain from that battered and shady invalid some exorcism against the ghost of
doubt. I must have been pretty desperate too, for, without loss of time, after
a few indifferent and friendly sentences which he answered with languid
readiness, just as any decent sick man would do, I produced the word Patna wrapped
up in a delicate question as in a wisp of floss silk. I was delicate selfishly;
I did not want to startle him; I had no solicitude for him; I was not furious
with him and sorry for him: his experience was of no importance, his redemption
would have had no point for me. He had grown old in minor iniquities, and could
no longer inspire aversion or pity. He repeated Patna? interrogatively, seemed
to make a short effort of memory, and said: "Quite right. I am an old
stager out here. I saw her go down." I made ready to vent my indignation
at such a stupid lie, when he added smoothly, "She was full of
reptiles."
'This made me pause.
What did he mean? The unsteady phantom of terror behind his glassy eyes seemed
to stand still and look into mine wistfully. "They turned me out of my
bunk in the middle watch to look at her sinking," he pursued in a
reflective tone. His voice sounded alarmingly strong all at once. I was sorry
for my folly. There was no snowy-winged coif of a nursing sister to be seen
flitting in the perspective of the ward; but away in the middle of a long row
of empty iron bedsteads an accident case from some ship in the Roads sat up
brown and gaunt with a white bandage set rakishly on the forehead. Suddenly my
interesting invalid shot out an arm thin like a tentacle and clawed my
shoulder. "Only my eyes were good enough to see. I am famous for my
eyesight. That's why they called me, I expect. None of them was quick enough to
see her go, but they saw that she was gone right enough, and sang out together
-- like this . " . . . A wolfish howl searched the very recesses of my
soul. "Oh! make 'im dry up," whined the accident case irritably.
"You don't believe me, I suppose," went on the other, with an air of
ineffable conceit. "I tell you there are no such eyes as mine this side of
the Persian Gulf. Look under the bed."
'Of course I stooped
instantly. I defy anybody not to have done so. "What can you see?" he
asked. "Nothing," I said, feeling awfully ashamed of myself. He
scrutinised my face with wild and withering contempt. "Just so," he
said, "but if I were to look I could see -- there's no eyes like mine, I
tell you." Again he clawed, pulling at me downwards in his eagerness to
relieve himself by a confidential communication. "Millions of pink toads.
There's no eyes like mine. Millions of pink toads. It's worse than seeing a
ship sink. I could look at sinking ships and smoke my pipe all day long. Why
don't they give me back my pipe? I would get a smoke while I watched these
toads. The ship was full of them. They've got to be watched, you know." He
winked facetiously. The perspiration dripped on him off my head, my drill coat
clung to my wet back: the afternoon breeze swept impetuously over the row of
bedsteads, the stiff folds of curtains stirred perpendicularly, rattling on
brass rods, the covers of empty beds blew about noiselessly near the bare floor
all along the line, and I shivered to the very marrow. The soft wind of the
tropics played in that naked ward as bleak as a winter's gale in an old barn at
home. "Don't you let him start his hollering, mister," hailed from
afar the accident case in a distressed angry shout that came ringing between
the walls like a quavering call down a tunnel. The clawing hand hauled at my
shoulder; he leered at me knowingly. "The ship was full of them, you know,
and we had to clear out on the strict Q.T.," he whispered with extreme
rapidity. "All pink. All pink -- as big as mastiffs, with an eye on the
top of the head and claws all round their ugly mouths. Ough! Ough!" Quick
jerks as of galvanic shocks disclosed under the flat coverlet the outlines of
meagre and agitated legs; he let go my shoulder and reached after something in
the air; his body trembled tensely like a released harp-string; and while I
looked down, the spectral horror in him broke through his glassy gaze.
Instantly his face of an old soldier, with its noble and calm outlines, became
decomposed before my eyes by the corruption of stealthy cunning, of an
abominable caution and of desperate fear. He restrained a cry -- "Ssh!
what are they doing now down there?" he asked, pointing to the floor with
fantastic precautions of voice and gesture, whose meaning, borne upon my mind
in a lurid flash, made me very sick of my cleverness. "They are all
asleep," I answered, watching him narrowly. That was it. That's what he
wanted to hear; these were the exact words that could calm him. He drew a long
breath. "Ssh! Quiet, steady. I am an old stager out here. I know them
brutes. Bash in the head of the first that stirs. There's too many of them, and
she won't swim more than ten minutes." He panted again. "Hurry
up," he yelled suddenly, and went on in a steady scream: "They are
all awake -- millions of them. They are trampling on me! Wait! Oh, wait! I'll
smash them in heaps like flies. Wait for me! Help! H-e-elp!" An
interminable and sustained howl completed my discomfiture. I saw in the
distance the accident case raise deplorably both his hands to his bandaged
head; a dresser, aproned to the chin showed himself in the vista of the ward,
as if seen in the small end of a telescope. I confessed myself fairly routed,
and without more ado, stepping out through one of the long windows, escaped
into the outside gallery. The howl pursued me like a vengeance. I turned into a
deserted landing, and suddenly all became very still and quiet around me, and I
descended the bare and shiny staircase in a silence that enabled me to compose
my distracted thoughts. Down below I met one of the resident surgeons who was
crossing the courtyard and stopped me. "Been to see your man, Captain? I
think we may let him go to-morrow. These fools have no notion of taking care of
themselves, though. I say, we've got the chief engineer of that pilgrim ship
here. A curious case. D.T.'s of the worst kind. He has been drinking hard in
that Greek's or Italian's grog-shop for three days. What can you expect? Four
bottles of that kind of brandy a day, I am told. Wonderful, if true. Sheeted
with boiler-iron inside I should think. The head, ah! the head, of course, gone,
but the curious part is there's some sort of method in his raving. I am trying
to find out. Most unusual -- that thread of logic in such a delirium.
Traditionally he ought to see snakes, but he doesn't. Good old tradition's at a
discount nowadays. Eh! His -- er -- visions are batrachian. Ha! ha! No,
seriously, I never remember being so interested in a case of jim-jams before.
He ought to be dead, don't you know, after such a festive experiment. Oh! he is
a tough object. Four-and-twenty years of the tropics too. You ought really to
take a peep at him. Noble-looking old boozer. Most extraordinary man I ever met
-- medically, of course. Won't you?"
'I had been all along
exhibiting the usual polite signs of interest, but now assuming an air of
regret I murmured of want of time, and shook hands in a hurry. "I
say," he cried after me; "he can't attend that inquiry. Is his
evidence material, you think?"
' "Not in the
least," I called back from the gateway.'
'The authorities were
evidently of the same opinion. The inquiry was not adjourned. It was held on
the appointed day to satisfy the law, and it was well attended because of its
human interest, no doubt. There was no incertitude as to facts -- as to the one
material fact, I mean. How the Patna came by her hurt it was impossible to find
out; the court did not expect to find out; and in the whole audience there was
not a man who cared. Yet, as I've told you, all the sailors in the port
attended, and the waterside business was fully represented. Whether they knew
it or not, the interest that drew them there was purely psychological -- the
expectation of some essential disclosure as to the strength, the power, the
horror, of human emotions. Naturally nothing of the kind could be disclosed.
The examination of the only man able and willing to face it was beating
futilely round the well-known fact, and the play of questions upon it was as
instructive as the tapping with a hammer on an iron box, were the object to
find out what's inside. However, an official inquiry could not be any other
thing. Its object was not the fundamental why, but the superficial how, of this
affair.
'The young chap could
have told them, and, though that very thing was the thing that interested the
audience, the questions put to him necessarily led him away from what to me,
for instance, would have been the only truth worth knowing. You can't expect
the constituted authorities to inquire into the state of a man's soul -- or is
it only of his liver? Their business was to come down upon the consequences,
and frankly, a casual police magistrate and two nautical assessors are not much
good for anything else. I don't mean to imply these fellows were stupid. The
magistrate was very patient. One of the assessors was a sailing-ship skipper
with a reddish beard, and of a pious disposition. Brierly was the other. Big
Brierly. Some of you must have heard of Big Brierly -- the captain of the crack
ship of the Blue Star line. That's the man.
'He seemed consumedly
bored by the honour thrust upon him. He had never in his life made a mistake,
never had an accident, never a mishap, never a check in his steady rise, and he
seemed to be one of those lucky fellows who know nothing of indecision, much
less of self-mistrust. At thirty-two he had one of the best commands going in
the Eastern trade -- and, what's more, he thought a lot of what he had. There
was nothing like it in the world, and I suppose if you had asked him
point-blank he would have confessed that in his opinion there was not such another
commander. The choice had fallen upon the right man. The rest of mankind that
did not command the sixteen-knot steel steamer Ossa were rather poor creatures.
He had saved lives at sea, had rescued ships in distress, had a gold
chronometer presented to him by the underwriters, and a pair of binoculars with
a suitable inscription from some foreign Government, in commemoration of these
services. He was acutely aware of his merits and of his rewards. I liked him
well enough, though some I know -- meek, friendly men at that -- couldn't stand
him at any price. I haven't the slightest doubt he considered himself vastly my
superior -- indeed, had you been Emperor of East and West, you could not have
ignored your inferiority in his presence -- but I couldn't get up any real
sentiment of offence. He did not despise me for anything I could help, for
anything I was -- don't you know? I was a negligible quantity simply because I
was not the fortunate man of the earth, not Montague Brierly in command of the
Ossa, not the owner of an inscribed gold chronometer and of silver-mounted
binoculars testifying to the excellence of my seamanship and to my indomitable
pluck; not possessed of an acute sense of my merits and of my rewards, besides
the love and worship of a black retriever, the most wonderful of its kind --
for never was such a man loved thus by such a dog. No doubt, to have all this
forced upon you was exasperating enough; but when I reflected that I was
associated in these fatal disadvantages with twelve hundred millions of other
more or less human beings, I found I could bear my share of his good-natured
and contemptuous pity for the sake of something indefinite and attractive in
the man. I have never defined to myself this attraction, but there were moments
when I envied him. The sting of life could do no more to his complacent soul
than the scratch of a pin to the smooth face of a rock. This was enviable. As I
looked at him, flanking on one side the unassuming pale-faced magistrate who
presided at the inquiry, his self-satisfaction presented to me and to the world
a surface as hard as granite. He committed suicide very soon after.
'No wonder Jim's case
bored him, and while I thought with something akin to fear of the immensity of
his contempt for the young man under examination, he was probably holding
silent inquiry into his own case. The verdict must have been of unmitigated
guilt, and he took the secret of the evidence with him in that leap into the
sea. If I understand anything of men, the matter was no doubt of the gravest
import, one of those trifles that awaken ideas -- start into life some thought
with which a man unused to such a companionship finds it impossible to live. I
am in a position to know that it wasn't money, and it wasn't drink, and it
wasn't woman. He jumped overboard at sea barely a week after the end of the
inquiry, and less than three days after leaving port on his outward passage; as
though on that exact spot in the midst of waters he had suddenly perceived the
gates of the other world flung open wide for his reception.
'Yet it was not a
sudden impulse. His grey-headed mate, a first- rate sailor and a nice old chap
with strangers, but in his relations with his commander the surliest chief
officer I've ever seen, would tell the story with tears in his eyes. It appears
that when he came on deck in the morning Brierly had been writing in the
chart-room. "It was ten minutes to four," he said, "and the
middle watch was not relieved yet of course. He heard my voice on the bridge speaking
to the second mate, and called me in. I was loth to go, and that's the truth,
Captain Marlow -- I couldn't stand poor Captain Brierly, I tell you with shame;
we never know what a man is made of. He had been promoted over too many heads,
not counting my own, and he had a damnable trick of making you feel small,
nothing but by the way he said 'Good morning.' I never addressed him, sir, but
on matters of duty, and then it was as much as I could do to keep a civil
tongue in my head." (He flattered himself there. I often wondered how
Brierly could put up with his manners for more than half a voyage.) "I've
a wife and children," he went on, "and I had been ten years in the
Company, always expecting the next command -- more fool I. Says he, just like
this: 'Come in here, Mr. Jones,' in that swagger voice of his -- 'Come in here,
Mr. Jones.' In I went. 'We'll lay down her position,' says he, stooping over
the chart, a pair of dividers in hand. By the standing orders, the officer
going off duty would have done that at the end of his watch. However, I said
nothing, and looked on while he marked off the ship's position with a tiny
cross and wrote the date and the time. I can see him this moment writing his
neat figures: seventeen, eight, four A. M. The year would be written in red ink
at the top of the chart. He never used his charts more than a year, Captain
Brierly didn't. I've the chart now. When he had done he stands looking down at
the mark he had made and smiling to himself, then looks up at me. 'Thirty-two
miles more as she goes,' says he, 'and then we shall be clear, and you may
alter the course twenty degrees to the southward.'
'"We were passing
to the north of the Hector Bank that voyage. I said, 'All right, sir,'
wondering what he was fussing about, since I had to call him before altering
the course anyhow. lust then eight bells were struck: we came out on the
bridge, and the second mate before going off mentions in the usual way --
'Seventy-one on the log.' Captain Brierly looks at the compass and then all
round. It was dark and clear, and all the stars were out as plain as on a
frosty night in high latitudes. Suddenly he says with a sort of a little sigh:
'I am going aft, and shall set the log at zero for you myself, so that there
can be no mistake. Thirty-two miles more on this course and then you are safe.
Let's see -- the correction on the log is six per cent. additive; say, then,
thirty by the dial to run, and you may come twenty degrees to starboard at
once. No use losing any distance -- is there?' I had never heard him talk so
much at a stretch, and to no purpose as it seemed to me. I said nothing. He
went down the ladder, and the dog, that was always at his heels whenever he
moved, night or day, followed, sliding nose first, after him. I heard his
boot-heels tap, tap on the after-deck, then he stopped and spoke to the dog --
'Go back, Rover. On the bridge, boy! Go on -- get.' Then he calls out to me
from the dark, 'Shut that dog up in the chart-room, Mr. Jones -- will you?'
' "This was the
last time I heard his voice, Captain Marlow. These are the last words he spoke
in the hearing of any living human being, sir." At this point the old
chap's voice got quite unsteady. "He was afraid the poor brute would jump after
him, don't you see?" he pursued with a quaver. "Yes, Captain Marlow.
He set the log for me; he -- would you believe it? -- he put a drop of oil in
it too. There was the oil-feeder where he left it near by. The boat -- swain's
mate got the hose along aft to wash down at half-past five; by-and-by he knocks
off and runs up on the bridge -- 'Will you please come aft, Mr. Jones,' he
says. 'There's a funny thing. I don't like to touch it.' It was Captain
Brierly's gold chronometer watch carefully hung under the rail by its chain.
' "As soon as my
eyes fell on it something struck me, and I knew, sir. My legs got soft under
me. It was as if I had seen him go over; and I could tell how far behind he was
left too. The taffrail-log marked eighteen miles and three-quarters, and four
iron belaying- pins were missing round the mainmast. Put them in his pockets to
help him down, I suppose; but, Lord! what's four iron pins to a powerful man
like Captain Brierly. Maybe his confidence in himself was just shook a bit at
the last. That's the only sign of fluster he gave in his whole life, I should
think; but I am ready to answer for him, that once over he did not try to swim
a stroke, the same as he would have had pluck enough to keep up all day long on
the bare chance had he fallen overboard accidentally. Yes, sir. He was second
to none -- if he said so himself, as I heard him once. He had written two
letters in the middle watch, one to the Company and the other to me. He gave me
a lot of instructions as to the passage -- I had been in the trade before he
was out of his time -- and no end of hints as to my conduct with our people in
Shanghai, so that I should keep the command of the Ossa. He wrote like a father
would to a favourite son, Captain Marlow, and I was five-and-twenty years his senior
and had tasted salt water before he was fairly breeched. In his letter to the
owners -- it was left open for me to see -- he said that he had always done his
duty by them -- up to that moment -- and even now he was not betraying their
confidence, since he was leaving the ship to as competent a seaman as could be
found -- meaning me, sir, meaning me! He told them that if the last act of his
life didn't take away all his credit with them, they would give weight to my
faithful service and to his warm recommendation, when about to fill the vacancy
made by his death. And much more like this, sir. I couldn't believe my eyes. It
made me feel queer all over," went on the old chap, in great perturbation,
and squashing something in the corner of his eye with the end of a thumb as
broad as a spatula. "You would think, sir, he had jumped overboard only to
give an unlucky man a last show to get on. What with the shock of him going in
this awful rash way, and thinking myself a made man by that chance, I was nearly
off my chump for a week. But no fear. The captain of the Pelion was shifted
into the Ossa -- came aboard in Shanghai -- a little popinjay, sir, in a grey
check suit, with his hair parted in the middle. 'Aw -- I am -- aw -- your new
captain, Mister -- Mister -- aw -- Jones.' He was drowned in scent -- fairly
stunk with it, Captain Marlow. I dare say it was the look I gave him that made
him stammer. He mumbled something about my natural disappointment -- I had
better know at once that his chief officer got the promotion to the Pelion --
he had nothing to do with it, of course -- supposed the office knew best --
sorry.... Says I, 'Don't you mind old Jones, sir; dam' his soul, he's used to
it.' I could see directly I had shocked his delicate ear, and while we sat at
our first tiffin together he began to find fault in a nasty manner with this
and that in the ship. I never heard such a voice out of a Punch and Judy show.
I set my teeth hard, and glued my eyes to my plate, and held my peace as long
as I could; but at last I had to say something. Up he jumps tiptoeing, ruffling
all his pretty plumes, like a little fighting-cock. 'You'll find you have a
different person to deal with than the late Captain Brierly.' 'I've found it,'
says I, very glum, but pretending to be mighty busy with my steak. 'You are an
old ruffian, Mister -- aw -- Jones; and what's more, you are known for an old
ruffian in the employ,' he squeaks at me. The damned bottle-washers stood about
listening with their mouths stretched from ear to ear. 'I may be a hard case,'
answers I, 'but I ain't so far gone as to put up with the sight of you sitting
in Captain Brierly's chair. ' With that I lay down my knife and fork. 'You
would like to sit in it yourself -- that's where the shoe pinches,' he sneers.
I left the saloon, got my rags together, and was on the quay with all my
dunnage about my feet before the stevedores had turned to again. Yes. Adrift --
on shore -- after ten years' service -- and with a poor woman and four children
six thousand miles off depending on my half-pay for every mouthful they ate.
Yes, sir! I chucked it rather than hear Captain Brierly abused. He left me his
night-glasses -- here they are; and he wished me to take care of the dog --
here he is. Hallo, Rover, poor boy. Where's the captain, Rover?" The dog
looked up at us with mournful yellow eyes, gave one desolate bark, and crept
under the table.
'All this was taking
place, more than two years afterwards, on board that nautical ruin the
Fire-Queen this Jones had got charge of -- quite by a funny accident, too --
from Matherson -- mad Matherson they generally called him -- the same who used
to hang out in Hai-phong, you know, before the occupation days. The old chap
snuffled on--
' "Ay, sir,
Captain Brierly will be remembered here, if there's no other place on earth. I
wrote fully to his father and did not get a word in reply -- neither Thank you,
nor Go to the devil! -- nothing! Perhaps they did not want to know."
'The sight of that
watery-eyed old Jones mopping his bald head with a red cotton handkerchief, the
sorrowing yelp of the dog, the squalor of that fly-blown cuddy which was the
only shrine of his memory, threw a veil of inexpressibly mean pathos over
Brierly's remembered figure, the posthumous revenge of fate for that belief in
his own splendour which had almost cheated his life of its legitimate terrors.
Almost! Perhaps wholly. Who can tell what flattering view he had induced
himself to take of his own suicide?
' "Why did he
commit the rash act, Captain Marlow -- can you think?" asked Jones,
pressing his palms together. "Why? It beats me! Why?" He slapped his
low and wrinkled forehead. "If he had been poor and old and in debt -- and
never a show -- or else mad. But he wasn't of the kind that goes mad, not he.
You trust me. What a mate don't know about his skipper isn't worth knowing.
Young, healthy, well off, no cares.... I sit here sometimes thinking, thinking,
till my head fairly begins to buzz. There was some reason."
' "You may depend
on it, Captain Jones," said I, "it wasn't anything that would have
disturbed much either of us two," I said; and then, as if a light had been
flashed into the muddle of his brain, poor old Jones found a last word of
amazing profundity. He blew his nose, nodding at me dolefully: "Ay, ay!
neither you nor I, sir, had ever thought so much of ourselves."
'Of course the
recollection of my last conversation with Brierly is tinged with the knowledge
of his end that followed so close upon it. I spoke with him for the last time
during the progress of the inquiry. It was after the first adjournment, and he
came up with me in the street. He was in a state of irritation, which I noticed
with surprise, his usual behaviour when he condescended to converse being
perfectly cool, with a trace of amused tolerance, as if the existence of his
interlocutor had been a rather good joke. "They caught me for that
inquiry, you see," he began, and for a while enlarged complainingly upon
the inconveniences of daily attendance in court. "And goodness knows how
long it will last. Three days, I suppose." I heard him out in silence; in
my then opinion it was a way as good as another of putting on side.
"What's the use of it? It is the stupidest set-out you can imagine,"
he pursued hotly. I remarked that there was no option. He interrupted me with a
sort of pent-up violence. "I feel like a fool all the time." I looked
up at him. This was going very far -- for Brierly -- when talking of Brierly.
He stopped short, and seizing the lapel of my coat, gave it a slight tug.
"Why are we tormenting that young chap?" he asked. This question
chimed in so well to the tolling of a certain thought of mine that, with the
image of the absconding renegade in my eye, I answered at once, "Hanged if
I know, unless it be that he lets you." I was astonished to see him fall
into line, so to speak, with that utterance, which ought to have been tolerably
cryptic. He said angrily, "Why, yes. Can't he see that wretched skipper of
his has cleared out? What does he expect to happen? Nothing can save him. He's
done for." We walked on in silence a few steps. "Why eat all that
dirt?" he exclaimed, with an oriental energy of expression -- about the
only sort of energy you can find a trace of east of the fiftieth meridian. I
wondered greatly at the direction of his thoughts, but now I strongly suspect
it was strictly in character: at bottom poor Brierly must have been thinking of
himself. I pointed out to him that the skipper of the Patna was known to have
feathered his nest pretty well, and could procure almost anywhere the means of
getting away. With Jim it was otherwise: the Government was keeping him in the
Sailors' Home for the time being, and probably he hadn't a penny in his pocket
to bless himself with. It costs some money to run away. "Does it? Not always,"
he said, with a bitter laugh, and to some further remark of mine -- "Well,
then, let him creep twenty feet underground and stay there! By heavens! I
would." I don't know why his tone provoked me, and I said, "There is
a kind of courage in facing it out as he does, knowing very well that if he
went away nobody would trouble to run after hmm." "Courage be
hanged!" growled Brierly. "That sort of courage is of no use to keep
a man straight, and I don't care a snap for such courage. If you were to say it
was a kind of cowardice now -- of softness. I tell you what, I will put up two
hundred rupees if you put up another hundred and undertake to make the beggar
clear out early to-morrow morning. The fellow's a gentleman if he ain't fit to
be touched -- he will understand. He must! This infernal publicity is too
shocking: there he sits while all these confounded natives, serangs, lascars,
quartermasters, are giving evidence that's enough to burn a man to ashes with
shame. This is abominable. Why, Marlow, don't you think, don't you feel, that
this is abominable; don't you now -- come -- as a seaman? If he went away all
this would stop at once." Brierly said these words with a most unusual
animation, and made as if to reach after his pocket-book. I restrained him, and
declared coldly that the cowardice of these four men did not seem to me a
matter of such great importance. "And you call yourself a seaman, I
suppose," he pronounced angrily. I said that's what I called myself, and I
hoped I was too. He heard me out, and made a gesture with his big arm that
seemed to deprive me of my individuality, to push me away into the crowd.
"The worst of it," he said, "is that all you fellows have no
sense of dignity; you don't think enough of what you are supposed to be."
'We had been walking
slowly meantime, and now stopped opposite the harbour office, in sight of the
very spot from which the immense captain of the Patna had vanished as utterly
as a tiny feather blown away in a hurricane. I smiled. Brierly went on:
"This is a disgrace. We've got all kinds amongst us -- some anointed
scoundrels in the lot; but, hang it, we must preserve professional decency or
we become no better than so many tinkers going about loose. We are trusted. Do
you understand? -- trusted! Frankly, I don't care a snap for all the pilgrims
that ever came out of Asia, but a decent man would not have behaved like this
to a full cargo of old rags in bales. We aren't an organised body of men, and
the only thing that holds us together is just the name for that kind of
decency. Such an affair destroys one's confidence. A man may go pretty near
through his whole sea-life without any call to show a stiff upper lip. But when
the call comes . . . Aha! . . . If I . . ."
'He broke off, and in a
changed tone, "I'll give you two hundred rupees now, Marlow, and you just
talk to that chap. Confound him! I wish he had never come out here. Fact is, I
rather think some of my people know his. The old man's a parson, and I remember
now I met him once when staying with my cousin in Essex last year. If I am not
mistaken, the old chap seemed rather to fancy his sailor son. Horrible. I can't
do it myself -- but you . . ."
'Thus, apropos of Jim,
I had a glimpse of the real Brierly a few days before he committed his reality
and his sham together to the keeping of the sea. Of course I declined to
meddle. The tone of this last "but you" (poor Brierly couldn't help
it), that seemed to imply I was no more noticeable than an insect, caused me to
look at the proposal with indignation, and on account of that provocation, or
for some other reason, I became positive in my mind that the inquiry was a
severe punishment to that Jim, and that his facing it -- practically of his own
free will -- was a redeeming feature in his abominable case. I hadn't been so
sure of it before. Brierly went off in a huff. At the time his state of mind
was more of a mystery to me than it is now.
'Next day, coming into
court late, I sat by myself. Of course I could not forget the conversation I
had with Brierly, and now I had them both under my eyes. The demeanour of one
suggested gloomy impudence and of the other a contemptuous boredom; yet one
attitude might not have been truer than the other, and I was aware that one was
not true. Brierly was not bored -- he was exasperated; and if so, then Jim
might not have been impudent. According to my theory he was not. I imagined he
was hopeless. Then it was that our glances met. They met, and the look he gave
me was discouraging of any intention I might have had to speak to him. Upon
either hypothesis -- insolence or despair -- I felt I could be of no use to
him. This was the second day of the proceedings. Very soon after that exchange
of glances the inquiry was adjourned again to the next day. The white men began
to troop out at once. Jim had been told to stand down some time before, and was
able to leave amongst the first. I saw his broad shoulders and his head
outlined in the light of the door, and while I made my way slowly out talking
with some one -- some stranger who had addressed me casually -- I could see him
from within the court-room resting both elbows on the balustrade of the
verandah and turning his back on the small stream of people trickling down the
few steps. There was a murmur of voices and a shuffle of boots.
'The next case was that
of assault and battery committed upon a money-lender, I believe; and the
defendant -- a venerable villager with a straight white beard -- sat on a mat
just outside the door with his sons, daughters, sons-in-law, their wives, and,
I should think, half the population of his village besides, squatting or
standing around him. A slim dark woman, with part of her back and one black
shoulder bared, and with a thin gold ring in her nose, suddenly began to talk
in a high-pitched, shrewish tone. The man with me instinctively looked up at
her. We were then just through the door, passing behind Jim's burly back.
'Whether those
villagers had brought the yellow dog with them, I don't know. Anyhow, a dog was
there, weaving himself in and out amongst people's legs in that mute stealthy
way native dogs have, and my companion stumbled over him. The dog leaped away
without a sound; the man, raising his voice a little, said with a slow laugh,
"Look at that wretched cur," and directly afterwards we became
separated by a lot of people pushing in. I stood back for a moment against the
wall while the stranger managed to get down the steps and disappeared. I saw
Jim spin round. He made a step forward and barred my way. We were alone; he
glared at me with an air of stubborn resolution. I became aware I was being
held up, so to speak, as if in a wood. The verandah was empty by then, the
noise and movement in court had ceased: a great silence fell upon the building,
in which, somewhere far within, an oriental voice began to whine abjectly. The
dog, in the very act of trying to sneak in at the door, sat down hurriedly to
hunt for fleas.
' "Did you speak
to me?" asked Jim very low, and bending forward, not so much towards me
but at me, if you know what I mean. I said "No" at once. Something in
the sound of that quiet tone of his warned me to be on my defence. I watched
him. It was very much like a meeting in a wood, only more uncertain in its
issue, since he could possibly want neither my money nor my life -- nothing
that I could simply give up or defend with a clear conscience. "You say
you didn't," he said, very sombre. "But I heard." "Some
mistake," I protested, utterly at a loss, and never taking my eyes off
him. To watch his face was like watching a darkening sky before a clap of
thunder, shade upon shade imperceptibly coming on, the doom growing
mysteriously intense in the calm of maturing violence.
' "As far as I
know, I haven't opened my lips in your hearing," I affirmed with perfect
truth. I was getting a little angry, too, at the absurdity of this encounter.
It strikes me now I have never in my life been so near a beating -- I mean it
literally; a beating with fists. I suppose I had some hazy prescience of that
eventuality being in the air. Not that he was actively threatening me. On the
contrary, he was strangely passive -- don't you know? but he was lowering, and,
though not exceptionally big, he looked generally fit to demolish a wall. The
most reassuring symptom I noticed was a kind of slow and ponderous hesitation,
which I took as a tribute to the evident sincerity of my manner and of my tone.
We faced each other. In the court the assault case was proceeding. I caught the
words: "Well -- buffalo -- stick -- in the greatness of my fear...."
' "What did you
mean by staring at me all the morning?" said Jim at last. He looked up and
looked down again. "Did you expect us all to sit with downcast eyes out of
regard for your susceptibilities?" I retorted sharply. I was not going to
submit meekly to any of his nonsense. He raised his eyes again, and this time
continued to look me straight in the face. "No. That's all right," he
pronounced with an air of deliberating with himself upon the truth of this
statement -- "that's all right. I am going through with that. Only"
-- and there he spoke a little faster -- "I won't let any man call me
names outside this court. There was a fellow with you. You spoke to him -- oh
yes -- I know; 'tis all very fine. You spoke to him, but you meant me to
hear...."
'I assured him he was
under some extraordinary delusion. I had no conception how it came about.
"You thought I would be afraid to resent this," he said, with just a
faint tinge of bitterness. I was interested enough to discern the slightest
shades of expression, but I was not in the least enlightened; yet I don't know
what in these words, or perhaps just the intonation of that phrase, induced me
suddenly to make all possible allowances for him. I ceased to be annoyed at my
unexpected predicament. It was some mistake on his part; he was blundering, and
I had an intuition that the blunder was of an odious, of an unfortunate nature.
I was anxious to end this scene on grounds of decency, just as one is anxious
to cut short some unprovoked and abominable confidence. The funniest part was,
that in the midst of all these considerations of the higher order I was
conscious of a certain trepidation as to the possibility -- nay, likelihood --
of this encounter ending in some disreputable brawl which could not possibly be
explained, and would make me ridiculous. I did not hanker after a three days'
celebrity as the man who got a black eye or something of the sort from the mate
of the Patna. He, in all probability, did not care what he did, or at any rate
would be fully justified in his own eyes. It took no magician to see he was
amazingly angry about something, for all his quiet and even torpid demeanour. I
don't deny I was extremely desirous to pacify him at all costs, had I only
known what to do. But I didn't know, as you may well imagine. It was a
blackness without a single gleam. We confronted each other in silence. He hung
fire for about fifteen seconds, then made a step nearer, and I made ready to
ward off a blow, though I don't think I moved a muscle. "If you were as big
as two men and as strong as six," he said very softly, "I would tell
you what I think of you. You . . ." "Stop!" I exclaimed. This
checked him for a second. "Before you tell me what you think of me,"
I went on quickly, "will you kindly tell me what it is I've said or
done?" During the pause that ensued he surveyed me with indignation, while
I made supernatural efforts of memory, in which I was hindered by the oriental
voice within the court-room expostulating with impassioned volubility against a
charge of falsehood. Then we spoke almost together. "I will soon show you
I am not," he said, in a tone suggestive of a crisis. "I declare I
don't know," I protested earnestly at the same time. He tried to crush me
by the scorn of his glance. "Now that you see I am not afraid you try to
crawl out of it," he said. "Who's a cur now -- hey?" Then, at
last, I understood.
'He had been scanning
my features as though looking for a place where he would plant his fist.
"I will allow no man," . . . he mumbled threateningly. It was,
indeed, a hideous mistake; he had given himself away utterly. I can't give you
an idea how shocked I was. I suppose he saw some reflection of my feelings in
my face, because his expression changed just a little. "Good God!" I
stammered, "you don't think I . . ." "But I am sure I've
heard," he persisted, raising his voice for the first time since the
beginning of this deplorable scene. Then with a shade of disdain he added,
"It wasn't you, then? Very well; I'll find the other." "Don't be
a fool," I cried in exasperation; "it wasn't that at all."
"I've heard," he said again, with an unshaken and sombre
perseverance.
'There may be those who
could have laughed at his pertinacity; I didn't. Oh, I didn't! There had never
been a man so mercilessly shown up by his own natural impulse. A single word
had stripped him of his discretion -- of that discretion which is more
necessary to the decencies of our inner being than clothing is to the decorum
of our body. "Don't be a fool," I repeated. "But the other man
said it, you don't deny that?" he pronounced distinctly, and looking in my
face without flinching. "No, I don't deny," said I, returning his
gaze. At last his eyes followed downwards the direction of my pointing finger.
He appeared at first uncomprehending, then confounded, and at last amazed and
scared as though a dog had been a monster and he had never seen a dog before.
"Nobody dreamt of insulting you," I said.
'He contemplated the
wretched animal, that moved no more than an effigy: it sat with ears pricked
and its sharp muzzle pointed into the doorway, and suddenly snapped at a fly
like a piece of mechanism.
'I looked at him. The
red of his fair sunburnt complexion deepened suddenly under the down of his
cheeks, invaded his forehead, spread to the roots of his curly hair. His ears
became intensely crimson, and even the clear blue of his eyes was darkened many
shades by the rush of blood to his head. His lips pouted a little, trembling as
though he had been on the point of bursting into tears. I perceived he was
incapable of pronouncing a word from the excess of his humiliation. From
disappointment too -- who knows? Perhaps he looked forward to that hammering he
was going to give me for rehabilitation, for appeasement? Who can tell what
relief he expected from this chance of a row? He was naive enough to expect
anything; but he had given himself away for nothing in this case. He had been
frank with himself -- let alone with me -- in the wild hope of arriving in that
way at some effective refutation, and the stars had been ironically
unpropitious. He made an inarticulate noise in his throat like a man
imperfectly stunned by a blow on the head. It was pitiful.
'I didn't catch up
again with him till well outside the gate. I had even to trot a bit at the
last, but when, out of breath at his elbow, I taxed him with running away, he
said, "Never!" and at once turned at bay. I explained I never meant
to say he was running away from me. "From no man -- from not a single man
on earth," he affirmed with a stubborn mien. I forbore to point out the
one obvious exception which would hold good for the bravest of us; I thought he
would find out by himself very soon. He looked at me patiently while I was
thinking of something to say, but I could find nothing on the spur of the
moment, and he began to walk on. I kept up, and, anxious not to lose him, I
said hurriedly that I couldn't think of leaving him under a false impression of
my -- of my -- I stammered. The stupidity of the phrase appalled me while I was
trying to finish it, but the power of sentences has nothing to do with their
sense or the logic of their construction. My idiotic mumble seemed to please
him. He cut it short by saying, with courteous placidity that argued an immense
power of self-control or else a wonderful elasticity of spirits --
"Altogether my mistake." I marvelled greatly at this expression: he
might have been alluding to some trifling occurrence. Hadn't he understood its
deplorable meaning? "You may well forgive me," he continued, and went
on a little moodily, "All these staring people in court seemed such fools
that -- that it might have been as I supposed."
'This opened suddenly a
new view of him to my wonder. I looked at him curiously and met his unabashed
and impenetrable eyes. "I can't put up with this kind of thing," he
said, very simply, "and I don't mean to. In court it's different; I've got
to stand that -- and I can do it too."
'I don't pretend I
understood him. The views he let me have of himself were like those glimpses
through the shifting rents in a thick fog -- bits of vivid and vanishing
detail, giving no connected idea of the general aspect of a country. They fed
one's curiosity without satisfying it; they were no good for purposes of
orientation. Upon the whole he was misleading. That's how I summed him up to
myself after he left me late in the evening. I had been staying at the Malabar
House for a few days, and on my pressing invitation he dined with me there.'
'An outward-bound
mail-boat had come in that afternoon, and the big dining-room of the hotel was
more than half full of people with a-hundred-pounds-round-the-world tickets in
their pockets. There were married couples looking domesticated and bored with
each other in the midst of their travels; there were small parties and large
parties, and lone individuals dining solemnly or feasting boisterously, but all
thinking, conversing, joking, or scowling as was their wont at home; and just
as intelligently receptive of new impressions as their trunks upstairs.
Henceforth they would be labelled as having passed through this and that place,
and so would be their luggage. They would cherish this distinction of their
persons, and preserve the gummed tickets on their portmanteaus as documentary
evidence, as the only permanent trace of their improving enterprise. The
dark-faced servants tripped without noise over the vast and polished floor; now
and then a girl's laugh would be heard, as innocent and empty as her mind, or,
in a sudden hush of crockery, a few words in an affected drawl from some wit
embroidering for the benefit of a grinning tableful the last funny story of
shipboard scandal. Two nomadic old maids, dressed up to kill, worked
acrimoniously through the bill of fare, whispering to each other with faded
lips, wooden-faced and bizarre, like two sumptuous scarecrows. A little wine
opened Jim's heart and loosened his tongue. His appetite was good, too, I
noticed. He seemed to have buried somewhere the opening episode of our
acquaintance. It was like a thing of which there would be no more question in
this world. And all the time I had before me these blue, boyish eyes looking
straight into mine, this young face, these capable shoulders, the open bronzed
forehead with a white line under the roots of clustering fair hair, this
appearance appealing at sight to all my sympathies: this frank aspect, the
artless smile, the youthful seriousness. He was of the right sort; he was one
of us. He talked soberly, with a sort of composed unreserve, and with a quiet
bearing that might have been the outcome of manly self-control, of impudence,
of callousness, of a colossal unconsciousness, of a gigantic deception. Who can
tell! From our tone we might have been discussing a third person, a football
match, last year's weather. My mind floated in a sea of conjectures till the
turn of the conversation enabled me, without being offensive, to remark that,
upon the whole, this inquiry must have been pretty trying to him. He darted his
arm across the tablecloth, and clutching my hand by the side of my plate,
glared fixedly. I was startled. "It must be awfully hard," I
stammered, confused by this display of speechless feeling. "It is --
hell," he burst out in a muffled voice.
'This movement and
these words caused two well-groomed male globe-trotters at a neighbouring table
to look up in alarm from their iced pudding. I rose, and we passed into the
front gallery for coffee and cigars.
'On little octagon
tables candles burned in glass globes; clumps of stiff-leaved plants separated
sets of cosy wicker chairs; and between the pairs of columns, whose reddish
shafts caught in a long row the sheen from the tall windows, the night,
glittering and sombre, seemed to hang like a splendid drapery. The riding
lights of ships winked afar like setting stars, and the hills across the road-
stead resembled rounded black masses of arrested thunder-clouds.
' "I couldn't
clear out," Jim began. "The skipper did -- that's all very well for
him. I couldn't, and I wouldn't. They all got out of it in one way or another,
but it wouldn't do for me."
'I listened with
concentrated attention, not daring to stir in my chair; I wanted to know -- and
to this day I don't know, I can only guess. He would be confident and depressed
all in the same breath, as if some conviction of innate blamelessness had
checked the truth writhing within him at every turn. He began by saying, in the
tone in which a man would admit his inability to jump a twenty-foot wall, that
he could never go home now; and this declaration recalled to my mind what
Brierly had said, "that the old parson in Essex seemed to fancy his sailor
son not a little."
'I can't tell you
whether Jim knew he was especially "fancied," but the tone of his references
to "my Dad" was calculated to give me a notion that the good old
rural dean was about the finest man that ever had been worried by the cares of
a large family since the beginning of the world. This, though never stated, was
implied with an anxiety that there should be no mistake about it, which was
really very true and charming, but added a poignant sense of lives far off to
the other elements of the story. "He has seen it all in the home papers by
this time," said Jim. "I can never face the poor old chap." I
did not dare to lift my eyes at this till I heard him add, "I could never
explain. He wouldn't understand." Then I looked up. He was smoking
reflectively, and after a moment, rousing himself, began to talk again. He
discovered at once a desire that I should not confound him with his partners in
-- in crime, let us call it. He was not one of them; he was altogether of
another sort. I gave no sign of dissent. I had no intention, for the sake of
barren truth, to rob him of the smallest particle of any saving grace that
would come in his way. I didn't know how much of it he believed himself. I
didn't know what he was playing up to -- if he was playing up to anything at
all -- and I suspect he did not know either; for it is my belief no man ever understands
quite his own artful dodges to escape from the grim shadow of self-knowledge. I
made no sound all the time he was wondering what he had better do after
"that stupid inquiry was over."
'Apparently he shared
Brierly's contemptuous opinion of these proceedings ordained by law. He would
not know where to turn, he confessed, clearly thinking aloud rather than
talking to me. Certificate gone, career broken, no money to get away, no work
that he could obtain as far as he could see. At home he could perhaps get
something; but it meant going to his people for help, and that he would not do.
He saw nothing for it but ship before the mast -- could get perhaps a
quartermaster's billet in some steamer. Would do for a quartermaster....
"Do you think you would?" I asked pitilessly. He jumped up, and going
to the stone balustrade looked out into the night. In a moment he was back,
towering above my chair with his youthful face clouded yet by the pain of a
conquered emotion. He had understood very well I did not doubt his ability to
steer a ship. In a voice that quavered a bit he asked me why did I say that? I
had been "no end kind" to him. I had not even laughed at him when --
here he began to mumble -- "that mistake, you know -- made a confounded ass
of myself." I broke in by saying rather warmly that for me such a mistake
was not a matter to laugh at. He sat down and drank deliberately some coffee,
emptying the small cup to the last drop. "That does not mean I admit for a
moment the cap fitted," he declared distinctly. "No?" I said.
"No," he affirmed with quiet decision. "Do you know what you
would have done? Do you? And you don't think yourself" . . . he gulped
something . . . "you don't think yourself a -- a -- cur?"
'And with this -- upon
my honour! -- he looked up at me inquisitively. It was a question it appears --
a bond-fide question! However, he didn't wait for an answer. Before I could
recover he went on, with his eyes straight before him, as if reading off
something written on the body of the night. "It is all in being ready. I
wasn't; not -- not then. I don't want to excuse myself; but I would like to
explain -- I would like somebody to understand -- somebody -- one person at
least! You! Why not you?"
'It was solemn, and a
little ridiculous too, as they always are, those struggles of an individual
trying to save from the fire his idea of what his moral identity should be,
this precious notion of a convention, only one of the rules of the game,
nothing more, but all the same so terribly effective by its assumption of
unlimited power over natural instincts, by the awful penalties of its failure.
He began his story quietly enough. On board that Dale Line steamer that had
picked up these four floating in a boat upon the discreet sunset glow of the
sea, they had been after the first day looked askance upon. The fat skipper
told some story, the others had been silent, and at first it had been accepted.
You don't cross- examine poor castaways you had the good luck to save, if not
from cruel death, then at least from cruel suffering. Afterwards, with time to
think it over, it might have struck the officers of the Avondale that there was
"something fishy" in the affair; but of course they would keep their
doubts to themselves. They had picked up the captain, the mate, and two
engineers of the steamer Patna sunk at sea, and that, very properly, was enough
for them. I did not ask Jim about the nature of his feelings during the ten
days he spent on board. From the way he narrated that part I was at liberty to
infer he was partly stunned by the discovery he had made -- the discovery about
himself -- and no doubt was at work trying to explain it away to the only man
who was capable of appreciating all its tremendous magnitude. You must
understand he did not try to minimise its importance. Of that I am sure; and
therein lies his distinction. As to what sensations he experienced when he got
ashore and heard the unforeseen conclusion of the tale in which he had taken
such a pitiful part, he told me nothing of them, and it is difficult to
imagine.
'I wonder whether he
felt the ground cut from under his feet? I wonder? But no doubt he managed to
get a fresh foothold very soon. He was ashore a whole fortnight waiting in the
Sailors' Home, and as there were six or seven men staying there at the time, I
had heard of him a little. Their languid opinion seemed to be that, in addition
to his other shortcomings, he was a sulky brute. He had passed these days on
the verandah, buried in a long chair, and coming out of his place of sepulture
only at meal-times or late at night, when he wandered on the quays all by
himself, detached from his surroundings, irresolute and silent, like a ghost
without a home to haunt. "I don't think I've spoken three words to a
living soul in all that time," he said, making me very sorry for him; and
directly he added, "One of these fellows would have been sure to blurt out
something I had made up my mind not to put up with, and I didn't want a row.
No! Not then. I was too -- too . . . I had no heart for it." "So that
bulkhead held out after all," I remarked cheerfully. "Yes," he
murmured, "it held. And yet I swear to you I felt it bulge under my hand.
" "It's extraordinary what strains old iron will stand
sometimes," I said. Thrown back in his seat, his legs stiffly out and arms
hanging down, he nodded slightly several times. You could not conceive a sadder
spectacle. Suddenly he lifted his head; he sat up; he slapped his thigh.
"Ah! what a chance missed! My God! what a chance missed!" he blazed
out, but the ring of the last "missed" resembled a cry wrung out by
pain.
'He was silent again
with a still, far-away look of fierce yearning after that missed distinction,
with his nostrils for an instant dilated, sniffing the intoxicating breath of
that wasted opportunity. If you think I was either surprised or shocked you do
me an injustice in more ways than one! Ah, he was an imaginative beggar! He
would give himself away; he would give himself up. I could see in his glance
darted into the night all his inner being carried on, projected headlong into
the fanciful realm of recklessly heroic aspirations. He had no leisure to
regret what he had lost, he was so wholly and naturally concerned for what he
had failed to obtain. He was very far away from me who watched him across three
feet of space. With every instant he was penetrating deeper into the impossible
world of romantic achievements. He got to the heart of it at last! A strange
look of beatitude overspread his features, his eyes sparkled in the light of
the candle burning between us; he positively smiled! He had penetrated to the
very heart -- to the very heart. It was an ecstatic smile that your faces -- or
mine either -- will never wear, my dear boys. I whisked him back by saying,
"If you had stuck to the ship, you mean!"
'He turned upon me, his
eyes suddenly amazed and full of pain, with a bewildered, startled, suffering
face, as though he had tumbled down from a star. Neither you nor I will ever
look like this on any man. He shuddered profoundly, as if a cold finger-tip had
touched his heart. Last of all he sighed.
'I was not in a
merciful mood. He provoked one by his contradictory indiscretions. "It is
unfortunate you didn't know beforehand!" I said with every unkind
intention; but the perfidious shaft fell harmless -- dropped at his feet like a
spent arrow, as it were, and he did not think of picking it up. Perhaps he had
not even seen it. Presently, lolling at ease, he said, "Dash it all! I
tell you it bulged. I was holding up my lamp along the angle-iron in the lower
deck when a flake of rust as big as the palm of my hand fell off the plate, all
of itself." He passed his hand over his forehead. "The thing stirred
and jumped off like something alive while I was looking at it. "
"That made you feel pretty bad," I observed casually. "Do you
suppose," he said, "that I was thinking of myself, with a hundred and
sixty people at my back, all fast asleep in that fore-'tween-deck alone -- and
more of them aft; more on the deck -- sleeping -- knowing nothing about it --
three times as many as there were boats for, even if there had been time? I
expected to see the iron open out as I stood there and the rush of water going
over them as they lay.... What could I do -- what?"
'I can easily picture
him to myself in the peopled gloom of the cavernous place, with the light of
the globe-lamp falling on a small portion of the bulkhead that had the weight
of the ocean on the other side, and the breathing of unconscious sleepers in
his ears. I can see him glaring at the iron, startled by the falling rust,
overburdened by the knowledge of an imminent death. This, I gathered, was the
second time he had been sent forward by that skipper of his, who, I rather
think, wanted to keep him away from the bridge. He told me that his first impulse
was to shout and straightway make all those people leap out of sleep into
terror; but such an overwhelming sense of his helplessness came over him that
he was not able to produce a sound. This is, I suppose, what people mean by the
tongue cleaving to the roof of the mouth. "Too dry," was the concise
expression he used in reference to this state. Without a sound, then, he
scrambled out on deck through the number one hatch. A windsail rigged down
there swung against him accidentally, and he remembered that the light touch of
the canvas on his face nearly knocked him off the hatchway ladder.
'He confessed that his
knees wobbled a good deal as he stood on the foredeck looking at another
sleeping crowd. The engines having been stopped by that time, the steam was
blowing off. Its deep rumble made the whole night vibrate like a bass string.
The ship trembled to it.
'He saw here and there
a head lifted off a mat, a vague form uprise in sitting posture, listen
sleepily for a moment, sink down again into the billowy confusion of boxes,
steam-winches, ventilators. He was aware all these people did not know enough
to take intelligent notice of that strange noise. The ship of iron, the men
with white faces, all the sights, all the sounds, everything on board to that
ignorant and pious multitude was strange alike, and as trustworthy as it would
for ever remain incomprehensible. It occurred to him that the fact was
fortunate. The idea of it was simply terrible.
'You must remember he
believed, as any other man would have done in his place, that the ship would go
down at any moment; the bulging, rust-eaten plates that kept back the ocean,
fatally must give way, all at once like an undermined dam, and let in a sudden
and overwhelming flood. He stood still looking at these recumbent bodies, a
doomed man aware of his fate, surveying the silent company of the dead. They
were dead! Nothing could save them! There were boats enough for half of them
perhaps, but there was no time. No time! No time! It did not seem worth while
to open his lips, to stir hand or foot. Before he could shout three words, or
make three steps, he would be floundering in a sea whitened awfully by the
desperate struggles of human beings, clamorous with the distress of cries for
help. There was no help. He imagined what would happen perfectly; he went
through it all motionless by the hatchway with the lamp in his hand -- he went
through it to the very last harrowing detail. I think he went through it again
while he was telling me these things he could not tell the court.
' "I saw as
clearly as I see you now that there was nothing I could do. It seemed to take
all life out of my limbs. I thought I might just as well stand where I was and
wait. I did not think I had many seconds . . ." Suddenly the steam ceased
blowing off. The noise, he remarked, had been distracting, but the silence at
once became intolerably oppressive.
' "I thought I
would choke before I got drowned," he said.
'He protested he did
not think of saving himself. The only distinct thought formed, vanishing, and
re-forming in his brain, was: eight hundred people and seven boats; eight
hundred people and seven boats.
' "Somebody was
speaking aloud inside my head," he said a little wildly. "Eight
hundred people and seven boats -- and no time! Just think of it." He
leaned towards me across the little table, and I tried to avoid his stare.
"Do you think I was afraid of death?" he asked in a voice very fierce
and low. He brought down his open hand with a bang that made the coffee-cups
dance. "I am ready to swear I was not -- I was not.... By God -- no!"
He hitched himself upright and crossed his arms; his chin fell on his breast.
'The soft clashes of
crockery reached us faintly through the high windows. There was a burst of
voices, and several men came out in high good-humour into the gallery. They
were exchanging jocular reminiscences of the donkeys in Cairo. A pale anxious
youth stepping softly on long legs was being chaffed by a strutting and
rubicund globe-trotter about his purchases in the bazaar. "No, really --
do you think I've been done to that extent?" he inquired, very earnest and
deliberate. The band moved away, dropping into chairs as they went; matches
flared, illuminating for a second faces without the ghost of an expression and
the flat glaze of white shirt-fronts; the hum of many conversations animated
with the ardour of feasting sounded to me absurd and infinitely remote.
' "Some of the
crew were sleeping on the number one hatch within reach of my arm," began
Jim again.
'You must know they
kept Kalashee watch in that ship, all hands sleeping through the night, and
only the reliefs of quartermasters and look-out men being called. He was
tempted to grip and shake the shoulder of the nearest lascar, but he didn't.
Something held his arms down along his sides. He was not afraid -- oh no! only
he just couldn't -- that's all. He was not afraid of death perhaps, but I'll
tell you what, he was afraid of the emergency. His confounded imagination had
evoked for him all the horrors of panic, the trampling rush, the pitiful
screams, boats swamped -- all the appalling incidents of a disaster at sea he
had ever heard of. He might have been resigned to die, but I suspect he wanted
to die without added terrors, quietly, in a sort of peaceful trance. A certain
readiness to perish is not so very rare, but it is seldom that you meet men
whose souls, steeled in the impenetrable armour of resolution, are ready to
fight a losing battle to the last; the desire of peace waxes stronger as hope
declines, till at last it conquers the very desire of life. Which of us here
has not observed this, or maybe experienced something of that feeling in his
own person -- this extreme weariness of emotions, the vanity of effort, the
yearning for rest? Those striving with unreasonable forces know it well -- the
shipwrecked castaways in boats, wanderers lost in a desert, men battling
against the unthinking might of nature, or the stupid brutality of crowds.'
'How long he stood
stock-still by the hatch expecting every moment to feel the ship dip under his
feet and the rush of water take him at the back and toss him like a chip, I
cannot say. Not very long -- two minutes perhaps. A couple of men he could not
make out began to converse drowsily, and also, he could not tell where, he
detected a curious noise of shuffling feet. Above these faint sounds there was
that awful stillness preceding a catastrophe, that trying silence of the moment
before the crash; then it came into his head that perhaps he would have time to
rush along and cut all the lanyards of the gripes, so that the boats would
float off as the ship went down.
'The Patna had a long
bridge, and all the boats were up there, four on one side and three on the
other -- the smallest of them on the port side and nearly abreast of the
steering-gear. He assured me, with evident anxiety to be believed, that he had
been most careful to keep them ready for instant service. He knew his duty. I
dare say he was a good enough mate as far as that went. "I always believed
in being prepared for the worst," he commented, staring anxiously in my
face. I nodded my approval of the sound principle, averting my eyes before the
subtle unsoundness of the man.
'He started unsteadily
to run. He had to step over legs, avoid stumbling against the heads. Suddenly
some one caught hold of his coat from below, and a distressed voice spoke under
his elbow. The light of the lamp he carried in his right hand fell upon an
upturned dark face whose eyes entreated him together with the voice. He had
picked up enough of the language to understand the word water repeated several
times in a tone of insistence, of prayer, almost of despair. He gave a jerk to
get away, and felt an arm embrace his leg.
' "The beggar
clung to me like a drowning man," he said impressively. "Water,
water! What water did he mean? What did he know? As calmly as I could I ordered
him to let go. He was stopping me, time was pressing, other men began to stir;
I wanted time -- time to cut the boats adrift. He got hold of my hand now, and
I felt that he would begin to shout. It flashed upon me it was enough to start
a panic, and I hauled off with my free arm and slung the lamp in his face. The
glass jingled, the light went out, but the blow made him let go, and I ran off
-- I wanted to get at the boats; I wanted to get at the boats. He leaped after
me from behind. I turned on him. He would not keep quiet; he tried to shout; I
had half throttled him before I made out what he wanted. He wanted some water
-- water to drink; they were on strict allowance, you know, and he had with him
a young boy I had noticed several times. His child was sick -- and thirsty. He
had caught sight of me as I passed by, and was begging for a little water. That's
all. We were under the bridge, in the dark. He kept on snatching at my wrists;
there was no getting rid of him. I dashed into my berth, grabbed my
water-bottle, and thrust it into his hands. He vanished. I didn't find out till
then how much I was in want of a drink myself." He leaned on one elbow
with a hand over his eyes.
'I felt a creepy
sensation all down my backbone; there was something peculiar in all this. The
fingers of the hand that shaded his brow trembled slightly. He broke the short
silence.
' "These things
happen only once to a man and . . . Ah! well! When I got on the bridge at last
the beggars were getting one of the boats off the chocks. A boat! I was running
up the ladder when a heavy blow fell on my shoulder, just missing my head. It
didn't stop me, and the chief engineer -- they had got him out of his bunk by
then -- raised the boat-stretcher again. Somehow I had no mind to be surprised
at anything. All this seemed natural -- and awful -- and awful. I dodged that
miserable maniac, lifted him off the deck as though he had been a little child,
and he started whispering in my arms: 'Don't! don't! I thought you were one of
them niggers.' I flung him away, he skidded along the bridge and knocked the
legs from under the little chap -- the second. The skipper, busy about the
boat, looked round and came at me head down, growling like a wild beast. I
flinched no more than a stone. I was as solid standing there as this," he
tapped lightly with his knuckles the wall beside his chair. "It was as
though I had heard it all, seen it all, gone through it all twenty times
already. I wasn't afraid of them. I drew back my fist and he stopped short,
muttering-
' " 'Ah! it's you.
Lend a hand quick.'
' "That's what he
said. Quick! As if anybody could be quick enough. 'Aren't you going to do
something?' I asked. 'Yes. Clear out,' he snarled over his shoulder.
' "I don't think I
understood then what he meant. The other two had picked themselves up by that
time, and they rushed together to the boat. They tramped, they wheezed, they
shoved, they cursed the boat, the ship, each other -- cursed me. All in
mutters. I didn't move, I didn't speak. I watched the slant of the ship. She
was as still as if landed on the blocks in a dry dock -- only she was like this,"
He held up his hand, palm under, the tips of the fingers inclined downwards.
"Like this," he repeated. "I could see the line of the horizon
before me, as clear as a bell, above her stem-head; I could see the water far
off there black and sparkling, and still -- still as a-pond, deadly still, more
still than ever sea was before -- more still than I could bear to look at. Have
you watched a ship floating head down, checked in sinking by a sheet of old
iron too rotten to stand being shored up? Have you? Oh yes, shored up? I
thought of that -- I thought of every mortal thing; but can you shore up a
bulkhead in five minutes -- or in fifty for that matter? Where was I going to
get men that would go down below? And the timber -- the timber! Would you have
had the courage to swing the maul for the first blow if you had seen that
bulkhead? Don't say you would: you had not seen it; nobody would. Hang it -- to
do a thing like that you must believe there is a chance, one in a thousand, at
least, some ghost of a chance; and you would not have believed. Nobody would
have believed. You think me a cur for standing there, but what would you have
done? What! You can't tell -- nobody can tell. One must have time to turn
round. What would you have me do? Where was the kindness in making crazy with
fright all those people I could not save single-handed -- that nothing could
save? Look here! As true as I sit on this chair before you . . ." "
'He drew quick breaths
at every few words and shot quick glances at my face, as though in his anguish
he were watchful of the effect. He was not speaking to me, he was only speaking
before me, in a dispute with an invisible personality, an antagonistic and
inseparable partner of his existence -- another possessor of his soul. These
were issues beyond the competency of a court of inquiry: it was a subtle and
momentous quarrel as to the true essence of life, and did not want a judge. He
wanted an ally, a helper, an accomplice. I felt the risk I ran of being
circumvented, blinded, decoyed, bullied, perhaps, into taking a definite part
in a dispute impossible of decision if one had to be fair to all the phantoms
in possession -- to the reputable that had its claims and to the disreputable
that had its exigencies. I can't explain to you who haven't seen him and who
hear his words only at second hand the mixed nature of my feelings. It seemed
to me I was being made to comprehend the Inconceivable -- and I know of nothing
to compare with the discomfort of such a sensation. I was made to look at the convention
that lurks in all truth and on the essential sincerity of falsehood. He
appealed to all sides at once -- to the side turned perpetually to the light of
day, and to that side of us which, like the other hemisphere of the moon,
exists stealthily in perpetual darkness, with only a fearful ashy light falling
at times on the edge. He swayed me. I own to it, I own up. The occasion was
obscure, insignificant -- what you will: a lost youngster, one in a million --
but then he was one of us; an incident as completely devoid of importance as
the flooding of an ant-heap, and yet the mystery of his attitude got hold of me
as though he had been an individual in the forefront of his kind, as if the
obscure truth involved were momentous enough to affect mankind's conception of
itself. .. . '
Marlow paused to put
new life into his expiring cheroot, seemed to forget all about the story, and
abruptly began again.
'My fault of course.
One has no business really to get interested. It's a weakness of mine. His was
of another kind. My weakness consists in not having a discriminating eye for
the incidental -- for the externals -- no eye for the hod of the rag-picker or
the fine linen of the next man. Next man -- that's it. I have met so many men,'
he pursued, with momentary sadness -- 'met them too with a certain -- certain
-- impact, let us say; like this fellow, for instance -- and in each case all I
could see was merely the human being. A confounded democratic quality of vision
which may be better than total blindness, but has been of no advantage to me, I
can assure you. Men expect one to take into account their fine linen. But I
never could get up any enthusiasm about these things. Oh! it's a failing; it's
a failing; and then comes a soft evening; a lot of men too indolent for whist
-- and a story.... '
He paused again to wait
for an encouraging remark, perhaps, but nobody spoke; only the host, as if
reluctantly performing a duty, murmured --
'You are so subtle,
Marlow.'
'Who? I?' said Marlow
in a low voice. 'Oh no! But he was; and try as I may for the success of this
yarn, I am missing innumerable shades -- they were so fine, so difficult to
render in colourless words. Because he complicated matters by being so simple,
too -- the simplest poor devil! . . . By Jove! he was amazing. There he sat
telling me that just as I saw him before my eyes he wouldn't be afraid to face
anything -- and believing in it too. I tell you it was fabulously innocent and
it was enormous, enormous! I watched him covertly, just as though I had
suspected him of an intention to take a jolly good rise out of me. He was
confident that, on the square, "on the square, mind!" there was
nothing he couldn't meet. Ever since he had been "so high" --
"quite a little chap," he had been preparing himself for all the
difficulties that can beset one on land and water. He confessed proudly to this
kind of foresight. He had been elaborating dangers and defences, expecting the
worst, rehearsing his best. He must have led a most exalted existence. Can you fancy
it? A succession of adventures, so much glory, such a victorious progress! and
the deep sense of his sagacity crowning every day of his inner life. He forgot
himself; his eyes shone; and with every word my heart, searched by the light of
his absurdity, was growing heavier in my breast. I had no mind to laugh, and
lest I should smile I made for myself a stolid face. He gave signs of
irritation.
' "It is always
the unexpected that happens," I said in a propitiatory tone. My obtuseness
provoked him into a contemptuous "Pshaw!" I suppose he meant that the
unexpected couldn't touch him; nothing less than the unconceivable itself could
get over his perfect state of preparation. He had been taken unawares -- and he
whispered to himself a malediction upon the waters and the firmament, upon the
ship, upon the men. Everything had betrayed him! He had been tricked into that
sort of high-minded resignation which prevented him lifting as much as his
little finger, while these others who had a very clear perception of the actual
necessity were tumbling against each other and sweating desperately over that
boat business. Something had gone wrong there at the last moment. It appears
that in their flurry they had contrived in some mysterious way to get the
sliding bolt of the foremost boat-chock jammed tight, and forthwith had gone
out of the remnants of their minds over the deadly nature of that accident. It
must have been a pretty sight, the fierce industry of these beggars toiling on
a motionless ship that floated quietly in the silence of a world asleep,
fighting against time for the freeing of that boat, grovelling on all-fours,
standing up in despair, tugging, pushing, snarling at each other venomously,
ready to kill, ready to weep, and only kept from flying at each other's throats
by the fear of death that stood silent behind them like an inflexible and
cold-eyed taskmaster. Oh yes! It must have been a pretty sight. He saw it all,
he could talk about it with scorn and bitterness; he had a minute knowledge of
it by means of some sixth sense, I conclude, because he swore to me he had
remained apart without a glance at them and at the boat -- without one single
glance. And I believe him. I should think he was too busy watching the
threatening slant of the ship, the suspended menace discovered in the midst of
the most perfect security -- fascinated by the sword hanging by a hair over his
imaginative head.
'Nothing in the world
moved before his eyes, and he could depict to himself without hindrance the
sudden swing upwards of the dark sky-line, the sudden tilt up of the vast plain
of the sea, the swift still rise, the brutal fling, the grasp of the abyss, the
struggle without hope, the starlight closing over his head for ever like the
vault of a tomb -- the revolt of his young life -- the black end. He could! By
Jove! who couldn't? And you must remember he was a finished artist in that
peculiar way, he was a gifted poor devil with the faculty of swift and
forestalling vision. The sights it showed him had turned him into cold stone
from the soles of his feet to the nape of his neck; but there was a hot dance
of thoughts in his head, a dance of lame, blind, mute thoughts -- a whirl of
awful cripples. Didn't I tell you he confessed himself before me as though I
had the power to bind and to loose? He burrowed deep, deep, in the hope of my
absolution, which would have been of no good to him. This was one of those
cases which no solemn deception can palliate, where no man can help; where his
very Maker seems to abandon a sinner to his own devices.
'He stood on the
starboard side of the bridge, as far as he could get from the struggle for the
boat, which went on with the agitation of madness and the stealthiness of a
conspiracy. The two Malays had meantime remained holding to the wheel. Just
picture to yourselves the actors in that, thank God! unique, episode of the
sea, four beside themselves with fierce and secret exertions, and three looking
on in complete immobility, above the awnings covering the profound ignorance of
hundreds of human beings, with their weariness, with their dreams, with their
hopes, arrested, held by an invisible hand on the brink of annihilation. For
that they were so, makes no doubt to me: given the state of the ship, this was
the deadliest possible description of accident that could happen. These beggars
by the boat had every reason to go distracted with funk. Frankly, had I been
there, I would not have given as much as a counterfeit farthing for the ship's
chance to keep above water to the end of each successive second. And still she
floated! These sleeping pilgrims were destined to accomplish their whole
pilgrimage to the bitterness of some other end. It was as if the Omnipotence
whose mercy they confessed had needed their humble testimony on earth for a while
longer, and had looked down to make a sign, "Thou shalt not!" to the
ocean. Their escape would trouble me as a prodigiously inexplicable event, did
I not know how tough old iron can be -- as tough sometimes as the spirit of
some men we meet now and then, worn to a shadow and breasting the weight of
life. Not the least wonder of these twenty minutes, to my mind, is the
behaviour of the two helmsmen. They were amongst the native batch of all sorts
brought over from Aden to give evidence at the inquiry. One of them, labouring
under intense bashfulness, was very young, and with his smooth, yellow, cheery
countenance looked even younger than he was. I remember perfectly Brierly
asking him, through the interpreter, what he thought of it at the time, and the
interpreter, after a short colloquy, turning to the court with an important air
--
' "He says he
thought nothing."
'The other, with
patient blinking eyes, a blue cotton handkerchief, faded with much washing,
bound with a smart twist over a lot of grey wisps, his face shrunk into grim
hollows, his brown skin made darker by a mesh of wrinkles, explained that he
had a knowledge of some evil thing befalling the ship, but there had been no
order; he could not remember an order; why should he leave the helm? To some
further questions he jerked back his spare shoulders, and declared it never
came into his mind then that the white men were about to leave the ship through
fear of death. He did not believe it now. There might have been secret reasons.
He wagged his old chin knowingly. Aha! secret reasons. He was a man of great
experience, and he wanted that white Tuan to know -- he turned towards Brierly,
who didn't raise his head -- that he had acquired a knowledge of many things by
serving white men on the sea for a great number of years -- and, suddenly, with
shaky excitement he poured upon our spellbound attention a lot of
queer-sounding names, names of dead-and-gone skippers, names of forgotten
country ships, names of familiar and distorted sound, as if the hand of dumb
time had been at work on them for ages. They stopped him at last. A silence
fell upon the court, -- a silence that remained unbroken for at least a minute,
and passed gently into a deep murmur. This episode was the sensation of the
second day's proceedings -- affecting all the audience, affecting everybody
except Jim, who was sitting moodily at the end of the first bench, and never
looked up at this extraordinary and damning witness that seemed possessed of
some mysterious theory of defence.
'So these two lascars
stuck to the helm of that ship without steerage-way, where death would have
found them if such had been their destiny. The whites did not give them half a
glance, had probably forgotten their existence. Assuredly Jim did not remember
it. He remembered he could do nothing; he could do nothing, now he was alone.
There was nothing to do but to sink with the ship. No use making a disturbance
about it. Was there? He waited upstanding, without a sound, stiffened in the
idea of some sort of heroic discretion. The first engineer ran cautiously
across the bridge to tug at his sleeve.
' "Come and help!
For God's sake, come and help!"
'He ran back to the
boat on the points of his toes, and returned directly to worry at his sleeve,
begging and cursing at the same time.
' "I believe he
would have kissed my hands," said Jim savagely, "and, next moment, he
starts foaming and whispering in my face, 'If I had the time I would like to
crack your skull for you.' I pushed him away. Suddenly he caught hold of me
round the neck. Damn him! I hit him. I hit out without looking. 'Won't you save
your own life -- you infernal coward?' he sobs. Coward! He called me an
infernal coward! Ha! ha! ha! ha! He called me -- ha! ha! ha! . . ."
'He had thrown himself
back and was shaking with laughter. I had never in my life heard anything so
bitter as that noise. It fell like a blight on all the merriment about donkeys,
pyramids, bazaars, or what not. Along the whole dim length of the gallery the
voices dropped, the pale blotches of faces turned our way with one accord, and
the silence became so profound that the clear tinkle of a tea- spoon falling on
the tesselated floor of the verandah rang out like a tiny and silvery scream.
' "You mustn't
laugh like this, with all these people about," I remonstrated. "It
isn't nice for them, you know."
'He gave no sign of
having heard at first, but after a while, with a stare that, missing me
altogether, seemed to probe the heart of some awful vision, he muttered
carelessly -- "Oh! they'll think I am drunk . "
'And after that you
would have thought from his appearance he would never make a sound again. But
-- no fear! He could no more stop telling now than he could have stopped living
by the mere exertion of his will.'
' "I was saying to
myself, 'Sink -- curse you! Sink!' " These were the words with which he
began again. He wanted it over. He was severely left alone, and he formulated
in his head this address to the ship in a tone of imprecation, while at the
same time he enjoyed the privilege of witnessing scenes -- as far as I can
judge -- of low comedy. They were still at that bolt. The skipper was ordering,
"Get under and try to lift"; and the others naturally shirked. You
understand that to be squeezed flat under the keel of a boat wasn't a desirable
position to be caught in if the ship went down suddenly. "Why don't you --
you the strongest?" whined the little engineer. "Gott-for-dam! I am
too thick," spluttered the skipper in despair. It was funny enough to make
angels weep. They stood idle for a moment, and suddenly the chief engineer
rushed again at Jim.
' "Come and help,
man! Are you mad to throw your only chance away? Come and help, man! Man! Look
there -- look!"
'And at last Jim looked
astern where the other pointed with maniacal insistence. He saw a silent black
squall which had eaten up already one-third of the sky. You know how these
squalls come up there about that time of the year. First you see a darkening of
the horizon -- no more; then a cloud rises opaque like a wall. A straight edge
of vapour lined with sickly whitish gleams flies up from the south-west,
swallowing the stars in whole constellations; its shadow flies over the waters,
and confounds sea and sky into one abyss of obscurity. And all is still. No
thunder, no wind, no sound; not a flicker of lightning. Then in the tenebrous
immensity a livid arch appears; a swell or two like undulations of the very
darkness run past, and, suddenly, wind and rain strike together with a peculiar
impetuosity as if they had burst through something solid. Such a cloud had come
up while they weren't looking. They had just noticed it, and were perfectly
justified in surmising that if in absolute stillness there was some chance for
the ship to keep afloat a few minutes longer, the least disturbance of the sea
would make an end of her instantly. Her first nod to the swell that precedes
the burst of such a squall would be also her last, would become a plunge,
would, so to speak, be prolonged into a long dive, down, down to the bottom.
Hence these new capers of their fright, these new antics in which they
displayed their extreme aversion to die.
' "It was black,
black," pursued Jim with moody steadiness. "It had sneaked upon us
from behind. The infernal thing! I suppose there had been at the back of my
head some hope yet. I don't know. But that was all over anyhow. It maddened me
to see myself caught like this. I was angry, as though I had been trapped. I
was trapped! The night was hot, too, I remember. Not a breath of air."
'He remembered so well
that, gasping in the chair, he seemed to sweat and choke before my eyes. No
doubt it maddened him; it knocked him over afresh -- in a manner of speaking --
but it made him also remember that important purpose which had sent him rushing
on that bridge only to slip clean out of his mind. He had intended to cut the
lifeboats clear of the ship. He whipped out his knife and went to work slashing
as though he had seen nothing, had heard nothing, had known of no one on board.
They thought him hopelessly wrong-headed and crazy, but dared not protest
noisily against this useless loss of time. When he had done he returned to the
very same spot from which he had started. The chief was there, ready with a
clutch at him to whisper close to his head, scathingly, as though he wanted to
bite his ear --
' "You silly fool!
do you think you'll get the ghost of a show when all that lot of brutes is in
the water? Why, they will batter your head for you from these boats."
'He wrung his hands,
ignored, at Jim's elbow. The skipper kept up a nervous shuffle in one place and
mumbled, "Hammer! hammer! Mein Gott! Get a hammer."
'The little engineer
whimpered like a child, but, broken arm and all, he turned out the least craven
of the lot as it seems, and, actually, mustered enough pluck to run an errand
to the engine-room. No trifle, it must be owned in fairness to him. Jim told me
he darted desperate looks like a cornered man, gave one low wail, and dashed off.
He was back instantly clambering, hammer in hand, and without a pause flung
himself at the bolt. The others gave up Jim at once and ran off to assist. He
heard the tap, tap of the hammer, the sound of the released chock falling over.
The boat was clear. Only then he turned to look -- only then. But he kept his
distance -- he kept his distance. He wanted me to know he had kept his
distance; that there was nothing in common between him and these men -- who had
the hammer. Nothing whatever. It is more than probable he thought himself cut
off from them by a space that could not be traversed, by an obstacle that could
not be overcome, by a chasm without bottom. He was as far as he could get from
them -- the whole breadth of the ship.
'His feet were glued to
that remote spot and his eyes to their indistinct group bowed together and
swaying strangely in the common torment of fear. A hand-lamp lashed to a
stanchion above a little table rigged up on the bridge -- the Patna had no
chart-room amidships -- threw a light on their labouring shoulders, on their
arched and bobbing backs. They pushed at the bow of the boat; they pushed out
into the night; they pushed, and would no more look back at him. They had given
him up as if indeed he had been too far, too hopelessly separated from
themselves, to be worth an appealing word, a glance, or a sign. They had no
leisure to look back upon his passive heroism, to feel the sting of his
abstention. The boat was heavy; they pushed at the bow with no breath to spare
for an encouraging word: but the turmoil of terror that had scattered their
self-command like chaff before the wind, converted their desperate exertions
into a bit of fooling, upon my word, fit for knockabout clowns in a farce. They
pushed with their hands, with their heads, they pushed for dear life with all
the weight of their bodies, they pushed with all the might of their souls --
only no sooner had they succeeded in canting the stem clear of the davit than
they would leave off like one man and start a wild scramble into her. As a
natural consequence the boat would swing in abruptly, driving them back,
helpless and jostling against each other. They would stand nonplussed for a
while, exchanging in fierce whispers all the infamous names they could call to
mind, and go at it again. Three times this occurred. He described it to me with
morose thoughtfulness. He hadn't lost a single movement of that comic business.
"I loathed them. I hated them. I had to look at all that," he said
without emphasis, turning upon me a sombrely watchful glance. "Was ever
there any one so shamefully tried?"
'He took his head in
his hands for a moment, like a man driven to distraction by some unspeakable
outrage. These were things he could not explain to the court -- and not even to
me; but I would have been little fitted for the reception of his confidences
had I not been able at times to understand the pauses between the words. In
this assault upon his fortitude there was the jeering intention of a spiteful
and vile vengeance; there was an element of burlesque in his ordeal -- a
degradation of funny grimaces in the approach of death or dishonour.
'He related facts which
I have not forgotten, but at this distance of time I couldn't recall his very
words: I only remember that he managed wonderfully to convey the brooding
rancour of his mind into the bare recital of events. Twice, he told me, he shut
his eyes in the certitude that the end was upon him already, and twice he had
to open them again. Each time he noted the darkening of the great stillness.
The shadow of the silent cloud had fallen upon the ship from the zenith, and
seemed to have extinguished every sound of her teeming life. He could no longer
hear the voices under the awnings. He told me that each time he closed his eyes
a flash of thought showed him that crowd of bodies, laid out for death, as
plain as daylight. When he opened them, it was to see the dim struggle of four
men fighting like mad with a stubborn boat. "They would fall back before
it time after time, stand swearing at each other, and suddenly make another
rush in a bunch.... Enough to make you die laughing," he commented with
downcast eyes; then raising them for a moment to my face with a dismal smile,
"I ought to have a merry life of it, by God! for I shall see that funny
sight a good many times yet before I die." His eyes fell again. "See
and hear.... See and hear," he repeated twice, at long intervals, filled
by vacant staring.
'He roused himself.
' "I made up my
mind to keep my eyes shut," he said, "and I couldn't. I couldn't, and
I don't care who knows it. Let them go through that kind of thing before they
talk. Just let them -- and do better -- that's all. The second time my eyelids
flew open and my mouth too. I had felt the ship move. She just dipped her bows
-- and lifted them gently -- and slow! everlastingly slow; and ever so little.
She hadn't done that much for days. The cloud had raced ahead, and this first
swell seemed to travel upon a sea of lead. There was no life in that stir. It
managed, though, to knock over something in my head. What would you have done?
You are sure of yourself -- aren't you? What would you do if you felt now --
this minute -- the house here move, just move a little under your chair. Leap!
By heavens! you would take one spring from where you sit and land in that clump
of bushes yonder."
'He flung his arm out
at the night beyond the stone balustrade. I held my peace. He looked at me very
steadily, very severe. There could be no mistake: I was being bullied now, and
it behoved me to make no sign lest by a gesture or a word I should be drawn
into a fatal admission about myself which would have had some bearing on the
case. I was not disposed to take any risk of that sort. Don't forget I had him
before me, and really he was too much like one of us not to be dangerous. But
if you want to know I don't mind telling you that I did, with a rapid glance,
estimate the distance to the mass of denser blackness in the middle of the
grass-plot before the verandah. He exaggerated. I would have landed short by
several feet -- and that's the only thing of which I am fairly certain.
'The last moment had
come, as he thought, and he did not move. His feet remained glued to the planks
if his thoughts were knocking about loose in his head. It was at this moment
too that he saw one of the men around the boat step backwards suddenly, clutch
at the air with raised arms, totter and collapse. He didn't exactly fall, he
only slid gently into a sitting posture, all hunched up, and with his shoulders
propped against the side of the engine-room skylight. "That was the
donkey-man. A haggard, white-faced chap with a ragged moustache. Acted third
engineer," he explained.
' "Dead," I
said. We had heard something of that in court.
' "So they
say," he pronounced with sombre indifference. "Of course I never
knew. Weak heart. The man had been complaining of being out of sorts for some
time before. Excitement. Over-exertion. Devil only knows. Ha! ha! ha! It was
easy to see he did not want to die either. Droll, isn't it? May I be shot if he
hadn't been fooled into killing himself! Fooled -- neither more nor less.
Fooled into it, by heavens! just as I . . . Ah! If he had only kept still; if
he had only told them to go to the devil when they came to rush him out of his
bunk because the ship was sinking! If he had only stood by with his hands in
his pockets and called them names!"
'He got up, shook his
fist, glared at me, and sat down.
' "A chance
missed, eh?" I murmured.
' "Why don't you
laugh?" he said. "A joke hatched in hell. Weak heart! . . . I wish
sometimes mine had been."
'This irritated me.
"Do you?" I exclaimed with deep-rooted irony. "Yes! Can't you
understand?" he cried. "I don't know what more you could wish
for," I said angrily. He gave me an utterly uncomprehending glance. This
shaft had also gone wide of the mark, and he was not the man to bother about
stray arrows. Upon my word, he was too unsuspecting; he was not fair game. I
was glad that my missile had been thrown away, -- that he had not even heard the
twang of the bow.
'Of course he could not
know at the time the man was dead. The next minute -- his last on board -- was
crowded with a tumult of events and sensations which beat about him like the
sea upon a rock. I use the simile advisedly, because from his relation I am
forced to believe he had preserved through it all a strange illusion of
passiveness, as though he had not acted but had suffered himself to be handled
by the infernal powers who had selected him for the victim of their practical joke.
The first thing that came to him was the grinding surge of the heavy davits
swinging out at last -- a jar which seemed to enter his body from the deck
through the soles of his feet, and travel up his spine to the crown of his
head. Then, the squall being very near now, another and a heavier swell lifted
the passive hull in a threatening heave that checked his breath, while his
brain and his heart together were pierced as with daggers by panic-stricken
screams. "Let go! For God's sake, let go! Let go! She's going."
Following upon that the boat-falls ripped through the blocks, and a lot of men
began to talk in startled tones under the awnings. "When these beggars did
break out, their yelps were enough to wake the dead," he said. Next, after
the splashing shock of the boat literally dropped in the water, came the hollow
noises of stamping and tumbling in her, mingled with confused shouts:
"Unhook! Unhook! Shove! Unhook! Shove for your life! Here's the squall
down on us.... " He heard, high above his head, the faint muttering of the
wind; he heard below his feet a cry of pain. A lost voice alongside started
cursing a swivel hook. The ship began to buzz fore and aft like a disturbed
hive, and, as quietly as he was telling me of all this -- because just then he
was very quiet in attitude, in face, in voice -- he went on to say without the
slightest warning as it were, "I stumbled over his legs."
'This was the first I
heard of his having moved at all. I could not restrain a grunt of surprise.
Something had started him off at last, but of the exact moment, of the cause
that tore him out of his immobility, he knew no more than the uprooted tree
knows of the wind that laid it low. All this had come to him: the sounds, the
sights, the legs of the dead man -- by Jove! The infernal joke was being
crammed devilishly down his throat, but -- look you -- he was not going to
admit of any sort of swallowing motion in his gullet. It's extraordinary how he
could cast upon you the spirit of his illusion. I listened as if to a tale of
black magic at work upon a corpse.
' "He went over
sideways, very gently, and this is the last thing I remember seeing on
board," he continued. "I did not care what he did. It looked as
though he were picking himself up: I thought he was picking himself up, of
course: I expected him to bolt past me over the rail and drop into the boat
after the others. I could hear them knocking about down there, and a voice as
if crying up a shaft called out 'George!' Then three voices together raised a
yell. They came to me separately: one bleated, another screamed, one howled.
Ough!"
'He shivered a little,
and I beheld him rise slowly as if a steady hand from above had been pulling
him out of the chair by his hair. Up, slowly -- to his full height, and when
his knees had locked stiff the hand let him go, and he swayed a little on his
feet. There was a suggestion of awful stillness in his face, in his movements,
in his very voice when he said "They shouted" -- and involuntarily I
pricked up my ears for the ghost of that shout that would be heard directly
through the false effect of silence. "There were eight hundred people in
that ship," he said, impaling me to the back of my seat with an awful
blank stare. "Eight hundred living people, and they were yelling after the
one dead man to come down and be saved. 'Jump, George! Jump! Oh, jump!' I stood
by with my hand on the davit. I was very quiet. It had come over pitch dark.
You could see neither sky nor sea. I heard the boat alongside go bump, bump,
and not another sound down there for a while, but the ship under me was full of
talking noises. Suddenly the skipper howled 'Mein Gott! The squall! The squall!
Shove off!' With the first hiss of rain, and the first gust of wind, they
screamed, 'Jump, George! We'll catch you! Jump!' The ship began a slow plunge;
the rain swept over her like a broken sea; my cap flew off my head; my breath
was driven back into my throat. I heard as if I had been on the top of a tower
another wild screech, 'Geo-o-o-orge! Oh, jump!' She was going down, down, head
first under me.... "
'He raised his hand
deliberately to his face, and made picking motions with his fingers as though
he had been bothered with cobwebs, and afterwards he looked into the open palm
for quite half a second before he blurted out --
' "I had jumped .
. . " He checked himself, averted his gaze.... "It seems," he
added.
'His clear blue eyes
turned to me with a piteous stare, and looking at him standing before me,
dumfounded and hurt, I was oppressed by a sad sense of resigned wisdom, mingled
with the amused and profound pity of an old man helpless before a childish
disaster.
' "Looks like
it," I muttered.
' "I knew nothing
about it till I looked up," he explained hastily. And that's possible too.
You had to listen to him as you would to a small boy in trouble. He didn't
know. It had happened somehow. It would never happen again. He had landed
partly on somebody and fallen across a thwart. He felt as though all his ribs
on his left side must be broken; then he rolled over, and saw vaguely the ship
he had deserted uprising above him, with the red side-light glowing large in
the rain like a fire on the brow of a hill seen through a mist. "She
seemed higher than a wall; she loomed like a cliff over the boat . . . I wished
I could die," he cried. "There was no going back. It was as if I had
jumped into a well -- into an everlasting deep hole.... " '
'He locked his fingers
together and tore them apart. Nothing could be more true: he had indeed jumped
into an everlasting deep hole. He had tumbled from a height he could never
scale again. By that time the boat had gone driving forward past the bows. It was
too dark just then for them to see each other, and, moreover, they were blinded
and half drowned with rain. He told me it was like being swept by a flood
through a cavern. They turned their backs to the squall; the skipper, it seems,
got an oar over the stern to keep the boat before it, and for two or three
minutes the end of the world had come through a deluge in a pitchy blackness.
The sea hissed "like twenty thousand kettles." That's his simile, not
mine. I fancy there was not much wind after the first gust; and he himself had
admitted at the inquiry that the sea never got up that night to any extent. He
crouched down in the bows and stole a furtive glance back. He saw just one
yellow gleam of the mast-head light high up and blurred like a last star ready
to dissolve. "It terrified me to see it still there," he said. That's
what he said. What terrified him was the thought that the drowning was not over
yet. No doubt he wanted to be done with that abomination as quickly as
possible. Nobody in the boat made a sound. In the dark she seemed to fly, but
of course she could not have had much way. Then the shower swept ahead, and the
great, distracting, hissing noise followed the rain into distance and died out.
There was nothing to be heard then but the slight wash about the boat's sides.
Somebody's teeth were chattering violently. A hand touched his back. A faint
voice said, "You there?" Another cried out shakily, "She's
gone!" and they all stood up together to look astern. They saw no lights.
All was black. A thin cold drizzle was driving into their faces. The boat
lurched slightly. The teeth chattered faster, stopped, and began again twice
before the man could master his shiver sufficiently to say, "Ju-ju-st in
ti-ti-me.... Brrrr." He recognised the voice of the chief engineer saying
surlily, "I saw her go down. I happened to turn my head." The wind
had dropped almost completely.
'They watched in the
dark with their heads half turned to windward as if expecting to hear cries. At
first he was thankful the night had covered up the scene before his eyes, and
then to know of it and yet to have seen and heard nothing appeared somehow the
culminating point of an awful misfortune. "Strange, isn't it?" he
murmured, interrupting himself in his disjointed narrative.
'It did not seem so
strange to me. He must have had an unconscious conviction that the reality
could not be half as bad, not half as anguishing, appalling, and vengeful as
the created terror of his imagination. I believe that, in this first moment,
his heart was wrung with all the suffering, that his soul knew the accumulated
savour of all the fear, all the horror, all the despair of eight hundred human
beings pounced upon in the night by a sudden and violent death, else why should
he have said, "It seemed to me that I must jump out of that accursed boat
and swim back to see -- half a mile -- more -- any distance -- to the very spot
. . . "? Why this impulse? Do you see the significance? Why back to the
very spot? Why not drown alongside -- if he meant drowning? Why back to the
very spot, to see -- as if his imagination had to be soothed by the assurance
that all was over before death could bring relief? I defy any one of you to
offer another explanation. It was one of those bizarre and exciting glimpses through
the fog. It was an extraordinary disclosure. He let it out as the most natural
thing one could say. He fought down that impulse and then he became conscious
of the silence. He mentioned this to me. A silence of the sea, of the sky,
merged into one indefinite immensity still as death around these saved,
palpitating lives. "You might have heard a pin drop in the boat," he
said with a queer contraction of his lips, like a man trying to master his
sensibilities while relating some extremely moving fact. A silence! God alone,
who had willed him as he was, knows what he made of it in his heart. "I
didn't think any spot on earth could be so still," he said. "You
couldn't distinguish the sea from the sky; there was nothing to see and nothing
to hear. Not a glimmer, not a shape, not a sound. You could have believed that
every bit of dry land had gone to the bottom; that every man on earth but I and
these beggars in the boat had got drowned." He leaned over the table with
his knuckles propped amongst coffee-cups, liqueur- glasses, cigar-ends. "I
seemed to believe it. Everything was gone and -- all was over . . . " he
fetched a deep sigh . . . "with me." '
Marlow sat up abruptly
and flung away his cheroot with force. It made a darting red trail like a toy
rocket fired through the drapery of creepers. Nobody stirred.
'Hey, what do you think
of it?' he cried with sudden animation. 'Wasn't he true to himself, wasn't he?
His saved life was over for want of ground under his feet, for want of sights
for his eyes, for want of voices in his ears. Annihilation -- hey! And all the
time it was only a clouded sky, a sea that did not break, the air that did not
stir. Only a night; only a silence.
'It lasted for a while,
and then they were suddenly and unanimously moved to make a noise over their
escape. "I knew from the first she would go." "Not a minute too
soon." "A narrow squeak, b'gosh!" He said nothing, but the
breeze that had dropped came back, a gentle draught freshened steadily, and the
sea joined its murmuring voice to this talkative reaction succeeding the dumb
moments of awe. She was gone! She was gone! Not a doubt of it. Nobody could
have helped. They repeated the same words over and over again as though they
couldn't stop themselves. Never doubted she would go. The lights were gone. No
mistake. The lights were gone. Couldn't expect anything else. She had to go....
He noticed that they talked as though they had left behind them nothing but an
empty ship. They concluded she would not have been long when she once started.
It seemed to cause them some sort of satisfaction. They assured each other that
she couldn't have been long about it -- "Just shot down like a
flat-iron." The chief engineer declared that the mast-head light at the
moment of sinking seemed to drop "like a lighted match you throw
down." At this the second laughed hysterically. "I am g-g-glad, I am
gla-a-a-d." His teeth went on "like an electric rattle," said
Jim, "and all at once he began to cry. He wept and blubbered like a child,
catching his breath and sobbing 'Oh dear! oh dear! oh dear!' He would be quiet
for a while and start suddenly, 'Oh, my poor arm! oh, my poor a-a-a-arm!' I
felt I could knock him down. Some of them sat in the stern-sheets. I could just
make out their shapes. Voices came to me, mumble, mumble, grunt, grunt. All
this seemed very hard to bear. I was cold too. And I could do nothing. I
thought that if I moved I would have to go over the side and . . . "
'His hand groped
stealthily, came in contact with a liqueur-glass, and was withdrawn suddenly as
if it had touched a red-hot coal. I pushed the bottle slightly. "Won't you
have some more?" I asked. He looked at me angrily. "Don't you think I
can tell you what there is to tell without screwing myself up?" he asked.
The squad of globe-trotters had gone to bed. We were alone but for a vague
white form erect in the shadow, that, being looked at, cringed forward,
hesitated, backed away silently. It was getting late, but I did not hurry my
guest.
'In the midst of his
forlorn state he heard his companions begin to abuse some one. "What kept
you from jumping, you lunatic?" said a scolding voice. The chief engineer
left the stern-sheets, and could be heard clambering forward as if with hostile
intentions against "the greatest idiot that ever was." The skipper
shouted with rasping effort offensive epithets from where he sat at the oar. He
lifted his head at that uproar, and heard the name "George," while a
hand in the dark struck him on the breast. "What have you got to say for
yourself, you fool?" queried somebody, with a sort of virtuous fury.
"They were after me," he said. "They were abusing me -- abusing
me . . . by the name of George. "
'He paused to stare,
tried to smile, turned his eyes away and went on. "That little second puts
his head right under my nose, 'Why, it's that blasted mate!' 'What!' howls the
skipper from the other end of the boat. 'No!' shrieks the chief. And he too
stooped to look at my face."
'The wind had left the
boat suddenly. The rain began to fall again, and the soft, uninterrupted, a
little mysterious sound with which the sea receives a shower arose on all sides
in the night. "They were too taken aback to say anything more at
first," he narrated steadily, "and what could I have to say to them?"
He faltered for a moment, and made an effort to go on. "They called me
horrible names." His voice, sinking to a whisper, now and then would leap
up suddenly, hardened by the passion of scorn, as though he had been talking of
secret abominations. "Never mind what they called me," he said
grimly. "I could hear hate in their voices. A good thing too. They could
not forgive me for being in that boat. They hated it. It made them mad....
" He laughed short.... "But it kept me from -- Look! I was sitting
with my arms crossed, on the gunwale! . . . " He perched himself smartly
on the edge of the table and crossed his arms.... "Like this -- see? One
little tilt backwards and I would have been gone -- after the others. One
little tilt -- the least bit -- the least bit." He frowned, and tapping
his forehead with the tip of his middle finger, "It was there all the
time," he said impressively. "All the time -- that notion. And the
rain -- cold, thick, cold as melted snow -- colder -- on my thin cotton clothes
-- I'll never be so cold again in my life, I know. And the sky was black too --
all black. Not a star, not a light anywhere. Nothing outside that confounded
boat and those two yapping before me like a couple of mean mongrels at a tree'd
thief. Yap! yap! 'What you doing here? You're a fine sort! Too much of a
bloomin' gentleman to put your hand to it. Come out of your trance, did you? To
sneak in? Did you?' Yap! yap! 'You ain't fit to live!' Yap! yap! Two of them
together trying to out-bark each other. The other would bay from the stern through
the rain -- couldn't see him -- couldn't make it out -- some of his filthy
jargon. Yap! yap! Bow-ow-ow-ow-ow! Yap! yap! It was sweet to hear them; it kept
me alive, I tell you. It saved my life. At it they went, as if trying to drive
me overboard with the noise! . . . 'I wonder you had pluck enough to jump. You
ain't wanted here. If I had known who it was, I would have tipped you over --
you skunk! What have you done with the other? Where did you get the pluck to
jump -- you coward? What's to prevent us three from firing you overboard?' . .
. They were out of breath; the shower passed away upon the sea. Then nothing.
There was nothing round the boat, not even a sound. Wanted to see me overboard,
did they? Upon my soul! I think they would have had their wish if they had only
kept quiet. Fire me overboard! Would they? 'Try,' I said. 'I would for
twopence.' 'Too good for you,' they screeched together. It was so dark that it
was only when one or the other of them moved that I was quite sure of seeing
him. By heavens! I only wish they had tried."
'I couldn't help
exclaiming, "What an extraordinary affair!"
' "Not bad --
eh?" he said, as if in some sort astounded. "They pretended to think
I had done away with that donkey-man for some reason or other. Why should I?
And how the devil was I to know? Didn't I get somehow into that boat? into that
boat -- I . . . " The muscles round his lips contracted into an
unconscious grimace that tore through the mask of his usual expression --
something violent, short-lived and illuminating like a twist of lightning that
admits the eye for an instant into the secret convolutions of a cloud. "I
did. I was plainly there with them -- wasn't I? Isn't it awful a man should be
driven to do a thing like that -- and be responsible? What did I know about
their George they were howling after? I remembered I had seen him curled up on
the deck. 'Murdering coward!' the chief kept on calling me. He didn't seem able
to remember any other two words. I didn't care, only his noise began to worry
me. 'Shut up,' I said. At that he collected himself for a confounded screech.
'You killed him! You killed him!' 'No,' I shouted, 'but I will kill you
directly.' I jumped up, and he fell backwards over a thwart with an awful loud
thump. I don't know why. Too dark. Tried to step back I suppose. I stood still
facing aft, and the wretched little second began to whine, 'You ain't going to
hit a chap with a broken arm -- and you call yourself a gentleman, too.' I
heard a heavy tramp -- one -- two -- and wheezy grunting. The other beast was
coming at me, clattering his oar over the stern. I saw him moving, big, big --
as you see a man in a mist, in a dream. 'Come on,' I cried. I would have
tumbled him over like a bale of shakings. He stopped, muttered to himself, and
went back. Perhaps he had heard the wind. I didn't. It was the last heavy gust
we had. He went back to his oar. I was sorry. I would have tried to -- to . . .
"
'He opened and closed
his curved fingers, and his hands had an eager and cruel flutter. "Steady,
steady," I murmured.
' "Eh? What? I am
not excited," he remonstrated, awfully hurt, and with a convulsive jerk of
his elbow knocked over the cognac bottle. I started forward, scraping my chair.
He bounced off the table as if a mine had been exploded behind his back, and
half turned before he alighted, crouching on his feet to show me a startled
pair of eyes and a face white about the nostrils. A look of intense annoyance
succeeded. "Awfully sorry. How clumsy of me!" he mumbled, very vexed,
while the pungent odour of spilt alcohol enveloped us suddenly with an
atmosphere of a low drinking-bout in the cool, pure darkness of the night. The
lights had been put out in the dining-hall; our candle glimmered solitary in
the long gallery, and the columns had turned black from pediment to capital. On
the vivid stars the high corner of the Harbour Office stood out distinct across
the Esplanade, as though the sombre pile had glided nearer to see and hear.
'He assumed an air of
indifference.
' "I dare say I am
less calm now than I was then. I was ready for anything. These were trifles....
"
' "You had a
lively time of it in that boat," I remarked
' "I was
ready," he repeated. "After the ship's lights had gone, anything
might have happened in that boat -- anything in the world -- and the world no
wiser. I felt this, and I was pleased. It was just dark enough too. We were
like men walled up quick in a roomy grave. No concern with anything on earth.
Nobody to pass an opinion. Nothing mattered." For the third time during
this conversation he laughed harshly, but there was no one about to suspect him
of being only drunk. "No fear, no law, no sounds, no eyes -- not even our
own, till -- till sunrise at least."
'I was struck by the
suggestive truth of his words. There is something peculiar in a small boat upon
the wide sea. Over the lives borne from under the shadow of death there seems
to fall the shadow of madness. When your ship fails you, your whole world seems
to fail you; the world that made you, restrained you, took care of you. It is
as if the souls of men floating on an abyss and in touch with immensity had
been set free for any excess of heroism, absurdity, or abomination. Of course,
as with belief, thought, love, hate, conviction, or even the visual aspect of
material things, there are as many shipwrecks as there are men, and in this one
there was something abject which made the isolation more complete -- there was
a villainy of circumstances that cut these men off more completely from the
rest of mankind, whose ideal of conduct had never undergone the trial of a
fiendish and appalling joke. They were exasperated with him for being a
half-hearted shirker: he focussed on them his hatred of the whole thing; he
would have liked to take a signal revenge for the abhorrent opportunity they
had put in his way. Trust a boat on the high seas to bring out the Irrational
that lurks at the bottom of every thought, sentiment, sensation, emotion. It
was part of the burlesque meanness pervading that particular disaster at sea
that they did not come to blows. It was all threats, all a terribly effective
feint, a sham from beginning to end, planned by the tremendous disdain of the
Dark Powers whose real terrors, always on the verge of triumph, are perpetually
foiled by the steadfastness of men. I asked, after waiting for a while,
"Well, what happened?" A futile question. I knew too much already to
hope for the grace of a single uplifting touch, for the favour of hinted
madness, of shadowed horror. "Nothing," he said. "I meant
business, but they meant noise only. Nothing happened."
'And the rising sun
found him just as he had jumped up first in the bows of the boat. What a
persistence of readiness! He had been holding the tiller in his hand, too, all
the night. They had dropped the rudder overboard while attempting to ship it,
and I suppose the tiller got kicked forward somehow while they were rushing up
and down that boat trying to do all sorts of things at once so as to get clear
of the side. It was a long heavy piece of hard wood, and apparently he had been
clutching it for six hours or so. If you don't call that being ready! Can you
imagine him, silent and on his feet half the night, his face to the gusts of
rain, staring at sombre forms watchful of vague movements, straining his ears
to catch rare low murmurs in the stern-sheets! Firmness of courage or effort of
fear? What do you think? And the endurance is undeniable too. Six hours more or
less on the defensive; six hours of alert immobility while the boat drove slowly
or floated arrested, according to the caprice of the wind; while the sea,
calmed, slept at last; while the clouds passed above his head; while the sky
from an immensity lustreless and black, diminished to a sombre and lustrous
vault, scintillated with a greater brilliance, faded to the east, paled at the
zenith; while the dark shapes blotting the low stars astern got outlines,
relief became shoulders, heads, faces, features, -- confronted him with dreary
stares, had dishevelled hair, torn clothes, blinked red eyelids at the white
dawn. "They looked as though they had been knocking about drunk in gutters
for a week," he described graphically; and then he muttered something
about the sunrise being of a kind that foretells a calm day. You know that
sailor habit of referring to the weather in every connection. And on my side
his few mumbled words were enough to make me see the lower limb of the sun
clearing the line of the horizon, the tremble of a vast ripple running over all
the visible expanse of the sea, as if the waters had shuddered, giving birth to
the globe of light, while the last puff of the breeze would stir the air in a
sigh of relief.
' "They sat in the
stern shoulder to shoulder, with the skipper in the middle, like three dirty
owls, and stared at me," I heard him say with an intention of hate that
distilled a corrosive virtue into the commonplace words like a drop of powerful
poison falling into a glass of water; but my thoughts dwelt upon that sunrise.
I could imagine under the pellucid emptiness of the sky these four men
imprisoned in the solitude of the sea, the lonely sun, regardless of the speck
of life, ascending the clear curve of the heaven as if to gaze ardently from a
greater height at his own splendour reflected in the still ocean. "They
called out to me from aft," said Jim, "as though we had been chums
together. I heard them. They were begging me to be sensible and drop that
'blooming piece of wood.' Why would I carry on so? They hadn't done me any harm
-- had they? There had been no harm.... No harm!"
'His face crimsoned as
though he could not get rid of the air in his lungs.
' "No harm!"
he burst out. "I leave it to you. You can understand. Can't you? You see
it -- don't you? No harm! Good God! What more could they have done? Oh yes, I
know very well -- I jumped. Certainly. I jumped! I told you I jumped; but I
tell you they were too much for any man. It was their doing as plainly as if
they had reached up with a boat-hook and pulled me over. Can't you see it? You
must see it. Come. Speak -- straight out."
His uneasy eyes
fastened upon mine, questioned, begged, challenged, entreated. For the life of
me I couldn't help murmuring, "You've been tried." "More than is
fair," he caught up swiftly. "I wasn't given half a chance -- with a gang
like that. And now they were friendly -- oh, so damnably friendly! Chums,
shipmates. All in the same boat. Make the best of it. They hadn't meant
anything. They didn't care a hang for George. George had gone back to his berth
for something at the last moment and got caught. The man was a manifest fool.
Very sad, of course.... Their eyes looked at me; their lips moved; they wagged
their heads at the other end of the boat -- three of them; they beckoned -- to
me. Why not? Hadn't I jumped? I said nothing. There are no words for the sort
of things I wanted to say. If I had opened my lips just then I would have
simply howled like an animal. I was asking myself when I would wake up. They
urged me aloud to come aft and hear quietly what the skipper had to say. We
were sure to be picked up before the evening -- right in the track of all the
Canal traffic; there was smoke to the north-west now.
' "It gave me an
awful shock to see this faint, faint blur, this low trail of brown mist through
which you could see the boundary of sea and sky. I called out to them that I
could hear very well where I was. The skipper started swearing, as hoarse as a
crow. He wasn't going to talk at the top of his voice for my accommodation.
'Are you afraid they will hear you on shore?' I asked. He glared as if he would
have liked to claw me to pieces. The chief engineer advised him to humour me.
He said I wasn't right in my head yet. The other rose astern, like a thick
pillar of flesh -- and talked -- talked.... "
'Jim remained thoughtful.
"Well?" I said. "What did I care what story they agreed to make
up?" he cried recklessly. "They could tell what they jolly well
liked. It was their business. I knew the story. Nothing they could make people
believe could alter it for me. I let him talk, argue -- talk, argue. He went on
and on and on. Suddenly I felt my legs give way under me. I was sick, tired --
tired to death. I let fall the tiller, turned my back on them, and sat down on
the foremost thwart. I had enough. They called to me to know if I understood --
wasn't it true, every word of it? It was true, by God! after their fashion. I
did not turn my head. I heard them palavering together. 'The silly ass won't
say anything.' 'Oh, he understands well enough.' 'Let him be; he will be all
right.' 'What can he do?' What could I do? Weren't we all in the same boat? I
tried to be deaf. The smoke had disappeared to the northward. It was a dead
calm. They had a drink from the water-breaker, and I drank too. Afterwards they
made a great business of spreading the boat-sail over the gunwales. Would I
keep a look-out? They crept under, out of my sight, thank God! I felt weary,
weary, done up, as if I hadn't had one hour's sleep since the day I was born. I
couldn't see the water for the glitter of the sunshine. From time to time one
of them would creep out, stand up to take a look all round, and get under
again. I could hear spells of snoring below the sail. Some of them could sleep.
One of them at least. I couldn't! All was light, light, and the boat seemed to
be falling through it. Now and then I would feel quite surprised to find myself
sitting on a thwart.... "
'He began to walk with
measured steps to and fro before my chair, one hand in his trousers-pocket, his
head bent thoughtfully, and his right arm at long intervals raised for a
gesture that seemed to put out of his way an invisible intruder.
' "I suppose you
think I was going mad," he began in a changed tone. "And well you
may, if you remember I had lost my cap. The sun crept all the way from east to
west over my bare head, but that day I could not come to any harm, I suppose.
The sun could not make me mad.... " His right arm put aside the idea of
madness.... "Neither could it kill me.... " Again his arm repulsed a
shadow.... "That rested with me."
' "Did it?" I
said, inexpressibly amazed at this new turn, and I looked at him with the same
sort of feeling I might be fairly conceived to experience had he, after
spinning round on his heel, presented an altogether new face.
' "I didn't get
brain fever, I did not drop dead either," he went on. "I didn't
bother myself at all about the sun over my head. I was thinking as coolly as
any man that ever sat thinking in the shade. That greasy beast of a skipper
poked his big cropped head from under the canvas and screwed his fishy eyes up
at me. 'Donnerwetter! you will die,' he growled, and drew in like a turtle. I had
seen him. I had heard him. He didn't interrupt me. I was thinking just then
that I wouldn't."
'He tried to sound my
thought with an attentive glance dropped on me in passing. "Do you mean to
say you had been deliberating with yourself whether you would die?" I
asked in as impenetrable a tone as I could command. He nodded without stopping.
"Yes, it had come to that as I sat there alone," he said. He passed
on a few steps to the imaginary end of his beat, and when he flung round to
come back both his hands were thrust deep into his pockets. He stopped short in
front of my chair and looked down. "Don't you believe it?" he
inquired with tense curiosity. I was moved to make a solemn declaration of my
readiness to believe implicitly anything he thought fit to tell me.'
'He heard me out with
his head on one side, and I had another glimpse through a rent in the mist in
which he moved and had his being. The dim candle spluttered within the ball of
glass, and that was all I had to see him by; at his back was the dark night
with the clear stars, whose distant glitter disposed in retreating planes lured
the eye into the depths of a greater darkness; and yet a mysterious light
seemed to show me his boyish head, as if in that moment the youth within him had,
for a second, glowed and expired. "You are an awful good sort to listen
like this," he said. "It does me good. You don't know what it is to
me. You don't" . . . words seemed to fail him. It was a distinct glimpse.
He was a youngster of the sort you like to see about you; of the sort you like
to imagine yourself to have been; of the sort whose appearance claims the
fellowship of these illusions you had thought gone out, extinct, cold, and
which, as if rekindled at the approach of another flame, give a flutter deep,
deep down somewhere, give a flutter of light . . . of heat! . . . Yes; I had a
glimpse of him then . . . and it was not the last of that kind.... "You
don't know what it is for a fellow in my position to be believed -- make a
clean breast of it to an elder man. It is so difficult -- so awfully unfair --
so hard to understand."
'The mists were closing
again. I don't know how old I appeared to him -- and how much wise. Not half as
old as I felt just then; not half as uselessly wise as I knew myself to be.
Surely in no other craft as in that of the sea do the hearts of those already
launched to sink or swim go out so much to the youth on the brink, looking with
shining eyes upon that glitter of the vast surface which is only a reflection
of his own glances full of fire. There is such magnificent vagueness in the
expectations that had driven each of us to sea, such a glorious indefiniteness,
such a beautiful greed of adventures that are their own and only reward. What
we get -- well, we won't talk of that; but can one of us restrain a smile? In
no other kind of life is the illusion more wide of reality -- in no other is
the beginning all illusion -- the disenchantment more swift -- the subjugation
more complete. Hadn't we all commenced with the same desire, ended with the
same knowledge, carried the memory of the same cherished glamour through the
sordid days of imprecation? What wonder that when some heavy prod gets home the
bond is found to be close; that besides the fellowship of the craft there is
felt the strength of a wider feeling -- the feeling that binds a man to a
child. He was there before me, believing that age and wisdom can find a remedy
against the pain of truth, giving me a glimpse of himself as a young fellow in
a scrape that is the very devil of a scrape, the sort of scrape greybeards wag
at solemnly while they hide a smile. And he had been deliberating upon death --
confound him! He had found that to meditate about because he thought he had
saved his life, while all its glamour had gone with the ship in the night. What
more natural! It was tragic enough and funny enough in all conscience to call
aloud for compassion, and in what was I better than the rest of us to refuse
him my pity? And even as I looked at him the mists rolled into the rent, and
his voice spoke --
' "I was so lost,
you know. It was the sort of thing one does not expect to happen to one. It was
not like a fight, for instance."
' "It was
not," I admitted. He appeared changed, as if he had suddenly matured.
' "One couldn't be
sure," he muttered.
' "Ah! You were
not sure," I said, and was placated by the sound of a faint sigh that
passed between us like the flight of a bird in the night.
' "Well, I
wasn't," he said courageously. "It was something like that wretched
story they made up. It was not a lie -- but it wasn't truth all the same. It
was something.... One knows a downright lie. There was not the thickness of a
sheet of paper between the right and the wrong of this affair."
' "How much more
did you want?" I asked; but I think I spoke so low that he did not catch
what I said. He had advanced his argument as though life had been a network of
paths separated by chasms. His voice sounded reasonable.
' "Suppose I had
not -- I mean to say, suppose I had stuck to the ship? Well. How much longer?
Say a minute -- half a minute. Come. In thirty seconds, as it seemed certain
then, I would have been overboard; and do you think I would not have laid hold
of the first thing that came in my way -- oar, life-buoy, grating -- anything?
Wouldn't you?"
' "And be
saved," I interjected.
' "I would have
meant to be," he retorted. "And that's more than I meant when I"
. . . he shivered as if about to swallow some nauseous drug . . .
"jumped," he pronounced with a convulsive effort, whose stress, as if
propagated by the waves of the air, made my body stir a little in the chair. He
fixed me with lowering eyes. "Don't you believe me?" he cried.
"I swear! . . . Confound it! You got me here to talk, and . . . You must!
. . . You said you would believe." "Of course I do," I
protested, in a matter-of-fact tone which produced a calming effect.
"Forgive me," he said. "Of course I wouldn't have talked to you
about all this if you had not been a gentleman. I ought to have known . . . I
am -- I am -- a gentleman too . . ." "Yes, yes," I said hastily.
He was looking me squarely in the face, and withdrew his gaze slowly. "Now
you understand why I didn't after all . . . didn't go out in that way. I wasn't
going to be frightened at what I had done. And, anyhow, if I had stuck to the
ship I would have done my best to be saved. Men have been known to float for
hours -- in the open sea -- and be picked up not much the worse for it. I might
have lasted it out better than many others. There's nothing the matter with my
heart." He withdrew his right fist from his pocket, and the blow he struck
on his chest resounded like a muffled detonation in the night.
' "No," I
said. He meditated, with his legs slightly apart and his chin sunk. "A
hair's-breadth," he muttered. "Not the breadth of a hair between this
and that. And at the time . . ."
' "It is difficult
to see a hair at midnight," I put in, a little viciously I fear. Don't you
see what I mean by the solidarity of the craft? I was aggrieved against him, as
though he had cheated me -- me! -- of a splendid opportunity to keep up the
illusion of my beginnings, as though he had robbed our common life of the last
spark of its glamour. "And so you cleared out -- at once."
' "Jumped,"
he corrected me incisively. "Jumped -- mind!" he repeated, and I
wondered at the evident but obscure intention. "Well, yes! Perhaps I could
not see then. But I had plenty of time and any amount of light in that boat.
And I could think too. Nobody would know, of course, but this did not make it
any easier for me. You've got to believe that too. I did not want all this
talk.... No . . . Yes . . . I won't lie . . . I wanted it: it is the very thing
I wanted -- there. Do you think you or anybody could have made me if I . . . I
am -- I am not afraid to tell. And I wasn't afraid to think either. I looked it
in the face. I wasn't going to run away. At first -- at night, if it hadn't
been for those fellows I might have . . . No! by heavens! I was not going to
give them that satisfaction. They had done enough. They made up a story, and
believed it for all I know. But I knew the truth, and I would live it down --
alone, with myself. I wasn't going to give in to such a beastly unfair thing.
What did it prove after all? I was confoundedly cut up. Sick of life -- to tell
you the truth; but what would have been the good to shirk it -- in -- in --
that way? That was not the way. I believe -- I believe it would have -- it
would have ended -- nothing."
'He had been walking up
and down, but with the last word he turned short at me.
' "What do you
believe?" he asked with violence. A pause ensued, and suddenly I felt
myself overcome by a profound and hopeless fatigue, as though his voice had
startled me out of a dream of wandering through empty spaces whose immensity
had harassed my soul and exhausted my body.
' ". . . Would
have ended nothing," he muttered over me obstinately, after a little
while. "No! the proper thing was to face it out -- alone -- for myself --
wait for another chance -- find out . . ." '
'All around everything
was still as far as the ear could reach. The mist of his feelings shifted
between us, as if disturbed by his struggles, and in the rifts of the
immaterial veil he would appear to my staring eyes distinct of form and
pregnant with vague appeal like a symbolic figure in a picture. The chill air
of the night seemed to lie on my limbs as heavy as a slab of marble.
' "I see," I
murmured, more to prove to myself that I could break my state of numbness than
for any other reason.
' "The Avondale
picked us up just before sunset," he remarked moodily. "Steamed right
straight for us. We had only to sit and wait."
'After a long interval,
he said, "They told their story." And again there was that oppressive
silence. "Then only I knew what it was I had made up my mind to," he
added.
' "You said
nothing," I whispered.
' "What could I
say?" he asked, in the same low tone.... "Shock slight. Stopped the
ship. Ascertained the damage. Took measures to get the boats out without
creating a panic. As the first boat was lowered ship went down in a squall.
Sank like lead.... What could be more clear" . . . he hung his head . . .
"and more awful?" His lips quivered while he looked straight into my
eyes. "I had jumped -- hadn't I?" he asked, dismayed. "That's
what I had to live down. The story didn't matter." . . . He clasped his
hands for an instant, glanced right and left into the gloom: "It was like
cheating the dead," he stammered.
' "And there were
no dead," I said.
'He went away from me
at this . That is the only way I can describe it. In a moment I saw his back
close to the balustrade. He stood there for some time, as if admiring the
purity and the peace of the night. Some flowering-shrub in the garden below
spread its powerful scent through the damp air. He returned to me with hasty
steps.
' "And that did
not matter," he said, as stubbornly as you please.
' "Perhaps
not," I admitted. I began to have a notion he was too much for me. After
all, what did I know?
' "Dead or not
dead, I could not get clear," he said. "I had to live; hadn't
I?"
' "Well, yes -- if
you take it in that way," I mumbled.
' "I was glad, of
course," he threw out carelessly, with his mind fixed on something else.
"The exposure," he pronounced slowly, and lifted his head. "Do
you know what was my first thought when I heard? I was relieved. I was relieved
to learn that those shouts- did I tell you I had heard shouts? No? Well, I did.
Shouts for help . . . blown along with the drizzle. Imagination, I suppose. And
yet I can hardly ... How stupid.... The others did not. I asked them
afterwards. They all said No. No? And I was hearing them even then! I might
have known -- but I didn't think -- I only listened. Very faint screams -- day
after day. Then that little half- caste chap here came up and spoke to me. 'The
Patna . . . French gunboat. . . towed successfully to Aden. . . Investigation.
. . Marine Office . . . Sailors' Home . . . arrangements made for your board
and lodging!' I walked along with him, and I enjoyed the silence. So there had
been no shouting. Imagination. I had to believe him. I could hear nothing any
more. I wonder how long I could have stood it. It was getting worse, too . . .
I mean -- louder." 'He fell into thought.
' "And I had heard
nothing! Well -- so be it. But the lights! The lights did go! We did not see
them. They were not there. If they had been, I would have swam back -- I would
have gone back and shouted alongside -- I would have begged them to take me on
board.... I would have had my chance.... You doubt me? ... How do you know how
I felt?... What right have you to doubt? . . . I very nearly did it as it was
-- do you understand?" His voice fell. "There was not a glimmer --
not a glimmer," he protested mournfully. "Don't you understand that
if there had been, you would not have seen me here? You see me -- and you
doubt."
'I shook my head
negatively. This question of the lights being lost sight of when the boat could
not have been more than a quarter of a mile from the ship was a matter for much
discussion. Jim stuck to it that there was nothing to be seen after the first
shower had cleared away; and the others had affirmed the same thing to the
officers of the Avondale. Of course people shook their heads and smiled. One
old skipper who sat near me in court tickled my ear with his white beard to
murmur, "Of course they would lie." As a matter of fact nobody lied;
not even the chief engineer with his story of the mast-head light dropping like
a match you throw down. Not consciously, at least. A man with his liver in such
a state might very well have seen a floating spark in the corner of his eye
when stealing a hurried glance over his shoulder. They had seen no light of any
sort though they were well within range, and they could only explain this in
one way: the ship had gone down. It was obvious and comforting. The foreseen
fact coming so swiftly had justified their haste. No wonder they did not cast
about for any other explanation. Yet the true one was very simple, and as soon
as Brierly suggested it the court ceased to bother about the question. If you
remember, the ship had been stopped, and was lying with her head on the course
steered through the night, with her stern canted high and her bows brought low
down in the water through the filling of the fore-compartment. Being thus out
of trim, when the squall struck her a little on the quarter, she swung head to
wind as sharply as though she had been at anchor. By this change in her
position all her lights were in a very few moments shut off from the boat to
leeward. It may very well be that, had they been seen, they would have had the
effect of a mute appeal -- that their glimmer lost in the darkness of the cloud
would have had the mysterious power of the human glance that can awaken the
feelings of remorse and pity. It would have said, "I am here -- still
here" . . . and what more can the eye of the most forsaken of human beings
say? But she turned her back on them as if in disdain of their fate: she had
swung round, burdened, to glare stubbornly at the new danger of the open sea
which she so strangely survived to end her days in a breaking-up yard, as if it
had been her recorded fate to die obscurely under the blows of many hammers.
What were the various ends their destiny provided for the pilgrims I am unable
to say; but the immediate future brought, at about nine o'clock next morning, a
French gun- boat homeward bound from Reunion. The report of her commander was
public property. He had swept a little out of his course to ascertain what was
the matter with that steamer floating dangerously by the head upon a still and
hazy sea. There was an ensign, union down, flying at her main gaff (the serang had
the sense to make a signal of distress at daylight); but the cooks were
preparing the food in the cooking-boxes forward as usual. The decks were packed
as close as a sheep-pen: there were people perched all along the rails, jammed
on the bridge in a solid mass; hundreds of eyes stared, and not a sound was
heard when the gunboat ranged abreast, as if all that multitude of lips had
been sealed by a spell.
'The Frenchman hailed,
could get no intelligible reply, and after ascertaining through his binoculars
that the crowd on deck did not look plague-stricken, decided to send a boat.
Two officers came on board, listened to the serang, tried to talk with the
Arab, couldn't make head or tail of it: but of course the nature of the
emergency was obvious enough. They were also very much struck by discovering a
white man, dead and curled up peacefully on the bridge. "Fort intrigués
par ce cadavre," as I was informed a long time after by an elderly French
lieutenant whom I came across one afternoon in Sydney, by the merest chance, in
a sort of cafe, and who remembered the affair perfectly. Indeed this affair, I
may notice in passing, had an extraordinary power of defying the shortness of
memories and the length of time: it seemed to live, with a sort of uncanny vitality,
in the minds of men, on the tips of their tongues. I've had the questionable
pleasure of meeting it often, years afterwards, thousands of miles away,
emerging from the remotest possible talk, coming to the surface of the most
distant allusions. Has it not turned up to-night between us? And I am the only
seaman here. I am the only one to whom it is a memory. And yet it has made its
way out! But if two men who, unknown to each other, knew of this affair met
accidentally on any spot of this earth, the thing would pop up between them as
sure as fate, before they parted. I had never seen that Frenchman before, and
at the end of an hour we had done with each other for life: he did not seem
particularly talkative either; he was a quiet, massive chap in a creased
uniform, sitting drowsily over a tumbler half full of some dark liquid. His
shoulder-straps were a bit tarnished, his clean-shaved cheeks were large and
sallow; he looked like a man who would be given to taking snuff -- don't you
know? I won't say he did; but the habit would have fitted that kind of man. It
all began by his handing me a number of Home News, which I didn't want, across
the marble table. I said "Merci." We exchanged a few apparently
innocent remarks, and suddenly, before I knew how it had come about, we were in
the midst of it, and he was telling me how much they had been "intrigued
by that corpse." It turned out he had been one of the boarding officers.
'In the establishment
where we sat one could get a variety of foreign drinks which were kept for the
visiting naval officers, and he took a sip of the dark medical-looking stuff,
which probably was nothing more nasty than cassis à l'eau, and glancing with
one eye into the tumbler, shook his head slightly. "Impossible de
comprendre -- vous concevez," he said, with a curious mixture of unconcern
and thoughtfulness. I could very easily conceive how impossible it had been for
them to understand. Nobody in the gunboat knew enough English to get hold of
the story as told by the serang. There was a good deal of noise, too, round the
two officers. "They crowded upon us. There was a circle round that dead
man (autour de ce mort)," he described. "One had to attend to the
most pressing. These people were beginning to agitate themselves -- Parbleu! A
mob like that -- don't you see?" he interjected with philosophic
indulgence. As to the bulkhead, he had advised his commander that the safest
thing was to leave it alone, it was so villainous to look at. They got two
hawsers on board promptly (en toute hâte) and took the Patna in tow -- stern
foremost at that -- which, under the circumstances, was not so foolish, since
the rudder was too much out of the water to be of any great use for steering,
and this manoeuvre eased the strain on the bulkhead, whose state, he expounded
with stolid glibness, demanded the greatest care (éxigeait les plus grands ménagements).
I could not help thinking that my new acquaintance must have had a voice in
most of these arrangements: he looked a reliable officer, no longer very active,
and he was seamanlike too, in a way, though as he sat there, with his thick
fingers clasped lightly on his stomach, he reminded you of one of those snuffy,
quiet village priests, into whose ears are poured the sins, the sufferings, the
remorse of peasant generations, on whose faces the placid and simple expression
is like a veil thrown over the mystery of pain and distress. He ought to have
had a threadbare black soutane buttoned smoothly up to his ample chin, instead
of a frock-coat with shoulder-straps and brass buttons. His broad bosom heaved
regularly while he went on telling me that it had been the very devil of a job,
as doubtless (sans doute) I could figure to myself in my quality of a seaman
(en votre qualité de marin). At the end of the period he inclined his body
slightly towards me, and, pursing his shaved lips, allowed the air to escape
with a gentle hiss. "Luckily," he continued, "the sea was level
like this table, and there was no more wind than there is here." . . . The
place struck me as indeed intolerably stuffy, and very hot; my face burned as
though I had been young enough to be embarrassed and blushing. They had
directed their course, he pursued, to the nearest English port
"naturellement," where their responsibility ceased, "Dieu merci."
... He blew out his flat cheeks a little.... "Because, mind you (notez
bien), all the time of towing we had two quartermasters stationed with axes by
the hawsers, to cut us clear of our tow in case she . . ." He fluttered
downwards his heavy eyelids, making his meaning as plain as possible....
"What would you! One does what one can (on fait ce qu'on peut)," and
for a moment he managed to invest his ponderous immobility with an air of
resignation. "Two quartermasters -- thirty hours -- always there. Two!"
he repeated, lifting up his right hand a little, and exhibiting two fingers.
This was absolutely the first gesture I saw him make. It gave me the
opportunity to "note" a starred scar on the back of his hand --
effect of a gunshot clearly; and, as if my sight had been made more acute by
this discovery, I perceived also the seam of an old wound, beginning a little
below the temple and going out of sight under the short grey hair at the side
of his head -- the graze of a spear or the cut of a sabre. He clasped his hands
on his stomach again. "I remained on board that -- that -- my memory is
going (s'en va). Ah! Patt-nà. C'est bien ça. Patt-nà. Merci. It is droll how
one forgets. I stayed on that ship thirty hours...."
' "You did!"
I exclaimed. Still gazing at his hands, he pursed his lips a little, but this
time made no hissing sound. "It was judged proper," he said, lifting
his eyebrows dispassionately, "that one of the officers should remain to
keep an eye open (pour ouvrir l'œil)" . . . he sighed idly . . . "and
for communicating by signals with the towing ship -- do you see? -- and so on.
For the rest, it was my opinion too. We made our boats ready to drop over --
and I also on that ship took measures.... Enfin! One has done one's possible.
It was a delicate position. Thirty hours! They prepared me some food. As for
the wine -- go and whistle for it -- not a drop." In some extraordinary
way, without any marked change in his inert attitude and in the placid
expression of his face, he managed to convey the idea of profound disgust.
"I -- you know -- when it comes to eating without my glass of wine -- I am
nowhere."
'I was afraid he would
enlarge upon the grievance, for though he didn't stir a limb or twitch a
feature, he made one aware how much he was irritated by the recollection. But
he seemed to forget all about it. They delivered their charge to the "port
authorities," as he expressed it. He was struck by the calmness with which
it had been received. "One might have thought they had such a droll find
(drôle de trouvaille) brought them every day. You are extraordinary -- you
others," he commented, with his back propped against the wall, and looking
himself as incapable of an emotional display as a sack of meal. There happened
to be a man-of-war and an Indian Marine steamer in the harbour at the time, and
he did not conceal his admiration of the efficient manner in which the boats of
these two ships cleared the Patna of her passengers. Indeed his torpid
demeanour concealed nothing: it had that mysterious, almost miraculous, power
of producing striking effects by means impossible of detection which is the
last word of the highest art. "Twenty- five minutes -- watch in hand --
twenty-five, no more." . . . He unclasped and clasped again his fingers without
removing his hands from his stomach, and made it infinitely more effective than
if he had thrown up his arms to heaven in amazement.... "All that lot
(tout ce monde) on shore -- with their little affairs -- nobody left but a
guard of seamen (marins de l'Etat) and that interesting corpse (cet intéressant
cadavre). Twenty-five minutes." . . . With downcast eyes and his head
tilted slightly on one side he seemed to roll knowingly on his tongue the
savour of a smart bit of work. He persuaded one without any further
demonstration that his approval was eminently worth having, and resuming his
hardly interrupted immobility he went on to inform me that, being under orders
to make the best of their way to Toulon, they left in two hours' time, "so
that (de sorte que) there are many things in this incident of my life (dans cet
épisode de ma vie) which have remained obscure." '
'After these words, and
without a change of attitude, he, so to speak, submitted himself passively to a
state of silence. I kept him company; and suddenly, but not abruptly, as if the
appointed time had arrived for his moderate and husky voice to come out of his
immobility, he pronounced, "Mon Dieu! how the time passes!" Nothing
could have been more commonplace than this remark; but its utterance coincided
for me with a moment of vision. It's extraordinary how we go through life with
eyes half shut, with dull ears, with dormant thoughts. Perhaps it's just as
well; and it may be that it is this very dullness that makes life to the
incalculable majority so supportable and so welcome. Nevertheless, there can be
but few of us who had never known one of these rare moments of awakening when
we see, hear, understand ever so much -- everything -- in a flash -- before we
fall back again into our agreeable somnolence. I raised my eyes when he spoke,
and I saw him as though I had never seen him before. I saw his chin sunk on his
breast, the clumsy folds of his coat, his clasped hands, his motionless pose,
so curiously suggestive of his having been simply left there. Time had passed
indeed: it had overtaken him and gone ahead. It had left him hopelessly behind
with a few poor gifts: the iron-grey hair, the heavy fatigue of the tanned
face, two scars, a pair of tarnished shoulder-straps; one of those steady,
reliable men who are the raw material of great reputations, one of those
uncounted lives that are buried without drums and trumpets under the
foundations of monumental successes. "I am now third lieutenant of the
Victorieuse" (she was the flagship of the French Pacific squadron at the
time), he said, detaching his shoulders from the wall a couple of inches to
introduce himself. I bowed slightly on my side of the table, and told him I
commanded a merchant vessel at present anchored in Rushcutters' Bay. He had
"remarked" her, -- a pretty little craft. He was very civil about it
in his impassive way. I even fancy he went the length of tilting his head in
compliment as he repeated, breathing visibly the while, "Ah, yes. A little
craft painted black -- very pretty -- very pretty (très coquet)." After a
time he twisted his body slowly to face the glass door on our right. "A
dull town (triste ville)," he observed, staring into the street. It was a
brilliant day; a southerly buster was raging, and we could see the passers-by,
men and women, buffeted by the wind on the sidewalks, the sunlit fronts of the
houses across the road blurred by the tall whirls of dust. "I descended on
shore," he said, "to stretch my legs a little, but . . ." He
didn't finish, and sank into the depths of his repose. "Pray -- tell
me," he began, coming up ponderously, "what was there at the bottom
of this affair -- precisely (au juste)? It is curious. That dead man, for
instance -- and so on."
' "There were
living men too," I said; "much more curious."
' "No doubt, no
doubt," he agreed half audibly, then, as if after mature consideration,
murmured, "Evidently." I made no difficulty in communicating to him
what had interested me most in this affair. It seemed as though he had a right
to know: hadn't he spent thirty hours on board the Patna -- had he not taken
the succession, so to speak, had he not done "his possible"? He
listened to me, looking more priest-like than ever, and with what -- probably
on account of his downcast eyes -- had the appearance of devout concentration.
Once or twice he elevated his eyebrows (but without raising his eyelids), as
one would say "The devil!" Once he calmly exclaimed, "Ah,
bah!" under his breath, and when I had finished he pursed his lips in a
deliberate way and emitted a sort of sorrowful whistle.
'In any one else it
might have been an evidence of boredom, a sign of indifference; but he, in his
occult way, managed to make his immobility appear profoundly responsive, and as
full of valuable thoughts as an egg is of meat. What he said at last was
nothing more than a "Very interesting," pronounced politely, and not
much above a whisper. Before I got over my disappointment he added, but as if
speaking to himself, "That's it. That is it." His chin seemed to sink
lower on his breast, his body to weigh heavier on his seat. I was about to ask
him what he meant, when a sort of preparatory tremor passed over his whole
person, as a faint ripple may be seen upon stagnant water even before the wind
is felt. "And so that poor young man ran away along with the others,"
he said, with grave tranquillity.
'I don't know what made
me smile: it is the only genuine smile of mine I can remember in connection
with Jim's affair. But somehow this simple statement of the matter sounded
funny in French.... "S'est enfui avec les autres," had said the
lieutenant. And suddenly I began to admire the discrimination of the man. He
had made out the point at once: he did get hold of the only thing I cared
about. I felt as though I were taking professional opinion on the case. His
imperturbable and mature calmness was that of an expert in possession of the
facts, and to whom one's perplexities are mere child's-play. "Ah! The
young, the young," he said indulgently. "And after all, one does not die
of it." "Die of what?" I asked swiftly. "Of being
afraid." He elucidated his meaning and sipped his drink.
'I perceived that the
three last fingers of his wounded hand were stiff and could not move
independently of each other, so that he took up his tumbler with an ungainly
clutch. "One is always afraid. One may talk, but ..." He put down the
glass awkwardly.... "The fear, the fear -- look you -- it is always
there." . . . He touched his breast near a brass button, on the very spot
where Jim had given a thump to his own when protesting that there was nothing
the matter with his heart. I suppose I made some sign of dissent, because he
insisted, "Yes! yes! One talks, one talks; this is all very fine; but at
the end of the reckoning one is no cleverer than the next man -- and no more
brave. Brave! This is always to be seen. I have rolled my hump (roulé ma
bosse)," he said, using the slang expression with imperturbable
seriousness, "in all parts of the world; I have known brave men -- famous
ones! Allez!" . . . He drank carelessly.... "Brave -- you conceive --
in the Service -- one has got to be -- the trade demands it (le métier veut ça).
Is it not so?" he appealed to me reasonably. "Eh bien! Each of them
-- I say each of them, if he were an honest man -- bien entendu -- would
confess that there is a point -- there is a point -- for the best of us --
there is somewhere a point when you let go everything (vous lachez tout). And
you have got to live with that truth -- do you see? Given a certain combination
of circumstances, fear is sure to come. Abominable funk (un trac épouvantable).
And even for those who do not believe this truth there is fear all the same --
the fear of themselves. Absolutely so. Trust me. Yes. Yes.... At my age one
knows what one is talking about - que diable!" . . . He had delivered
himself of all this as immovably as though he had been the mouthpiece of
abstract wisdom, but at this point he heightened the effect of detachment by
beginning to twirl his thumbs slowly. "It's evident -- parbleu!" he
continued; "for, make up your mind as much as you like, even a simple
headache or a fit of indigestion (un dérangement d'estomac) is enough to . . .
Take me, for instance -- I have made my proofs. Eh bien! I, who am speaking to
you, once . . ."
'He drained his glass
and returned to his twirling. "No, no; one does not die of it," he
pronounced finally, and when I found he did not mean to proceed with the
personal anecdote, I was extremely disappointed; the more so as it was not the
sort of story, you know, one could very well press him for. I sat silent, and
he too, as if nothing could please him better. Even his thumbs were still now.
Suddenly his lips began to move. "That is so," he resumed placidly.
"Man is born a coward (L'homme est né poltron). It is a difficulty --
parbleu! It would be too easy other vise. But habit -- habit -- necessity -- do
you see? -- the eye of others -- voilà. One puts up with it. And then the
example of others who are no better than yourself, and yet make good countenance...."
'His voice ceased.
' "That young man
-- you will observe -- had none of these inducements -- at least at the
moment," I remarked.
'He raised his eyebrows
forgivingly: "I don't say; I don't say. The young man in question might
have had the best dispositions -- the best dispositions," he repeated,
wheezing a little.
' "I am glad to
see you taking a lenient view," I said. "His own feeling in the
matter was -- ah! -- hopeful, and . . ."
'The shuffle of his
feet under the table interrupted me. He drew up his heavy eyelids. Drew up, I
say -- no other expression can describe the steady deliberation of the act --
and at last was disclosed completely to me. I was confronted by two narrow grey
circlets, like two tiny steel rings around the profound blackness of the
pupils. The sharp glance, coming from that massive body, gave a notion of
extreme efficiency, like a razor-edge on a battle-axe. "Pardon," he
said punctiliously. His right hand went up, and he swayed forward. "Allow
me . . . I contended that one may get on knowing very well that one's courage
does not come of itself (ne vient pas tout seul). There's nothing much in that
to get upset about. One truth the more ought not to make life impossible....
But the honour -- the honour, monsieur! . . . The honour . . . that is real --
that is! And what life may be worth when" . . . he got on his feet with a
ponderous impetuosity, as a startled ox might scramble up from the grass . . .
"when the honour is gone -- ah ça! par exemple -- I can offer no opinion.
I can offer no opinion -- because -- monsieur -- I know nothing of it."
'I had risen too, and,
trying to throw infinite politeness into our attitudes, we faced each other
mutely, like two china dogs on a mantelpiece. Hang the fellow! he had pricked
the bubble. The blight of futility that lies in wait for men's speeches had
fallen upon our conversation, and made it a thing of empty sounds. "Very
well," I said, with a disconcerted smile; "but couldn't it reduce
itself to not being found out?" He made as if to retort readily, but when
he spoke he had changed his mind. "This, monsieur, is too fine for me --
much above me -- I don't think about it." He bowed heavily over his cap,
which he held before him by the peak, between the thumb and the forefinger of
his wounded hand. I bowed too. We bowed together: we scraped our feet at each
other with much ceremony, while a dirty specimen of a waiter looked on
critically, as though he had paid for the performance. "Serviteur,"
said the Frenchman. Another scrape. "Monsieur" . . .
"Monsieur." . . . The glass door swung behind his burly back. I saw
the southerly buster get hold of him and drive him down wind with his hand to
his head, his shoulders braced, and the tails of his coat blown hard against
his legs.
'I sat down again alone
and discouraged -- discouraged about Jim's case. If you wonder that after more
than three years it had preserved its actuality, you must know that I had seen
him only very lately. I had come straight from Samarang, where I had loaded a
cargo for Sydney: an utterly uninteresting bit of business, -- what Charley
here would call one of my rational transactions, -- and in Samarang I had seen
something of Jim. He was then working for De Jongh, on my recommendation.
Water-clerk. "My representative afloat," as De Jongh called him. You
can't imagine a mode of life more barren of consolation, less capable of being
invested with a spark of glamour -- unless it be the business of an insurance
canvasser. Little Bob Stanton -- Charley here knew him well -- had gone through
that experience. The same who got drowned afterwards trying to save a
lady's-maid in the Sephora disaster. A case of collision on a hazy morning off
the Spanish coast -- you may remember. All the passengers had been packed
tidily into the boats and shoved clear of the ship, when Bob sheered alongside
again and scrambled back on deck to fetch that girl. How she had been left behind
I can't make out; anyhow, she had gone completely crazy -- wouldn't leave the
ship -- held to the rail like grim death. The wrestling- match could be seen
plainly from the boats; but poor Bob was the shortest chief mate in the
merchant service, and the woman stood five feet ten in her shoes and was as
strong as a horse, I've been told. So it went on, pull devil, pull baker, the
wretched girl screaming all the time, and Bob letting out a yell now and then
to warn his boat to keep well clear of the ship. One of the hands told me,
hiding a smile at the recollection, "It was for all the world, sir, like a
naughty youngster fighting with his mother. " The same old chap said that
"At the last we could see that Mr. Stanton had given up hauling at the
gal, and just stood by looking at her, watchful like. We thought afterwards he
must've been reckoning that, maybe, the rush of water would tear her away from
the rail by-and-by and give him a show to save her. We daren't come alongside
for our life; and after a bit the old ship went down all on a sudden with a
lurch to starboard -- plop. The suck in was something awful. We never saw
anything alive or dead come up." Poor Bob's spell of shore-life had been
one of the complications of a love affair, I believe. He fondly hoped he had
done with the sea for ever, and made sure he had got hold of all the bliss on
earth, but it came to canvassing in the end. Some cousin of his in Liverpool
put up to it. He used to tell us his experiences in that line. He made us laugh
till we cried, and, not altogether displeased at the effect, undersized and
bearded to the waist like a gnome, he would tiptoe amongst us and say,
"It's all very well for you beggars to laugh, but my immortal soul was
shrivelled down to the size of a parched pea after a week of that work." I
don't know how Jim's soul accommodated itself to the new conditions of his life
-- I was kept too busy in getting him something to do that would keep body and
soul together -- but I am pretty certain his adventurous fancy was suffering
all the pangs of starvation. It had certainly nothing to feed upon in this new
calling. It was distressing to see him at it, though he tackled it with a
stubborn serenity for which I must give him full credit. I kept my eye on his
shabby plodding with a sort of notion that it was a punishment for the heroics
of his fancy -- an expiation for his craving after more glamour than he could
carry . He had loved too well to imagine himself a glorious racehorse, and now
he was condemned to toil without honour like a costermonger's donkey. He did it
very well. He shut himself in, put his head down, said never a word. Very well;
very well indeed -- except for certain fantastic and violent outbreaks, on the
deplorable occasions when the irrepressible Patna case cropped up.
Unfortunately that scandal of the Eastern seas would not die out. And this is
the reason why I could never feel I had done with Jim for good.
'I sat thinking of him
after the French lieutenant had left, not, however, in connection with De Jongh's
cool and gloomy back- shop, where we had hurriedly shaken hands not very long
ago, but as I had seen him years before in the last flickers of the candle,
alone with me in the long gallery of the Malabar House, with the chill and the
darkness of the night at his back. The respectable sword of his country's law
was suspended over his head. To-morrow -- or was it to-day? (midnight had
slipped by long before we parted) -- the marble-faced police magistrate, after
distributing fines and terms of imprisonment in the assault-and-battery case,
would take up the awful weapon and smite his bowed neck. Our communion in the
night was uncommonly like a last vigil with a condemned man. He was guilty too.
He was guilty -- as I had told myself repeatedly, guilty and done for;
nevertheless, I wished to spare him the mere detail of a formal execution. I
don't pretend to explain the reasons of my desire -- I don't think I could; but
if you haven't got a sort of notion by this time, then I must have been very
obscure in my narrative, or you too sleepy to seize upon the sense of my words.
I don't defend my morality. There was no morality in the impulse which induced
me to lay before him Brierly's plan of evasion -- I may call it -- in all its
primitive simplicity. There were the rupees -- absolutely ready in my pocket
and very much at his service. Oh! a loan; a loan of course -- and if an
introduction to a man (in Rangoon) who could put some work in his way . . .
Why! with the greatest pleasure. I had pen, ink, and paper in my room on the
first floor And even while I was speaking I was impatient to begin the letter
-- day, month, year, 2.30 A.M.... for the sake of our old friendship I ask you
to put some work in the way of Mr. James So-and-so, in whom, &c.,
&c.... I was even ready to write in that strain about him. If he had not
enlisted my sympathies he had done better for himself -- he had gone to the
very fount and origin of that sentiment he had reached the secret sensibility
of my egoism. I am concealing nothing from you, because were I to do so my
action would appear more unintelligible than any man's action has the right to
be, and -- in the second place -- to-morrow you will forget my sincerity along
with the other lessons of the past. In this transaction, to speak grossly and
precisely, I was the irreproachable man; but the subtle intentions of my
immorality were defeated by the moral simplicity of the criminal. No doubt he
was selfish too, but his selfishness had a higher origin, a more lofty aim. I
discovered that, say what I would, he was eager to go through the ceremony of
execution, and I didn't say much, for I felt that in argument his youth would
tell against me heavily: he believed where I had already ceased to doubt. There
was something fine in the wildness of his unexpressed, hardly formulated hope.
"Clear out! Couldn't think of it," he said, with a shake of the head.
"I make you an offer for which I neither demand nor expect any sort of
gratitude," I said; "you shall repay the money when convenient, and .
. ." "Awfully good of you," he muttered without looking up. I
watched him narrowly: the future must have appeared horribly uncertain to him;
but he did not falter, as though indeed there had been nothing wrong with his
heart. I felt angry -- not for the first time that night. "The whole
wretched business," I said, "is bitter enough, I should think, for a
man of your kind . . ." "It is, it is," he whispered twice, with
his eyes fixed on the floor. It was heartrending. He towered above the light,
and I could see the down on his cheek, the colour mantling warm under the
smooth skin of his face. Believe me or not, I say it was outrageously heart-
rending. It provoked me to brutality. "Yes," I said; "and allow
me to confess that I am totally unable to imagine what advantage you can expect
from this licking of the dregs." "Advantage!" he murmured out of
his stillness. "I am dashed if I do," I said, enraged. "I've
been trying to tell you all there is in it," he went on slowly, as if meditating
something unanswerable. "But after all, it is my trouble." I opened
my mouth to retort, and discovered suddenly that I'd lost all confidence in
myself; and it was as if he too had given me up, for he mumbled like a man
thinking half aloud. "Went away ... went into hospitals.... Not one of
them would face it.... They! ..." He moved his hand slightly to imply
disdain. "But I've got to get over this thing, and I mustn't shirk any of
it or . . . I won't shirk any of it." He was silent. He gazed as though he
had been haunted. His unconscious face reflected the passing expressions of
scorn, of despair, of resolution -- reflected them in turn, as a magic mirror
would reflect the gliding passage of unearthly shapes. He lived surrounded by
deceitful ghosts, by austere shades. "Oh! nonsense, my dear fellow,"
I began. He had a movement of impatience. "You don't seem to
understand," he said incisively; then looking at me without a wink,
"I may have jumped, but I don't run away." "I meant no
offence," I said; and added stupidly, "Better men than you have found
it expedient to run, at times." He coloured all over, while in my
confusion I half-choked myself with my own tongue. "Perhaps so," he
said at last, "I am not good enough; I can't afford it. I am bound to
fight this thing down -- I am fighting it now." I got out of my chair and
felt stiff all over. The silence was embarrassing, and to put an end to it I
imagined nothing better but to remark, "I had no idea it was so
late," in an airy tone.... "I dare say you have had enough of
this," he said brusquely: "and to tell you the truth" -- he
began to look round for his hat -- "so have I."
'Well! he had refused
this unique offer. He had struck aside my helping hand; he was ready to go now,
and beyond the balustrade the night seemed to wait for him very still, as
though he had been marked down for its prey. I heard his voice. "Ah! here
it is." He had found his hat. For a few seconds we hung in the wind.
"What will you do after -- after . . ." I asked very low. "Go to
the dogs as likely as not," he answered in a gruff mutter. I had recovered
my wits in a measure, and judged best to take it lightly. "Pray
remember," I said, "that I should like very much to see you again
before you go." "I don't know what's to prevent you. The damned thing
won't make me invisible," he said with intense bitterness, -- "no
such luck." And then at the moment of taking leave he treated me to a
ghastly muddle of dubious stammers and movements, to an awful display of
hesitations. God forgive him -- me! He had taken it into his fanciful head that
I was likely to make some difficulty as to shaking hands. It was too awful for
words. I believe I shouted suddenly at him as you would bellow to a man you saw
about to walk over a cliff; I remember our voices being raised, the appearance
of a miserable grin on his face, a crushing clutch on my hand, a nervous laugh.
The candle spluttered out, and the thing was over at last, with a groan that
floated up to me in the dark. He got himself away somehow. The night swallowed
his form. He was a horrible bungler. Horrible. I heard the quick crunch-crunch
of the gravel under his boots. He was running. Absolutely running, with nowhere
to go to. And he was not yet four-and-twenty.'
'I slept little,
hurried over my breakfast, and after a slight hesitation gave up my early
morning visit to my ship. It was really very wrong of me, because, though my
chief mate was an excellent man all round, he was the victim of such black
imaginings that if he did not get a letter from his wife at the expected time
he would go quite distracted with rage and jealousy, lose all grip on the work,
quarrel with all hands, and either weep in his cabin or develop such a ferocity
of temper as all but drove the crew to the verge of mutiny. The thing had
always seemed inexplicable to me: they had been married thirteen years; I had a
glimpse of her once, and, honestly, I couldn't conceive a man abandoned enough
to plunge into sin for the sake of such an unattractive person. I don't know
whether I have not done wrong by refraining from putting that view before poor
Selvin: the man made a little hell on earth for himself, and I also suffered
indirectly, but some sort of, no doubt, false delicacy prevented me. The
marital relations of seamen would make an interesting subject, and I could tell
you instances.... However, this is not the place, nor the time, and we are
concerned with Jim -- who was unmarried. If his imaginative conscience or his
pride; if all the extravagant ghosts and austere shades that were the
disastrous familiars of his youth would not let him run away from the block, I,
who of course can't be suspected of such familiars, was irresistibly impelled
to go and see his head roll off. I wended my way towards the court. I didn't
hope to be very much impressed or edified, or interested or even frightened --
though, as long as there is any life before one, a jolly good fright now and
then is a salutary discipline. But neither did I expect to be so awfully
depressed. The bitterness of his punishment was in its chill and mean
atmosphere. The real significance of crime is in its being a breach of faith
with the community of mankind, and from that point of view he was no mean
traitor, but his execution was a hole-and-corner affair. There was no high
scaffolding, no scarlet cloth (did they have scarlet cloth on Tower Hill? They
should have had), no awe-stricken multitude to be horrified at his guilt and be
moved to tears at his fate -- no air of sombre retribution. There was, as I
walked along, the clear sunshine, a brilliance too passionate to be consoling,
the streets full of jumbled bits of colour like a damaged kaleidoscope: yellow,
green, blue, dazzling white, the brown nudity of an undraped shoulder, a
bullock-cart with a red canopy, a company of native infantry in a drab body
with dark heads marching in dusty laced boots, a native policeman in a sombre
uniform of scanty cut and belted in patent leather, who looked up at me with
orientally pitiful eyes as though his migrating spirit were suffering
exceedingly from that unforeseen -- what d'ye call 'em? -- avatar --
incarnation. Under the shade of a lonely tree in the courtyard, the villagers
connected with the assault case sat in a picturesque group, looking like a
chromo- lithograph of a camp in a book of Eastern travel. One missed the
obligatory thread of smoke in the foreground and the pack-animals grazing. A
blank yellow wall rose behind overtopping the tree, reflecting the glare. The
court-room was sombre, seemed more vast. High up in the dim space the punkahs
were swaying short to and fro, to and fro. Here and there a draped figure,
dwarfed by the bare walls, remained without stirring amongst the rows of empty
benches, as if absorbed in pious meditation. The plaintiff, who had been
beaten, -- an obese chocolate-coloured man with shaved head, one fat breast
bare and a bright yellow caste-mark above the bridge of his nose, -- sat in
pompous immobility: only his eyes glittered, rolling in the gloom, and the
nostrils dilated and collapsed violently as he breathed. Brierly dropped into
his seat looking done up, as though he had spent the night in sprinting on a
cinder-track. The pious sailing-ship skipper appeared excited and made uneasy
movements, as if restraining with difficulty an impulse to stand up and exhort
us earnestly to prayer and repentance. The head of the magistrate, delicately
pale under the neatly arranged hair, resembled the head of a hopeless invalid
after he had been washed and brushed and propped up in bed. He moved aside the
vase of flowers -- a bunch of purple with a few pink blossoms on long stalks --
and seizing in both hands a long sheet of bluish paper, ran his eye over it,
propped his forearms on the edge of the desk, and began to read aloud in an
even, distinct, and careless voice.
'By Jove! For all my
foolishness about scaffolds and heads rolling off -- I assure you it was
infinitely worse than a beheading. A heavy sense of finality brooded over all
this, unrelieved by the hope of rest and safety following the fall of the axe.
These proceedings had all the cold vengefulness of a death-sentence, and the
cruelty of a sentence of exile. This is how I looked at it that morning -- and
even now I seem to see an undeniable vestige of truth in that exaggerated view
of a common occurrence. You may imagine how strongly I felt this at the time.
Perhaps it is for that reason that I could not bring myself to admit the
finality. The thing was always with me, I was always eager to take opinion on
it, as though it had not been practically settled: individual opinion --
international opinion -- by Jove! That Frenchman's, for instance. His own
country's pronouncement was uttered in the passionless and definite phraseology
a machine would use, if machines could speak. The head of the magistrate was
half hidden by the paper, his brow was like alabaster.
'There were several
questions before the court. The first as to whether the ship was in every
respect fit and seaworthy for the voyage. The court found she was not. The next
point, I remember, was, whether up to the time of the accident the ship had
been navigated with proper and seamanlike care. They said Yes to that, goodness
knows why, and then they declared that there was no evidence to show the exact
cause of the accident. A floating derelict probably. I myself remember that a
Norwegian barque bound out with a cargo of pitch-pine had been given up as
missing about that time, and it was just the sort of craft that would capsize
in a squall and float bottom up for months -- a kind of maritime ghoul on the
prowl to kill ships in the dark. Such wandering corpses are common enough in
the North Atlantic, which is haunted by all the terrors of the sea, -- fogs,
icebergs, dead ships bent upon mischief, and long sinister gales that fasten
upon one like a vampire till all the strength and the spirit and even hope are
gone, and one feels like the empty shell of a man. But there -- in those seas
-- the incident was rare enough to resemble a special arrangement of a
malevolent providence, which, unless it had for its object the killing of a
donkeyman and the bringing of worse than death upon Jim, appeared an utterly
aimless piece of devilry. This view occurring to me took off my attention. For
a time I was aware of the magistrate's voice as a sound merely; but in a moment
it shaped itself into distinct words . . . "in utter disregard of their
plain duty," it said. The next sentence escaped me somehow, and then . . .
"abandoning in the moment of danger the lives and property confided to
their charge" . . . went on the voice evenly, and stopped. A pair of eyes
under the white forehead shot darkly a glance above the edge of the paper. I
looked for Jim hurriedly, as though I had expected him to disappear. He was
very still -- but he was there. He sat pink and fair and extremely attentive.
"Therefore,..." began the voice emphatically. He stared with parted
lips, hanging upon the words of the man behind the desk. These came out into
the stillness wafted on the wind made by the punkahs, and I, watching for their
effect upon him, caught only the fragments of official language.... "The
Court... Gustav So-and-so . . . master . . . native of Germany . . . James So-
and-so. . . mate . . . certificates cancelled." A silence fell. The
magistrate had dropped the paper, and, leaning sideways on the arm of his
chair, began to talk with Brierly easily. People started to move out; others
were pushing in, and I also made for the door. Outside I stood still, and when
Jim passed me on his way to the gate, I caught at his arm and detained him. The
look he gave discomposed me, as though I had been responsible for his state he
looked at me as if I had been the embodied evil of life. "It's all
over," I stammered. "Yes," he said thickly. "And now let no
man . . ." He jerked his arm out of my grasp. I watched his back as he
went away. It was a long street, and he remained in sight for some time. He
walked rather slow, and straddling his legs a little, as if he had found it
difficult to keep a straight line. Just before I lost him I fancied he
staggered a bit.
' "Man
overboard," said a deep voice behind me. Turning round, I saw a fellow I
knew slightly, a West Australian; Chester was his name. He, too, had been
looking after Jim. He was a man with an immense girth of chest, a rugged,
clean-shaved face of mahogany colour, and two blunt tufts of iron-grey, thick,
wiry hairs on his upper lip. He had been pearler, wrecker, trader, whaler too,
I believe; in his own words -- anything and everything a man may be at sea, but
a pirate. The Pacific, north and south, was his proper hunting-ground; but he
had wandered so far afield looking for a cheap steamer to buy. Lately he had
discovered -- so he said -- a guano island somewhere, but its approaches were
dangerous, and the anchorage, such as it was, could not be considered safe, to
say the least of it. "As good as a gold-mine," he would exclaim.
"Right bang in the middle of the Walpole Reefs, and if it's true enough
that you can get no holding-ground anywhere in less than forty fathom, then
what of that? There are the hurricanes, too. But it's a first-rate thing. As
good as a gold-mine -- better! Yet there's not a fool of them that will see it.
I can't get a skipper or a shipowner to go near the place. So I made up my mind
to cart the blessed stuff myself." . . . This was what he required a
steamer for, and I knew he was just then negotiating enthusiastically with a
Parsee firm for an old, brig-rigged, sea-anachronism of ninety horse-power. We
had met and spoken together several times. He looked knowingly after Jim.
"Takes it to heart?" he asked scornfully. "Very much," I
said. "Then he's no good," he opined. "What's all the to-do
about? A bit of ass's skin. That never yet made a man. You must see things
exactly as they are -- if you don't, you may just as well give in at once. You
will never do anything in this world. Look at me. I made it a practice never to
take anything to heart." "Yes," I said, "you see things as
they are." "I wish I could see my partner coming along, that's what I
wish to see," he said. "Know my partner? Old Robinson. Yes; the
Robinson. Don't you know? The notorious Robinson. The man who smuggled more
opium and bagged more seals in his time than any loose Johnny now alive. They
say he used to board the sealing-schooners up Alaska way when the fog was so
thick that the Lord God, He alone, could tell one man from another. Holy-Terror
Robinson. That's the man. He is with me in that guano thing. The best chance he
ever came across in his life." He put his lips to my ear. "Cannibal?
-- well, they used to give him the name years and years ago. You remember the
story? A shipwreck on the west side of Stewart Island; that's right; seven of
them got ashore, and it seems they did not get on very well together. Some men
are too cantankerous for anything -- don't know how to make the best of a bad
job -- don't see things as they are -- as they are, my boy! And then what's the
consequence? Obvious! Trouble, trouble; as likely as not a knock on the head;
and serve 'em right too. That sort is the most useful when it's dead. The story
goes that a boat of Her Majesty's ship Wolverine found him kneeling on the
kelp, naked as the day he was born, and chanting some psalm-tune or other;
light snow was falling at the time. He waited till the boat was an oar's length
from the shore, and then up and away. They chased him for an hour up and down
the boulders, till a marine flung a stone that took him behind the ear
providentially and knocked him senseless. Alone? Of course. But that's like
that tale of sealing-schooners; the Lord God knows the right and the wrong of
that story. The cutter did not investigate much. They wrapped him in a
boat-cloak and took him off as quick as they could, with a dark night coming
on, the weather threatening, and the ship firing recall guns every five minutes.
Three weeks after- wards he was as well as ever. He didn't allow any fuss that
was made on shore to upset him; he just shut his lips tight, and let people
screech. It was bad enough to have lost his ship, and all he was worth besides,
without paying attention to the hard names they called him. That's the man for
me." He lifted his arm for a signal to some one down the street.
"He's got a little money, so I had to let him into my thing. Had to! It
would have been sinful to throw away such a find, and I was cleaned out myself.
It cut me to the quick, but I could see the matter just as it was, and if I
must share -- thinks I -- with any man, then give me Robinson. I left him at
breakfast in the hotel to come to court, because I've an idea.... Ah! Good
morning, Captain Robinson.... Friend of mine, Captain Robinson."
'An emaciated patriarch
in a suit of white drill, a solah topi with a green-lined rim on a head
trembling with age, joined us after crossing the street in a trotting shuffle,
and stood propped with both hands on the handle of an umbrella. A white beard
with amber streaks hung lumpily down to his waist. He blinked his creased
eyelids at me in a bewildered way. "How do you do? how do you do?" he
piped amiably, and tottered. "A little deaf," said Chester aside.
"Did you drag him over six thousand miles to get a cheap steamer?" I
asked. "I would have taken him twice round the world as soon as look at
him," said Chester with immense energy. "The steamer will be the
making of us, my lad. Is it my fault that every skipper and shipowner in the
whole of blessed Australasia turns out a blamed fool? Once I talked for three
hours to a man in Auckland. 'Send a ship,' I said, 'send a ship. I'll give you
half of the first cargo for yourself, free gratis for nothing -- just to make a
good start.' Says he, 'I wouldn't do it if there was no other place on earth to
send a ship to.' Perfect ass, of course. Rocks, currents, no anchor- age, sheer
cliff to lay to, no insurance company would take the risk, didn't see how he could
get loaded under three years. Ass! I nearly went on my knees to him. 'But look
at the thing as it is,' says I. 'Damn rocks and hurricanes. Look at it as it
is. There's guano there Queensland sugar-planters would fight for -- fight for
on the quay, I tell you.' . . . What can you do with a fool? . . . 'That's one
of your little jokes, Chester,' he says.... Joke! I could have wept. Ask
Captain Robinson here.... And there was another shipowning fellow -- a fat chap
in a white waistcoat in Wellington, who seemed to think I was up to some
swindle or other. 'I don't know what sort of fool you're looking for,' he says,
'but I am busy just now. Good morning.' I longed to take him in my two hands
and smash him through the window of his own office. But I didn't. I was as mild
as a curate. 'Think of it,' says I. 'Do think it over. I'll call to-morrow.' He
grunted something about being 'out all day.' On the stairs I felt ready to beat
my head against the wall from vexation. Captain Robinson here can tell you. It
was awful to think of all that lovely stuff lying waste under the sun -- stuff
that would send the sugar-cane shooting sky-high. The making of Queensland! The
making of Queensland! And in Brisbane, where I went to have a last try, they
gave me the name of a lunatic. Idiots! The only sensible man I came across was
the cabman who drove me about. A broken-down swell he was, I fancy. Hey!
Captain Robinson? You remember I told you about my cabby in Brisbane -- don't
you? The chap had a wonderful eye for things. He saw it all in a jiffy. It was
a real pleasure to talk with him. One evening after a devil of a day amongst
shipowners I felt so bad that, says I, 'I must get drunk. Come along; I must
get drunk, or I'll go mad. ' 'I am your man,' he says; 'go ahead.' I don't know
what I would have done without him. Hey! Captain Robinson."
'He poked the ribs of
his partner. "He! he! he!" laughed the Ancient, looked aimlessly down
the street, then peered at me doubt- fully with sad, dim pupils.... "He!
he! he!" ... He leaned heavier on the umbrella, and dropped his gaze on
the ground. I needn't tell you I had tried to get away several times, but
Chester had foiled every attempt by simply catching hold of my coat. "One
minute. I've a notion." "What's your infernal notion?" I exploded
at last. "If you think I am going in with you . . ." "No, no, my
boy. Too late, if you wanted ever so much. We've got a steamer."
"You've got the ghost of a steamer," I said. "Good enough for a
start -- there's no superior nonsense about us. Is there, Captain
Robinson?" "No! no! no!" croaked the old man without lifting his
eyes, and the senile tremble of his head became almost fierce with
determination. "I understand you know that young chap," said Chester,
with a nod at the street from which Jim had disappeared long ago. "He's
been having grub with you in the Malabar last night -- so I was told."
'I said that was true,
and after remarking that he too liked to live well and in style, only that, for
the present, he had to be saving of every penny -- "none too many for the
business! Isn't that so, Captain Robinson?" -- he squared his shoulders
and stroked his dumpy moustache, while the notorious Robinson, coughing at his
side, clung more than ever to the handle of the umbrella, and seemed ready to
subside passively into a heap of old bones. "You see, the old chap has all
the money," whispered Chester confidentially. "I've been cleaned out
trying to engineer the dratted thing. But wait a bit, wait a bit. The good time
is coming." . . . He seemed suddenly astonished at the signs of impatience
I gave. "Oh, crakee!" he cried; "I am telling you of the biggest
thing that ever was, and you . . ." "I have an appointment," I
pleaded mildly. "What of that?" he asked with genuine surprise;
"let it wait." "That's exactly what I am doing now," I
remarked; "hadn't you better tell me what it is you want?" "Buy
twenty hotels like that," he growled to himself; "and every joker
boarding in them too -- twenty times over." He lifted his head smartly
"I want that young chap." "I don't understand," I said.
"He's no good, is he?" said Chester crisply. "I know nothing
about it," I protested. "Why, you told me yourself he was taking it
to heart," argued Chester. "Well, in my opinion a chap who . . .
Anyhow, he can't be much good; but then you see I am on the look-out for
somebody, and I've just got a thing that will suit him. I'll give him a job on
my island." He nodded significantly. "I'm going to dump forty coolies
there -- if I've to steal 'em. Somebody must work the stuff. Oh! I mean to act
square: wooden shed, corrugated-iron roof -- I know a man in Hobart who will
take my bill at six months for the materials. I do. Honour bright. Then there's
the water-supply. I'll have to fly round and get somebody to trust me for
half-a-dozen second-hand iron tanks. Catch rain-water, hey? Let him take
charge. Make him supreme boss over the coolies. Good idea, isn't it? What do
you say?" "There are whole years when not a drop of rain falls on
Walpole," I said, too amazed to laugh. He bit his lip and seemed bothered.
"Oh, well, I will fix up something for them -- or land a supply. Hang it
all! That's not the question."
'I said nothing. I had
a rapid vision of Jim perched on a shadow- less rock, up to his knees in guano,
with the screams of sea-birds in his ears, the incandescent ball of the sun
above his head; the empty sky and the empty ocean all a-quiver, simmering
together in the heat as far as the eye could reach. "I wouldn't advise my
worst enemy . . ." I began. "What's the matter with you?" cried
Chester; "I mean to give him a good screw -- that is, as soon as the thing
is set going, of course. It's as easy as falling off a log. Simply nothing to
do; two six-shooters in his belt . . . Surely he wouldn't be afraid of anything
forty coolies could do -- with two six-shooters and he the only armed man too!
It's much better than it looks. I want you to help me to talk him over."
"No!" I shouted. Old Robinson lifted his bleared eyes dismally for a
moment, Chester looked at me with infinite contempt. "So you wouldn't
advise him?" he uttered slowly. "Certainly not," I answered, as
indignant as though he had requested me to help murder somebody;
"moreover, I am sure he wouldn't. He is badly cut up, but he isn't mad as
far as I know." "He is no earthly good for anything," Chester
mused aloud. "He would just have done for me. If you only could see a
thing as it is, you would see it's the very thing for him. And besides . . .
Why! it's the most splendid, sure chance . . ." He got angry suddenly.
"I must have a man. There! . . ." He stamped his foot and smiled
unpleasantly. "Anyhow, I could guarantee the island wouldn't sink under
him -- and I believe he is a bit particular on that point." "Good
morning," I said curtly. He looked at me as though I had been an
incomprehensible fool.... "Must be moving, Captain Robinson," he
yelled suddenly into the old man's ear. "These Parsee Johnnies are waiting
for us to clinch the bargain." He took his partner under the arm with a
firm grip, swung him round, and, unexpectedly, leered at me over his shoulder.
"I was trying to do him a kindness," he asserted, with an air and
tone that made my blood boil. "Thank you for nothing -- in his name,"
I rejoined. "Oh! you are devilish smart," he sneered; "but you
are like the rest of them. Too much in the clouds. See what you will do with
him." "I don't know that I want to do anything with him."
"Don't you?" he spluttered; his grey moustache bristled with anger,
and by his side the notorious Robinson, propped on the umbrella, stood with his
back to me, as patient and still as a worn-out cab-horse. "I haven't found
a guano island," I said. "It's my belief you wouldn't know one if you
were led right up to it by the hand," he riposted quickly; "and in
this world you've got to see a thing first, before you can make use of it. Got
to see it through and through at that, neither more nor less." "And
get others to see it too," I insinuated, with a glance at the bowed back
by his side. Chester snorted at me. "His eyes are right enough -- don't
you worry. He ain't a puppy." "Oh dear, no!" I said. "Come
along, Captain Robinson," he shouted, with a sort of bullying deference
under the rim of the old man's hat; the Holy Terror gave a submissive little
jump. The ghost of a steamer was waiting for them, Fortune on that fair isle!
They made a curious pair of Argonauts. Chester strode on leisurely, well set
up, portly, and of conquering mien; the other, long, wasted, drooping, and
hooked to his arm, shuffled his withered shanks with desperate haste.'
'I did not start in
search of Jim at once, only because I had really an appointment which I could
not neglect. Then, as ill-luck would have it, in my agent's office I was
fastened upon by a fellow fresh from Madagascar with a little scheme for a
wonderful piece of business. It had something to do with cattle and cartridges
and a Prince Ravonalo something; but the pivot of the whole affair was the
stupidity of some admiral -- Admiral Pierre, I think. Everything turned on
that, and the chap couldn't find words strong enough to express his confidence.
He had globular eyes starting out of his head with a fishy glitter, bumps on
his forehead, and wore his long hair brushed back without a parting. He had a
favourite phrase which he kept on repeating triumphantly, "The minimum of
risk with the maximum of profit is my motto. What?" He made my head ache,
spoiled my tiffin, but got his own out of me all right; and soon as I had
shaken him off, I made straight for the water-side. I caught sight of Jim leaning
over the parapet of the quay. Three native boatmen quarrelling over five annas
were making an awful row at his elbow. He didn't hear me come up, but spun
round as if the slight contact of my finger had released a catch. "I was
looking," he stammered. I don't remember what I said, not much anyhow, but
he made no difficulty in following me to the hotel.
'He followed me as
manageable as a little child, with an obedient air, with no sort of
manifestation, rather as though he had been waiting for me there to come along
and carry him off. I need not have been so surprised as I was at his
tractability. On all the round earth, which to some seems so big and that
others affect to consider as rather smaller than a mustard-seed, he had no
place where he could -- what shall I say? -- where he could withdraw. That's
it! Withdraw -- be alone with his loneliness. He walked by my side very calm,
glancing here and there, and once turned his head to look after a Sidiboy
fireman in a cutaway coat and yellowish trousers, whose black face had silky
gleams like a lump of anthracite coal. I doubt, however, whether he saw
anything, or even remained all the time aware of my companionship, because if I
had not edged him to the left here, or pulled him to the right there, I believe
he would have gone straight before him in any direction till stopped by a wall
or some other obstacle. I steered him into my bedroom, and sat down at once to
write letters. This was the only place in the world (unless, perhaps, the
Walpole Reef -- but that was not so handy) where he could have it out with
himself without being bothered by the rest of the universe. The damned thing --
as he had expressed it -- had not made him invisible, but I behaved exactly as
though he were. No sooner in my chair I bent over my writing-desk like a
medieval scribe, and, but for the movement of the hand holding the pen,
remained anxiously quiet. I can't say I was frightened; but I certainly kept as
still as if there had been something dangerous in the room, that at the first
hint of a movement on my part would be provoked to pounce upon me. There was
not much in the room -- you know how these bedrooms are -- a sort of four-
poster bedstead under a mosquito-net, two or three chairs, the table I was
writing at, a bare floor. A glass door opened on an upstairs verandah, and he
stood with his face to it, having a hard time with all possible privacy. Dusk
fell; I lit a candle with the greatest economy of movement and as much prudence
as though it were an illegal proceeding. There is no doubt that he had a very
hard time of it, and so had I, even to the point, I must own, of wishing him to
the devil, or on Walpole Reef at least. It occurred to me once or twice that,
after all, Chester was, perhaps, the man to deal effectively with such a
disaster. That strange idealist had found a practical use for it at once --
unerringly, as it were. It was enough to make one suspect that, maybe, he
really could see the true aspect of things that appeared mysterious or utterly
hopeless to less imaginative persons. I wrote and wrote; I liquidated all the
arrears of my correspondence, and then went on writing to people who had no
reason whatever to expect from me a gossipy letter about nothing at all. At
times I stole a sidelong glance. He was rooted to the spot, but convulsive
shudders ran down his back; his shoulders would heave suddenly. He was
fighting, he was fighting -- mostly for his breath, as it seemed. The massive
shadows, cast all one way from the straight flame of the candle, seemed possessed
of gloomy consciousness; the immobility of the furniture had to my furtive eye
an air of attention. I was becoming fanciful in the midst of my industrious
scribbling; and though, when the scratching of my pen stopped for a moment,
there was complete silence and stillness in the room, I suffered from that
profound disturbance and confusion of thought which is caused by a violent and
menacing uproar -- of a heavy gale at sea, for instance. Some of you may know
what I mean: that mingled anxiety, distress, and irritation with a sort of
craven feeling creeping in -- not pleasant to acknowledge, but which gives a
quite special merit to one's endurance. I don't claim any merit for standing
the stress of Jim's emotions; I could take refuge in the letters; I could have
written to strangers if necessary. Suddenly, as I was taking up a fresh sheet
of notepaper, I heard a low sound, the first sound that, since we had been shut
up together, had come to my ears in the dim stillness of the room. I remained
with my head down, with my hand arrested. Those who have kept vigil by a
sick-bed have heard such faint sounds in the stillness of the night watches,
sounds wrung from a racked body, from a weary soul. He pushed the glass door
with such force that all the panes rang: he stepped out, and I held my breath,
straining my ears without knowing what else I expected to hear. He was really
taking too much to heart an empty formality which to Chester's rigorous
criticism seemed unworthy the notice of a man who could see things as they
were. An empty formality; a piece of parchment. Well, well. As to an
inaccessible guano deposit, that was another story altogether. One could
intelligibly break one's heart over that. A feeble burst of many voices mingled
with the tinkle of silver and glass floated up from the dining-room below;
through the open door the outer edge of the light from my candle fell on his
back faintly; beyond all was black; he stood on the brink of a vast obscurity,
like a lonely figure by the shore of a sombre and hopeless ocean. There was the
Walpole Reef in it -- to be sure -- a speck in the dark void, a straw for the
drowning man. My compassion for him took the shape of the thought that I
wouldn't have liked his people to see him at that moment. I found it trying myself.
His back was no longer shaken by his gasps; he stood straight as an arrow,
faintly visible and still; and the meaning of this stillness sank to the bottom
of my soul like lead into the water, and made it so heavy that for a second I
wished heartily that the only course left open for me was to pay for his
funeral. Even the law had done with him. To bury him would have been such an
easy kindness! It would have been so much in accordance with the wisdom of
life, which consists in putting out of sight all the reminders of our folly, of
our weakness, of our mortality; all that makes against our efficiency -- the
memory of our failures, the hints of our undying fears, the bodies of our dead
friends. Perhaps he did take it too much to heart. And if so then -- Chester's
offer.... At this point I took up a fresh sheet and began to write resolutely.
There was nothing but myself between him and the dark ocean. I had a sense of
responsibility. If I spoke, would that motionless and suffering youth leap into
the obscurity -- clutch at the straw? I found out how difficult it may be
sometimes to make a sound. There is a weird power in a spoken word. And why the
devil not? I was asking myself persistently while I drove on with my writing.
All at once, on the blank page, under the very point of the pen, the two
figures of Chester and his antique partner, very distinct and complete, would
dodge into view with stride and gestures, as if reproduced in the field of some
optical toy. I would watch them for a while. No! They were too phantasmal and
extravagant to enter into any one's fate. And a word carries far -- very far --
deals destruction through time as the bullets go flying through space. I said
nothing; and he, out there with his back to the light, as if bound and gagged by
all the invisible foes of man, made no stir and made no sound.'
'The time was coming
when I should see him loved, trusted, admired, with a legend of strength and
prowess forming round his name as though he had been the stuff of a hero. It's
true -- I assure you; as true as I'm sitting here talking about him in vain.
He, on his side, had that faculty of beholding at a hint the face of his desire
and the shape of his dream, without which the earth would know no lover and no
adventurer. He captured much honour and an Arcadian happiness (I won't say
anything about innocence) in the bush, and it was as good to him as the honour
and the Arcadian happiness of the streets to another man. Felicity, felicity --
how shall I say it? -- is quaffed out of a golden cup in every latitude: the
flavour is with you -- with you alone, and you can make it as intoxicating as
you please. He was of the sort that would drink deep, as you may guess from
what went before. I found him, if not exactly intoxicated, then at least
flushed with the elixir at his lips. He had not obtained it at once. There had
been, as you know, a period of probation amongst infernal ship-chandlers,
during which he had suffered and I had worried about -- about -- my trust --
you may call it. I don't know that I am completely reassured now, after
beholding him in all his brilliance. That was my last view of him -- in a
strong light, dominating, and yet in complete accord with his surroundings --
with the life of the forests and with the life of men. I own that I was
impressed, but I must admit to myself that after all this is not the lasting
impression. He was protected by his isolation, alone of his own superior kind,
in close touch with Nature, that keeps faith on such easy terms with her lovers.
But I cannot fix before my eye the image of his safety. I shall always remember
him as seen through the open door of my room, taking, perhaps, too much to
heart the mere consequences of his failure. I am pleased, of course, that some
good -- and even some splendour -- came out of my endeavours; but at times it
seems to me it would have been better for my peace of mind if I had not stood
between him and Chester's confoundedly generous offer. I wonder what his
exuberant imagination would have made of Walpole islet -- that most hopelessly
forsaken crumb of dry land on the face of the waters. It is not likely I would
ever have heard, for I must tell you that Chester, after calling at some
Australian port to patch up his brig-rigged sea- anachronism, steamed out into
the Pacific with a crew of twenty- two hands all told, and the only news having
a possible bearing upon the mystery of his fate was the news of a hurricane
which is supposed to have swept in its course over the Walpole shoals, a month
or so afterwards. Not a vestige of the Argonauts ever turned up; not a sound
came out of the waste. Finis! The Pacific is the most discreet of live,
hot-tempered oceans: the chilly Antarctic can keep a secret too, but more in
the manner of a grave.
'And there is a sense
of blessed finality in such discretion, which is what we all more or less
sincerely are ready to admit -- for what else is it that makes the idea of
death supportable? End! Finis! the potent word that exorcises from the house of
life the haunting shadow of fate. This is what -- notwithstanding the testimony
of my eyes and his own earnest assurances -- I miss when I look back upon Jim's
success. While there's life there is hope, truly; but there is fear too. I
don't mean to say that I regret my action, nor will I pretend that I can't
sleep o' nights in consequence; still, the idea obtrudes itself that he made so
much of his disgrace while it is the guilt alone that matters. He was not -- if
I may say so -- clear to me. He was not clear. And there is a suspicion he was
not clear to himself either. There were his fine sensibilities, his fine
feelings, his fine longings -- a sort of sublimated, idealised selfishness. He
was -- if you allow me to say so -- very fine; very fine -- and very
unfortunate. A little coarser nature would not have borne the strain; it would
have had to come to terms with itself -- with a sigh, with a grunt, or even
with a guffaw; a still coarser one would have remained invulnerably ignorant
and completely uninteresting.
'But he was too
interesting or too unfortunate to be thrown to the dogs, or even to Chester. I
felt this while I sat with my face over the paper and he fought and gasped,
struggling for his breath in that terribly stealthy way, in my room; I felt it
when he rushed out on the verandah as if to fling himself over -- and didn't; I
felt it more and more all the time he remained outside, faintly lighted on the
background of night, as if standing on the shore of a sombre and hopeless sea.
'An abrupt heavy rumble
made me lift my head. The noise seemed to roll away, and suddenly a searching
and violent glare fell on the blind face of the night. The sustained and
dazzling flickers seemed to last for an unconscionable time. The growl of the
thunder increased steadily while I looked at him, distinct and black, planted
solidly upon the shores of a sea of light. At the moment of greatest brilliance
the darkness leaped back with a culminating crash, and he vanished before my
dazzled eyes as utterly as though he had been blown to atoms. A blustering sigh
passed; furious hands seemed to tear at the shrubs, shake the tops of the trees
below, slam doors, break window-panes, all along the front of the building. He
stepped in, closing the door behind him, and found me bending over the table:
my sudden anxiety as to what he would say was very great, and akin to a fright.
"May I have a cigarette?" he asked. I gave a push to the box without
raising my head. "I want -- want -- tobacco," he muttered. I became
extremely buoyant. "Just a moment." I grunted pleasantly. He took a
few steps here and there. "That's over," I heard him say. A single
distant clap of thunder came from the sea like a gun of distress. "The
monsoon breaks up early this year," he remarked conversationally,
somewhere behind me. This encouraged me to turn round, which I did as soon as I
had finished addressing the last envelope. He was smoking greedily in the
middle of the room, and though he heard the stir I made, he remained with his
back to me for a time.
' "Come -- I
carried it off pretty well," he said, wheeling suddenly. "Something's
paid off -- not much. I wonder what's to come." His face did not show any
emotion, only it appeared a little darkened and swollen, as though he had been
holding his breath. He smiled reluctantly as it were, and went on while I gazed
up at him mutely.... "Thank you, though -- your room -- jolly convenient
-- for a chap -- badly hipped." . . . The rain pattered and swished in the
garden; a water-pipe (it must have had a hole in it) performed just outside the
window a parody of blubbering woe with funny sobs and gurgling lamentations,
interrupted by jerky spasms of silence.... "A bit of shelter," he
mumbled and ceased.
'A flash of faded
lightning darted in through the black framework of the windows and ebbed out
without any noise. I was thinking how I had best approach him (I did not want
to be flung off again) when he gave a little laugh. "No better than a
vagabond now" . . . the end of the cigarette smouldered between his
fingers . . . "with- out a single -- single," he pronounced slowly;
"and yet . . ." He paused; the rain fell with redoubled violence.
"Some day one's bound to come upon some sort of chance to get it all back
again. Must!" he whispered distinctly, glaring at my boots.
'I did not even know
what it was he wished so much to regain, what it was he had so terribly missed.
It might have been so much that it was impossible to say. A piece of ass's
skin, according to Chester.... He looked up at me inquisitively. "Perhaps.
If life's long enough," I muttered through my teeth with unreasonable
animosity. "Don't reckon too much on it."
' "Jove! I feel as
if nothing could ever touch me," he said in a tone of sombre conviction.
"If this business couldn't knock me over, then there's no fear of there
being not enough time to -- climb out, and . . ." He looked upwards.
'It struck me that it
is from such as he that the great army of waifs and strays is recruited, the army
that marches down, down into all the gutters of the earth. As soon as he left
my room, that "bit of shelter," he would take his place in the ranks,
and begin the journey towards the bottomless pit. I at least had no illusions;
but it was I, too, who a moment ago had been so sure of the power of words, and
now was afraid to speak, in the same way one dares not move for fear of losing
a slippery hold. It is when we try to grapple with another man's intimate need
that we perceive how incomprehensible, wavering, and misty are the beings that
share with us the sight of the stars and the warmth of the sun. It is as if
loneliness were a hard and absolute condition of existence; the envelope of
flesh and blood on which our eyes are fixed melts before the out- stretched
hand, and there remains only the capricious, unconsolable, and elusive spirit
that no eye can follow, no hand can grasp. It was the fear of losing him that
kept me silent, for it was borne upon me suddenly and with unaccountable force
that should I let him slip away into the darkness I would never forgive myself.
' "Well. Thanks --
once more. You've been -- er -- uncommonly -- really there's no word to . . .
Uncommonly! I don't know why, I am sure. I am afraid I don't feel as grateful
as I would if the whole thing hadn't been so brutally sprung on me. Because at
bottom . . . you, yourself . . ." He stuttered.
' "Possibly,"
I struck in. He frowned.
' "All the same,
one is responsible." He watched me like a hawk.
' "And that's
true, too," I said.
' "Well. I've gone
with it to the end, and I don't intend to let any man cast it in my teeth
without -- without -- resenting it." He clenched his fist.
' "There's
yourself," I said with a smile -- mirthless enough, God knows -- but he
looked at me menacingly. "That's my business," he said. An air of
indomitable resolution came and went upon his face like a vain and passing
shadow. Next moment he looked a dear good boy in trouble, as before. He flung
away the cigarette. "Good- bye," he said, with the sudden haste of a
man who had lingered too long in view of a pressing bit of work waiting for
him; and then for a second or so he made not the slightest movement. The
downpour fell with the heavy uninterrupted rush of a sweeping flood, with a
sound of unchecked overwhelming fury that called to one's mind the images of
collapsing bridges, of uprooted trees, of undermined mountains. No man could
breast the colossal and headlong stream that seemed to break and swirl against
the dim stillness in which we were precariously sheltered as if on an island.
The perforated pipe gurgled, choked, spat, and splashed in odious ridicule of a
swimmer fighting for his life. "It is raining," I remonstrated,
"and I . . ." "Rain or shine," he began brusquely, checked
himself, and walked to the window. "Perfect deluge," he muttered
after a while: he leaned his forehead on the glass. "It's dark, too."
' "Yes, it is very
dark," I said.
'He pivoted on his
heels, crossed the room, and had actually opened the door leading into the
corridor before I leaped up from my chair. "Wait," I cried, "I
want you to . . ." "I can't dine with you again to-night," he
flung at me, with one leg out of the room already. "I haven't the
slightest intention of asking you," I shouted. At this he drew back his
foot, but remained mistrustfully in the very doorway. I lost no time in
entreating him earnestly not to be absurd; to come in and shut the door.'
'He came in at last;
but I believe it was mostly the rain that did it; it was falling just then with
a devastating violence which quieted down gradually while we talked. His manner
was very sober and set; his bearing was that of a naturally taciturn man
possessed by an idea. My talk was of the material aspect of his position; it
had the sole aim of saving him from the degradation, ruin, and despair that out
there close so swiftly upon a friendless, homeless man; I pleaded with him to
accept my help; I argued reasonably: and every time I looked up at that
absorbed smooth face, so grave and youthful, I had a disturbing sense of being
no help but rather an obstacle to some mysterious, inexplicable, impalpable
striving of his wounded spirit.
' "I suppose you
intend to eat and drink and to sleep under shelter in the usual way," I
remember saying with irritation. "You say you won't touch the money that
is due to you." . . . He came as near as his sort can to making a gesture
of horror. (There were three weeks and five days' pay owing him as mate of the
Patna.) "Well, that's too little to matter anyhow; but what will you do
to- morrow? Where will you turn? You must live . . ." "That isn't the
thing," was the comment that escaped him under his breath. I ignored it,
and went on combating what I assumed to be the scruples of an exaggerated
delicacy. "On every conceivable ground," I concluded, "you must
let me help you." "You can't," he said very simply and gently,
and holding fast to some deep idea which I could detect shimmering like a pool
of water in the dark, but which I despaired of ever approaching near enough to
fathom. I surveyed his well-proportioned bulk. "At any rate," I said,
"I am able to help what I can see of you. I don't pretend to do
more." He shook his head sceptically without looking at me. I got very
warm. "But I can," I insisted. "I can do even more. I am doing
more. I am trusting you . . ." "The money . . ." he began.
"Upon my word you deserve being told to go to the devil," I cried,
forcing the note of indignation. He was startled, smiled, and I pressed my attack
home. "It isn't a question of money at all. You are too superficial,"
I said (and at the same time I was thinking to myself: Well, here goes! And
perhaps he is, after all). "Look at the letter I want you to take. I am
writing to a man of whom I've never asked a favour, and I am writing about you
in terms that one only ventures to use when speaking of an intimate friend. I
make myself unreservedly responsible for you. That's what I am doing. And
really if you will only reflect a little what that means . . ."
'He lifted his head.
The rain had passed away; only the water- pipe went on shedding tears with an
absurd drip, drip outside the window. It was very quiet in the room, whose
shadows huddled together in corners, away from the still flame of the candle
flaring upright in the shape of a dagger; his face after a while seemed
suffused by a reflection of a soft light as if the dawn had broken already.
' "Jove!" he
gasped out. "It is noble of you!"
'Had he suddenly put
out his tongue at me in derision, I could not have felt more humiliated. I
thought to myself -- Serve me right for a sneaking humbug.... His eyes shone
straight into my face, but I perceived it was not a mocking brightness. All at
once he sprang into jerky agitation, like one of those flat wooden figures that
are worked by a string. His arms went up, then came down with a slap. He became
another man altogether. "And I had never seen," he shouted; then
suddenly bit his lip and frowned. "What a bally ass I've been," he
said very slow in an awed tone.... "You are a brick! " he cried next
in a muffled voice. He snatched my hand as though he had just then seen it for
the first time, and dropped it at once. "Why! this is what I -- you -- I .
. ." he stammered, and then with a return of his old stolid, I may say
mulish, manner he began heavily, "I would be a brute now if I . . ."
and then his voice seemed to break. "That's all right," I said. I was
almost alarmed by this display of feeling, through which pierced a strange
elation. I had pulled the string accidentally, as it were; I did not fully
under- stand the working of the toy. "I must go now," he said.
"Jove! You have helped me. Can't sit still. The very thing . . ." He
looked at me with puzzled admiration. "The very thing . . ."
'Of course it was the
thing. It was ten to one that I had saved him from starvation -- of that
peculiar sort that is almost invariably associated with drink. This was all. I
had not a single illusion on that score, but looking at him, I allowed myself
to wonder at the nature of the one he had, within the last three minutes, so
evidently taken into his bosom. I had forced into his hand the means to carry
on decently the serious business of life, to get food, drink, and shelter of
the customary kind, while his wounded spirit, like a bird with a broken wing,
might hop and flutter into some hole, to die quietly of inanition there. This
is what I had thrust upon him: a definitely small thing; and -- behold! -- by
the manner of its reception it loomed in the dim light of the candle like a
big, indistinct, perhaps a dangerous shadow. "You don't mind me not saying
anything appropriate," he burst out. "There isn't anything one could
say. Last night already you had done me no end of good. Listening to me -- you
know. I give you my word I've thought more than once the top of my head would
fly off. . ." He darted -- positively darted -- here and there, rammed his
hands into his pockets, jerked them out again, flung his cap on his head. I had
no idea it was in him to be so airily brisk. I thought of a dry leaf imprisoned
in an eddy of wind, while a mysterious apprehension, a load of indefinite
doubt, weighed me down in my chair. He stood stock-still, as if struck
motionless by a discovery. "You have given me confidence," he
declared soberly. "Oh! for God's sake, my dear fellow -- don't!" I
entreated, as though he had hurt me. "All right. I'll shut up now and
henceforth. Can't prevent me thinking though.... Never mind! . . . I'll show
yet . . ." He went to the door in a hurry, paused with his head down, and
came back, stepping deliberately. "I always thought that if a fellow could
begin with a clean slate . . . And now you . . . in a measure . . . yes . . .
clean slate." I waved my hand, and he marched out without looking back;
the sound of his footfalls died out gradually behind the closed door -- the
unhesitating tread of a man walking in broad daylight.
'But as to me, left
alone with the solitary candle, I remained strangely unenlightened. I was no
longer young enough to behold at every turn the magnificence that besets our
insignificant footsteps in good and in evil. I smiled to think that, after all,
it was yet he, of us two, who had the light. And I felt sad. A clean slate, did
he say? As if the initial word of each our destiny were not graven in imperishable
characters upon the face of a rock.'
'Six months afterwards
my friend (he was a cynical, more than middle-aged bachelor, with a reputation
for eccentricity, and owned a rice-mill) wrote to me, and judging, from the
warmth of my recommendation, that I would like to hear, enlarged a little upon
Jim's perfections. These were apparently of a quiet and effective sort.
"Not having been able so far to find more in my heart than a resigned
toleration for any individual of my kind, I have lived till now alone in a
house that even in this steaming climate could be considered as too big for one
man. I have had him to live with me for some time past. It seems I haven't made
a mistake." It seemed to me on reading this letter that my friend had found
in his heart more than tolerance for Jim -- that there were the beginnings of
active liking. Of course he stated his grounds in a characteristic way. For one
thing, Jim kept his freshness in the climate. Had he been a girl -- my friend
wrote -- one could have said he was blooming -- blooming modestly -- like a
violet, not like some of these blatant tropical flowers. He had been in the
house for six weeks, and had not as yet attempted to slap him on the back, or
address him as "old boy," or try to make him feel a superannuated
fossil. He had nothing of the exasperating young man's chatter. He was
good-tempered, had not much to say for himself, was not clever by any means,
thank goodness -- wrote my friend. It appeared, how- ever, that Jim was clever
enough to be quietly appreciative of his wit, while, on the other hand, he
amused him by his naiveness. "The dew is yet on him, and since I had the
bright idea of giving him a room in the house and having him at meals I feel
less withered myself. The other day he took it into his head to cross the room
with no other purpose but to open a door for me; and I felt more in touch with
mankind than I had been for years. Ridiculous, isn't it? Of course I guess
there is something -- some awful little scrape -- which you know all about --
but if I am sure that it is terribly heinous, I fancy one could manage to
forgive it. For my part, I declare I am unable to imagine him guilty of
anything much worse than robbing an orchard. Is it much worse? Perhaps you
ought to have told me; but it is such a long time since we both turned saints
that you may have forgotten we too had sinned in our time? It may be that some
day I shall have to ask you, and then I shall expect to be told. I don't care
to question him myself till I have some idea what it is. Moreover, it's too
soon as yet. Let him open the door a- few times more for me...." Thus my
friend. I was trebly pleased -- at Jim's shaping so well, at the tone of the
letter, at my own cleverness. Evidently I had known what I was doing. I had read
characters aright, and so on. And what if something unexpected and wonderful
were to come of it? That evening, reposing in a deck-chair under the shade of
my own poop awning (it was in Hong-Kong harbour), I laid on Jim's behalf the
first stone of a castle in Spain.
'I made a trip to the
northward, and when I returned I found another letter from my friend waiting
for me. It was the first envelope I tore open. "There are no spoons
missing, as far as I know," ran the first line; "I haven't been
interested enough to inquire. He is gone, leaving on the breakfast-table a
formal little note of apology, which is either silly or heartless. Probably
both -- and it's all one to me. Allow me to say, lest you should have some more
mysterious young men in reserve, that I have shut up shop, definitely and for
ever. This is the last eccentricity I shall be guilty of. Do not imagine for a
moment that I care a hang; but he is very much regretted at tennis-parties, and
for my own sake I've told a plausible lie at the club...." I flung the
letter aside and started looking through the batch on my table, till I came
upon Jim's handwriting. Would you believe it? One chance in a hundred! But it
is always that hundredth chance! That little second engineer of the Patna had
turned up in a more or less destitute state, and got a temporary job of looking
after the machinery of the mill. "I couldn't stand the familiarity of the
little beast," Jim wrote from a seaport seven hundred miles south of the
place where he should have been in clover. "I am now for the time with
Egström & Blake, ship-chandlers, as their -- well -- runner, to call the
thing by its right name. For reference I gave them your name, which they know
of course, and if you could write a word in my favour it would be a permanent
employment." I was utterly crushed under the ruins of my castle, but of
course I wrote as desired. Before the end of the year my new charter took me
that way, and I had an opportunity of seeing him.
'He was still with
Egström & Blake, and we met in what they called "our parlour"
opening out of the store. He had that moment come in from boarding a ship, and
confronted me head down, ready for a tussle. "What have you got to say for
yourself?" I began as soon as we had shaken hands. "What I wrote you
-- nothing more," he said stubbornly. "Did the fellow blab -- or
what?" I asked. He looked up at me with a troubled smile. "Oh no! He
didn't. He made it a kind of confidential business between us. He was most
damnably mysterious whenever I came over to the mill; he would wink at me in a
respectful manner -- as much as to say 'We know what we know.' Infernally
fawning and familiar - -and that sort of thing . . ." He threw himself
into a chair and stared down his legs. "One day we happened to be alone
and the fellow had the cheek to say, 'Well, Mr. James' -- I was called Mr.
James there as if I had been the son -- 'here we are together once more. This
is better than the old ship -- ain't it?' . . . Wasn't it appalling, eh? I
looked at him, and he put on a knowing air. 'Don't you be uneasy, sir,' he
says. 'I know a gentleman when I see one, and I know how a gentleman feels. I
hope, though, you will be keeping me on this job. I had a hard time of it too,
along of that rotten old Patna racket.' Jove! It was awful. I don't know what I
should have said or done if I had not just then heard Mr. Denver calling me in
the passage. It was tiffin-time, and we walked together across the yard and
through the garden to the bungalow. He began to chaff me in his kindly way . .
. I believe he liked me . . ."
'Jim was silent for a
while.
' "I know he liked
me. That's what made it so hard. Such a splendid man! . . . That morning he
slipped his hand under my arm.... He, too, was familiar with me." He burst
into a short laugh, and dropped his chin on his breast. "Pah! When I
remembered how that mean little beast had been talking to me," he began
suddenly in a vibrating voice, "I couldn't bear to think of myself ... I
suppose you know ..." I nodded.... "More like a father," he cried;
his voice sank. "I would have had to tell him. I couldn't let it go on --
could I?" "Well?" I murmured, after waiting a while. "I
preferred to go," he said slowly; "this thing must be buried."
'We could hear in the
shop Blake upbraiding Egström in an abusive, strained voice. They had been
associated for many years, and every day from the moment the doors were opened
to the last minute before closing, Blake, a little man with sleek, jetty hair
and unhappy, beady eyes, could be heard rowing his partner incessantly with a
sort of scathing and plaintive fury. The sound of that everlasting scolding was
part of the place like the other fixtures; even strangers would very soon come
to disregard it completely unless it be perhaps to mutter "Nuisance,"
or to get up suddenly and shut the door of the "parlour." Egström
himself, a raw-boned, heavy Scandinavian, with a busy manner and immense blonde
whiskers, went on directing his people, checking parcels, making out bills or
writing letters at a stand-up desk in the shop, and comported him- self in that
clatter exactly as though he had been stone-deaf. Now and again he would emit a
bothered perfunctory "Sssh," which neither produced nor was expected
to produce the slightest effect. "They are very decent to me here,"
said Jim. "Blake's a little cad, but Egström's all right." He stood
up quickly, and walking with measured steps to a tripod telescope standing in
the window and pointed at the roadstead, he applied his eye to it.
"There's that ship which has been becalmed outside all the morning has got
a breeze now and is coming in," he remarked patiently; "I must go and
board." We shook hands in silence, and he turned to go. "Jim!" I
cried. He looked round with his hand on the lock. "You -- you have thrown
away something like a fortune." He came back to me all the way from the
door. "Such a splendid old chap," he said. "How could I? How
could I?" His lips twitched. "Here it does not matter."
"Oh! you -- you --" I began, and had to cast about for a suitable
word, but before I became aware that there was no name that would just do, he
was gone. I heard outside Egström's deep gentle voice saying cheerily,
"That's the Sarah W. Granger, Jimmy. You must manage to be first
aboard"; and directly Blake struck in, screaming after the manner of an
outraged cockatoo, "Tell the captain we've got some of his mail here.
That'll fetch him. D'ye hear, Mister What's-your-name?" And there was Jim
answering Egström with something boyish in his tone. "All right. I'll make
a race of it." He seemed to take refuge in the boat-sailing part of that
sorry business.
'I did not see him
again that trip, but on my next (I had a six months' charter) I went up to the
store. Ten yards away from the door Blake's scolding met my ears, and when I
came in he gave me a glance of utter wretchedness; Egström, all smiles,
advanced, extending a large bony hand. "Glad to see you, captain....
Sssh.... Been thinking you were about due back here. What did you say, sir? ...
Sssh.... Oh! him! He has left us. Come into the parlour." . . . After the
slam of the door Blake's strained voice became faint, as the voice of one
scolding desperately in a wilderness.... "Put us to a great inconvenience,
too. Used us badly -- I must say . . ." "Where's he gone to? Do you
know?" I asked. "No. It's no use asking either," said Egström,
standing bewhiskered and obliging before me with his arms hanging down his
sides clumsily, and a thin silver watch-chain looped very low on a rucked-up
blue serge waistcoat. "A man like that don't go anywhere in
particular." I was too concerned at the news to ask for the explanation of
that pronouncement, and he went on. "He left -- let's see -- the very day
a steamer with returning pilgrims from the Red Sea put in here with two blades
of her propeller gone. Three weeks ago now." "Wasn't there something
said about the Patna case?" I asked, fearing the worst. He gave a start,
and looked at me as if I had been a sorcerer. "Why, yes! How do you know?
Some of them were talking about it here. There was a captain or two, the
manager of Vanlo's engineering shop at the harbour, two or three others, and
myself. Jim was in here too, having a sandwich and a glass of beer; when we are
busy -- you see, captain -- there's no time for a proper tiffin. He was standing
by this table eating sandwiches, and the rest of us were round the telescope
watching that steamer come in; and by-and-by Vanlo's manager began to talk
about the chief of the Patna; he had done some repairs for him once, and from
that he went on to tell us what an old ruin she was, and the money that had
been made out of her. He came to mention her last voyage, and then we all
struck in. Some said one thing and some another -- not much -- what you or any
other man might say; and there was some laughing. Captain O'Brien of the Sarah
W. Granger, a large, noisy old man with a stick -- he was sitting listening to
us in this arm-chair here -- he let drive suddenly with his stick at the floor,
and roars out, 'Skunks!' . . . Made us all jump. Vanlo's manager winks at us
and asks, 'What's the matter, Captain O'Brien?' 'Matter! matter!' the old man
began to shout; 'what are you Injuns laughing at? It's no laughing matter. It's
a disgrace to human natur' -- that's what it is. I would despise being seen in
the same room with one of those men. Yes, sir!' He seemed to catch my eye like,
and I had to speak out of civility. 'Skunks!' says I, 'of course, Captain
O'Brien, and I wouldn't care to have them here myself, so you're quite safe in
this room, Captain O'Brien. Have a little something cool to drink.' 'Dam' your
drink, Egström,' says he, with a twinkle in his eye; 'when I want a drink I
will shout for it. I am going to quit. It stinks here now.' At this all the
others burst out laughing, and out they go after the old man. And then, sir,
that blasted Jim he puts down the sandwich he had in his hand and walks round
the table to me; there was his glass of beer poured out quite full. 'I am off,'
he says - just like this. 'It isn't half-past one yet,' says I; 'you might snatch
a smoke first.' I thought he meant it was time for him to go down to his work.
When I understood what he was up to, my arms fell -- so! Can't get a man like
that every day, you know, sir; a regular devil for sailing a boat; ready to go
out miles to sea to meet ships in any sort of weather. More than once a captain
would come in here full of it, and the first thing he would say would be,
'That's a reckless sort of a lunatic you've got for water-clerk, Egström. I was
feeling my way in at daylight under short canvas when there comes flying out of
the mist right under my forefoot a boat half under water, sprays going over the
mast-head, two frightened niggers on the bottom boards, a yelling fiend at the
tiller. Hey! hey! Ship ahoy! ahoy! Captain! Hey! hey! Egström & Blake's man
first to speak to you! Hey! hey! Egström & Blake! Hallo! hey! whoop! Kick
the niggers -- out reefs -- a squall on at the time -- shoots ahead whooping
and yelling to me to make sail and he would give me a lead in -- more like a
demon than a man. Never saw a boat handled like that in all my life. Couldn't
have been drunk -- was he? Such a quiet, soft- spoken chap too -- blush like a
girl when he came on board.... ' I tell you, Captain Marlow, nobody had a
chance against us with a strange ship when Jim was out. The other
ship-chandlers just kept their old customers, and . . ."
'Egström appeared
overcome with emotion.
' "Why, sir -- it
seemed as though he wouldn't mind going a hundred miles out to sea in an old
shoe to nab a ship for the firm. If the business had been his own and all to
make yet, he couldn't have done more in that way. And now . . . all at once . .
. like this! Thinks I to myself: 'Oho! a rise in the screw -- that's the
trouble -- is it?' 'All right,' says I, 'no need of all that fuss with me,
Jimmy. Just mention your figure. Anything in reason.' He looks at me as if he
wanted to swallow something that stuck in his throat. 'I can't stop with you.'
'What's that blooming joke?' I asks. He shakes his head, and I could see in his
eye he was as good as gone already, sir. So I turned to him and slanged him
till all was blue. 'What is it you're running away from?' I asks. 'Who has been
getting at you? What scared you? You haven't as much sense as a rat; they don't
clear out from a good ship. Where do you expect to get a better berth? -- you
this and you that.' I made him look sick, I can tell you. 'This business ain't
going to sink,' says I. He gave a big jump. 'Good-bye,' he says, nodding at me
like a lord; 'you ain't half a bad chap, Egström. I give you my word that if
you knew my reasons you wouldn't care to keep me.' 'That's the biggest lie you
ever told in your life,' says I; 'I know my own mind.' He made me so mad that I
had to laugh. 'Can't you really stop long enough to drink this glass of beer
here, you funny beggar, you?' I don't know what came over him; he didn't seem
able to find the door; something comical, I can tell you, captain. I drank the
beer myself. 'Well, if you're in such a hurry, here's luck to you in your own drink,'
says I; 'only, you mark my words, if you keep up this game you'll very soon
find that the earth ain't big enough to hold you -- that's all.' He gave me one
black look, and out he rushed with a face fit to scare little children."
'Egström snorted bitterly,
and combed one auburn whisker with knotty fingers. "Haven't been able to
get a man that was any good since. It's nothing but worry, worry, worry in
business. And where might you have come across him, captain, if it's fair to
ask?"
' "He was the mate
of the Patna that voyage," I said, feeling that I owed some explanation.
For a time Egström remained very still, with his fingers plunged in the hair at
the side of his face, and then exploded. "And who the devil cares about
that?" "I dare say no one," I began . . . "And what the
devil is he -- anyhow -- for to go on like this?" He stuffed suddenly his
left whisker into his mouth and stood amazed. "Jee!" he exclaimed,
"I told him the earth wouldn't be big enough to hold his caper." '
'I have told you these
two episodes at length to show his manner of dealing with himself under the new
conditions of his life. There were many others of the sort, more than I could
count on the fingers of my two hands. They were all equally tinged by a high-minded
absurdity of intention which made their futility profound and touching. To
fling away your daily bread so as to get your hands free for a grapple with a
ghost may be an act of prosaic heroism. Men had done it before (though we who
have lived know full well that it is not the haunted soul but the hungry body
that makes an outcast), and men who had eaten and meant to eat every day had
applauded the creditable folly. He was indeed unfortunate, for all his
recklessness could not carry him out from under the shadow. There was always a
doubt of his courage. The truth seems to be that it is impossible to lay the
ghost of a fact. You can face it or shirk it -- and I have come across a man or
two who could wink at their familiar shades. Obviously Jim was not of the
winking sort; but what I could never make up my mind about was whether his line
of conduct amounted to shirking his ghost or to facing him out.
'I strained my mental
eyesight only to discover that, as with the complexion of all our actions, the
shade of difference was so delicate that it was impossible to say. It might
have been flight and it might have been a mode of combat. To the common mind he
became known as a rolling stone, because this was the funniest part: he did
after a time become perfectly known, and even notorious, within the circle of
his wanderings (which had a diameter of, say, three thousand miles), in the
same way as an eccentric character is known to a whole countryside. For
instance, in Bankok, where he found employment with Yucker Brothers, charterers
and teak merchants, it was almost pathetic to see him go about in sunshine
hugging his secret, which was known to the very up-country logs on the river.
Schomberg, the keeper of the hotel where he boarded, a hirsute Alsatian of
manly bearing and an irrepressible retailer of all the scandalous gossip of the
place, would, with both elbows on the table, impart an adorned version of the
story to any guest who cared to imbibe knowledge along with the more costly
liquors. "And, mind you, the nicest fellow you could meet," would be
his generous conclusion; "quite superior." It says a lot for the
casual crowd that frequented Schomberg's establishment that Jim managed to hang
out in Bankok for a whole six months. I remarked that people, perfect strangers,
took to him as one takes to a nice child. His manner was reserved, but it was
as though his personal appearance, his hair, his eyes, his smile, made friends
for him wherever he went. And, of course, he was no fool. I heard Siegmund
Yucker (native of Switzerland), a gentle creature ravaged by a cruel dyspepsia,
and so frightfully lame that his head swung through a quarter of a circle at
every step he took, declare appreciatively that for one so young he was
"of great gabasidy," as though it had been a mere question of cubic
contents. "Why not send him up country?" I suggested anxiously.
(Yucker Brothers had concessions and teak forests in the interior.) "If he
has capacity, as you say, he will soon get hold of the work. And physically he
is very fit. His health is always excellent." "Ach! It's a great ting
in dis goundry to be vree vrom tispep-shia," sighed poor Yucker enviously,
casting a stealthy glance at the pit of his ruined stomach. I left him drumming
pensively on his desk and muttering, "Es ist ein' Idee. Es ist ein'
Idee." Unfortunately, that very evening an unpleasant affair took place in
the hotel.
'I don't know that I
blame Jim very much, but it was a truly regrettable incident. It belonged to
the lamentable species of bar- room scuffles, and the other party to it was a
cross-eyed Dane of sorts whose visiting-card recited, under his misbegotten
name: first lieutenant in the Royal Siamese Navy. The fellow, of course, was
utterly hopeless at billiards, but did not like to be beaten, I suppose. He had
had enough to drink to turn nasty after the sixth game, and make some scornful
remark at Jim's expense. Most of the people there didn't hear what was said,
and those who had heard seemed to have had all precise recollection scared out
of them by the appalling nature of the consequences that immediately ensued. It
was very lucky for the Dane that he could swim, because the room opened on a
verandah and the Menam flowed below very wide and black. A boat-load of
Chinamen, bound, as likely as not, on some thieving expedition, fished out the
officer of the King of Siam, and Jim turned up at about midnight on board my
ship without a hat. "Everybody in the room seemed to know," he said,
gasping yet from the contest, as it were. He was rather sorry, on general
principles, for what had happened, though in this case there had been, he said,
"no option." But what dismayed him was to find the nature of his
burden as well known to everybody as though he had gone about all that time
carrying it on his shoulders. Naturally after this he couldn't remain in the
place. He was universally condemned for the brutal violence, so unbecoming a
man in his delicate position; some maintained he had been disgracefully drunk
at the time; others criticised his want of tact. Even Schomberg was very much
annoyed. "He is a very nice young man," he said argumentatively to
me, "but the lieutenant is a first-rate fellow too. He dines every night
at my table d'hôte, you know. And there's a billiard-cue broken. I can't allow
that. First thing this morning I went over with my apologies to the lieutenant,
and I think I've made it all right for myself; but only think, captain, if
everybody started such games! Why, the man might have been drowned! And here I
can't run out into the next street and buy a new cue. I've got to write to
Europe for them. No, no! A temper like that won't do!" . . . He was
extremely sore on the subject.
'This was the worst
incident of all in his -- his retreat. Nobody could deplore it more than
myself; for if, as somebody said hearing him mentioned, "Oh yes! I know.
He has knocked about a good deal out here," yet he had somehow avoided
being battered and chipped in the process. This last affair, however, made me
seriously uneasy, because if his exquisite sensibilities were to go the length
of involving him in pot-house shindies, he would lose his name of an
inoffensive, if aggravating, fool, and acquire that of a common loafer. For all
my confidence in him I could not help reflecting that in such cases from the
name to the thing itself is but a step. I suppose you will understand that by
that time I could not think of washing my hands of him. I took him away from
Bankok in my ship, and we had a longish passage. It was pitiful to see how he
shrank within himself. A seaman, even if a mere passenger, takes an interest in
a ship, and looks at the sea-life around him with the critical enjoyment of a
painter, for instance, looking at another man's work. In every sense of the
expression he is "on deck"; but my Jim, for the most part, skulked
down below as though he had been a stowaway. He infected me so that I avoided
speaking on professional matters, such as would suggest themselves naturally to
two sailors during a passage. For whole days we did not exchange a word; I felt
extremely unwilling to give orders to my officers in his presence. Often, when
alone with him on deck or in the cabin, we didn't know what to do with our
eyes.
'I placed him with De
Jongh, as you know, glad enough to dispose of him in any way, yet persuaded
that his position was now growing intolerable. He had lost some of that
elasticity which had enabled him to rebound back into his uncompromising
position after every overthrow. One day, coming ashore, I saw him standing on
the quay; the water of the roadstead and the sea in the offing made one smooth
ascending plane, and the outermost ships at anchor seemed to ride motionless in
the sky. He was waiting for his boat, which was being loaded at our feet with
packages of small stores for some vessel ready to leave. After exchanging
greetings, we remained silent -- side by side. "Jove!" he said
suddenly, "this is killing work."
'He smiled at me; I
must say he generally could manage a smile. I made no reply. I knew very well
he was not alluding to his duties; he had an easy time of it with De Jongh.
Nevertheless, as soon as he had spoken I became completely convinced that the
work was killing. I did not even look at him. "Would you like," said
I, "to leave this part of the world altogether; try California or the West
Coast? I'll see what I can do . . ." He interrupted me a little scorn-
fully. "What difference would it make?" . . . I felt at once
convinced that he was right. It would make no difference; it was not relief he
wanted; I seemed to perceive dimly that what he wanted, what he was, as it
were, waiting for, was something not easy to define -- something in the nature
of an opportunity. I had given him many opportunities, but they had been merely
opportunities to earn his bread. Yet what more could any man do? The position
struck me as hopeless, and poor Brierly's saying recurred to me, "Let him
creep twenty feet underground and stay there." Better that, I thought,
than this waiting above ground for the impossible. Yet one could not be sure
even of that. There and then, before his boat was three oars' lengths away from
the quay, I had made up my mind to go and consult Stein in the evening.
'This Stein was a
wealthy and respected merchant. His "house" (because it was a house,
Stein & Co., and there was some sort of partner who, as Stein said,
"looked after the Moluccas") had a large inter-island business, with
a lot of trading posts established in the most out-of-the-way places for
collecting the produce. His wealth and his respectability were not exactly the
reasons why I was anxious to seek his advice. I desired to confide my
difficulty to him because he was one of the most trustworthy men I had ever
known. The gentle light of a simple, unwearied, as it were, and intelligent
good- nature illumined his long hairless face. It had deep downward folds, and
was pale as of a man who had always led a sedentary life -- which was indeed
very far from being the case. His hair was thin, and brushed back from a
massive and lofty forehead. One fancied that at twenty he must have looked very
much like what he was now at threescore. It was a student's face; only the
eyebrows nearly all white, thick and bushy, together with the resolute
searching glance that came from under them, were not in accord with his, I may
say, learned appearance. He was tall and loose-jointed; his slight stoop,
together with an innocent smile, made him appear benevolently ready to lend you
his ear; his long arms with pale big hands had rare deliberate gestures of a
pointing out, demonstrating kind. I speak of him at length, because under this
exterior, and in conjunction with an upright and indulgent nature, this man
possessed an intrepidity of spirit and a physical courage that could have been
called reckless had it not been like a natural function of the body -- say good
digestion, for instance -- completely unconscious of itself. It is sometimes
said of a man that he carries his life in his hand. Such a saying would have
been inadequate if applied to him; during the early part of his existence in the
East he had been playing ball with it. All this was in the past, but I knew the
story of his life and the origin of his fortune. He was also a naturalist of
some distinction, or perhaps I should say a learned collector. Entomology was
his special study. His collection of Buprestidæ and Longicorns -- beetles all
-- horrible miniature monsters, looking malevolent in death and immobility, and
his cabinet of butterflies, beautiful and hovering under the glass of cases on
lifeless wings, had spread his fame far over the earth. The name of this
merchant, adventurer, sometime adviser of a Malay sultan (to whom he never
alluded otherwise than as "my poor Mohammed Bonso"), had, on account
of a few bushels of dead insects, become known to learned persons in Europe, who
could have had no conception, and certainly would not have cared to know
anything, of his life or character. I, who knew, considered him an eminently
suitable person to receive my confidences about Jim's difficulties as well as
my own.'
'Late in the evening I
entered his study, after traversing an imposing but empty dining-room very
dimly lit. The house was silent. I was preceded by an elderly grim Javanese
servant in a sort of livery of white jacket and yellow sarong, who, after
throwing the door open, exclaimed low, "O master!" and stepping
aside, vanished in a mysterious way as though he had been a ghost only
momentarily embodied for that particular service. Stein turned round with the
chair, and in the same movement his spectacles seemed to get pushed up on his
forehead. He welcomed me in his quiet and humorous voice. Only one corner of
the vast room, the corner in which stood his writing-desk, was strongly lighted
by a shaded reading-lamp, and the rest of the spacious apartment melted into
shapeless gloom like a cavern. Narrow shelves filled with dark boxes of uniform
shape and colour ran round the walls, not from floor to ceiling, but in a
sombre belt about four feet broad -- catacombs of beetles. Wooden tablets were
hung above at irregular intervals. The light reached one of them, and the word
Coleoptera written in gold letters glittered mysteriously upon a vast dimness.
The glass cases containing the collection of butterflies were ranged in three
long rows upon slender-legged little tables. One of these cases had been
removed from its place and stood on the desk, which was bestrewn with oblong
slips of paper blackened with minute handwriting.
' "So you see me
-- so," he said. His hand hovered over the case where a butterfly in
solitary grandeur spread out dark bronze wings, seven inches or more across,
with exquisite white veinings and a gorgeous border of yellow spots. "Only
one specimen like this they have in your London, and then -- no more. To my
small native town this my collection I shall bequeath. Something of me. The
best."
'He bent forward in the
chair and gazed intently, his chin over the front of the case. I stood at his
back. "Marvellous," he whispered, and seemed to forget my presence.
His history was curious. He had been born in Bavaria, and when a youth of
twenty-two had taken an active part in the revolutionary movement of 1848.
Heavily compromised, he managed to make his escape, and at first found a refuge
with a poor republican watchmaker in Trieste. From there he made his way to
Tripoli with a stock of cheap watches to hawk about, -- not a very great
opening truly, but it turned out lucky enough, because it was there he came
upon a Dutch traveller -- a rather famous man, I believe, but I don't remember
his name. It was that naturalist who, engaging him as a sort of assistant, took
him to the East. They travelled in the Archipelago together and separately,
collecting insects and birds, for four years or more. Then the naturalist went
home, and Stein, having no home to go to, remained with an old trader he had
come across in his journeys in the interior of Celebes -- if Celebes may be
said to have an interior. This old Scotsman, the only white man allowed to
reside in the country at the time, was a privileged friend of the chief ruler
of Wajo States, who was a woman. I often heard Stein relate how that chap, who
was slightly paralysed on one side, had introduced him to the native court a
short time before another stroke carried him off. He was a heavy man with a
patriarchal white beard, and of imposing stature. He came into the council-hall
where all the rajahs, pangerans, and headmen were assembled, with the queen, a
fat wrinkled woman (very free in her speech, Stein said), reclining on a high
couch under a canopy. He dragged his leg, thumping with his stick, and grasped
Stein's arm, leading him right up to the couch. "Look, queen, and you
rajahs, this is my son," he pro- claimed in a stentorian voice. "I
have traded with your fathers, and when I die he shall trade with you and your
sons."
'By means of this
simple formality Stein inherited the Scotsman's privileged position and all his
stock-in-trade, together with a fortified house on the banks of the only
navigable river in the country. Shortly afterwards the old queen, who was so
free in her speech, died, and the country became disturbed by various
pretenders to the throne. Stein joined the party of a younger son, the one of
whom thirty years later he never spoke otherwise but as "my poor Mohammed
Bonso." They both became the heroes of innumerable exploits; they had
wonderful adventures, and once stood a siege in the Scotsman's house for a
month, with only a score of followers against a whole army. I believe the
natives talk of that war to this day. Meantime, it seems, Stein never failed to
annex on his own account every butterfly or beetle he could lay hands on. After
some eight years of war, negotiations, false truces, sudden outbreaks,
reconciliation, treachery, and so on, and just as peace seemed at last
permanently established, his "poor Mohammed Bonso" was assassinated
at the gate of his own royal residence while dismounting in the highest spirits
on his return from a successful deer-hunt. This event rendered Stein's position
extremely insecure, but he would have stayed perhaps had it not been that a
short time after- wards he lost Mohammed's sister ("my dear wife the
princess," he used to say solemnly), by whom he had had a daughter --
mother and child both dying within three days of each other from some infectious
fever. He left the country, which this cruel loss had made unbearable to him.
Thus ended the first and adventurous part of his existence. What followed was
so different that, but for the reality of sorrow which remained with him, this
strange past must have resembled a dream. He had a little money; he started
life afresh, and in the course of years acquired a considerable fortune. At
first he had travelled a good deal amongst the islands, but age had stolen upon
him, and of late he seldom left his spacious house three miles out of town,
with an extensive garden, and surrounded by stables, offices, and bamboo
cottages for his servants and dependants, of whom he had many. He drove in his
buggy every morning to town, where he had an office with white and Chinese clerks.
He owned a small fleet of schooners and native craft, and dealt in island
produce on a large scale. For the rest he lived solitary, but not misanthropic,
with his books and his collection, classing and arranging specimens,
corresponding with entomologists in Europe, writing up a descriptive catalogue
of his treasures. Such was the history of the man whom I had come to consult
upon Jim's case without any definite hope. Simply to hear what he would have to
say would have been a relief. I was very anxious, but I respected the intense,
almost passionate, absorption with which he looked at a butterfly, as though on
the bronze sheen of these frail wings, in the white tracings, in the gorgeous
markings, he could see other things, an image of something as perishable and
defying destruction as these delicate and lifeless tissues displaying a
splendour unmarred by death.
'
"Marvellous!" he repeated, looking up at me. "Look! The beauty
-- but that is nothing -- look at the accuracy, the harmony. And so fragile!
And so strong! And so exact! This is Nature -- the balance of colossal forces.
Every star is so -- and every blade of grass stands so -- and the mighty Kosmos
in perfect equilibrium produces -- this. This wonder; this masterpiece of
Nature -- the great artist."
' "Never heard an
entomologist go on like this," I observed cheerfully. "Masterpiece!
And what of man?"
' "Man is amazing,
but he is not a masterpiece," he said, keeping his eyes fixed on the glass
case. "Perhaps the artist was a little mad. Eh? What do you think?
Sometimes it seems to me that man is come where he is not wanted, where there
is no place for him; for if not, why should he want all the place? Why should
he run about here and there making a great noise about himself, talking about the
stars, disturbing the blades of grass? . . ."
' "Catching
butterflies," I chimed in.
'He smiled, threw
himself back in his chair, and stretched his legs. "Sit down," he
said. "I captured this rare specimen myself one very fine morning. And I
had a very big emotion. You don't know what it is for a collector to capture
such a rare specimen. You can't know."
'I smiled at my ease in
a rocking-chair. His eyes seemed to look far beyond the wall at which they
stared; and he narrated how, one night, a messenger arrived from his "poor
Mohammed," requiring his presence at the "residenz" -- as he
called it -- which was distant some nine or ten miles by a bridle-path over a
cultivated plain, with patches of forest here and there. Early in the morning
he started from his fortified house, after embracing his little Emma, and
leaving the "princess," his wife, in command. He described how she
came with him as far as the gate, walking with one hand on the neck of his
horse; she had on a white jacket, gold pins in her hair, and a brown leather
belt over her left shoulder with a revolver in it. "She talked as women
will talk," he said, "telling me to be careful, and to try to get
back before dark, and what a great wickedness it was for me to go alone. We
were at war, and the country was not safe; my men were putting up bullet-proof
shutters to the house and loading their rifles, and she begged me to have no
fear for her. She could defend the house against anybody till I returned. And I
laughed with pleasure a little. I liked to see her so brave and young and
strong. I too was young then. At the gate she caught hold of my hand and gave
it one squeeze and fell back. I made my horse stand still outside till I heard
the bars of the gate put up behind me. There was a great enemy of mine, a great
noble -- and a great rascal too -- roaming with a band in the neighbourhood. I
cantered for four or five miles; there had been rain in the night, but the
mists had gone up, up -- and the face of the earth was clean; it lay smiling to
me, so fresh and innocent -- like a little child. Suddenly somebody fires a
volley -- twenty shots at least it seemed to me. I hear bullets sing in my ear,
and my hat jumps to the back of my head. It was a little intrigue, you
understand. They got my poor Mohammed to send for me and then laid that ambush.
I see it all in a minute, and I think -- This wants a little management. My
pony snort, jump, and stand, and I fall slowly forward with my head on his
mane. He begins to walk, and with one eye I could see over his neck a faint
cloud of smoke hanging in front of a clump of bamboos to my left. I think --
Aha! my friends, why you not wait long enough before you shoot? This is not yet
gelungen. Oh no! I get hold of my revolver with my right hand -- quiet -- quiet.
After all, there were only seven of these rascals. They get up from the grass
and start running with their sarongs tucked up, waving spears above their
heads, and yelling to each other to look out and catch the horse, because I was
dead. I let them come as close as the door here, and then bang, bang, bang --
take aim each time too. One more shot I fire at a man's back, but I miss. Too
far already. And then I sit alone on my horse with the clean earth smiling at
me, and there are the bodies of three men lying on the ground. One was curled
up like a dog, another on his back had an arm over his eyes as if to keep off
the sun, and the third man he draws up his leg very slowly and makes it with
one kick straight again. I watch him very carefully from my horse, but there is
no more -- bleibt ganz ruhig -- keep still, so. And as I looked at his face for
some sign of life I observed something like a faint shadow pass over his
forehead. It was the shadow of this butterfly. Look at the form of the wing.
This species fly high with a strong flight. I raised my eyes and I saw him
fluttering away. I think -- Can it be possible? And then I lost him. I
dismounted and went on very slow, leading my horse and holding my revolver with
one hand and my eyes darting up and down and right and left, everywhere! At
last I saw him sitting on a small heap of dirt ten feet away. At once my heart
began to beat quick. I let go my horse, keep my revolver in one hand, and with
the other snatch my soft felt hat off my head. One step. Steady. Another step.
Flop! I got him! When I got up I shook like a leaf with excitement, and when I
opened these beautiful wings and made sure what a rare and so extraordinary
perfect specimen I had, my head went round and my legs became so weak with
emotion that I had to sit on the ground. I had greatly desired to possess
myself of a specimen of that species when collecting for the professor. I took
long journeys and underwent great privations; I had dreamed of him in my sleep,
and here suddenly I had him in my fingers -- for myself! In the words of the
poet" (he pronounced it "boet") --
"'So halt' ich's
endlich denn in meinen Händen,
Und nenn' es in
gewissem Sinne mein.' "
He gave to the last
word the emphasis of a suddenly lowered voice, and withdrew his eyes slowly
from my face. He began to charge a long-stemmed pipe busily and in silence,
then, pausing with his thumb on the orifice of the bowl, looked again at me
significantly.
' "Yes, my good
friend. On that day I had nothing to desire; I had greatly annoyed my principal
enemy; I was young, strong; I had friendship; I had the love" (he said
"lof") "of woman, a child I had, to make my heart very full --
and even what I had once dreamed in my sleep had come into my hand too!"
'He struck a match,
which flared violently. His thoughtful placid face twitched once.
' "Friend, wife,
child," he said slowly, gazing at the small flame -- "phoo!" The
match was blown out. He sighed and turned again to the glass case. The frail
and beautiful wings quivered faintly, as if his breath had for an instant
called back to life that gorgeous object of his dreams.
' "The work,"
he began suddenly, pointing to the scattered slips, and in his usual gentle and
cheery tone, "is making great progress. I have been this rare specimen
describing.... Na! And what is your good news?"
' "To tell you the
truth, Stein," I said with an effort that surprised me, "I came here
to describe a specimen...."
'
"Butterfly?" he asked, with an unbelieving and humorous eagerness.
' "Nothing so
perfect," I answered, feeling suddenly dispirited with all sorts of
doubts. "A man!"
' "Ach so!"
he murmured, and his smiling countenance, turned to me, became grave. Then
after looking at me for a while he said slowly, "Well -- I am a man
too."
'Here you have him as
he was; he knew how to be so generously encouraging as to make a scrupulous man
hesitate on the brink of confidence; but if I did hesitate it was not for long.
'He heard me out,
sitting with crossed legs. Sometimes his head would disappear completely in a
great eruption of smoke, and a sympathetic growl would come out from the cloud.
When I finished he uncrossed his legs, laid down his pipe, leaned forward
towards me earnestly with his elbows on the arms of his chair, the tips of his
fingers together.
' "I understand
very well. He is romantic."
'He had diagnosed the
case for me, and at first I was quite startled to find how simple it was; and
indeed our conference resembled so much a medical consultation -- Stein, of
learned aspect, sitting in an arm-chair before his desk; I, anxious, in
another, facing him, but a little to one side -- that it seemed natural to ask
--
' "What's good for
it?"
'He lifted up a long
forefinger.
' "There is only
one remedy! One thing alone can us from being ourselves cure!" The finger
came down on the desk with a smart rap. The case which he had made to look so
simple before became if possible still simpler -- and altogether hopeless.
There was a pause. "Yes," said I, "strictly speaking, the
question is not how to get cured, but how to live."
'He approved with his
head, a little sadly as it seemed. "Ja! ja! In general, adapting the words
of your great poet: That is the question...." He went on nodding
sympathetically.... "How to be! Ach! How to be."
'He stood up with the
tips of his fingers resting on the desk.
' "We want in so
many different ways to be," he began again. "This magnificent
butterfly finds a little heap of dirt and sits still on it; but man he will
never on his heap of mud keep still. He want to be so, and again he want to be
so...." He moved his hand up, then down.... "He wants to be a saint,
and he wants to be a devil -- and every time he shuts his eyes he sees himself
as a very fine fellow -- so fine as he can never be.... In a dream...."
'He lowered the glass
lid, the automatic lock clicked sharply, and taking up the case in both hands
he bore it religiously away to its place, passing out of the bright circle of
the lamp into the ring of fainter light -- into shapeless dusk at last. It had
an odd effect -- as if these few steps had carried him out of this concrete and
perplexed world. His tall form, as though robbed of its substance, hovered noiselessly
over invisible things with stooping and indefinite movements; his voice, heard
in that remoteness where he could be glimpsed mysteriously busy with immaterial
cares, was no longer incisive, seemed to roll voluminous and grave -- mellowed
by distance.
' "And because you
not always can keep your eyes shut there comes the real trouble -- the heart
pain -- the world pain. I tell you, my friend, it is not good for you to find
you cannot make your dream come true, for the reason that you not strong enough
are, or not clever enough. .Ja! . . . And all the time you are such a fine
fellow too! Wie? Was? Gott im Himmel! How can that be? Ha! ha! ha!"
'The shadow prowling
amongst the graves of butterflies laughed boisterously.
' "Yes! Very funny
this terrible thing is. A man that is born falls into a dream like a man who
falls into the sea. If he tries to climb out into the air as inexperienced
people endeavour to do, he drowns -- nicht wahr? . . . No! I tell you! The way
is to the destructive element submit yourself, and with the exertions of your
hands and feet in the water make the deep, deep sea keep you up. So if you ask
me -- how to be?"
'His voice leaped up
extraordinarily strong, as though away there in the dusk he had been inspired
by some whisper of knowledge. "I will tell you! For that too there is only
one way."
'With a hasty
swish-swish of his slippers he loomed up in the ring of faint light, and
suddenly appeared in the bright circle of the lamp. His extended hand aimed at
my breast like a pistol; his deep- set eyes seemed to pierce through me, but
his twitching lips uttered no word, and the austere exaltation of a certitude
seen in the dusk vanished from his face. The hand that had been pointing at my
breast fell, and by-and-by, coming a step nearer, he laid it gently on my
shoulder. There were things, he said mournfully, that perhaps could never be
told, only he had lived so much alone that sometimes he forgot -- he forgot.
The light had destroyed the assurance which had inspired him in the distant
shadows. He sat down and, with both elbows on the desk, rubbed his forehead.
"And yet it is true -- it is true. In the destructive element
immerse." . . . He spoke in a subdued tone, without looking at me, one
hand on each side of his face. "That was the way. To follow the dream, and
again to follow the dream -- and so -- ewig -- usque ad finem...." The
whisper of his conviction seemed to open before me a vast and uncertain
expanse, as of a crepuscular horizon on a plain at dawn -- or was it, perchance,
at the coming of the night? One had not the courage to decide; but it was a
charming and deceptive light, throwing the impalpable poesy of its dimness over
pitfalls -- over graves. His life had begun in sacrifice, in enthusiasm for
generous ideas; he had travelled very far, on various ways, on strange paths,
and whatever he followed it had been without faltering, and there- fore without
shame and without regret. In so far he was right. That was the way, no doubt.
Yet for all that, the great plain on which men wander amongst graves and
pitfalls remained very desolate under the impalpable poesy of its crepuscular
light, overshadowed in the centre, circled with a bright edge as if surrounded
by an abyss full of flames. When at last I broke the silence it was to express
the opinion that no one could be more romantic than himself.
'He shook his head
slowly, and afterwards looked at me with a patient and inquiring glance. It was
a shame, he said. There we were sitting and talking like two boys, instead of
putting our heads together to find something practical -- a practical remedy --
for the evil -- for the great evil -- he repeated, with a humorous and
indulgent smile. For all that, our talk did not grow more practical. We avoided
pronouncing Jim's name as though we had tried to keep flesh and blood out of
our discussion, or he were nothing but an erring spirit, a suffering and
nameless shade. "Na!" said Stein, rising. "To-night you sleep
here, and in the morning we shall do something practical -- practical...."
He lit a two-branched candlestick and led the way. We passed through empty dark
rooms, escorted by gleams from the lights Stein carried. They glided along the
waxed floors, sweeping here and there over the polished surface of a table,
leaped upon a fragmentary curve of a piece of furniture, or flashed
perpendicularly in and out of distant mirrors, while the forms of two men and
the flicker of two flames could be seen for a moment stealing silently across
the depths of a crystalline void. He walked slowly a pace in advance with
stooping courtesy; there was a profound, as it were a listening, quietude on
his face; the long flaxen locks mixed with white threads were scattered thinly
upon his slightly bowed neck.
' "He is romantic
-- romantic," he repeated. "And that is very bad -- very bad.... Very
good, too," he added. "But is he?" I queried.
' "Gewiss,"
he said, and stood still holding up the candelabrum, but without looking at me.
"Evident! What is it that by inward pain makes him know himself? What is
it that for you and me makes him -- exist?"
'At that moment it was
difficult to believe in Jim's existence -- starting from a country parsonage,
blurred by crowds of men as by clouds of dust, silenced by the clashing claims
of life and death in a material world -- but his imperishable reality came to
me with a convincing, with an irresistible force! I saw it vividly, as though
in our progress through the lofty silent rooms amongst fleeting gleams of light
and the sudden revelations of human figures stealing with flickering flames
within unfathomable and pellucid depths, we had approached nearer to absolute
Truth, which, like Beauty itself, floats elusive, obscure, half submerged, in
the silent still waters of mystery. "Perhaps he is," I admitted with
a slight laugh, whose unexpectedly loud reverberation made me lower my voice
directly; "but I am sure you are." With his head dropping on his
breast and the light held high he began to walk again. "Well -- I exist
too," he said.
'He preceded me. My
eyes followed his movements, but what I did see was not the head of the firm,
the welcome guest at afternoon receptions, the correspondent of learned
societies, the entertainer of stray naturalists; I saw only the reality of his
destiny, which he had known how to follow with unfaltering footsteps, that life
begun in humble surroundings, rich in generous enthusiasms, in friendship,
love, war -- in all the exalted elements of romance. At the door of my room he
faced me. "Yes," I said, as though carrying on a discussion,
"and amongst other things you dreamed foolishly of a certain butterfly;
but when one fine morning your dream came in your way you did not let the
splendid opportunity escape. Did you? Whereas he . . ." Stein lifted his
hand. "And do you know how many opportunities I let escape; how many dreams
I had lost that had come in my way?" He shook his head regretfully.
"It seems to me that some would have been very fine -- if I had made them
come true. Do you know how many? Perhaps I myself don't know. "
"Whether his were fine or not," I said, "he knows of one which
he certainly did not catch." "Everybody knows of one or two like
that," said Stein; "and that is the trouble -- the great
trouble...."
'He shook hands on the
threshold, peered into my room under his raised arm. "Sleep well. And
to-morrow we must do something practical -- practical...."
'Though his own room
was beyond mine I saw him return the way he came. He was going back to his
butterflies.'
'I don't suppose any of
you have ever heard of Patusan?' Marlow resumed, after a silence occupied in
the careful lighting of a cigar. 'It does not matter; there's many a heavenly
body in the lot crowding upon us of a night that mankind had never heard of, it
being outside the sphere of its activities and of no earthly importance to
anybody but to the astronomers who are paid to talk learnedly about its
composition, weight, path -- the irregularities of its conduct, the aberrations
of its light -- a sort of scientific scandal-mongering. Thus with Patusan. It
was referred to knowingly in the inner government circles in Batavia,
especially as to its irregularities and aberrations, and it was known by name
to some few, very few, in the mercantile world. Nobody, however, had been
there, and I suspect no one desired to go there in person -- just as an
astronomer, I should fancy, would strongly object to being transported into a
distant heavenly body, where, parted from his earthly emoluments, he would be
bewildered by the view of an unfamiliar heaven. However, neither heavenly
bodies nor astronomers have anything to do with Patusan. It was Jim who went
there. I only meant you to understand that had Stein arranged to send him into
a star of the fifth magnitude the change could not have been greater. He left
his earthly failings behind him and what sort of reputation he had, and there
was a totally new set of conditions for his imaginative faculty to work upon.
Entirely new, entirely remarkable. And he got hold of them in a remarkable way.
'Stein was the man who
knew more about Patusan than anybody else. More than was known in the
government circles I suspect. I have no doubt he had been there, either in his
butterfly-hunting days or later on, when he tried in his incorrigible way to
season with a pinch of romance the fattening dishes of his commercial kitchen.
There were very few places in the Archipelago he had not seen in the original
dusk of their being, before light (and even electric light) had been carried
into them for the sake of better morality and -- and -- well -- the greater
profit too. It was at breakfast of the morning following our talk about Jim
that he mentioned the place, after I had quoted poor Brierly's remark:
"Let him creep twenty feet underground and stay there." He looked up
at me with interested attention, as though I had been a rare insect. "This
could be done too," he remarked, sipping his coffee. "Bury him in
some sort," I explained. "One doesn't like to do it of course, but it
would be the best thing, seeing what he is." "Yes; he is young,"
Stein mused. "The youngest human being now in existence," I affirmed.
"Schon. There's Patusan," he went on in the same tone.... "And
the woman is dead now," he added incomprehensibly.
'Of course I don't know
that story; I can only guess that once before Patusan had been used as a grave
for some sin, transgression, or misfortune. It is impossible to suspect Stein.
The only woman that had ever existed for him was the Malay girl he called
"My wife the princess," or, more rarely, in moments of expansion,
"the mother of my Emma." Who was the woman he had mentioned in
connection with Patusan I can't say; but from his allusions I understand she
had been an educated and very good-looking Dutch- Malay girl, with a tragic or
perhaps only a pitiful history, whose most painful part no doubt was her marriage
with a Malacca Portuguese who had been clerk in some commercial house in the
Dutch colonies. I gathered from Stein that this man was an unsatisfactory
person in more ways than one, all being more or less indefinite and offensive.
It was solely for his wife's sake that Stein had appointed him manager of Stein
& Co.'s trading post in Patusan; but commercially the arrangement was not a
success, at any rate for the firm, and now the woman had died, Stein was
disposed to try another agent there. The Portuguese, whose name was Cornelius,
considered himself a very deserving but ill-used person, entitled by his
abilities to a better position. This man Jim would have to relieve. "But I
don't think he will go away from the place," remarked Stein. "That
has nothing to do with me. It was only for the sake of the woman that I . . .
But as I think there is a daughter left, I shall let him, if he likes to stay,
keep the old house."
'Patusan is a remote
district of a native-ruled state, and the chief settlement bears the same name.
At a point on the river about forty miles from the sea, where the first houses
come into view, there can be seen rising above the level of the forests the
summits of two steep hills very close together, and separated by what looks
like a deep fissure, the cleavage of some mighty stroke. As a matter of fact,
the valley between is nothing but a narrow ravine; the appearance from the
settlement is of one irregularly conical hill split in two, and with the two
halves leaning slightly apart. On the third day after the full, the moon, as
seen from the open space in front of Jim's house (he had a very fine house in
the native style when I visited him), rose exactly behind these hills, its
diffused light at first throwing the two masses into intensely black relief,
and then the nearly perfect disc, glowing ruddily, appeared, gliding upwards
between the sides of the chasm, till it floated away above the summits, as if
escaping from a yawning grave in gentle triumph. "Wonderful effect,"
said Jim by my side. "Worth seeing. Is it not?"
'And this question was
put with a note of personal pride that made me smile, as though he had had a
hand in regulating that unique spectacle. He had regulated so many things in
Patusan -- things that would have appeared as much beyond his control as the
motions of the moon and the stars.
'It was inconceivable.
That was the distinctive quality of the part into which Stein and I had tumbled
him unwittingly, with no other notion than to get him out of the way; out of
his own way, be it understood. That was our main purpose, though, I own, I
might have had another motive which had influenced me a little. I was about to
go home for a time; and it may be I desired, more than I was aware of myself,
to dispose of him -- to dispose of him, you understand -- before I left. I was
going home, and he had come to me from there, with his miserable trouble and
his shadowy claim, like a man panting under a burden in a mist. I cannot say I
had ever seen him distinctly -- not even to this day, after I had my last view
of him; but it seemed to me that the less I understood the more I was bound to
him in the name of that doubt which is the inseparable part of our knowledge. I
did not know so much more about myself. And then, I repeat, I was going home --
to that home distant enough for all its hearthstones to be like one
hearthstone, by which the humblest of us has the right to sit. We wander in our
thousands over the face of the earth, the illustrious and the obscure, earning
beyond the seas our fame, our money, or only a crust of bread; but it seems to
me that for each of us going home must be like going to render an account. We
return to face our superiors, our kindred, our friends -- those whom we obey,
and those whom we love; but even they who have neither, the most free, lonely,
irresponsible and bereft of ties, -- even those for whom home holds no dear
face, no familiar voice, -- even they have to meet the spirit that dwells
within the land, under its sky, in its air, in its valleys, and on its rises,
in its fields, in its waters and its trees -- a mute friend, judge, and
inspirer. Say what you like, to get its joy, to breathe its peace, to face its
truth, one must return with a clear conscience. All this may seem to you sheer
sentimentalism; and indeed very few of us have the will or the capacity to look
consciously under the surface of familiar emotions. There are the girls we
love, the men we look up to, the tenderness, the friendships, the
opportunities, the pleasures! But the fact remains that you must touch your
reward with clean hands, lest it turn to dead leaves, to thorns, in your grasp.
I think it is the lonely, without a fireside or an affection they may call
their own, those who return not to a dwelling but to the land itself, to meet its
disembodied, eternal, and unchangeable spirit -- it is those who understand
best its severity, its saving power, the grace of its secular right to our
fidelity, to our obedience. Yes! few of us understand, but we all feel it
though, and I say all without exception, because those who do not feel do not
count. Each blade of grass has its spot on earth whence it draws its life, its
strength; and so is man rooted to the land from which he draws his faith
together with his life. I don't know how much Jim understood; but I know he
felt, he felt confusedly but powerfully, the demand of some such truth or some
such illusion -- I don't care how you call it, there is so little difference,
and the difference means so little. The thing is that in virtue of his feeling
he mattered. He would never go home now. Not he. Never. Had he been capable of
picturesque manifestations he would have shuddered at the thought and made you
shudder too. But he was not of that sort, though he was expressive enough in
his way. Before the idea of going home he would grow desperately stiff and
immovable, with lowered chin and pouted lips, and with those candid blue eyes
of his glowering darkly under a frown, as if before something unbearable, as if
before something revolting. There was imagination in that hard skull of his,
over which the thick clustering hair fitted like a cap. As to me, I have no
imagination (I would be more certain about him today, if I had), and I do not
mean to imply that I figured to myself the spirit of the land uprising above
the white cliffs of Dover, to ask me what I -- returning with no bones broken,
so to speak -- had done with my very young brother. I could not make such a
mistake. I knew very well he was of those about whom there is no inquiry; I had
seen better men go out, disappear, vanish utterly, without provoking a sound of
curiosity or sorrow. The spirit of the land, as becomes the ruler of great
enterprises, is careless of innumerable lives. Woe to the stragglers! We exist
only in so far as we hang together. He had straggled in a way; he had not hung
on; but he was aware of it with an intensity that made him touching, just as a
man's more intense life makes his death more touching than the death of a tree.
I happened to be handy, and I happened to be touched. That's all there is to
it. I was concerned as to the way he would go out. It would have hurt me if,
for instance, he had taken to drink. The earth is so small that I was afraid
of, some day, being waylaid by a blear- eyed, swollen-faced, besmirched loafer,
with no soles to his canvas shoes, and with a flutter of rags about the elbows,
who, on the strength of old acquaintance, would ask for a loan of five dollars.
You know the awful jaunty bearing of these scarecrows coming to you from a
decent past, the rasping careless voice, the half-averted impudent glances --
those meetings more trying to a man who believes in the solidarity of our lives
than the sight of an impenitent death-bed to a priest. That, to tell you the
truth, was the only danger I could see for him and for me; but I also
mistrusted my want of imagination. It might even come to something worse, in
some way it was beyond my powers of fancy to foresee. He wouldn't let me forget
how imaginative he was, and your imaginative people swing farther in any
direction, as if given a longer scope of cable in the uneasy anchorage of life.
They do. They take to drink too. It may be I was belittling him by such a fear.
How could I tell? Even Stein could say no more than that he was romantic. I
only knew he was one of us. And what business had he to be romantic? I am
telling you so much about my own instinctive feelings and bemused reflections
because there remains so little to be told of him. He existed for me, and after
all it is only through me that he exists for you. I've led him out by the hand;
I have paraded him before you. Were my commonplace fears unjust? I won't say --
not even now. You may be able to tell better, since the proverb has it that the
onlookers see most of the game. At any rate, they were superfluous. He did not
go out, not at all; on the contrary, he came on wonder- fully, came on straight
as a die and in excellent form, which showed that he could stay as well as
spurt. I ought to be delighted, for it is a victory in which I had taken my
part; but I am not so pleased as I would have expected to be. I ask myself
whether his rush had really carried him out of that mist in which he loomed
interesting if not very big, with floating outlines -- a straggler yearning
inconsolably for his humble place in the ranks. And besides, the last word is
not said -- probably shall never be said. Are not our lives too short for that
full utterance which through all our stammerings is of course our only and
abiding intention? I have given up expecting those last words, whose ring, if
they could only be pronounced, would shake both heaven and earth. There is
never time to say our last word -- the last word of our love, of our desire,
faith, remorse, submission, revolt. The heaven and the earth must not be shaken,
I suppose -- at least, not by us who know so many truths about either. My last
words about Jim shall be few. I affirm he had achieved greatness; but the thing
would be dwarfed in the telling, or rather in the hearing. Frankly, it is not
my words that I mistrust, but your minds. I could be eloquent were I not afraid
you fellows had starved your imaginations to feed your bodies. I do not mean to
be offensive; it is respectable to have no illusions -- and safe -- and
profitable -- and dull. Yet you too in your time must have known the intensity
of life, that light of glamour created in the shock of trifles, as amazing as
the glow of sparks struck from a cold stone -- and as short-lived, alas!'
'The conquest of love,
honour, men's confidence -- the pride of it, the power of it, are fit materials
for a heroic tale; only our minds are struck by the externals of such a
success, and to Jim's successes there were no externals. Thirty miles of forest
shut it off from the sight of an indifferent world, and the noise of the white
surf along the coast overpowered the voice of fame. The stream of civilisation,
as if divided on a headland a hundred miles north of Patusan, branches east and
south-east, leaving its plains and valleys, its old trees and its old mankind,
neglected and isolated, such as an insignificant and crumbling islet between
the two branches of a mighty, devouring stream. You find the name of the
country pretty often in collections of old voyages. The seventeenth-century
traders went there for pepper, because the passion for pepper seemed to burn
like a flame of love in the breast of Dutch and English adventurers about the
time of James the First. Where wouldn't they go for pepper! For a bag of pepper
they would cut each other's throats without hesitation, and would forswear
their souls, of which they were so careful otherwise: the bizarre obstinacy of
that desire made them defy death in a thousand shapes -- the unknown seas, the
loathsome and strange diseases; wounds, captivity, hunger, pestilence, and
despair. It made them great! By heavens! it made them heroic; and it made them
pathetic too in their craving for trade with the inflexible death levying its
toll on young and old. It seems impossible to believe that mere greed could
hold men to such a steadfastness of purpose, to such a blind persistence in
endeavour and sacrifice. And indeed those who adventured their persons and
lives risked all they had for a slender reward. They left their bones to lie
bleaching on distant shores, so that wealth might flow to the living at home.
To us, their less tried successors, they appear magnified, not as agents of
trade but as instruments of a recorded destiny, pushing out into the unknown in
obedience to an inward voice, to an impulse beating in the blood, to a dream of
the future. They were wonderful; and it must be owned they were ready for the
wonderful. They recorded it complacently in their sufferings, in the aspect of
the seas, in the customs of strange nations, in the glory of splendid rulers.
'In Patusan they had
found lots of pepper, and had been impressed by the magnificence and the wisdom
of the Sultan; but somehow, after a century of chequered intercourse, the
country seems to drop gradually out of the trade. Perhaps the pepper had given
out. Be it as it may, nobody cares for it now; the glory has departed, the
Sultan is an imbecile youth with two thumbs on his left hand and an uncertain
and beggarly revenue extorted from a miserable population and stolen from him
by his many uncles.
'This of course I have
from Stein. He gave me their names and a short sketch of the life and character
of each. He was as full of information about native states as an official
report, but infinitely more amusing. He had to know. He traded in so many, and
in some districts -- as in Patusan, for instance -- his firm was the only one
to have an agency by special permit from the Dutch authorities. The Government
trusted his discretion, and it was understood that he took all the risks. The
men he employed understood that too, but he made it worth their while
apparently. He was perfectly frank with me over the breakfast-table in the
morning. As far as he was aware (the last news was thirteen months old, he
stated precisely), utter insecurity for life and property was the normal
condition. There were in Patusan antagonistic forces, and one of them was Rajah
Allang, the worst of the Sultan's uncles, the governor of the river, who did
the extorting and the stealing, and ground down to the point of extinction the
country-born Malays, who, utterly defenceless, had not even the resource of
emigrating -- "For indeed," as Stein remarked, "where could they
go, and how could they get away?" No doubt they did not even desire to get
away. The world (which is circumscribed by lofty impassable mountains) has been
given into the hand of the high-born, and this Rajah they knew: he was of their
own royal house. I had the pleasure of meeting the gentleman later on. He was a
dirty, little, used-up old man with evil eyes and a weak mouth, who swallowed
an opium pill every two hours, and in defiance of common decency wore his hair
uncovered and falling in wild stringy locks about his wizened grimy face. When
giving audience he would clamber upon a sort of narrow stage erected in a hall
like a ruinous barn with a rotten bamboo floor, through the cracks of which you
could see, twelve or fifteen feet below, the heaps of refuse and garbage of all
kinds lying under the house. That is where and how he received us when,
accompanied by Jim, I paid him a visit of ceremony. There were about forty
people in the room, and perhaps three times as many in the great courtyard
below. There was constant movement, coming and going, pushing and murmuring, at
our backs. A few youths in gay silks glared from the distance; the majority,
slaves and humble dependants, were half naked, in ragged sarongs, dirty with
ashes and mud-stains. I had never seen Jim look so grave, so self- possessed,
in an impenetrable, impressive way. In the midst of these dark-faced men, his stalwart
figure in white apparel, the gleaming clusters of his fair hair, seemed to
catch all the sunshine that trickled through the cracks in the closed shutters
of that dim hall, with its walls of mats and a roof of thatch. He appeared like
a creature not only of another kind but of another essence. Had they not seen
him come up in a canoe they might have thought he had descended upon them from
the clouds. He did, however, come in a crazy dug-out, sitting (very still and
with his knees together, for fear of overturning the thing) -- sitting on a tin
box -- which I had lent him -- nursing on his lap a revolver of the Navy
pattern -- presented by me on parting -- which, through an interposition of
Providence, or through some wrong-headed notion, that was just like him, or
else from sheer instinctive sagacity, he had decided to carry unloaded. That's
how he ascended the Patusan river. Nothing could have been more prosaic and
more unsafe, more extravagantly casual, more lonely. Strange, this fatality
that would cast the complexion of a flight upon all his acts, of impulsive
unreflecting desertion of a jump into the unknown.
'It is precisely the
casualness of it that strikes me most. Neither Stein nor I had a clear
conception of what might be on the other side when we, metaphorically speaking,
took him up and hove him over the wall with scant ceremony. At the moment I
merely wished to achieve his disappearance; Stein characteristically enough had
a sentimental motive. He had a notion of paying off (in kind, I sup- pose) the
old debt he had never forgotten. Indeed he had been all his life especially
friendly to anybody from the British Isles. His late benefactor, it is true,
was a Scot -- even to the length of being called Alexander McNeil -- and Jim
came from a long way south of the Tweed; but at the distance of six or seven
thousand miles Great Britain, though never diminished, looks foreshortened
enough even to its own children to rob such details of their importance. Stein
was excusable, and his hinted intentions were so generous that I begged him
most earnestly to keep them secret for a time. I felt that no consideration of
personal advantage should be allowed to influence Jim; that not even the risk
of such influence should be run. We had to deal with another sort of reality.
He wanted a refuge, and a refuge at the cost of danger should be offered him --
nothing more.
'Upon every other point
I was perfectly frank with him, and I even (as I believed at the time)
exaggerated the danger of the undertaking. As a matter of fact I did not do it
justice; his first day in Patusan was nearly his last -- would have been his
last if he had not been so reckless or so hard on himself and had condescended
to load that revolver. I remember, as I unfolded our precious scheme for his
retreat, how his stubborn but weary resignation was gradually replaced by
surprise, interest, wonder, and by boyish eagerness. This was a chance he had
been dreaming of. He couldn't think how he merited that I . . . He would be
shot if he could see to what he owed . . .And it was Stein, Stein the merchant,
who . . .but of course it was me he had to . . . I cut him short. He was not
articulate, and his gratitude caused me inexplicable pain. I told him that if
he owed this chance to any one especially, it was to an old Scot of whom he had
never heard, who had died many years ago, of whom little was remembered besides
a roaring voice and a rough sort of honesty. There was really no one to receive
his thanks. Stein was passing on to a young man the help he had received in his
own young days, and I had done no more than to mention his name. Upon this he
coloured, and, twisting a bit of paper in his fingers, he remarked bashfully
that I had always trusted him.
'I admitted that such
was the case, and added after a pause that I wished he had been able to follow
my example. "You think I don't?" he asked uneasily, and remarked in a
mutter that one had to get some sort of show first; then brightening up, and in
a loud voice he protested he would give me no occasion to regret my confidence,
which -- which . . .
' "Do not
misapprehend," I interrupted. "It is not in your power to make me
regret anything." There would be no regrets; but if there were, it would
be altogether my own affair: an the other hand, I wished him to understand
clearly that this arrangement, this -- this -- experiment, was his own doing;
he was responsible for it and no one else. "Why? Why," he stammered,
"this is the very thing that I . . ." I begged him not to be dense, and
he looked more puzzled than ever. He was in a fair way to make life intolerable
to himself . . . "Do you think so?" he asked, disturbed; but in a
moment added confidently, "I was going on though. Was I not?" It was
impossible to be angry with him: I could not help a smile, and told him that in
the old days people who went on like this were on the way of becoming hermits
in a wilderness. "Hermits be hanged!" he commented with engaging
impulsiveness. Of course he didn't mind a wilderness.... "I was glad of
it," I said. That was where he would be going to. He would find it lively
enough, I ventured to promise. "Yes, yes," he said keenly. He had
shown a desire, I continued inflexibly, to go out and shut the door after
him.... "Did I?" he interrupted in a strange access of gloom that
seemed to envelop him from head to foot like the shadow of a passing cloud. He
was wonderfully expressive after all. Wonder- fully! "Did I?" he
repeated bitterly. "You can't say I made much noise about it. And I can
keep it up too -- only, confound it! you show me a door." . . . "Very
well. Pass on," I struck in. I could make him a solemn promise that it
would be shut behind him with a vengeance. His fate, whatever it was, would be
ignored, because the country, for all its rotten state, was not judged ripe for
interference. Once he got in, it would be for the outside world as though he
had never existed. He would have nothing but the soles of his two feet to stand
upon, and he would have first to find his ground at that. "Never existed
-- that's it, by love," he murmured to him- self. His eyes, fastened upon
my lips, sparkled. If he had thoroughly understood the conditions, I concluded,
he had better jump into the first gharry he could see and drive on to Stein's
house for his final instructions. He flung out of the room before I had fairly
finished speaking.'
'He did not return till
next morning. He had been kept to dinner and for the night. There never had
been such a wonderful man as Mr. Stein. He had in his pocket a letter for
Cornelius ("the Johnnie who's going to get the sack," he explained,
with a momentary drop in his elation), and he exhibited with glee a silver
ring, such as natives use, worn down very thin and showing faint traces of
chasing.
'This was his
introduction to an old chap called Doramin -- one of the principal men out
there -- a big pot -- who had been Mr. Stein's friend in that country where he
had all these adventures. Mr. Stein called him "war-comrade."
War-comrade was good. Wasn't it? And didn't Mr. Stein speak English wonderfully
well? Said he had learned it in Celebes -- of all places! That was awfully
funny. Was it not? He did speak with an accent -- a twang -- did I notice? That
chap Doramin had given him the ring. They had exchanged presents when they
parted for the last time. Sort of promising eternal friendship. He called it
fine -- did I not? They had to make a dash for dear life out of the country
when that Mohammed -- Mohammed -- What's-his-name had been killed. I knew the
story, of course. Seemed a beastly shame, didn't it? . . .
'He ran on like this,
forgetting his plate, with a knife and fork in hand (he had found me at
tiffin), slightly flushed, and with his eyes darkened many shades, which was
with him a sign of excitement. The ring was a sort of credential -- ("It's
like something you read of in books," he threw in appreciatively) -- and
Doramin would do his best for him. Mr. Stein had been the means of saving that
chap's life on some occasion; purely by accident, Mr. Stein had said, but he --
Jim -- had his own opinion about that. Mr. Stein was just the man to look out
for such accidents. No matter. Accident or purpose, this would serve his turn
immensely. Hoped to goodness the jolly old beggar had not gone off the hooks
meantime. Mr. Stein could not tell. There had been no news for more than a
year; they were kicking up no end of an all-fired row amongst themselves, and
the river was closed. Jolly awkward, this; but, no fear; he would manage to
find a crack to get in.
'He impressed, almost
frightened me with his elated rattle. He was voluble like a youngster on the
eve of a long holiday with a prospect of delightful scrapes, and such an
attitude of mind in a grown man and in this connection had in it something
phenomenal, a little mad, dangerous, unsafe. I was on the point of entreating
him to take things seriously when he dropped his knife and fork (he had begun
eating, or rather swallowing food, as it were, unconsciously), and began a
search all round his plate. The ring! The ring! Where the devil . . . Ah! Here
it was . . . He closed his big hand on it, and tried all his pockets one after
another. Jove! wouldn't do to lose the thing. He meditated gravely over his
fist. Had it? Would hang the bally affair round his neck! And he proceeded to
do this immediately, producing a string (which looked like a bit of a cotton
shoe-lace) for the purpose. There! That would do the trick! It would be the
deuce if . . . He seemed to catch sight of my face for the first time, and it
steadied him a little. I probably didn't realise, he said with a naive gravity,
how much importance he attached to that token. It meant a friend; and it is a
good thing to have a friend. He knew something about that. He nodded at me
expressively, but before my disclaiming gesture he leaned his head on his hand
and for a while sat silent, playing thoughtfully with the bread-crumbs on the
cloth . . . "Slam the door -- that was jolly well put," he cried, and
jumping up, began to pace the room, reminding me by the set of the shoulders,
the turn of his head, the headlong and uneven stride, of that night when he had
paced thus, confessing, explaining -- what you will -- but, in the last
instance, living -- living before me, under his own little cloud, with all his
un- conscious subtlety which could draw consolation from the very source of
sorrow. It was the same mood, the same and different, like a fickle companion
that to-day guiding you on the true path, with the same eyes, the same step,
the same impulse, to-morrow will lead you hopelessly astray. His tread was
assured, his straying, darkened eyes seemed to search the room for something.
One of his footfalls somehow sounded louder than the other -- the fault of his
boots probably -- and gave a curious impression of an invisible halt in his
gait. One of his hands was rammed deep into his trousers' pocket, the other
waved suddenly above his head. "Slam the door!" he shouted.
"I've been waiting for that. I'll show yet . . . I'll . . . I'm ready for
any confounded thing . . . I've been dreaming of it . . . Jove! Get out of
this. Jove! This is luck at last . . . You wait. I'll . . . "
'He tossed his head
fearlessly, and I confess that for the first and last time in our acquaintance
I perceived myself unexpectedly to be thoroughly sick of him. Why these vapourings?
He was stumping about the room flourishing his arm absurdly, and now and then
feeling on his breast for the ring under his clothes. Where was the sense of
such exaltation in a man appointed to be a trading-clerk, and in a place where
there was no trade -- at that? Why hurl defiance at the universe? This was not
a proper frame of mind to approach any undertaking; an improper frame of mind
not only for him, I said, but for any man. He stood still over me. Did I think
so? he asked, by no means subdued, and with a smile in which I seemed to detect
suddenly something insolent. But then I am twenty years his senior. Youth is
insolent; it is its right -- its necessity; it has got to assert itself, and
all assertion in this world of doubts is a defiance, is an insolence. He went
off into a far corner, and coming back, he, figuratively speaking, turned to
rend me. I spoke like that because I -- even I, who had been no end kind to him
-- even I remembered -- remembered -- against him -- what -- what had happened.
And what about others -- the -- the -- world? Where's the wonder he wanted to
get out, meant to get out, meant to stay out -- by heavens! And I talked about
proper frames of mind!
' "It is not I or
the world who remember," I shouted. "It is you -- you, who
remember."
'He did not flinch, and
went on with heat, "Forget everything, everybody, everybody." . . .
His voice fell. . . "But you," he added.
' "Yes -- me too
-- if it would help," I said, also in a low tone. After this we remained
silent and languid for a time as if exhausted. Then he began again, composedly,
and told me that Mr. Stein had instructed him to wait for a month or so, to see
whether it was possible for him to remain, before he began building a new house
for himself, so as to avoid "vain expense." He did make use of funny
expressions -- Stein did. "Vain expense" was good. . . . Remain? Why!
of course. He would hang on. Let him only get in - that's all; he would answer
for it he would remain. Never get out. It was easy enough to remain.
' "Don't be
foolhardy," I said, rendered uneasy by his threatening tone. "If you
only live long enough you will want to come back."
' "Come back to
what?" he asked absently, with his eyes fixed upon the face of a clock on
the wall.
'I was silent for a
while. "Is it to be never, then?" I said. "Never," he
repeated dreamily without looking at me, and then flew into sudden activity.
"Jove! Two o'clock, and I sail at four!"
'It was true. A
brigantine of Stein's was leaving for the westward that afternoon, and he had
been instructed to take his passage in her, only no orders to delay the sailing
had been given. I suppose Stein forgot. He made a rush to get his things while
I went aboard my ship, where he promised to call on his way to the outer road-
stead. He turned up accordingly in a great hurry and with a small leather
valise in his hand. This wouldn't do, and I offered him an old tin trunk of
mine supposed to be water-tight, or at least damp- tight. He effected the
transfer by the simple process of shooting out the contents of his valise as
you would empty a sack of wheat. I saw three books in the tumble; two small, in
dark covers, and a thick green-and-gold volume -- a half-crown complete
Shakespeare. "You read this?" I asked. "Yes. Best thing to cheer
up a fellow," he said hastily. I was struck by this appreciation, but
there was no time for Shakespearian talk. A heavy revolver and two small boxes
of cartridges were lying on the cuddy-table. "Pray take this," I
said. "It may help you to remain." No sooner were these words out of
my mouth than I perceived what grim meaning they could bear. "May help you
to get in," I corrected myself remorsefully. He however was not troubled
by obscure meanings; he thanked me effusively and bolted out, calling Good-bye
over his shoulder. I heard his voice through the ship's side urging his boatmen
to give way, and looking out of the stern-port I saw the boat rounding under
the counter. He sat in her leaning forward, exciting his men with voice and
gestures; and as he had kept the revolver in his hand and seemed to be
presenting it at their heads, I shall never forget the scared faces of the four
Javanese, and the frantic swing of their stroke which snatched that vision from
under my eyes. Then turning away, the first thing I saw were the two boxes of
cartridges on the cuddy-table. He had forgotten to take them.
'I ordered my gig
manned at once; but Jim's rowers, under the impression that their lives hung on
a thread while they had that madman in the boat, made such excellent time that
before I had traversed half the distance between the two vessels I caught sight
of him clambering over the rail, and of his box being passed up. All the
brigantine's canvas was loose, her mainsail was set, and the windlass was just
beginning to clink as I stepped upon her deck: her master, a dapper little
half-caste of forty or so, in a blue flannel suit, with lively eyes, his round
face the colour of lemon-peel, and with a thin little black moustache drooping
on each side of his thick, dark lips, came forward smirking. He turned out,
notwithstanding his self-satisfied and cheery exterior, to be of a careworn
temperament. In answer to a remark of mine (while Jim had gone below for a
moment) he said, "Oh yes. Patusan." He was going to carry the
gentleman to the mouth of the river, but would "never ascend. " His
flowing English seemed to be derived from a dictionary compiled by a lunatic.
Had Mr. Stein desired him to "ascend," he would have
"reverentially" -- (I think he wanted to say respectfully -- but
devil only knows) -- "reverentially made objects for the safety of proper-
ties." If disregarded, he would have presented "resignation to quit."
Twelve months ago he had made his last voyage there, and though Mr. Cornelius
"propitiated many offertories" to Mr. Rajah Allang and the
"principal populations," on conditions which made the trade "a
snare and ashes in the mouth," yet his ship had been fired upon from the
woods by "irresponsive parties" all the way down the river; which
causing his crew "from exposure to limb to remain silent in hidings,"
the brigantine was nearly stranded on a sandbank at the bar, where she
"would have been perishable beyond the act of man." The angry disgust
at the recollection, the pride of his fluency, to which he turned an attentive
ear, struggled for the possession of his broad simple face. He scowled and
beamed at me, and watched with satisfaction the undeniable effect of his
phraseology. Dark frowns ran swiftly over the placid sea, and the brigantine,
with her fore-topsail to the mast and her main-boom amidships, seemed
bewildered amongst the cat's-paws. He told me further, gnashing his teeth, that
the Rajah was a "laughable hyæna" (can't imagine how he got hold of
hyænas); while somebody else was many times falser than the "weapons of a
crocodile." Keeping one eye on the movements of his crew forward, he let
loose his volubility -- comparing the place to a "cage of beasts made
ravenous by long impenitence." I fancy he meant impunity. He had no
intention, he cried, to "exhibit himself to be made attached purposefully
to robbery." The long-drawn wails, giving the time for the pull of the men
catting the anchor, came to an end, and he lowered his voice. "Plenty too
much enough of Patusan," he concluded, with energy.
'I heard afterwards he
had been so indiscreet as to get himself tied up by the neck with a rattan
halter to a post planted in the middle of a mud-hole before the Rajah's house.
He spent the best part of a day and a whole night in that unwholesome
situation, but there is every reason to believe the thing had been meant as a
sort of joke. He brooded for a while over that horrid memory, I suppose, and
then addressed in a quarrelsome tone the man coming aft to the helm. When he
turned to me again it was to speak judicially, without passion. He would take
the gentleman to the mouth of the river at Batu Kring (Patusan town "being
situated internally," he remarked, "thirty miles"). But in his
eyes, he continued -- a tone of bored, weary conviction replacing his previous
voluble delivery -- the gentleman was already "in the similitude of a
corpse." "What? What do you say?" I asked. He assumed a
startlingly ferocious demeanour, and imitated to perfection the act of stabbing
from behind. "Already like the body of one deported," he explained,
with the insufferably conceited air of his kind after what they imagine a
display of cleverness. Behind him I perceived Jim smiling silently at me, and
with a raised hand checking the exclamation on my lips.
'Then, while the
half-caste, bursting with importance, shouted his orders, while the yards swung
creaking and the heavy boom came surging over, Jim and I, alone as it were, to
leeward of the mainsail, clasped each other's hands and exchanged the last
hurried words. My heart was freed from that dull resentment which had existed
side by side with interest in his fate. The absurd chatter of the half-caste
had given more reality to the miserable dangers of his path than Stein's
careful statements. On that occasion the sort of formality that had been always
present in our intercourse vanished from our speech; I believe I called him
"dear boy," and he tacked on the words "old man" to some
half-uttered expression of gratitude, as though his risk set off against my
years had made us more equal in age and in feeling. There was a moment of real
and pro- found intimacy, unexpected and short-lived like a glimpse of some
everlasting, of some saving truth. He exerted himself to soothe me as though he
had been the more mature of the two. "All right, all right," he said
rapidly and with feeling. "I promise to take care of myself. Yes; I won't
take any risks. Not a single blessed risk. Of course not. I mean to hang out.
Don't you worry. Jove! I feel as if nothing could touch me. Why! this is luck
from the word Go. I wouldn't spoil such a magnificent chance!" . . . A
magnificent chance! Well, it was magnificent, but chances are what men make
them, and how was I to know? As he had said, even I -- even I remembered -- his
-- his misfortune against him. It was true. And the best thing for him was to
go.
'My gig had dropped in
the wake of the brigantine, and I saw him aft detached upon the light of the
westering sun, raising his cap high above his head. I heard an indistinct
shout, "You -- shall -- hear -- of -- me." Of me, or from me, I don't
know which. I think it must have been of me. My eyes were too dazzled by the
glitter of the sea below his feet to see him clearly; I am fated never to see
him clearly; but I can assure you no man could have appeared less "in the
similitude of a corpse," as that half-caste croaker had put it. I could
see the little wretch's face, the shape and colour of a ripe pumpkin, poked out
somewhere under Jim's elbow. He too raised his arm as if for a downward thrust.
Absit omen!'
'The coast of Patusan
(I saw it nearly two years afterwards) is straight and sombre, and faces a
misty ocean. Red trails are seen like cataracts of rust streaming under the
dark-green foliage of bushes and creepers clothing the low cliffs. Swampy
plains open out at the mouth of rivers, with a view of jagged blue peaks beyond
the vast forests. In the offing a chain of islands, dark, crumbling shapes,
stand out in the everlasting sunlit haze like the remnants of a wall breached
by the sea.
'There is a village of
fisher-folk at the mouth of the Batu Kring branch of the estuary. The river,
which had been closed so long, was open then, and Stein's little schooner, in
which I had my passage, worked her way up in three tides without being exposed
to a fusillade from "irresponsive parties." Such a state of affairs
belonged already to ancient history, if I could believe the elderly headman of
the fishing village, who came on board to act as a sort of pilot. He talked to
me (the second white man he had ever seen) with confidence, and most of his
talk was about the first white man he had ever seen. He called him Tuan Jim and
the tone of his references was made remarkable by a strange mixture of
familiarity and awe. They, in the village, were under that lord's special protection,
which showed that Jim bore no grudge. If he had warned me that I would hear of
him it was perfectly true. I was hearing of him. There was already a story that
the tide had turned two hours before its time to help him on his journey up the
river. The talkative old man himself had steered the canoe and had marvelled at
the phenomenon. Moreover, all the glory was in his family. His son and his
son-in-law had paddled; but they were only youths without experience, who did
not notice the speed of the canoe till he pointed out to them the amazing fact.
'Jim's coming to that
fishing village was a blessing; but to them, as to many of us, the blessing
came heralded by terrors. So many generations had been released since the last
white man had visited the river that the very tradition had been lost. The
appearance of the being that descended upon them and demanded inflexibly to be
taken up to Patusan was discomposing; his insistence was alarming; his
generosity more than suspicious. It was an unheard-of request. There was no
precedent. What would the Rajah say to this? What would he do to them? The best
part of the night was spent in consultation; but the immediate risk from the
anger of that strange man seemed so great that at last a cranky dug-out was got
ready. The women shrieked with grief as it put off. A fearless old hag cursed
the stranger.
'He sat in it, as I've
told you, on his tin box, nursing the unloaded revolver on his lap. He sat with
precaution -- than which there is nothing more fatiguing -- and thus entered
the land he was destined to fill with the fame of his virtues, from the blue
peaks inland to the white ribbon of surf on the coast. At the first bend he
lost sight of the sea with its labouring waves for ever rising, sinking, and
vanishing to rise again -- the very image of struggling mankind -- and faced
the immovable forests rooted deep in the soil, soaring towards the sunshine,
everlasting in the shadowy might of their tradition, like life itself. And his
opportunity sat veiled by his side like an Eastern bride waiting to be
uncovered by the hand of the master. He too was the heir of a shadowy and
mighty tradition! He told me, however, that he had never in his life felt so
depressed and tired as in that canoe. All the movement he dared to allow
himself was to reach, as it were by stealth, after the shell of half a
cocoa-nut floating between his shoes, and bale some of the water out with a
carefully restrained action. He discovered how hard the lid of a block-tin case
was to sit upon. He had heroic health; but several times during that journey he
experienced fits of giddiness, and between whiles he speculated hazily as to
the size of the blister the sun was raising on his back. For amusement he tried
by looking ahead to decide whether the muddy object he saw lying on the water's
edge was a log of wood or an alligator. Only very soon he had to give that up.
No fun in it. Always alligator. One of them flopped into the river and all but
capsized the canoe. But this excitement was over directly. Then in a long empty
reach he was very grateful to a troop of monkeys who came right down on the
bank and made an insulting hullabaloo on his passage. Such was the way in which
he was approaching greatness as genuine as any man ever achieved. Principally,
he longed for sunset; and meantime his three paddlers were preparing to put
into execution their plan of delivering him up to the Rajah.
' "I suppose I
must have been stupid with fatigue, or perhaps I did doze off for a time,"
he said. The first thing he knew was his canoe coming to the bank. He became
instantaneously aware of the forest having been left behind, of the first
houses being visible higher up, of a stockade on his left, and of his boatmen
leaping out together upon a low point of land and taking to their heels.
Instinctively he leaped out after them. At first he thought himself deserted
for some inconceivable reason, but he heard excited shouts, a gate swung open,
and a lot of people poured out, making towards him. At the same time a boat full
of armed men appeared on the river and came alongside his empty canoe, thus
shutting off his retreat.
' "I was too
startled to be quite cool -- don't you know? and if that revolver had been
loaded I would have shot somebody -- perhaps two, three bodies, and that would
have been the end of me. But it wasn't...." "Why not?" I asked.
"Well, I couldn't fight the whole population, and I wasn't coming to them
as if I were afraid of my life," he said, with just a faint hint of his
stubborn sulkiness in the glance he gave me. I refrained from pointing out to
him that they could not have known the chambers were actually empty. He had to
satisfy himself in his own way.... "Anyhow it wasn't," he repeated
good-humouredly, "and so I just stood still and asked them what was the
matter. That seemed to strike them dumb. I saw some of these thieves going off
with my box. That long-legged old scoundrel Kassim (I'll show him to you
to-morrow) ran out fussing to me about the Rajah wanting to see me. I said,
'All right.' I too wanted to see the Rajah, and I simply walked in through the
gate and -- and -- here I am." He laughed, and then with unexpected
emphasis, "And do you know what's the best in it?" he asked.
"I'll tell you. It's the knowledge that had I been wiped out it is this
place that would have been the loser."
'He spoke thus to me
before his house on that evening I've mentioned -- after we had watched the
moon float away above the chasm between the hills like an ascending spirit out
of a grave; its sheen descended, cold and pale, like the ghost of dead
sunlight. There is something haunting in the light of the moon; it has all the
dispassionateness of a disembodied soul, and something of its inconceivable
mystery. It is to our sunshine, which -- say what you like -- is all we have to
live by, what the echo is to the sound: misleading and confusing whether the
note be mocking or sad. It robs all forms of matter -- which, after all, is our
domain -- of their substance, and gives a sinister reality to shadows alone.
And the shadows were very real around us, but Jim by my side looked very
stalwart, as though nothing -- not even the occult power of moonlight -- could
rob him of his reality in my eyes. Perhaps, indeed, nothing could touch him
since he had survived the assault of the dark powers. All was silent, all was
still; even on the river the moonbeams slept as on a pool. It was the moment of
high water, a moment of immobility that accentuated the utter isolation of this
lost corner of the earth. The houses crowding along the wide shining sweep
without ripple or glitter, stepping into the water in a line of jostling,
vague, grey, silvery forms mingled with black masses of shadow, were like a
spectral herd of shapeless creatures pressing forward to drink in a spectral
and lifeless stream. Here and there a red gleam twinkled within the bamboo
walls, warm, like a living spark, significant of human affections, of shelter,
of repose.
'He confessed to me
that he often watched these tiny warm gleams go out one by one, that he loved
to see people go to sleep under his eyes, confident in the security of
to-morrow. "Peaceful here, eh?" he asked. He was not eloquent, but
there was a deep meaning in the words that followed. "Look at these
houses; there's not one where I am not trusted. Jove! I told you I would hang
on. Ask any man, woman, or child . . ." He paused. "Well, I am all
right anyhow."
'I observed quickly
that he had found that out in the end. I had been sure of it, I added. He shook
his head. "Were you?" He pressed my arm lightly above the elbow.
"Well, then -- you were right."
'There was elation and
pride, there was awe almost, in that low exclamation. "Jove!" he
cried, "only think what it is to me." Again he pressed my arm.
"And you asked me whether I thought of leaving. Good God! I! want to
leave! Especially now after what you told me of Mr. Stein's . . . Leave! Why!
That's what I was afraid of. It would have been -- it would have been harder
than dying. No -- on my word. Don't laugh. I must feel -- every day, every time
I open my eyes -- that I am trusted -- that nobody has a right -- don't you
know? Leave! For where? What for? To get what?"
'I had told him (indeed
it was the main object of my visit) that it was Stein's intention to present
him at once with the house and the stock of trading goods, on certain easy
conditions which would make the transaction perfectly regular and valid. He
began to snort and plunge at first. "Confound your delicacy!" I
shouted. "It isn't Stein at all. It's giving you what you had made for
yourself. And in any case keep your remarks for McNeil -- when you meet him in
the other world. I hope it won't happen soon...." He had to give in to my
arguments, because all his conquests, the trust, the fame, the friendships, the
love -- all these things that made him master had made him a captive too. He
looked with an owner's eye at the peace of the evening, at the river, at the
houses, at the everlasting life of the forests, at the life of the old mankind,
at the secrets of the land, at the pride of his own heart; but it was they that
possessed him and made him their own to the innermost thought, to the slightest
stir of blood, to his last breath.
'It was something to be
proud of. I too was proud -- for him, if not so certain of the fabulous value
of the bargain. It was wonderful. It was not so much of his fearlessness that I
thought. It is strange how little account I took of it: as if it had been
something too conventional to be at the root of the matter. No. I was more
struck by the other gifts he had displayed. He had proved his grasp of the
unfamiliar situation, his intellectual alertness in that field of thought.
There was his readiness too! Amazing. And all this had come to him in a manner
like keen scent to a well-bred hound. He was not eloquent, but there was a
dignity in this constitutional reticence, there was a high seriousness in his
stammerings. He had still his old trick of stubborn blushing. Now and then,
though, a word, a sentence, would escape him that showed how deeply, how solemnly,
he felt about that work which had given him the certitude of rehabilitation.
That is why he seemed to love the land and the people with a sort of fierce
egoism, with a contemptuous tenderness.'
' "This is where I
was prisoner for three days," he murmured to me (it was on the occasion of
our visit to the Rajah), while we were making our way slowly through a kind of
awestruck riot of dependants across Tunku Allang's courtyard. "Filthy
place, isn't it? And I couldn't get anything to eat either, unless I made a row
about it, and then it was only a small plate of rice and a fried fish not much
bigger than a stickleback -- confound them! Jove! I've been hungry prowling
inside this stinking enclosure with some of these vagabonds shoving their mugs right
under my nose. I had given up that famous revolver of yours at the first
demand. Glad to get rid of the bally thing. Looked like a fool walking about
with an empty shooting-iron in my hand." At that moment we came into the
presence, and he became unflinchingly grave and complimentary with his late
captor. Oh! magnificent! I want to laugh when I think of it. But I was
impressed too. The old disreputable Tank Allang could not help showing his fear
(he was no hero, for all the tales of his hot youth he was fond of telling);
and at the same time there was a wistful confidence in his manner towards his
late prisoner. Note! Even where he would be most hated he was still trusted.
Jim -- as far as I could follow the conversation -- was improving the occasion
by the delivery of a lecture. Some poor villagers had been waylaid and robbed
while on their way to Doramin's house with a few pieces of gum or beeswax which
they wished to exchange for rice. "It was Doramin who was a thief,"
burst out the Rajah. A shaking fury seemed to enter that old frail body. He
writhed weirdly on his mat, gesticulating with his hands and feet, tossing the
tangled strings of his mop -- an impotent incarnation of rage. There were
staring eyes and dropping jaws all around us. Jim began to speak. Resolutely,
coolly, and for some time he enlarged upon the text that no man should be
prevented from getting his food and his children's food honestly. The other sat
like a tailor at his board, one palm on each knee, his head low, and fixing Jim
through the grey hair that fell over his very eyes. When Jim had done there was
a great stillness. Nobody seemed to breathe even; no one made a sound till the
old Rajah sighed faintly, and looking up, with a toss of his head, said
quickly, "You hear, my people! No more of these little games." This
decree was received in profound silence. A rather heavy man, evidently in a
position of confidence, with intelligent eyes, a bony, broad, very dark face,
and a cheerily of officious manner (I learned later on he was the executioner),
presented to us two cups of coffee on a brass tray, which he took from the
hands of an inferior attendant. "You needn't drink," muttered Jim
very rapidly. I didn't perceive the meaning at first, and only looked at him.
He took a good sip and sat composedly, holding the saucer in his left hand. In
a moment I felt excessively annoyed. "Why the devil," I whispered,
smiling at him amiably, "do you expose me to such a stupid risk?" I
drank, of course, there was nothing for it, while he gave no sign, and almost
immediately afterwards we took our leave. While we were going down the
courtyard to our boat, escorted by the intelligent and cheery executioner, Jim
said he was very sorry. It was the barest chance, of course. Personally he
thought nothing of poison. The remotest chance. He was -- he assured me --
considered to be infinitely more useful than dangerous, and so . . . "But
the Rajah is afraid of you abominably. Anybody can see that," I argued
with, I own, a certain peevishness, and all the time watching anxiously for the
first twist of some sort of ghastly colic. I was awfully disgusted. "If I
am to do any good here and preserve my position," he said, taking his seat
by my side in the boat, "I must stand the risk: I take it once every
month, at least. Many people trust me to do that -- for them. Afraid of me!
That's just it. Most likely he is afraid of me because I am not afraid of his
coffee." Then showing me a place on the north front of the stockade where
the pointed tops of several stakes were broken, "This is where I leaped
over on my third day in Patusan. They haven't put new stakes there yet. Good
leap, eh?" A moment later we passed the mouth of a muddy creek. "This
is my second leap. I had a bit of a run and took this one flying, but fell
short. Thought I would leave my skin there. Lost my shoes struggling. And all
the time I was thinking to myself how beastly it would be to get a jab with a
bally long spear while sticking in the mud like this. I remember how sick I
felt wriggling in that slime. I mean really sick -- as if I had bitten some-
thing rotten."
'That's how it was --
and the opportunity ran by his side, leaped over the gap, floundered in the mud
. . . still veiled. The unexpectedness of his coming was the only thing, you
understand, that saved him from being at once dispatched with krisses and flung
into the river. They had him, but it was like getting hold of an apparition, a
wraith, a portent. What did it mean? What to do with it? Was it too late to
conciliate him? Hadn't he better be killed without more delay? But what would
happen then? Wretched old Allang went nearly mad with apprehension and through
the difficulty of making up his mind. Several times the council was broken up,
and the advisers made a break helter-skelter for the door and out on to the
verandah. One -- it is said -- even jumped down to the ground -- fifteen feet,
I should judge -- and broke his leg. The royal governor of Patusan had bizarre
mannerisms, and one of them was to intro- duce boastful rhapsodies into every
arduous discussion, when, getting gradually excited, he would end by flying off
his perch with a kriss in his hand. But, barring such interruptions, the
deliberations upon Jim's fate went on night and day.
'Meanwhile he wandered
about the courtyard, shunned by some, glared at by others, but watched by all,
and practically at the mercy of the first casual ragamuffin with a chopper, in
there. He took possession of a small tumble-down shed to sleep in; the effluvia
of filth and rotten matter incommoded him greatly: it seems he had not lost his
appetite though, because -- he told me -- he had been hungry all the blessed
time. Now and again "some fussy ass" deputed from the council-room
would come out running to him, and in honeyed tones would administer amazing
interrogatories: "Were the Dutch coming to take the country? Would the
white man like to go back down the river? What was the object of coming to such
a miserable country? The Rajah wanted to know whether the white man could
repair a watch?" They did actually bring out to him a nickel clock of New
England make, and out of sheer unbearable boredom he busied himself in trying
to get the alarum to work. It was apparently when thus occupied in his shed
that the true perception of his extreme peril dawned upon him. He dropped the
thing -- he says -- "like a hot potato," and walked out hastily,
without the slightest idea of what he would, or indeed could, do. He only knew
that the position was intolerable. He strolled aimlessly beyond a sort of
ramshackle little granary on posts, and his eyes fell on the broken stakes of the
palisade; and then -- he says -- at once, without any mental process as it
were, without any stir of emotion, he set about his escape as if executing a
plan matured for a month. He walked off carelessly to give himself a good run,
and when he faced about there was some dignitary, with two spearmen in
attendance, close at his elbow ready with a question. He started off "from
under his very nose," went over "like a bird," and landed on the
other side with a fall that jarred all his bones and seemed to split his head.
He picked himself up instantly. He never thought of anything at the time; all
he could remember -- he said -- was a great yell; the first houses of Patusan
were before him four hundred yards away; he saw the creek, and as it were
mechanically put on more pace. The earth seemed fairly to fly backwards under
his feet. He took off from the last dry spot, felt himself flying through the
air, felt himself, without any shock, planted upright in an extremely soft and
sticky mudbank. It was only when he tried to move his legs and found he
couldn't that, in his own words, "he came to himself." He began to
think of the "bally long spears." As a matter of fact, considering
that the people inside the stockade had to run to the gate, then get down to
the landing-place, get into boats, and pull round a point of land, he had more
advance than he imagined. Besides, it being low water, the creek was without
water -- you couldn't call it dry -- and practically he was safe for a time
from everything but a very long shot perhaps. The higher firm ground was about
six feet in front of him. "I thought I would have to die there all the
same," he said. He reached and grabbed desperately with his hands, and
only succeeded in gathering a horrible cold shiny heap of slime against his
breast -- up to his very chin. It seemed to him he was burying himself alive,
and then he struck out madly, scattering the mud with his fists. It fell on his
head, on his face, over his eyes, into his mouth. He told me that he remembered
suddenly the courtyard, as you remember a place where you had been very happy
years ago. He longed -- so he said -- to be back there again, mending the
clock. Mending the clock -- that was the idea. He made efforts, tremendous
sobbing, gasping efforts, efforts that seemed to burst his eyeballs in their
sockets and make him blind, and culminating into one mighty supreme effort in
the darkness to crack the earth asunder, to throw it off his limbs -- and he
felt himself creeping feebly up the bank. He lay full length on the firm ground
and saw the light, the sky. Then as a sort of happy thought the notion came to
him that he would go to sleep. He will have it that he did actually go to
sleep; that he slept -- perhaps for a minute, perhaps for twenty seconds, or
only for one second, but he recollects distinctly the violent convulsive start
of awakening. He remained lying still for a while, and then he arose muddy from
head to foot and stood there, thinking he was alone of his kind for hundreds of
miles, alone, with no help, no sympathy, no pity to expect from any one, like a
hunted animal. The first houses were not more than twenty yards from him; and
it was the desperate screaming of a frightened woman trying to carry off a
child that started him again. He pelted straight on in his socks, beplastered
with filth out of all semblance to a human being. He traversed more than half
the length of the settlement. The nimbler women fled right and left, the slower
men just dropped whatever they had in their hands, and remained petrified with
dropping jaws. He was a flying terror. He says he noticed the little children
trying to run for life, falling on their little stomachs and kicking. He
swerved between two houses up a slope, clambered in desperation over a
barricade of felled trees (there wasn't a week without some fight in Patusan at
that time), burst through a fence into a maize-patch, where a scared boy flung
a stick at him, blundered upon a path, and ran all at once into the arms of
several startled men. He just had breath enough to gasp out, "Doramin!
Doramin!" He remembers being half-carried, half-rushed to the top of the
slope, and in a vast enclosure with palms and fruit trees being run up to a
large man sitting massively in a chair in the midst of the greatest possible
commotion and excitement. He fumbled in mud and clothes to produce the ring,
and, finding himself suddenly on his back, wondered who had knocked him down.
They had simply let him go -- don't you know? -- but he couldn't stand. At the
foot of the slope random shots were fired, and above the roofs of the
settlement there rose a dull roar of amazement. But he was safe. Doramin's
people were barricading the gate and pouring water down his throat; Doramin's
old wife, full of business and commiseration, was issuing shrill orders to her
girls. "The old woman," he said softly, "made a to-do over me as
if I had been her own son. They put me into an immense bed -- her state bed --
and she ran in and out wiping her eyes to give me pats on the back. I must have
been a pitiful object. I just lay there like a log for I don't know how
long."
'He seemed to have a
great liking for Doramin's old wife. She on her side had taken a motherly fancy
to him. She had a round, nut- brown, soft face, all fine wrinkles, large,
bright red lips (she chewed betel assiduously), and screwed up, winking,
benevolent eyes. She was constantly in movement, scolding busily and ordering
unceasingly a troop of young women with clear brown faces and big grave eyes,
her daughters, her servants, her slave-girls. You know how it is in these
households: it's generally impossible to tell the difference. She was very
spare, and even her ample outer garment, fastened in front with jewelled
clasps, had somehow a skimpy effect. Her dark bare feet were thrust into yellow
straw slippers of Chinese make. I have seen her myself flitting about with her
extremely thick, long, grey hair falling about her shoulders. She uttered
homely shrewd sayings, was of noble birth, and was eccentric and arbitrary. In
the afternoon she would sit in a very roomy arm-chair, opposite her husband,
gazing steadily through a wide opening in the wall which gave an extensive view
of the settlement and the river.
'She invariably tucked
up her feet under her, but old Doramin sat squarely, sat imposingly as a
mountain sits on a plain. He was only of the nakhoda or merchant class, but the
respect shown to him and the dignity of his bearing were very striking. He was
the chief of the second power in Patusan. The immigrants from Celebes (about sixty
families that, with dependants and so on, could muster some two hundred men
"wearing the kriss") had elected him years ago for their head. The
men of that race are intelligent, enterprising, revengeful, but with a more
frank courage than the other Malays, and restless under oppression. They formed
the party opposed to the Rajah. Of course the quarrels were for trade. This was
the primary cause of faction fights, of the sudden outbreaks that would fill
this or that part of the settlement with smoke, flame, the noise of shots and
shrieks. Villages were burnt, men were dragged into the Rajah's stockade to be
killed or tortured for the crime of trading with anybody else but himself. Only
a day or two before Jim's arrival several heads of households in the very
fishing village that was afterwards taken under his especial protection had
been driven over the cliffs by a party of the Rajah's spearmen, on suspicion of
having been collecting edible birds' nests for a Celebes trader. Rajah Allang
pretended to be the only trader in his country, and the penalty for the breach
of the monopoly was death; but his idea of trading was indistinguishable from
the commonest forms of robbery. His cruelty and rapacity had no other bounds
than his coward- ice, and he was afraid of the organised power of the Celebes
men, only -- till Jim came -- he was not afraid enough to keep quiet. He struck
at them through his subjects, and thought himself pathetically in the right.
The situation was complicated by a wandering stranger, an Arab half-breed, who,
I believe, on purely religious grounds, had incited the tribes in the interior
(the bush-folk, as Jim himself called them) to rise, and had established
himself in a fortified camp on the summit of one of the twin hills. He hung
over the town of Patusan like a hawk over a poultry-yard, but he devastated the
open country. Whole villages, deserted, rotted on their blackened posts over
the banks of clear streams, dropping piecemeal into the water the grass of
their walls, the leaves of their roofs, with a curious effect of natural decay
as if they had been a form of vegetation stricken by a blight at its very root.
The two parties in Patusan were not sure which one this partisan most desired
to plunder. The Rajah intrigued with him feebly. Some of the Bugis settlers,
weary with endless insecurity, were half inclined to call him in. The younger
spirits amongst them, chaffing, advised to "get Sherif Ali with his wild
men and drive the Rajah Allang out of the country." Doramin restrained them
with difficulty. He was growing old, and, though his influence had not
diminished, the situation was getting beyond him. This was the state of affairs
when Jim, bolting from the Rajah's stockade, appeared before the chief of the
Bugis, produced the ring, and was received, in a manner of speaking, into the
heart of the community.'
'Doramin was one of the
most remarkable men of his race I had ever seen. His bulk for a Malay was
immense, but he did not look merely fat; he looked imposing, monumental. This
motionless body, clad in rich stuffs, coloured silks, gold embroideries; this
huge head, enfolded in a red-and-gold headkerchief; the flat, big, round face,
wrinkled, furrowed, with two semicircular heavy folds starting on each side of
wide, fierce nostrils, and enclosing a thick- lipped mouth; the throat like a
bull; the vast corrugated brow over- hanging the staring proud eyes -- made a
whole that, once seen, can never be forgotten. His impassive repose (he seldom
stirred a limb when once he sat down) was like a display of dignity. He was
never known to raise his voice. It was a hoarse and powerful murmur, slightly
veiled as if heard from a distance. When he walked, two short, sturdy young
fellows, naked to the waist, in white sarongs and with black skull-caps on the
backs of their heads, sustained his elbows; they would ease him down and stand
behind his chair till he wanted to rise, when he would turn his head slowly, as
if with difficulty, to the right and to the left, and then they would catch him
under his armpits and help him up. For all that, there was nothing of a cripple
about him: on the contrary, all his ponderous movements were like
manifestations of a mighty deliberate force. It was generally believed he
consulted his wife as to public affairs; but nobody, as far as I know, had ever
heard them exchange a single word. When they sat in state by the wide opening
it was in silence. They could see below them in the declining light the vast
expanse of the forest country, a dark sleeping sea of sombre green undulating
as far as the violet and purple range of mountains; the shining sinuosity of
the river like an immense letter S of beaten silver; the brown ribbon of houses
following the sweep of both banks, overtopped by the twin hills uprising above
the nearer tree-tops. They were wonderfully contrasted: she, light, delicate,
spare, quick, a little witch-like, with a touch of motherly fussiness in her
repose; he, facing her, immense and heavy, like a figure of a man roughly
fashioned of stone, with something magnanimous and ruth- less in his
immobility. The son of these old people was a most distinguished youth.
'They had him late in
life. Perhaps he was not really so young as he looked. Four- or five-and-twenty
is not so young when a man is already father of a family at eighteen. When he
entered the large room, lined and carpeted with fine mats, and with a high
ceiling of white sheeting, where the couple sat in state surrounded by a most
deferential retinue, he would make his way straight to Doramin, to kiss his
hand -- which the other abandoned to him, majestically -- and then would step
across to stand by his mother's chair. I suppose I may say they idolised him,
but I never caught them giving him an overt glance. Those, it is true, were
public functions. The room was generally thronged. The solemn formality of
greetings and leave- takings, the profound respect expressed in gestures, on
the faces, in the low whispers, is simply indescribable. "It's well worth
seeing," Jim had assured me while we were crossing the river, on our way
back. "They are like people in a book, aren't they?" he said
triumphantly. "And Dain Waris -- their son -- is the best friend (barring
you) I ever had. What Mr. Stein would call a good 'war- comrade.' I was in
luck. Jove! I was in luck when I tumbled amongst them at my last gasp." He
meditated with bowed head, then rousing himself he added --
' "Of course I
didn't go to sleep over it, but . . ." He paused again. "It seemed to
come to me," he murmured. "All at once I saw what I had to do . .
."
'There was no doubt
that it had come to him; and it had come through war, too, as is natural, since
this power that came to him was the power to make peace. It is in this sense
alone that might so often is right. You must not think he had seen his way at
once. When he arrived the Bugis community was in a most critical position.
"They were all afraid," he said to me -- "each man afraid for
himself; while I could see as plain as possible that they must do something at
once, if they did not want to go under one after another, what between the
Rajah and that vagabond Sherif." But to see that was nothing. When he got
his idea he had to drive it into reluctant minds, through the bulwarks of fear,
of selfishness. He drove it in at last. And that was nothing. He had to devise
the means. He devised them -- an audacious plan; and his task was only half
done. He had to inspire with his own confidence a lot of people who had hidden
and absurd reasons to hang back; he had to conciliate imbecile jealousies, and
argue away all sorts of senseless mistrusts. Without the weight of Doramin's
authority, and his son's fiery enthusiasm, he would have failed. Dain Waris,
the distinguished youth, was the first to believe in him; theirs was one of
those strange, profound, rare friendships between brown and white, in which the
very difference of race seems to draw two human beings closer by some mystic
element of sympathy. Of Dain Waris, his own people said with pride that he knew
how to fight like a white man. This was true; he had that sort of courage --
the courage in the open, I may say -- but he had also a European mind. You meet
them sometimes like that, and are surprised to discover unexpectedly a familiar
turn of thought, an unobscured vision, a tenacity of purpose, a touch of
altruism. Of small stature, but admirably well proportioned, Dain Waris had a
proud carriage, a polished, easy bearing, a temperament like a clear flame. His
dusky face, with big black eyes, was in action expressive, and in repose thoughtful.
He was of a silent disposition; a firm glance, an ironic smile, a courteous
deliberation of manner seemed to hint at great reserves of intelligence and
power. Such beings open to the Western eye, so often concerned with mere
surfaces, the hidden possibilities of races and lands over which hangs the
mystery of unrecorded ages. He not only trusted Jim, he understood him, I
firmly believe. I speak of him because he had captivated me. His -- if I may
say so -- his caustic placidity, and, at the same time, his intelligent
sympathy with Jim's aspirations, appealed to me. I seemed to behold the very
origin of friendship. If Jim took the lead, the other had captivated his
leader. In fact, Jim the leader was a captive in every sense. The land, the
people, the friendship, the love, were like the jealous guardians of his body.
Every day added a link to the fetters of that strange freedom. I felt convinced
of it, as from day to day I learned more of the story.
'The story! Haven't I
heard the story? I've heard it on the march, in camp (he made me scour the
country after invisible game); I've listened to a good part of it on one of the
twin summits, after climbing the last hundred feet or so on my hands and knees.
Our escort (we had volunteer followers from village to village) had camped
meantime on a bit of level ground half-way up the slope, and in the still
breathless evening the smell of wood-smoke reached our nostrils from below with
the penetrating delicacy of some choice scent. Voices also ascended, wonderful
in their distinct and immaterial clearness. Jim sat on the trunk of a felled
tree, and pulling out his pipe began to smoke. A new growth of grass and bushes
was springing up; there were traces of an earthwork under a mass of thorny
twigs. "It all started from here," he said, after a long and
meditative silence. On the other hill, two hundred yards across a sombre
precipice, I saw a line of high blackened stakes, showing here and there
ruinously -- the remnants of Sherif Ali's impregnable camp.
'But it had been taken,
though. That had been his idea. He had mounted Doramin's old ordnance on the
top of that hill; two rusty iron 7-pounders, a lot of small brass cannon --
currency cannon. But if the brass guns represent wealth, they can also, when
crammed recklessly to the muzzle, send a solid shot to some little distance.
The thing was to get them up there. He showed me where he had fastened the
cables, explained how he had improvised a rude capstan out of a hollowed log
turning upon a pointed stake, indicated with the bowl of his pipe the outline
of the earthwork. The last hundred feet of the ascent had been the most
difficult. He had made himself responsible for success on his own head. He had
induced the war party to work hard all night. Big fires lighted at intervals
blazed all down the slope, "but up here," he explained, "the
hoisting gang had to fly around in the dark. " From the top he saw men
moving on the hillside like ants at work. He himself on that night had kept on
rushing down and climbing up like a squirrel, directing, encouraging, watching
all along the line. Old Doramin had himself carried up the hill in his
arm-chair. They put him down on the level place upon the slope, and he sat
there in the light of one of the big fires -- "amazing old chap -- real
old chieftain," said Jim, "with his little fierce eyes -- a pair of
immense flintlock pistols on his knees. Magnificent things, ebony,
silver-mounted, with beautiful locks and a calibre like an old blunderbuss. A
present from Stein, it seems -- in exchange for that ring, you know. Used to
belong to good old McNeil. God only knows how he came by them. There he sat,
moving neither hand nor foot, a flame of dry brushwood behind him, and lots of
people rushing about, shouting and pulling round him -- the most solemn,
imposing old chap you can imagine. He wouldn't have had much chance if Sherif
Ali had let his infernal crew loose at us and stampeded my lot. Eh? Anyhow, he
had come up there to die if anything went wrong. No mistake! Jove! It thrilled
me to see him there -- like a rock. But the Sherif must have thought us mad,
and never troubled to come and see how we got on. Nobody believed it could be
done. Why! I think the very chaps who pulled and shoved and sweated over it did
not believe it could be done! Upon my word I don't think they did...."
'He stood erect, the
smouldering brier-wood in his clutch, with a smile on his lips and a sparkle in
his boyish eyes. I sat on the stump of a tree at his feet, and below us
stretched the land, the great expanse of the forests, sombre under the
sunshine, rolling like a sea, with glints of winding rivers, the grey spots of
villages, and here and there a clearing, like an islet of light amongst the
dark waves of continuous tree-tops. A brooding gloom lay over this vast and
monotonous landscape; the light fell on it as if into an abyss. The land
devoured the sunshine; only far off, along the coast, the empty ocean, smooth
and polished within the faint haze, seemed to rise up to the sky in a wall of
steel.
'And there I was with
him, high in the sunshine on the top of that historic hill of his. He dominated
the forest, the secular doom, the old mankind. He was like a figure set up on a
pedestal, to represent in his persistent youth the power, and perhaps the
virtues, of races that never grow old, that have emerged from the gloom. I
don't know why he should always have appeared to me symbolic. Perhaps this is
the real cause of my interest in his fate. I don't know whether it was exactly
fair to him to remember the incident which had given a new direction to his
life, but at that very moment I remembered very distinctly. It was like a
shadow in the light.'
'Already the legend had
gifted him with supernatural powers. Yes, it was said, there had been many ropes
cunningly disposed, and a strange contrivance that turned by the efforts of
many men, and each gun went up tearing slowly through the bushes, like a wild
pig rooting its way in the undergrowth, but . . . and the wisest shook their
heads. There was something occult in all this, no doubt; for what is the
strength of ropes and of men's arms? There is a rebellious soul in things which
must be overcome by powerful charms and incantations. Thus old Sura -- a very
respectable householder of Patusan -- with whom I had a quiet chat one evening.
However, Sura was a professional sorcerer also, who attended all the rice
sowings and reapings for miles around for the purpose of subduing the stubborn
souls of things. This occupation he seemed to think a most arduous one, and
perhaps the souls of things are more stubborn than the souls of men. As to the
simple folk of outlying villages, they believed and said (as the most natural
thing in the world) that Jim had carried the guns up the hill on his back --
two at a time.
'This would make Jim
stamp his foot in vexation and exclaim with an exasperated little laugh,
"What can you do with such silly beggars? They will sit up half the night
talking bally rot, and the greater the lie the more they seem to like it."
You could trace the subtle influence of his surroundings in this irritation. It
was part of his captivity. The earnestness of his denials was amusing, and at
last I said, "My dear fellow, you don't suppose I believe this." He
looked at me quite startled. "Well, no! I suppose not," he said, and
burst into a Homeric peal of laughter. "Well, anyhow the guns were there,
and went off all together at sunrise. Jove! You should have seen the splinters
fly," he cried. By his side Dain Waris, listening with a quiet smile,
dropped his eyelids and shuffled his feet a little. It appears that the success
in mounting the guns had given Jim's people such a feeling of confidence that
he ventured to leave the battery under charge of two elderly Bugis who had seen
some fighting in their day, and went to join Dain Waris and the storming party
who were concealed in the ravine. In the small hours they began creeping up,
and when two-thirds of the way up, lay in the wet grass waiting for the
appearance of the sun, which was the agreed signal. He told me with what
impatient anguishing emotion he watched the swift coming of the dawn; how,
heated with the work and the climbing, he felt the cold dew chilling his very
bones; how afraid he was he would begin to shiver and shake like a leaf before
the time came for the advance. "It was the slowest half-hour in my
life," he declared. Gradually the silent stockade came out on the sky
above him. Men scattered all down the slope were crouching amongst the dark
stones and dripping bushes. Dain Waris was lying flattened by his side.
"We looked at each other," Jim said, resting a gentle hand on his
friend's shoulder. "He smiled ar me as cheery as you please, and I dared
not stir my lips for fear I would break out into a shivering fit. 'Pon my word,
it's true! I had been streaming with perspiration when we took cover -- so you
may imagine . . ." He declared, and I believe him, that he had no fears as
to the result. He was only anxious as to his ability to repress these shivers.
He didn't bother about the result. He was bound to get to the top of that hill
and stay there, whatever might happen. There could be no going back for him.
Those people had trusted him implicitly. Him alone! His bare word....
'I remember how, at
this point, he paused with his eyes fixed upon me. "As far as he knew,
they never had an occasion to regret it yet," he said. "Never. He
hoped to God they never would. Meantime -- worse luck! -- they had got into the
habit of taking his word for anything and everything. I could have no idea!
Why, only the other day an old fool he had never seen in his life came from
some village miles away to find out if he should divorce his wife. Fact. Solemn
word. That's the sort of thing. . . He wouldn't have believed it. Would I?
Squatted on the verandah chewing betel-nut, sighing and spitting all over the
place for more than an hour, and as glum as an undertaker before he came out
with that dashed conundrum. That's the kind of thing that isn't so funny as it
looks. What was a fellow to say? -- Good wife? -- Yes. Good wife -- old though.
Started a confounded long story about some brass pots. Been living together for
fifteen years -- twenty years -- could not tell. A long, long time. Good wife.
Beat her a little -- not much -- just a little, when she was young. Had to --
for the sake of his honour. Suddenly in her old age she goes and lends three
brass pots to her sister's son's wife, and begins to abuse him every day in a
loud voice. His enemies jeered at him; his face was utterly blackened. Pots
totally lost. Awfully cut up about it. Impossible to fathom a story like that;
told him to go home, and promised to come along myself and settle it all. It's
all very well to grin, but it was the dashedest nuisance! A day's journey
through the forest, another day lost in coaxing a lot of silly villagers to get
at the rights of the affair. There was the making of a sanguinary shindy in the
thing. Every bally idiot took sides with one family or the other, and one half
of the village was ready to go for the other half with anything that came handy
. Honour bright! No joke! . . . Instead of attending to their bally crops. Got
him the infernal pots back of course -- and pacified all hands. No trouble to
settle it. Of course not. Could settle the deadliest quarrel in the country by
crooking his little finger. The trouble was to get at the truth of anything.
Was not sure to this day whether he had been fair to all parties. It worried
him. And the talk! Jove! There didn't seem to be any head or tail to it. Rather
storm a twenty-foot-high old stockade any day. Much! Child's play to that other
job. Wouldn't take so long either. Well, yes; a funny set out, upon the whole
-- the fool looked old enough to be his grandfather. But from another point of
view it was no joke. His word decided everything -- ever since the smashing of
Sherif Ali. An awful responsibility," he repeated. "No, really --
joking apart, had it been three lives instead of three rotten brass pots it
would have been the same...."
'Thus he illustrated
the moral effect of his victory in war. It was in truth immense. It had led him
from strife to peace, and through death into the innermost life of the people;
but the gloom of the land spread out under the sunshine preserved its
appearance of inscrutable, of secular repose. The sound of his fresh young
voice -- it's extraordinary how very few signs of wear he showed -- floated
lightly, and passed away over the unchanged face of the forests like the sound
of the big guns on that cold dewy morning when he had no other concern on earth
but the proper control of the chills in his body. With the first slant of
sun-rays along these immovable tree- tops the summit of one hill wreathed
itself, with heavy reports, in white clouds of smoke, and the other burst into
an amazing noise of yells, war-cries, shouts of anger, of surprise, of dismay.
Jim and Dain Waris were the first to lay their hands on the stakes. The popular
story has it that Jim with a touch of one finger had thrown down the gate. He
was, of course, anxious to disclaim this achievement. The whole stockade -- he
would insist on explaining to you -- was a poor affair (Sherif Ali trusted
mainly to the inaccessible position); and, anyway, the thing had been already
knocked to pieces and only hung together by a miracle. He put his shoulder to
it like a little fool and went in head over heels. Jove! If it hadn't been for
Dain Waris, a pock-marked tattooed vagabond would have pinned him with his
spear to a balk of timber like one of Stein's beetles. The third man in, it
seems, had been Tamb' Itam, Jim's own servant. This was a Malay from the north,
a stranger who had wandered into Patusan, and had been forcibly detained by
Rajah Allang as paddler of one of the state boats. He had made a bolt of it at
the first opportunity, and finding a precarious refuge (but very little to eat)
amongst the Bugis settlers, had attached himself to Jim's person. His
complexion was very dark, his face flat, his eyes prominent and injected with
bile. There was something excessive, almost fanatical, in his devotion to his
"white lord." He was inseparable from Jim like a morose shadow. On
state occasions he would tread on his master's heels, one hand on the haft of
his kriss, keeping the common people at a distance by his truculent brooding
glances. Jim had made him the headman of his establishment, and all Patusan
respected and courted him as a person of much influence. At the taking of the
stockade he had distinguished himself greatly by the methodical ferocity of his
fighting. The storming party had come on so quick -- Jim said -- that
notwithstanding the panic of the garrison, there was a "hot five minutes
hand-to-hand inside that stockade, till some bally ass set fire to the shelters
of boughs and dry grass, and we all had to clear out for dear life."
'The rout, it seems,
had been complete. Doramin, waiting immovably in his chair on the hillside,
with the smoke of the guns spreading slowly above his big head, received the
news with a deep grunt. When informed that his son was safe and leading the
pursuit, he, without another sound, made a mighty effort to rise; his
attendants hurried to his help, and, held up reverently, he shuffled with great
dignity into a bit of shade, where he laid himself down to sleep, covered
entirely with a piece of white sheeting. In Patusan the excitement was intense.
Jim told me that from the hill, turning his back on the stockade with its
embers, black ashes, and half- consumed corpses, he could see time after time
the open spaces between the houses on both sides of the stream fill suddenly
with a seething rush of people and get empty in a moment. His ears caught
feebly from below the tremendous din of gongs and drums; the wild shouts of the
crowd reached him in bursts of faint roaring. A lot of streamers made a flutter
as of little white, red, yellow birds amongst the brown ridges of roofs.
"You must have enjoyed it," I murmured, feeling the stir of
sympathetic emotion.
' "It was . . . it
was immense! Immense!" he cried aloud, flinging his arms open. The sudden
movement startled me as though I had seen him bare the secrets of his breast to
the sunshine, to the brooding forests, to the steely sea. Below us the town
reposed in easy curves upon the banks of a stream whose current seemed to
sleep. "Immense!" he repeated for a third time, speaking in a
whisper, for himself alone.
'Immense! No doubt it
was immense; the seal of success upon his words, the conquered ground for the
soles of his feet, the blind trust of men, the belief in himself snatched from
the fire, the solitude of his achievement. All this, as I've warned you, gets
dwarfed in the telling. I can't with mere words convey to you the impression of
his total and utter isolation. I know, of course, he was in every sense alone
of his kind there, but the unsuspected qualities of his nature had brought him
in such close touch with his surroundings that this isolation seemed only the
effect of his power. His loneliness added to his stature. There was nothing
within sight to compare him with, as though he had been one of those exceptional
men who can be only measured by the greatness of their fame; and his fame,
remember, was the greatest thing around for many a day's journey. You would
have to paddle, pole, or track a long weary way through the jungle before you
passed beyond the reach of its voice. Its voice was not the trumpeting of the
disreputable goddess we all know -- not blatant -- not brazen. It took its tone
from the stillness and gloom of the land without a past, where his word was the
one truth of every passing day. It shared something of the nature of that
silence through which it accompanied you into unexplored depths, heard
continuously by your side, penetrating, far-reaching -- tinged with wonder and
mystery on the lips of whispering men.'
'The defeated Sherif
Ali fled the country without making another stand, and when the miserable
hunted villagers began to crawl out of the jungle back to their rotting houses,
it was Jim who, in consultation with Dain Waris, appointed the headmen. Thus he
became the virtual ruler of the land. As to old Tunku Allang, his fears at
first had known no bounds. It is said that at the intelligence of the
successful storming of the hill he flung himself, face down, on the bamboo
floor of his audience-hall, and lay motionless for a whole night and a whole
day, uttering stifled sounds of such an appalling nature that no man dared
approach his prostrate form nearer than a spear's length. Already he could see
himself driven ignominiously out of Patusan, wandering, abandoned, stripped,
without opium, without his women, without followers, a fair game for the first
comer to kill. After Sherif Ali his turn would come, and who could resist an
attack led by such a devil? And indeed he owed his life and such authority as
he still possessed at the time of my visit to Jim's idea of what was fair
alone. The Bugis had been extremely anxious to pay off old scores, and the
impassive old Doramin cherished the hope of yet seeing his son ruler of
Patusan. During one of our interviews he deliberately allowed me to get a
glimpse of this secret ambition. Nothing could be finer in its way than the
dignified wariness of his approaches. He himself -- he began by declaring --
had used his strength in his young days, but now he had grown old and tired....
With his imposing bulk and haughty little eyes darting sagacious, inquisitive
glances, he reminded one irresistibly of a cunning old elephant; the slow rise
and fall of his vast breast went on powerful and regular, like the heave of a
calm sea. He too, as he protested, had an unbounded confidence in Tuan Jim's
wisdom. If he could only obtain a promise! One word would be enough! . . . His
breathing silences, the low rumblings of his voice, recalled the last efforts
of a spent thunderstorm.
'I tried to put the subject
aside. It was difficult, for there could be no question that Jim had the power;
in his new sphere there did not seem to be anything that was not his to hold or
to give. But that, I repeat, was nothing in comparison with the notion, which
occurred to me, while I listened with a show of attention, that he seemed to
have come very near at last to mastering his fate. Doramin was anxious about
the future of the country, and I was struck by the turn he gave to the
argument. The land remains where God had put it; but white men -- he said --
they come to us and in a little while they go. They go away. Those they leave
behind do not know when to look for their return. They go to their own land, to
their people, and so this white man too would.... I don't know what induced me
to commit myself at this point by a vigorous "No, no." The whole
extent of this indiscretion became apparent when Doramin, turning full upon me
his face, whose expression, fixed in rugged deep folds, remained unalterable,
like a huge brown mask, said that this was good news indeed, reflectively; and
then wanted to know why.
'His little, motherly
witch of a wife sat on my other hand, with her head covered and her feet tucked
up, gazing through the great shutter-hole. I could only see a straying lock of
grey hair, a high cheek-bone, the slight masticating motion of the sharp chin.
Without removing her eyes from the vast prospect of forests stretching as far
as the hills, she asked me in a pitying voice why was it that he so young had
wandered from his home, coming so far, through so many dangers? Had he no
household there, no kinsmen in his own country? Had he no old mother, who would
always remember his face? . . .
'I was completely
unprepared for this. I could only mutter and shake my head vaguely. Afterwards
I am perfectly aware I cut a very poor figure trying to extricate myself out of
this difficulty. From that moment, however, the old nakhoda became taciturn. He
was not very pleased, I fear, and evidently I had given him food for thought.
Strangely enough, on the evening of that very day (which was my last in
Patusan) I was once more confronted with the same question, with the
unanswerable why of Jim's fate. And this brings me to the story of his love.
'I suppose you think it
is a story that you can imagine for yourselves. We have heard so many such
stories, and the majority of us don't believe them to be stories of love at
all. For the most part we look upon them as stories of opportunities: episodes
of passion at best, or perhaps only of youth and temptation, doomed to
forgetfulness in the end, even if they pass through the reality of tenderness
and regret. This view mostly is right, and perhaps in this case too.... Yet I
don't know. To tell this story is by no means so easy as it should be -- were
the ordinary standpoint adequate. Apparently it is a story very much like the
others: for me, however, there is visible in its background the melancholy
figure of a woman, the shadow of a cruel wisdom buried in a lonely grave,
looking on wistfully, helplessly, with sealed lips. The grave itself, as I came
upon it during an early morning stroll, was a rather shapeless brown mound,
with an inlaid neat border of white lumps of coral at the base, and enclosed
within a circular fence made of split saplings, with the bark left on. A
garland of leaves and flowers was woven about the heads of the slender posts --
and the flowers were fresh.
'Thus, whether the
shadow is of my imagination or not, I can at all events point out the
significant fact of an unforgotten grave. When I tell you besides that Jim with
his own hands had worked at the rustic fence, you will perceive directly the
difference, the individual side of the story. There is in his espousal of
memory and affection belonging to another human being something characteristic
of his seriousness. He had a conscience, and it was a romantic conscience.
Through her whole life the wife of the unspeakable Cornelius had no other
companion, confidant, and friend but her daughter. How the poor woman had come
to marry the awful little Malacca Portuguese -- after the separation from the
father of her girl -- and how that separation had been brought about, whether
by death, which can be sometimes merciful, or by the merciless pressure of
conventions, is a mystery to me. From the little which Stein (who knew so many
stories) had let drop in my hearing, I am convinced that she was no ordinary
woman. Her own father had been a white; a high official; one of the brilliantly
endowed men who are not dull enough to nurse a success, and whose careers so
often end under a cloud. I suppose she too must have lacked the saving dullness
-- and her career ended in Patusan. Our common fate . . . for where is the man
-- I mean a real sentient man -- who does not remember vaguely having been
deserted in the fullness of possession by some one or something more precious
than life? . . . our common fate fastens upon the women with a peculiar
cruelty. It does not punish like a master, but inflicts lingering torment, as
if to gratify a secret, unappeasable spite. One would think that, appointed to
rule on earth, it seeks to revenge itself upon the beings that come nearest to
rising above the trammels of earthly caution; for it is only women who manage
to put at times into their love an element just palpable enough to give one a
fright -- an extra-terrestrial touch. I ask myself with wonder -- how the world
can look to them -- whether it has the shape and substance we know, the air we
breathe! Sometimes I fancy it must be a region of unreasonable sublimities
seething with the excitement of their adventurous souls, lighted by the glory
of all possible risks and renunciations. However, I suspect there are very few
women in the world, though of course I am aware of the multitudes of mankind
and of the equality of sexes -- in point of numbers, that is. But I am sure
that the mother was as much of a woman as the daughter seemed to be. I cannot
help picturing to myself these two, at first the young woman and the child,
then the old woman and the young girl, the awful sameness and the swift passage
of time, the barrier of forest, the solitude and the turmoil round these two
lonely lives, and every word spoken between them penetrated with sad meaning.
There must have been confidences, not so much of fact, I suppose, as of
innermost feelings -- regrets -- fears -- warnings, no doubt: warnings that the
younger did not fully understand till the elder was dead -- and Jim came along.
Then I am sure she understood much -- not everything -- the fear mostly, it
seems. Jim called her by a word that means precious, in the sense of a precious
gem -- jewel. Pretty, isn't it? But he was capable of anything. He was equal to
his fortune, as he -- after all -- must have been equal to his misfortune.
Jewel he called her; and he would say this as he might have said
"Jane," don't you know -- with a marital, homelike, peaceful effect.
I heard the name for the first time ten minutes after I had landed in his
courtyard, when, after nearly shaking my arm off, he darted up the steps and
began to make a joyous, boyish disturbance at the door under the heavy eaves.
"Jewel! O Jewel! Quick! Here's a friend come," . . . and suddenly
peering at me in the dim verandah, he mumbled earnestly, "You know -- this
-- no confounded nonsense about it -- can't tell you how much I owe to her --
and so -- you understand -- I -- exactly as if . . " His hurried, anxious
whispers were cut short by the flitting of a white form within the house, a
faint exclamation, and a child-like but energetic little face with delicate
features and a profound, attentive glance peeped out of the inner gloom, like a
bird out of the recess of a nest. I was struck by the name, of course; but it
was not till later on that I connected it with an astonishing rumour that had
met me on my journey, at a little place on the coast about 230 miles south of
Patusan River. Stein's schooner, in which I had my passage, put in there, to
collect some produce, and, going ashore, I found to my great surprise that the
wretched locality could boast of a third-class deputy-assistant resident, a
big, fat, greasy, blinking fellow of mixed descent, with turned-out, shiny
lips. I found him lying extended on his back in a cane chair, odiously
unbuttoned, with a large green leaf of some sort on the top of his steaming
head, and another in his hand which he used lazily as a fan . . . Going to
Patusan? Oh yes. Stein's Trading Company. He knew. Had a permission? No business
of his. It was not so bad there now, he remarked negligently, and, he went on
drawling, "There's some sort of white vagabond has got in there, I
hear.... Eh? What you say? Friend of yours? So! . . . Then it was true there
was one of these verdammte -- What was he up to? Found his way in, the rascal.
Eh? I had not been sure. Patusan -- they cut throats there -- no business of
ours." He interrupted himself to groan. "Phoo! Almighty! The heat!
The heat! Well, then, there might be something in the story too, after all, and
. . ." He shut one of his beastly glassy eyes (the eyelid went on
quivering) while he leered at me atrociously with the other. "Look
here," says he mysteriously, "if -- do you understand? -- if he has
really got hold of something fairly good -- none of your bits of green glass --
understand? -- I am a Government official -- you tell the rascal . . . Eh?
What? Friend of yours?" . . . He continued wallowing calmly in the chair .
. . "You said so; that's just it; and I am pleased to give you the hint. I
suppose you too would like to get something out of it? Don't interrupt. You
just tell him I've heard the tale, but to my Government I have made no report.
Not yet. See? Why make a report? Eh? Tell him to come to me if they let him get
alive out of the country. He had better look out for himself. Eh? I promise to
ask no questions. On the quiet -- you understand? You too -- you shall get
something from me. Small commission for the trouble. Don't interrupt. I am a
Government official, and make no report. That's business. Understand? I know
some good people that will buy anything worth having, and can give him more
money than the scoundrel ever saw in his life. I know his sort." He fixed
me steadfastly with both his eyes open, while I stood over him utterly amazed,
and asking myself whether he was mad or drunk. He perspired, puffed, moaning
feebly, and scratching himself with such horrible composure that I could not
bear the sight long enough to find out. Next day, talking casually with the
people of the little native court of the place, I discovered that a story was
travelling slowly down the coast about a mysterious white man in Patusan who
had got hold of an extraordinary gem -- namely, an emerald of an enormous size,
and altogether priceless. The emerald seems to appeal more to the Eastern
imagination than any other precious stone. The white man had obtained it, I was
told, partly by the exercise of his wonderful strength and partly by cunning,
from the ruler of a distant country, whence he had fled instantly, arriving in
Patusan in utmost distress, but frightening the people by his extreme ferocity,
which nothing seemed able to subdue. Most of my informants were of the opinion
that the stone was probably unlucky, -- like the famous stone of the Sultan of
Succadana, which in the old times had brought wars and untold calamities upon
that country. Perhaps it was the same stone -- one couldn't say. Indeed the
story of a fabulously large emerald is as old as the arrival of the first white
men in the Archipelago; and the belief in it is so persistent that less than
forty years ago there had been an official Dutch inquiry into the truth of it.
Such a jewel -- it was explained to me by the old fellow from whom I heard most
of this amazing Jim-myth -- a sort of scribe to the wretched little Rajah of
the place; -- such a jewel, he said, cocking his poor purblind eyes up at me
(he was sitting on the cabin floor out of respect), is best preserved by being
concealed about the person of a woman. Yet it is not every woman that would do.
She must be young -- he sighed deeply -- and insensible to the seductions of
love. He shook his head sceptically. But such a woman seemed to be actually in
existence. He had been told of a tall girl, whom the white man treated with
great respect and care, and who never went forth from the house unattended.
People said the white man could be seen with her almost any day; they walked
side by side, openly, he holding her arm under his -- pressed to his side --
thus -- in a most extraordinary way. This might be a lie, he conceded, for it
was indeed a strange thing for any one to do: on the other hand, there could be
no doubt she wore the white man's jewel concealed upon her bosom.'
'This was the theory of
Jim's marital evening walks. I made a third on more than one occasion,
unpleasantly aware every time of Cornelius, who nursed the aggrieved sense of
his legal paternity, slinking in the neighbourhood with that peculiar twist of
his mouth as if he were perpetually on the point of gnashing his teeth. But do
you notice how, three hundred miles beyond the end of telegraph cables and
mail-boat lines, the haggard utilitarian lies of our civilisation wither and
die, to be replaced by pure exercises of imagination, that have the futility, often
the charm, and sometimes the deep hidden truthfulness, of works of art? Romance
had singled Jim for its own -- and that was the true part of the story, which
otherwise was all wrong. He did not hide his jewel. In fact, he was extremely
proud of it.
'It comes to me now
that I had, on the whole, seen very little of her. What I remember best is the
even, olive pallor of her complexion, and the intense blue-black gleams of her
hair, flowing abundantly from under a small crimson cap she wore far back on her
shapely head. Her movements were free, assured, and she blushed a dusky red.
While Jim and I were talking, she would come and go with rapid glances at us,
leaving on her passage an impression of grace and charm and a distinct
suggestion of watchfulness. Her manner presented a curious combination of
shyness and audacity. Every pretty smile was succeeded swiftly by a look of
silent, repressed anxiety, as if put to flight by the recollection of some
abiding danger. At times she would sit down with us and, with her soft cheek
dimpled by the knuckles of her little hand, she would listen to our talk; her
big clear eyes would remain fastened on our lips, as though each pronounced
word had a visible shape. Her mother had taught her to read and write; she had
learned a good bit of English from Jim, and she spoke it most amusingly, with
his own clipping, boyish intonation. Her tenderness hovered over him like a
flutter of wings. She lived so completely in his contemplation that she had
acquired something of his outward aspect, something that recalled him in her
movements, in the way she stretched her arm, turned her head, directed her
glances. Her vigilant affection had an intensity that made it almost
perceptible to the senses; it seemed actually to exist in the ambient matter of
space, to envelop him like a peculiar fragrance, to dwell in the sunshine like
a tremulous, subdued, and impassioned note. I suppose you think that I too am
romantic, but it is a mistake. I am relating to you the sober impressions of a
bit of youth, of a strange uneasy romance that had come in my way. I observed
with interest the work of his -- well -- good fortune. He was jealously loved,
but why she should be jealous, and of what, I could not tell. The land, the
people, the forests were her accomplices, guarding him with vigilant accord,
with an air of seclusion, of mystery, of invincible possession. There was no
appeal, as it were; he was imprisoned within the very freedom of his power, and
she, though ready to make a footstool of her head for his feet, guarded her
conquest inflexibly -- as though he were hard to keep. The very Tamb' Itam,
marching on our journeys upon the heels of his white lord, with his head thrown
back, truculent and be-weaponed like a janissary, with kriss, chopper, and lance
(besides carrying Jim's gun); even Tamb' Itam allowed himself to put on the
airs of uncompromising guardianship, like a surly devoted jailer ready to lay
down his life for his captive. On the evenings when we sat up late, his silent,
indistinct form would pass and repass under the verandah, with noiseless
footsteps, or lifting my head I would unexpectedly make him out standing
rigidly erect in the shadow. As a general rule he would vanish after a time,
without a sound; but when we rose he would spring up close to us as if from the
ground, ready for any orders Jim might wish to give. The girl too, I believe,
never went to sleep till we had separated for the night. More than once I saw
her and Jim through the window of my room come out together quietly and lean on
the rough balustrade -- two white forms very close, his arm about her waist,
her head on his shoulder. Their soft murmurs reached me, penetrating, tender,
with a calm sad note in the stillness of the night, like a self-communion of
one being carried on in two tones. Later on, tossing on my bed under the
mosquito-net, I was sure to hear slight creakings, faint breathing, a throat
cleared cautiously -- and I would know that Tamb' Itam was still on the prowl.
Though he had (by the favour of the white lord) a house in the compound, had
"taken wife," and had lately been blessed with a child, I believe
that, during my stay at all events, he slept on the verandah every night. It
was very difficult to make this faithful and grim retainer talk. Even Jim himself
was answered in jerky short sentences, under protest as it were. Talking, he
seemed to imply, was no business of his. The longest speech I heard him
volunteer was one morning when, suddenly extending his hand towards the
courtyard, he pointed at Cornelius and said, "Here comes the
Nazarene." I don't think he was addressing me, though I stood at his side;
his object seemed rather to awaken the indignant attention of the universe.
Some muttered allusions, which followed, to dogs and the smell of roast-meat,
struck me as singularly felicitous. The courtyard, a large square space, was
one torrid blaze of sunshine, and, bathed in intense light, Cornelius was
creeping across in full view with an inexpressible effect of stealthiness, of
dark and secret slinking. He reminded one of everything that is unsavoury. His
slow laborious walk resembled the creeping of a repulsive beetle, the legs
alone moving with horrid industry while the body glided evenly. I suppose he
made straight enough for the place where he wanted to get to, but his progress
with one shoulder carried forward seemed oblique. He was often seen circling
slowly amongst the sheds, as if following a scent; passing before the verandah
with upward stealthy glances; disappearing without haste round the corner of
some hut. That he seemed free of the place demonstrated Jim's absurd
carelessness or else his infinite disdain, for Cornelius had played a very
dubious part (to say the least of it) in a certain episode which might have
ended fatally for Jim. As a matter of fact, it had redounded to his glory. But
everything redounded to his glory; and it was the irony of his good fortune
that he, who had been too careful of it once, seemed to bear a charmed life.
'You must know he had
left Doramin's place very soon after his arrival -- much too soon, in fact, for
his safety, and of course a long time before the war. In this he was actuated
by a sense of duty; he had to look after Stein's business, he said. Hadn't he?
To that end, with an utter disregard of his personal safety, he crossed the
river and took up his quarters with Cornelius. How the latter had managed to
exist through the troubled times I can't say. As Stein's agent, after all, he
must have had Doramin's protection in a measure; and in one way or another he
had managed to wriggle through all the deadly complications, while I have no
doubt that his conduct, whatever line he was forced to take, was marked by that
abjectness which was like the stamp of the man. That was his characteristic; he
was fundamentally and outwardly abject, as other men are markedly of a
generous, distinguished, or venerable appearance. It was the element of his
nature which permeated all his acts and passions and emotions; he raged
abjectly, smiled abjectly, was abjectly sad; his civilities and his
indignations were alike abject. I am sure his love would have been the most
abject of sentiments -- but can one imagine a loathsome insect in love? And his
loathsomeness, too, was abject, so that a simply disgusting person would have appeared
noble by his side. He has his place neither in the background nor in the
foreground of the story; he is simply seen skulking on its outskirts,
enigmatical and unclean, tainting the fragrance of its youth and of its
naiveness.
'His position in any case
could not have been other than extremely miserable, yet it may very well be
that he found some advantages in it. Jim told me he had been received at first
with an abject display of the most amicable sentiments. "The fellow
apparently couldn't contain himself for joy," said Jim with disgust.
"He flew at me every morning to shake both my hands -- confound him! --
but I could never tell whether there would be any breakfast. If I got three
meals in two days I considered myself jolly lucky, and he made me sign a chit
for ten dollars every week. Said he was sure Mr. Stein did not mean him to keep
me for nothing. Well -- he kept me on nothing as near as possible. Put it down
to the unsettled state of the country, and made as if to tear his hair out,
begging my pardon twenty times a day, so that I had at last to entreat him not
to worry. It made me sick. Half the roof of his house had fallen in, and the
whole place had a mangy look, with wisps of dry grass sticking out and the
corners of broken mats flapping on every wall. He did his best to make out that
Mr. Stein owed him money on the last three years' trading, but his books were
all torn, and some were missing. He tried to hint it was his late wife's fault.
Disgusting scoundrel! At last I had to forbid him to mention his late wife at
all. It made Jewel cry. I couldn't discover what became of all the trade-goods;
there was nothing in the store but rats, having a high old time amongst a
litter of brown paper and old sacking. I was assured on every hand that he had
a lot of money buried somewhere, but of course could get nothing out of him. It
was the most miserable existence I led there in that wretched house. I tried to
do my duty by Stein, but I had also other matters to think of. When I escaped
to Doramin old Tunku Allang got frightened and returned all my things. It was
done in a roundabout way, and with no end of mystery, through a Chinaman who
keeps a small shop here; but as soon as I left the Bugis quarter and went to
live with Cornelius it began to be said openly that the Rajah had made up his
mind to have me killed before long. Pleasant, wasn't it? And I couldn't see
what there was to prevent him if he really had made up his mind. The worst of
it was, I couldn't help feeling I wasn't doing any good either for Stein or for
myself. Oh! it was beastly -- the whole six weeks of it." '
'He told me further
that he didn't know what made him hang on -- but of course we may guess. He
sympathised deeply with the defenceless girl, at the mercy of that "mean,
cowardly scoundrel." It appears Cornelius led her an awful life, stopping
only short of actual ill-usage, for which he had not the pluck, I suppose. He
insisted upon her calling him father -- "and with respect too -- with
respect," he would scream, shaking a little yellow fist in her face.
"I am a respectable man, and what are you? Tell me -- what are you? You
think I am going to bring up somebody else's child and not be treated with
respect? You ought to be glad I let you. Come -- say Yes, father.... No? ...
You wait a bit." Thereupon he would begin to abuse the dead woman, till
the girl would run off with her hands to her head. He pursued her, dashing in
and out and round the house and amongst the sheds, would drive her into some
corner, where she would fall on her knees stopping her ears, and then he would
stand at a distance and declaim filthy denunciations at her back for half an
hour at a stretch. "Your mother was a devil, a deceitful devil -- and you
too are a devil," he would shriek in a final outburst, pick up a bit of
dry earth or a handful of mud (there was plenty of mud around the house), and
fling it into her hair. Sometimes, though, she would hold out full of scorn,
confronting him in silence, her face sombre and contracted, and only now and then
uttering a word or two that would make the other jump and writhe with the
sting. Jim told me these scenes were terrible. It was indeed a strange thing to
come upon in a wilderness. The endlessness of such a subtly cruel situation was
appalling -- if you think of it. The respectable Cornelius (Inchi 'Nelyus the
Malays called him, with a grimace that meant many things) was a
much-disappointed man. I don't know what he had expected would be done for him
in consideration of his marriage; but evidently the liberty to steal, and
embezzle, and appropriate to himself for many years and in any way that suited
him best, the goods of Stein's Trading Company (Stein kept the supply up
unfalteringly as long as he could get his skippers to take it there) did not
seem to him a fair equivalent for the sacrifice of his honourable name. Jim
would have enjoyed exceedingly thrashing Cornelius within an inch of his life;
on the other hand, the scenes were of so painful a character, so abominable,
that his impulse would be to get out of earshot, in order to spare the girl's
feelings. They left her agitated, speechless, clutching her bosom now and then
with a stony, desperate face, and then Jim would lounge up and say unhappily,
"Now -- come -- really -- what's the use -- you must try to eat a
bit," or give some such mark of sympathy. Cornelius would keep on slinking
through the doorways, across the verandah and back again, as mute as a fish,
and with malevolent, mistrustful, underhand glances. "I can stop his game,"
Jim said to her once. "Just say the word." And do you know what she
answered? She said -- Jim told me impressively -- that if she had not been sure
he was intensely wretched himself, she would have found the courage to kill him
with her own hands. "Just fancy that! The poor devil of a girl, almost a
child, being driven to talk like that," he exclaimed in horror. It seemed
impossible to save her not only from that mean rascal but even from herself! It
wasn't that he pitied her so much, he affirmed; it was more than pity; it was
as if he had something on his conscience, while that life went on. To leave the
house would have appeared a base desertion. He had understood at last that
there was nothing to expect from a longer stay, neither accounts nor money, nor
truth of any sort, but he stayed on, exasperating Cornelius to the verge, I
won't say of insanity, but almost of courage. Meantime he felt all sorts of
dangers gathering obscurely about him. Doramin had sent over twice a trusty
servant to tell him seriously that he could do nothing for his safety unless he
would recross the river again and live amongst the Bugis as at first. People of
every condition used to call, often in the dead of night, in order to disclose
to him plots for his assassination. He was to be poisoned. He was to be stabbed
in the bath-house. Arrangements were being made to have him shot from a boat on
the river. Each of these informants professed himself to be his very good
friend. It was enough -- he told me -- to spoil a fellow's rest for ever. Something
of the kind was extremely possible -- nay, probable -- but the lying warnings
gave him only the sense as deadly scheming going on all around him, on all
sides, in the dark. Nothing more calculated to shake the best of nerve.
Finally, one night, Cornelius himself, with a great apparatus of alarm and
secrecy, unfolded in solemn wheedling tones a little plan wherein for one
hundred dollars -- or even for eighty; let's say eighty -- he, Cornelius, would
procure a trustworthy man to smuggle Jim out of the river, all safe. There was
nothing else for it now -- if Jim cared a pin for his life. What's eighty
dollars? A trifle. An insignificant sum. While he, Cornelius, who had to remain
behind, was absolutely courting death by this proof of devotion to Mr. Stein's
young friend. The sight of his abject grimacing was -- Jim told me -- very hard
to bear: he clutched at his hair, beat his breast, rocked himself to and fro
with his hands pressed to his stomach, and actually pretended to shed tears.
"Your blood be on your own head," he squeaked at last, and rushed
out. It is a curious question how far Cornelius was sincere in that
performance. Jim confessed to me that he did not sleep a wink after the fellow
had gone. He lay on his back on a thin mat spread over the bamboo flooring,
trying idly to make out the bare rafters, and listening to the rustlings in the
torn thatch. A star suddenly twinkled through a hole in the roof. His brain was
in a whirl; but, nevertheless, it was on that very night that he matured his
plan for overcoming Sherif Ali. It had been the thought of all the moments he
could spare from the hopeless investigation into Stein's affairs, but the
notion -- he says -- came to him then all at once. He could see, as it were,
the guns mounted on the top of the hill. He got very hot and excited lying
there; sleep was out of the question more than ever. He jumped up, and went out
barefooted on the verandah. Walking silently, he came upon the girl, motionless
against the wall, as if on the watch. In his then state of mind it did not
surprise him to see her up, nor yet to hear her ask in an anxious whisper where
Cornelius could be. He simply said he did not know. She moaned a little, and
peered into the campong. Everything was very quiet. He was possessed by his new
idea, and so full of it that he could not help telling the girl all about it at
once. She listened, clapped her hands lightly, whispered softly her admiration,
but was evidently on the alert all the time. It seems he had been used to make
a confidant of her all along -- and that she on her part could and did give him
a lot of useful hints as to Patusan affairs there is no doubt. He assured me
more than once that he had never found himself the worse for her advice. At any
rate, he was proceeding to explain his plan fully to her there and then, when
she pressed his arm once, and vanished from his side. Then Cornelius appeared
from somewhere, and, perceiving Jim, ducked sideways, as though he had been
shot at, and afterwards stood very still in the dusk. At last he came forward
prudently, like a suspicious cat. "There were some fishermen there -- with
fish," he said in a shaky voice. "To sell fish -- you
understand." . . . It must have been then two o'clock in the morning -- a
likely time for anybody to hawk fish about!
'Jim, however, let the
statement pass, and did not give it a single thought. Other matters occupied
his mind, and besides he had neither seen nor heard anything. He contented
himself by saying, "Oh!" absently, got a drink of water out of a pitcher
standing there, and leaving Cornelius a prey to some inexplicable emotion --
that made him embrace with both arms the worm-eaten rail of the verandah as if
his legs had failed -- went in again and lay down on his mat to think.
By-and-by he heard stealthy footsteps. They stopped. A voice whispered
tremulously through the wall, "Are you asleep?" "No! What is
it?" he answered briskly, and there was an abrupt movement outside, and
then all was still, as if the whisperer had been startled. Extremely annoyed at
this, Jim came out impetuously, and Cornelius with a faint shriek fled along
the verandah as far as the steps, where he hung on to the broken banister. Very
puzzled, Jim called out to him from the distance to know what the devil he
meant. "Have you given your consideration to what I spoke to you
about?" asked Cornelius, pronouncing the words with difficulty, like a man
in the cold fit of a fever. "No!" shouted Jim in a passion. "I
have not, and I don't intend to. I am going to live here, in Patusan."
"You shall d-d-die h-h-here," answered Cornelius, still shaking
violently, and in a sort of expiring voice. The whole performance was so absurd
and provoking that Jim didn't know whether he ought to be amused or angry.
"Not till I have seen you tucked away, you bet," he called out,
exasperated yet ready to laugh. Half seriously (being excited with his own
thoughts, you know) he went on shouting, "Nothing can touch me! You can do
your damnedest." Somehow the shadowy Cornelius far off there seemed to be
the hateful embodiment of all the annoyances and difficulties he had found in
his path. He let himself go -- his nerves had been over-wrought for days -- and
called him many pretty names, -- swindler, liar, sorry rascal: in fact, carried
on in an extraordinary way. He admits he passed all bounds, that he was quite
beside himself -- defied all Patusan to scare him away -- declared he would
make them all dance to his own tune yet, and so on, in a menacing, boasting
strain. Perfectly bombastic and ridiculous, he said. His ears burned at the
bare recollection. Must have been off his chump in some way.... The girl, who
was sitting with us, nodded her little head at me quickly, frowned faintly, and
said, "I heard him," with child-like solemnity. He laughed and
blushed. What stopped him at last, he said, was the silence, the complete
deathlike silence, of the indistinct figure far over there, that seemed to hang
collapsed, doubled over the rail in a weird immobility. He came to his senses,
and ceasing suddenly, wondered greatly at himself. He watched for a while. Not
a stir, not a sound. "Exactly as if the chap had died while I had been
making all that noise," he said. He was so ashamed of himself that he went
indoors in a hurry without another word, and flung himself down again. The row
seemed to have done him good though, because he went to sleep for the rest of
the night like a baby. Hadn't slept like that for weeks. "But I didn't
sleep," struck in the girl, one elbow on the table and nursing her cheek.
"I watched." Her big eyes flashed, rolling a little, and then she
fixed them on my face intently.'
'You may imagine with
what interest I listened. All these details were perceived to have some
significance twenty-four hours later. In the morning Cornelius made no allusion
to the events of the night. "I suppose you will come back to my poor
house," he muttered surlily, slinking up just as Jim was entering the
canoe to go over to Doramin's campong. Jim only nodded, without looking at him.
"You find it good fun, no doubt," muttered the other in a sour tone.
Jim spent the day with the old nakhoda, preaching the necessity of vigorous
action to the principal men of the Bugis community, who had been summoned for a
big talk. He remembered with pleasure how very eloquent and persuasive he had
been. "I managed to put some backbone into them that time, and no
mistake," he said. Sherif Ali's last raid had swept the outskirts of the
settlement, and some women belonging to the town had been carried off to the
stockade. Sherif Ali's emissaries had been seen in the market-place the day
before, strutting about haughtily in white cloaks, and boasting of the Rajah's
friendship for their master. One of them stood forward in the shade of a tree,
and, leaning on the long barrel of a rifle, exhorted the people to prayer and
repentance, advising them to kill all the strangers in their midst, some of
whom, he said, were infidels and others even worse -- children of Satan in the
guise of Moslems. It was reported that several of the Rajah's people amongst
the listeners had loudly expressed their approbation. The terror amongst the
common people was intense. Jim, immensely pleased with his day's work, crossed
the river again before sunset.
'As he had got the
Bugis irretrievably committed to action, and had made himself responsible for
success on his own head, he was so elated that in the lightness of his heart he
absolutely tried to be civil with Cornelius. But Cornelius became wildly jovial
in response, and it was almost more than he could stand, he says, to hear his
little squeaks of false laughter, to see him wriggle and blink, and suddenly
catch hold of his chin and crouch low over the table with a distracted stare.
The girl did not show herself, and Jim retired early. When he rose to say good-night,
Cornelius jumped up, knocking his chair over, and ducked out of sight as if to
pick up something he had dropped. His good-night came huskily from under the
table. Jim was amazed to see him emerge with a dropping jaw, and staring,
stupidly frightened eyes. He clutched the edge of the table. "What's the
matter? Are you unwell?" asked Jim. "Yes, yes, yes. A great colic in
my stomach," says the other; and it is Jim's opinion that it was perfectly
true. If so, it was, in view of his contemplated action, an abject sign of a
still imperfect callousness for which he must be given all due credit.
'Be it as it may, Jim's
slumbers were disturbed by a dream of heavens like brass resounding with a
great voice, which called upon him to Awake! Awake! so loud that,
notwithstanding his desperate determination to sleep on, he did wake up in
reality. The glare of a red spluttering conflagration going on in mid-air fell
on his eyes. Coils of black thick smoke curved round the head of some
apparition, some unearthly being, all in white, with a severe, drawn, anxious
face. After a second or so he recognised the girl. She was holding a dammar
torch at arm's-length aloft, and in a persistent, urgent monotone she was
repeating, "Get up! Get up! Get up!"
'Suddenly he leaped to
his feet; at once she put into his hand a revolver, his own revolver, which had
been hanging on a nail, but loaded this time. He gripped it in silence,
bewildered, blinking in the light. He wondered what he could do for her.
'She asked rapidly and
very low, "Can you face four men with this?" He laughed while
narrating this part at the recollection of his polite alacrity. It seems he
made a great display of it. "Certainly -- of course -- certainly --
command me." He was not properly awake, and had a notion of being very
civil in these extraordinary circumstances, of showing his unquestioning,
devoted readiness. She left the room, and he followed her; in the passage they
disturbed an old hag who did the casual cooking of the household, though she was
so decrepit as to be hardly able to understand human speech. She got up and
hobbled behind them, mumbling toothlessly. On the verandah a hammock of
sail-cloth, belonging to Cornelius, swayed lightly to the touch of Jim's elbow.
It was empty.
'The Patusan
establishment, like all the posts of Stein's Trading Company, had originally
consisted of four buildings. Two of them were represented by two heaps of
sticks, broken bamboos, rotten thatch, over which the four corner-posts of
hardwood leaned sadly at different angles: the principal storeroom, however,
stood yet, facing the agent's house. It was an oblong hut, built of mud and
clay; it had at one end a wide door of stout planking, which so far had not
come off the hinges, and in one of the side walls there was a square aperture,
a sort of window, with three wooden bars. Before descending the few steps the
girl turned her face over her shoulder and said quickly, "You were to be
set upon while you slept." Jim tells me he experienced a sense of deception.
It was the old story. He was weary of these attempts upon his life. He had had
his fill of these alarms. He was sick of them. He assured me he was angry with
the girl for deceiving him. He had followed her under the impression that it
was she who wanted his help, and now he had half a mind to turn on his heel and
go back in disgust. "Do you know," he commented profoundly, "I
rather think I was not quite myself for whole weeks on end about that
time." "Oh yes. You were though," I couldn't help contradicting.
'But she moved on
swiftly, and he followed her into the courtyard. All its fences had fallen in a
long time ago; the neighbours' buffaloes would pace in the morning across the
open space, snorting profoundly, without haste; the very jungle was invading it
already. Jim and the girl stopped in the rank grass. The light in which they
stood made a dense blackness all round, and only above their heads there was an
opulent glitter of stars. He told me it was a beautiful night -- quite cool,
with a little stir of breeze from the river. It seems he noticed its friendly
beauty. Remember this is a love story I am telling you now. A lovely night
seemed to breathe on them a soft caress. The flame of the torch streamed now
and then with a fluttering noise like a flag, and for a time this was the only
sound. "They are in the storeroom waiting," whispered the girl;
"they are waiting for the signal." "Who's to give it?" he
asked. She shook the torch, which blazed up after a shower of sparks. "Only
you have been sleeping so restlessly," she continued in a murmur; "I
watched your sleep, too." "You!" he exclaimed, craning his neck
to look about him. "You think I watched on this night only!" she
said, with a sort of despairing indignation..
'He says it was as if
he had received a blow on the chest. He gasped. He thought he had been an awful
brute somehow, and he felt remorseful, touched, happy, elated. This, let me
remind you again, is a love story; you can see it by the imbecility, not a
repulsive imbecility, the exalted imbecility of these proceedings, this station
in torchlight, as if they had come there on purpose to have it out for the
edification of concealed murderers. If Sherif Ali's emissaries had been
possessed -- as Jim remarked -- of a pennyworth of spunk, this was the time to
make a rush. His heart was thumping -- not with fear -- but he seemed to hear
the grass rustle, and he stepped smartly out of the light. Something dark,
imperfectly seen, flitted rapidly out of sight. He called out in a strong
voice, "Cornelius! O Cornelius!" A profound silence succeeded: his
voice did not seem to have carried twenty feet. Again the girl was by his side.
"Fly!" she said. The old woman was coming up; her broken figure
hovered in crippled little jumps on the edge of the light; they heard her
mumbling, and a light, moaning sigh. "Fly!" repeated the girl
excitedly. "They are frightened now -- this light -- the voices. They know
you are awake now -- they know you are big, strong, fearless . . ."
"If I am all that," he began; but she interrupted him: "Yes --
to-night! But what of to-morrow night? Of the next night? Of the night after --
of all the many, many nights? Can I be always watching?" A sobbing catch
of her breath affected him beyond the power of words.
'He told me that he had
never felt so small, so powerless -- and as to courage, what was the good of
it? he thought. He was so helpless that even flight seemed of no use; and
though she kept on whispering, "Go to Doramin, go to Doramin," with
feverish insistence, he realised that for him there was no refuge from that
loneliness which centupled all his dangers except -- in her. "I
thought," he said to me, "that if I went away from her it would be
the end of everything somehow." Only as they couldn't stop there for ever
in the middle of that courtyard, he made up his mind to go and look into the
storehouse. He let her follow him without thinking of any protest, as if they
had been indissolubly united. "I am fearless -- am I?" he muttered
through his teeth. She restrained his arm. "Wait till you hear my
voice," she said, and, torch in hand, ran lightly round the corner. He
remained alone in the darkness, his face to the door: not a sound, not a breath
came from the other side. The old hag let out a dreary groan somewhere behind
his back. He heard a high-pitched almost screaming call from the girl.
"Now! Push!" He pushed violently; the door swung with a creak and a
clatter, disclosing to his intense astonishment the low dungeon-like interior
illuminated by a lurid, wavering glare. A turmoil of smoke eddied down upon an
empty wooden crate in the middle of the floor, a litter of rags and straw tried
to soar, but only stirred feebly in the draught. She had thrust the light
through the bars of the window. He saw her bare round arm extended and rigid,
holding up the torch with the steadiness of an iron bracket. A conical ragged
heap of old mats cumbered a distant corner almost to the ceiling, and that was
all.
'He explained to me
that he was bitterly disappointed at this. His fortitude had been tried by so
many warnings, he had been for weeks surrounded by so many hints of danger,
that he wanted the relief of some reality, of something tangible that he could
meet. "It would have cleared the air for a couple of hours at least, if
you know what I mean," he said to me. "Jove! I had been living for
days with a stone on my chest. " Now at last he had thought he would get
hold of something, and -- nothing! Not a trace, not a sign of anybody. He had
raised his weapon as the door flew open, but now his arm fell. "Fire!
Defend yourself," the girl outside cried in an agonising voice. She, being
in the dark and with her arm thrust in to the shoulder through the small hole,
couldn't see what was going on, and she dared not withdraw the torch now to run
round. "There's nobody here!" yelled Jim contemptuously, but his
impulse to burst into a resentful exasperated laugh died without a sound: he
had perceived in the very act of turning away that he was exchanging glances
with a pair of eyes in the heap of mats. He saw a shifting gleam of whites.
"Come out!" he cried in a fury, a little doubtful, and a dark-faced
head, a head without a body, shaped itself in the rubbish, a strangely detached
head, that looked at him with a steady scowl. Next moment the whole mound stirred,
and with a low grunt a man emerged swiftly, and bounded towards Jim. Behind him
the mats as it were jumped and flew, his right arm was raised with a crooked
elbow, and the dull blade of a kriss protruded from his fist held off, a little
above his head. A cloth wound tight round his loins seemed dazzlingly white on
his bronze skin; his naked body glistened as if wet.
'Jim noted all this. He
told me he was experiencing a feeling of unutterable relief, of vengeful
elation. He held his shot, he says, deliberately. He held it for the tenth part
of a second, for three strides of the man -- an unconscionable time. He held it
for the pleasure of saying to himself, That's a dead man! He was absolutely
positive and certain. He let him come on because it did not matter. A dead man,
anyhow. He noticed the dilated nostrils, the wide eyes, the intent, eager
stillness of the face, and then he fired.
'The explosion in that
confined space was stunning. He stepped back a pace. He saw the man jerk his
head up, fling his arms forward, and drop the kriss. He ascertained afterwards
that he had shot him through the mouth, a little upwards, the bullet coming out
high at the back of the skull. With the impetus of his rush the man drove
straight on, his face suddenly gaping disfigured, with his hands open before
him gropingly, as though blinded, and landed with terrific violence on his
forehead, just short of Jim's bare toes. Jim says he didn't lose the smallest
detail of all this. He found himself calm, appeased, without rancour, without
uneasiness, as if the death of that man had atoned for everything. The place
was getting very full of sooty smoke from the torch, in which the unswaying
flame burned blood-red without a flicker. He walked in resolutely, striding
over the dead body, and covered with his revolver another naked figure outlined
vaguely at the other end. As he was about to pull the trigger, the man threw
away with force a short heavy spear, and squatted submissively on his hams, his
back to the wall and his clasped hands between his legs. "You want your
life?" Jim said. The other made no sound. "How many more of
you?" asked Jim again. "Two more, Tuan," said the man very
softly, looking with big fascinated eyes into the muzzle of the revolver.
Accordingly, two more crawled from under the mats, holding out ostentatiously
their empty hands.'
'Jim took up an
advantageous position and shepherded them out in a bunch through the doorway:
all that time the torch had remained vertical in the grip of a little hand,
without so much as a tremble. The three men obeyed him, perfectly mute, moving
automatically. He ranged them in a row. "Link arms!" he ordered. They
did so. "The first who withdraws his arm or turns his head is a dead
man," he said. "March!" They stepped out together, rigidly; he
followed, and at the side the girl, in a trailing white gown, her black hair
falling as low as her waist, bore the light. Erect and swaying, she seemed to
glide without touching the earth; the only sound was the silky swish and rustle
of the long grass. "Stop!" cried Jim.
'The river-bank was
steep; a great freshness ascended, the light fell on the edge of smooth dark
water frothing without a ripple; right and left the shapes of the houses ran
together below the sharp outlines of the roofs. "Take my greetings to
Sherif Ali -- till I come myself," said Jim. Not one head of the three
budged. "Jump!" he thundered. The three splashes made one splash, a
shower flew up, black heads bobbed convulsively, and disappeared; but a great
blowing and spluttering went on, growing faint, for they were diving
industriously, in great fear of a parting shot. Jim turned to the girl, who had
been a silent and attentive observer. His heart seemed suddenly to grow too big
for his breast and choke him in the hollow of his throat. This probably made
him speechless for so long, and after returning his gaze she flung the burning
torch with a wide sweep of the arm into the river. The ruddy fiery glare,
taking a long flight through the night, sank with a vicious hiss, and the calm
soft starlight descended upon them, unchecked.
'He did not tell me
what it was he said when at last he recovered his voice. I don't suppose he
could be very eloquent. The world was still, the night breathed on them, one of
those nights that seem created for the sheltering of tenderness, and there are
moments when our souls, as if freed from their dark envelope, glow with an
exquisite sensibility that makes certain silences more lucid than speeches. As
to the girl, he told me, "She broke down a bit. Excitement -- don't you
know. Reaction. Deucedly tired she must have been -- and all that kind of
thing. And -- and -- hang it all -- she was fond of me, don't you see.... I
too... didn't know, of course . . . never entered my head . . ."
'Then he got up and
began to walk about in some agitation. "I -- I love her dearly. More than
I can tell. Of course one cannot tell. You take a different view of your
actions when you come to understand, when you are made to understand every day
that your existence is necessary -- you see, absolutely necessary -- to another
person. I am made to feel that. Wonderful! But only try to think what her life
has been. It is too extravagantly awful! Isn't it? And me finding her here like
this -- as you may go out for a stroll and come suddenly upon somebody drowning
in a lonely dark place. Jove! No time to lose. Well, it is a trust too . . . I
believe I am equal to it . . ."
'I must tell you the
girl had left us to ourselves some time before. He slapped his chest.
"Yes! I feel that, but I believe I am equal to all my luck!" He had
the gift of finding a special meaning in everything that happened to him. This
was the view he took of his love affair; it was idyllic, a little solemn, and
also true, since his belief had all the unshakable seriousness of youth. Some
time after, on another occasion, he said to me, "I've been only two years
here, and now, upon my word, I can't conceive being able to live anywhere else.
The very thought of the world outside is enough to give me a fright; because,
don't you see," he continued, with downcast eyes watching the action of
his boot busied in squashing thoroughly a tiny bit of dried mud (we were
strolling on the river-bank) -- "because I have not forgotten why I came
here. Not yet!"
'I refrained from
looking at him, but I think I heard a short sigh; we took a turn or two in
silence. "Upon my soul and conscience," he began again, "if such
a thing can be forgotten, then I think I have a right to dismiss it from my
mind. Ask any man here" . . . his voice changed. "Is it not
strange," he went on in a gentle, almost yearning tone, "that all
these people, all these people who would do anything for me, can never be made
to understand? Never! If you disbelieved me I could not call them up. It seems
hard, somehow. I am stupid, am I not? What more can I want? If you ask them who
is brave -- who is true -- who is just -- who is it they would trust with their
lives? -- they would say, Tuan Jim. And yet they can never know the real, real
truth . . ."
'That's what he said to
me on my last day with him. I did not let a murmur escape me: I felt he was
going to say more, and come no nearer to the root of the matter. The sun, whose
concentrated glare dwarfs the earth into a restless mote of dust, had sunk
behind the forest, and the diffused light from an opal sky seemed to cast upon a
world without shadows and without brilliance the illusion of a calm and pensive
greatness. I don't know why, listening to him, I should have noted so
distinctly the gradual darkening of the river, of the air; the irresistible
slow work of the night settling silently on all the visible forms, effacing the
outlines, burying the shapes deeper and deeper, like a steady fall of
impalpable black dust.
' "Jove!" he
began abruptly, "there are days when a fellow is too absurd for anything;
only I know I can tell you what I like. I talk about being done with it -- with
the bally thing at the back of my head . . . Forgetting . . . Hang me if I
know! I can think of it quietly. After all, what has it proved? Nothing. I
suppose you don't think so . . ."
'I made a protesting
murmur.
' "No
matter," he said. "I am satisfied . . . nearly. I've got to look only
at the face of the first man that comes along, to regain my confidence. They
can't be made to understand what is going on in me. What of that? Come! I
haven't done so badly."
' "Not so
badly," I said.
' "But all the
same, you wouldn't like to have me aboard your own ship hey?"
' "Confound
you!" I cried. "Stop this."
' "Aha! You
see," he said, crowing, as it were, over me placidly. "Only," he
went on, "you just try to tell this to any of them here. They would think
you a fool, a liar, or worse. And so I can stand it. I've done a thing or two
for them, but this is what they have done for me."
' "My dear
chap," I cried, "you shall always remain for them an insoluble
mystery." Thereupon we were silent.
' "Mystery,"
he repeated, before looking up. "Well, then let me always remain
here."
'After the sun had set,
the darkness seemed to drive upon us, borne in every faint puff of the breeze.
In the middle of a hedged path I saw the arrested, gaunt, watchful, and
apparently one-legged silhouette of Tamb' Itam; and across the dusky space my
eye detected something white moving to and fro behind the supports of the roof.
As soon as Jim, with Tamb' Itam at his heels, had started upon his evening
rounds, I went up to the house alone, and, unexpectedly, found myself waylaid
by the girl, who had been clearly waiting for this opportunity.
'It is hard to tell you
what it was precisely she wanted to wrest from me. Obviously it would be
something very simple -- the simplest impossibility in the world; as, for
instance, the exact description of the form of a cloud. She wanted an
assurance, a statement, a promise, an explanation -- I don't know how to call
it: the thing has no name. It was dark under the projecting roof, and all I
could see were the flowing lines of her gown, the pale small oval of her face,
with the white flash of her teeth, and, turned towards me, the big sombre
orbits of her eyes, where there seemed to be a faint stir, such as you may
fancy you can detect when you plunge your gaze to the bottom of an immensely
deep well. What is it that moves there? you ask yourself. Is it a blind monster
or only a lost gleam from the universe? It occurred to me -- don't laugh --
that all things being dissimilar, she was more inscrutable in her childish
ignorance than the Sphinx propounding childish riddles to wayfarers. She had
been carried off to Patusan before her eyes were open. She had grown up there;
she had seen nothing, she had known nothing, she had no conception of anything.
I ask myself whether she were sure that anything else existed. What notions she
may have formed of the outside world is to me inconceivable: all that she knew
of its inhabitants were a betrayed woman and a sinister pantaloon. Her lover
also came to her from there, gifted with irresistible seductions; but what
would become of her if he should return to these inconceivable regions that
seemed always to claim back their own? Her mother had warned her of this with
tears, before she died . . .
'She had caught hold of
my arm firmly, and as soon as I had stopped she had withdrawn her hand in
haste. She was audacious and shrinking. She feared nothing, but she was checked
by the profound incertitude and the extreme strangeness -- a brave person
groping in the dark. I belonged to this Unknown that might claim Jim for its
own at any moment. I was, as it were, in the secret of its nature and of its
intentions -- the confidant of a threatening mystery -- armed with its power,
perhaps! I believe she supposed I could with a word whisk Jim away out of her
very arms; it is my sober conviction she went through agonies of apprehension
during my long talks with Jim; through a real and intolerable anguish that
might have conceivably driven her into plotting my murder, had the fierceness
of her soul been equal to the tremendous situation it had created. This is my
impression, and it is all I can give you: the whole thing dawned gradually upon
me, and as it got clearer and clearer I was overwhelmed by a slow incredulous
amazement. She made me believe her, but there is no word that on my lips could
render the effect of the headlong and vehement whisper, of the soft, passionate
tones, of the sudden breathless pause and the appealing movement of the white
arms extended swiftly. They fell; the ghostly figure swayed like a slender tree
in the wind, the pale oval of the face drooped; it was impossible to
distinguish her features, the darkness of the eyes was unfathomable; two wide sleeves
uprose in the dark like unfolding wings, and she stood silent, holding her head
in her hands.'
'I was immensely
touched: her youth, her ignorance, her pretty beauty, which had the simple
charm and the delicate vigour of a wild flower, her pathetic pleading, her
helplessness, appealed to me with almost the strength of her own unreasonable
and natural fear. She feared the unknown as we all do, and her ignorance made
the unknown infinitely vast. I stood for it, for myself, for you fellows, for
all the world that neither cared for Jim nor needed him in the least. I would
have been ready enough to answer for the indifference of the teeming earth but
for the reflection that he too belonged to this mysterious unknown of her
fears, and that, however much I stood for, I did not stand for him. This made
me hesitate. A murmur of hopeless pain unsealed my lips. I began by protesting
that I at least had come with no intention to take Jim away.
'Why did I come, then?
After a slight movement she was as still as a marble statue in the night. I
tried to explain briefly: friendship, business; if I had any wish in the matter
it was rather to see him stay.... "They always leave us," she
murmured. The breath of sad wisdom from the grave which her piety wreathed with
flowers seemed to pass in a faint sigh.... Nothing, I said, could separate Jim
from her.
'It is my firm
conviction now; it was my conviction at the time; it was the only possible
conclusion from the facts of the case. It was not made more certain by her
whispering in a tone in which one speaks to oneself, "He swore this to
me." "Did you ask him?" I said.
'She made a step
nearer. "No. Never!" She had asked him only to go away. It was that
night on the river-bank, after he had killed the man -- after she had flung the
torch in the water because he was looking at her so. There was too much light,
and the danger was over then -- for a little time -- for a little time. He said
then he would not abandon her to Cornelius. She had insisted. She wanted him to
leave her. He said that he could not -- that it was impossible. He trembled
while he said this. She had felt him tremble.... One does not require much
imagination to see the scene, almost to hear their whispers. She was afraid for
him too. I believe that then she saw in him only a predestined victim of
dangers which she understood better than himself. Though by nothing but his
mere presence he had mastered her heart, had filled all her thoughts, and had
possessed himself of all her affections, she underestimated his chances of
success. It is obvious that at about that time everybody was inclined to
underestimate his chances. Strictly speaking he didn't seem to have any. I know
this was Cornelius's view. He confessed that much to me in extenuation of the
shady part he had played in Sherif Ali's plot to do away with the infidel. Even
Sherif Ali himself, as it seems certain now, had nothing but contempt for the
white man. Jim was to be murdered mainly on religious grounds, I believe. A
simple act of piety (and so far infinitely meritorious), but otherwise without
much importance. In the last part of this opinion Cornelius concurred.
"Honourable sir," he argued abjectly on the only occasion he managed
to have me to himself -- "honourable sir, how was I to know? Who was he?
What could he do to make people believe him? What did Mr. Stein mean sending a
boy like that to talk big to an old servant? I was ready to save him for eighty
dollars. Only eighty dollars. Why didn't the fool go? Was I to get stabbed myself
for the sake of a stranger?" He grovelled in spirit before me, with his
body doubled up insinuatingly and his hands hovering about my knees, as though
he were ready to embrace my legs. "What's eighty dollars? An insignificant
sum to give to a defenceless old man ruined for life by a deceased she-
devil." Here he wept. But I anticipate. I didn't that night chance upon
Cornelius till I had had it out with the girl.
'She was unselfish when
she urged Jim to leave her, and even to leave the country. It was his danger
that was foremost in her thoughts -- even if she wanted to save herself too --
perhaps unconsciously: but then look at the warning she had, look at the lesson
that could be drawn from every moment of the recently ended life in which all
her memories were centred. She fell at his feet -- she told me so -- there by
the river, in the discreet light of stars which showed nothing except great
masses of silent shadows, indefinite open spaces, and trembling faintly upon
the broad stream made it appear as wide as the sea. He had lifted her up. He
lifted her up, and then she would struggle no more. Of course not. Strong arms,
a tender voice, a stalwart shoulder to rest her poor lonely little head upon.
The need -- the infinite need -- of all this for the aching heart, for the
bewildered mind; -- the promptings of youth -- the necessity of the moment.
What would you have? One understands -- unless one is incapable of
understanding anything under the sun. And so she was content to be lifted up --
and held. "You know -- Jove! this is serious -- no nonsense in it!"
as Jim had whispered hurriedly with a troubled concerned face on the threshold
of his house. I don't know so much about nonsense, but there was nothing
light-hearted in their romance: they came together under the shadow of a life's
disaster, like knight and maiden meeting to exchange vows amongst haunted
ruins. The starlight was good enough for that story, a light so faint and
remote that it cannot resolve shadows into shapes, and show the other shore of
a stream. I did look upon the stream that night and from the very place; it
rolled silent and as black as Styx: the next day I went away, but I am not
likely to forget what it was she wanted to be saved from when she entreated him
to leave her while there was time. She told me what it was, calmed -- she was
now too passionately interested for mere excitement -- in a voice as quiet in
the obscurity as her white half-lost figure. She told me, "I didn't want
to die weeping." I thought I had not heard aright.
' "You did not
want to die weeping?" I repeated after her. "Like my mother,"
she added readily. The outlines of her white shape did not stir in the least.
"My mother had wept bitterly before she died," she explained. An inconceivable
calmness seemed to have risen from the ground around us, imperceptibly, like
the still rise of a flood in the night, obliterating the familiar landmarks of
emotions. There came upon me, as though I had felt myself losing my footing in
the midst of waters, a sudden dread, the dread of the unknown depths. She went
on explaining that, during the last moments, being alone with her mother, she
had to leave the side of the couch to go and set her back against the door, in
order to keep Cornelius out. He desired to get in, and kept on drumming with
both fists, only desisting now and again to shout huskily, "Let me in! Let
me in! Let me in!" In a far corner upon a few mats the moribund woman,
already speechless and unable to lift her arm, rolled her head over, and with a
feeble movement of her hand seemed to command - "No! No!" and the
obedient daughter, setting her shoulders with all her strength against the
door, was looking on. "The tears fell from her eyes -- and then she
died," concluded the girl in an imperturbable monotone, which more than
anything else, more than the white statuesque immobility of her person, more
than mere words could do, troubled my mind profoundly with the passive,
irremediable horror of the scene. It had the power to drive me out of my
conception of existence, out of that shelter each of us makes for himself to
creep under in moments of danger, as a tortoise withdraws within its shell. For
a moment I had a view of a world that seemed to wear a vast and dismal aspect
of disorder, while, in truth, thanks to our unwearied efforts, it is as sunny
as arrangement of small conveniences as the mind of man can conceive. But still
-- it was only a moment: I went back into my shell directly. One must -- don't
you know? -- though I seemed to have lost all my words in the chaos of dark
thoughts I had contemplated for a second or two beyond the pale. These came
back, too, very soon, for words also belong to the sheltering conception of
light and order which is our refuge. I had them ready at my disposal before she
whispered softly, "He swore he would never leave me, when we stood there
alone! He swore to me!"... "And it is possible that you -- you! do
not believe him?" I asked, sincerely reproachful, genuinely shocked. Why
couldn't she believe? Wherefore this craving for incertitude, this clinging to
fear, as if incertitude and fear had been the safeguards of her love. It was
monstrous. She should have made for herself a shelter of inexpugnable peace out
of that honest affection. She had not the knowledge -- not the skill perhaps.
The night had come on apace; it had grown pitch-dark where we were, so that
without stirring she had faded like the intangible form of a wistful and
perverse spirit. And suddenly I heard her quiet whisper again, "Other men
had sworn the same thing." It was like a meditative comment on some
thoughts full of sadness, of awe. And she added, still lower if possible,
"My father did." She paused the time to draw an inaudible breath.
"Her father too." . . . These were the things she knew! At once I
said, "Ah! but he is not like that." This, it seemed, she did not
intend to dispute; but after a time the strange still whisper wandering
dreamily in the air stole into my ears. "Why is he different? Is he
better? Is he . . ." "Upon my word of honour," I broke in,
"I believe he is." We subdued our tones to a mysterious pitch.
Amongst the huts of Jim's workmen (they were mostly liberated slaves from the
Sherif's stockade) somebody started a shrill, drawling song. Across the river a
big fire (at Doramin's, I think) made a glowing ball, completely isolated in
the night. "Is he more true?" she murmured. "Yes," I said.
"More true than any other man," she repeated in lingering accents.
"Nobody here," I said, "would dream of doubting his word --
nobody would dare -- except you."
'I think she made a
movement at this. "More brave," she went on in a changed tone.
"Fear will never drive him away from you," I said a little nervously.
The song stopped short on a shrill note, and was succeeded by several voices
talking in the distance. Jim's voice too. I was struck by her silence.
"What has he been telling you? He has been telling you something?" I
asked. There was no answer. "What is it he told you?" I insisted.
' "Do you think I
can tell you? How am I to know? How am I to understand?" she cried at
last. There was a stir. I believe she was wringing her hands. "There is
something he can never forget."
' "So much the
better for you," I said gloomily.
' "What is it?
What is it?" She put an extraordinary force of appeal into her supplicating
tone. "He says he had been afraid. How can I believe this? Am I a mad
woman to believe this? You all remember something! You all go back to it. What
is it? You tell me! What is this thing? Is it alive? -- is it dead? I hate it.
It is cruel. Has it got a face and a voice -- this calamity? Will he see it --
will he hear it? In his sleep perhaps when he cannot see me -- and then arise
and go. Ah! I shall never forgive him. My mother had forgiven -- but I, never!
Will it be a sign -- a call?"
'It was a wonderful
experience. She mistrusted his very slumbers -- and she seemed to think I could
tell her why! Thus a poor mortal seduced by the charm of an apparition might
have tried to wring from another ghost the tremendous secret of the claim the
other world holds over a disembodied soul astray amongst the passions of this
earth. The very ground on which I stood seemed to melt under my feet. And it
was so simple too; but if the spirits evoked by our fears and our unrest have
ever to vouch for each other's constancy before the forlorn magicians that we
are, then I -- I alone of us dwellers in the flesh -- have shuddered in the
hopeless chill of such a task. A sign, a call! How telling in its expression
was her ignorance. A few words! How she came to know them, how she came to
pronounce them, I can't imagine. Women find their inspiration in the stress of
moments that for us are merely awful, absurd, or futile. To discover that she
had a voice at all was enough to strike awe into the heart. Had a spurned stone
cried out in pain it could not have appeared a greater and more pitiful
miracle. These few sounds wandering in the dark had made their two benighted
lives tragic to my mind. It was impossible to make her understand. I chafed
silently at my impotence. And Jim, too -- poor devil! Who would need him? Who
would remember him? He had what he wanted. His very existence probably had been
forgotten by this time. They had mastered their fates. They were tragic.
'Her immobility before
me was clearly expectant, and my part was to speak for my brother from the
realm of forgetful shade. I was deeply moved at my responsibility and at her
distress. I would have given anything for the power to soothe her frail soul,
tormenting itself in its invincible ignorance like a small bird beating about
the cruel wires of a cage. Nothing easier than to say, Have no fear! Nothing
more difficult. How does one kill fear, I wonder? How do you shoot a spectre
through the heart, slash off its spectral head, take it by its spectral throat?
It is an enterprise you rush into while you dream, and are glad to make your
escape with wet hair and every limb shaking. The bullet is not run, the blade
not forged, the man not born; even the winged words of truth drop at your feet
like lumps of lead. You require for such a desperate encounter an enchanted and
poisoned shaft dipped in a lie too subtle to be found on earth. An enterprise
for a dream, my masters!
'I began my exorcism
with a heavy heart, with a sort of sullen anger in it too. Jim's voice, suddenly
raised with a stern intonation, carried across the courtyard, reproving the
carelessness of some dumb sinner by the river-side. Nothing -- I said, speaking
in a distinct murmur -- there could be nothing, in that unknown world she
fancied so eager to rob her of her happiness, there was nothing, neither living
nor dead, there was no face, no voice, no power, that could tear Jim from her
side. I drew breath and she whispered softly, "He told me so."
"He told you the truth," I said. "Nothing," she sighed out,
and abruptly turned upon me with a barely audible intensity of tone: "Why
did you come to us from out there? He speaks of you too often. You make me
afraid. Do you -- do you want him?" A sort of stealthy fierceness had
crept into our hurried mutters. "I shall never come again," I said
bitterly. "And I don't want him. No one wants him." "No
one," she repeated in a tone of doubt. "No one," I affirmed,
feeling myself swayed by some strange excitement. "You think him strong,
wise, courageous, great -- why not believe him to be true too? I shall go
to-morrow -- and that is the end. You shall never be troubled by a voice from
there again. This world you don't know is too big to miss him. You understand?
Too big. You've got his heart in your hand. You must feel that. You must know
that." "Yes, I know that," she breathed out, hard and still, as
a statue might whisper.
'I felt I had done
nothing. And what is it that I had wished to do? I am not sure now. At the time
I was animated by an inexplicable ardour, as if before some great and necessary
task -- the influence of the moment upon my mental and emotional state. There
are in all our lives such moments, such influences, coming from the outside, as
it were, irresistible, incomprehensible -- as if brought about by the
mysterious conjunctions of the planets. She owned, as I had put it to her, his
heart. She had that and everything else -- if she could only believe it. What I
had to tell her was that in the whole world there was no one who ever would
need his heart, his mind, his hand. It was a common fate, and yet it seemed an
awful thing to say of any man. She listened without a word, and her stillness
now was like the protest of an invincible unbelief. What need she care for the
world beyond the forests? I asked. From all the multitudes that peopled the
vastness of that unknown there would come, I assured her, as long as he lived,
neither a call nor a sign for him. Never. I was carried away. Never! Never! I
remember with wonder the sort of dogged fierceness I displayed. I had the
illusion of having got the spectre by the throat at last. Indeed the whole real
thing has left behind the detailed and amazing impression of a dream. Why
should she fear? She knew him to be strong, true, wise, brave. He was all that.
Certainly. He was more. He was great -- invincible -- and the world did not
want him, it had forgotten him, it would not even know him.
'I stopped; the silence
over Patusan was profound, and the feeble dry sound of a paddle striking the
side of a canoe somewhere in the middle of the river seemed to make it
infinite. "Why?" she murmured. I felt that sort of rage one feels
during a hard tussle. The spectre vas trying to slip out of my grasp.
"Why?" she repeated louder; "tell me!" And as I remained
confounded, she stamped with her foot like a spoilt child. "Why?
Speak." "You want to know?" I asked in a fury. "Yes!"
she cried. "Because he is not good enough," I said brutally. During
the moment's pause I noticed the fire on the other shore blaze up, dilating the
circle of its glow like an amazed stare, and contract suddenly to a red
pin-point. I only knew how close to me she had been when I felt the clutch of
her fingers on my forearm. Without raising her voice, she threw into it an
infinity of scathing contempt, bitterness, and despair.
' "This is the
very thing he said.... You lie!"
'The last two words she
cried at me in the native dialect. "Hear me out!" I entreated. She
caught her breath tremulously, flung my arm away. "Nobody, nobody is good
enough," I began with the greatest earnestness. I could hear the sobbing
labour of her breath frightfully quickened. I hung my head. What was the use?
Footsteps were approaching; I slipped away without another word....'
Marlow swung his legs
out, got up quickly, and staggered a little, as though he had been set down
after a rush through space. He leaned his back against the balustrade and faced
a disordered array of long cane chairs. The bodies prone in them seemed
startled out of their torpor by his movement. One or two sat up as if alarmed;
here and there a cigar glowed yet; Marlow looked at them all with the eyes of a
man returning from the excessive remoteness of a dream. A throat was cleared; a
calm voice encouraged negligently, "'Well.'"
'Nothing,' said Marlow
with a slight start. 'He had told her -- that's all. She did not believe him --
nothing more. As to myself, I do not know whether it be just, proper, decent
for me to rejoice or to be sorry. For my part, I cannot say what I believed --
indeed I don't know to this day, and never shall probably. But what did the
poor devil believe himself? Truth shall prevail -- don't you know. Magna est
veritas et . . . Yes, when it gets a chance. There is a law, no doubt -- and
likewise a law regulates your luck in the throwing of dice. It is not Justice
the servant of men, but accident, hazard, Fortune -- the ally of patient Time
-- that holds an even and scrupulous balance. Both of us had said the very same
thing. Did we both speak the truth -- or one of us did -- or neither? . . .'
Marlow paused, crossed
his arms on his breast, and in a changed tone --
'She said we lied. Poor
soul! Well -- let's leave it to Chance, whose ally is Time, that cannot be
hurried, and whose enemy is Death, that will not wait. I had retreated -- a
little cowed, I must own. I had tried a fall with fear itself and got thrown --
of course. I had only succeeded in adding to her anguish the hint of some
mysterious collusion, of an inexplicable and incomprehensible conspiracy to
keep her for ever in the dark. And it had come easily, naturally, unavoidably,
by his act, by her own act! It was as though I had been shown the working of
the implacable destiny of which we are the victims -- and the tools. It was
appalling to think of the girl whom I had left standing there motionless; Jim's
footsteps had a fateful sound as he tramped by, without seeing me, in his heavy
laced boots. "What? No lights!" he said in a loud, surprised voice.
"What are you doing in the dark -- you two?" Next moment he caught
sight of her, I suppose. "Hallo, girl!" he cried cheerily.
"Hallo, boy!" she answered at once, with amazing pluck.
'This was their usual
greeting to each other, and the bit of swagger she would put into her rather
high but sweet voice was very droll, pretty, and childlike. It delighted Jim
greatly. This was the last occasion on which I heard them exchange this
familiar hail, and it struck a chill into my heart. There was the high sweet
voice, the pretty effort, the swagger; but it all seemed to die out prematurely,
and the playful call sounded like a moan. It was too confoundedly awful.
"What have you done with Marlow?" Jim was asking; and then,
"Gone down -- has he? Funny I didn't meet him.... You there, Marlow?"
'I didn't answer. I
wasn't going in -- not yet at any rate. I really couldn't. While he was calling
me I was engaged in making my escape through a little gate leading out upon a
stretch of newly cleared ground. No; I couldn't face them yet. I walked hastily
with lowered head along a trodden path. The ground rose gently, the few big
trees had been felled, the undergrowth had been cut down and the grass fired.
He had a mind to try a coffee-plantation there. The big hill, rearing its
double summit coal-black in the clear yellow glow of the rising moon, seemed to
cast its shadow upon the ground prepared for that experiment. He was going to
try ever so many experiments; I had admired his energy, his enterprise, and his
shrewdness. Nothing on earth seemed less real now than his plans, his energy,
and his enthusiasm; and raising my eyes, I saw part of the moon glittering
through the bushes at the bottom of the chasm. For a moment it looked as though
the smooth disc, falling from its place in the sky upon the earth, had rolled
to the bottom of that precipice: its ascending movement was like a leisurely
rebound; it disengaged itself from the tangle of twigs; the bare contorted limb
of some tree, growing on the slope, made a black crack right across its face.
It threw its level rays afar as if from a cavern, and in this mournful
eclipse-like light the stumps of felled trees uprose very dark, the heavy
shadows fell at my feet on all sides, my own moving shadow, and across my path
the shadow of the solitary grave perpetually garlanded with flowers. In the darkened
moonlight the interlaced blossoms took on shapes foreign to one's memory and
colours indefinable to the eye, as though they had been special flowers
gathered by no man, grown not in this world, and destined for the use of the
dead alone. Their powerful scent hung in the warm air, making it thick and
heavy like the fumes of incense. The lumps of white coral shone round the dark
mound like a chaplet of bleached skulls, and everything around was so quiet
that when I stood still all sound and all movement in the world seemed to come
to an end.
'It was a great peace,
as if the earth had been one grave, and for a time I stood there thinking
mostly of the living who, buried in remote places out of the knowledge of
mankind, still are fated to share in its tragic or grotesque miseries. In its
noble struggles too -- who knows? The human heart is vast enough to contain all
the world. It is valiant enough to bear the burden, but where is the courage
that would cast it off?
'I suppose I must have
fallen into a sentimental mood; I only know that I stood there long enough for
the sense of utter solitude to get hold of me so completely that all I had
lately seen, all I had heard, and the very human speech itself, seemed to have
passed away out of existence, living only for a while longer in my memory, as
though I had been the last of mankind. It was a strange and melancholy
illusion, evolved half-consciously like all our illusions, which I suspect only
to be visions of remote unattainable truth, seen dimly. This was, indeed, one
of the lost, forgotten, unknown places of the earth; I had looked under its
obscure surface; and I felt that when to-morrow I had left it for ever, it
would slip out of existence, to live only in my memory till I myself passed
into oblivion. I have that feeling about me now; perhaps it is that feeling
which has incited me to tell you the story, to try to hand over to you, as it
were, its very existence, its reality -- the truth disclosed in a moment of
illusion.
'Cornelius broke upon
it. He bolted out, vermin-like, from the long grass growing in a depression of
the ground. I believe his house was rotting somewhere near by, though I've
never seen it, not having been far enough in that direction. He ran towards me
upon the path; his feet, shod in dirty white shoes, twinkled on the dark earth;
he pulled himself up, and began to whine and cringe under a tall stove-pipe
hat. His dried-up little carcass was swallowed up, totally lost, in a suit of
black broadcloth. That was his costume for holidays and ceremonies, and it
reminded me that this was the fourth Sunday I had spent in Patusan. All the
time of my stay I had been vaguely aware of his desire to confide in me, if he
only could get me all to himself. He hung about with an eager craving look on his
sour yellow little face; but his timidity had kept him back as much as my
natural reluctance to have anything to do with such an unsavoury creature. He
would have succeeded, nevertheless, had he not been so ready to slink off as
soon as you looked at him. He would slink off before Jim's severe gaze, before
my own, which I tried to make indifferent, even before Tamb' Itam's surly,
superior glance. He was perpetually slinking away; whenever seen he was seen
moving off deviously, his face over his shoulder, with either a mistrustful
snarl or a woe-begone, piteous, mute aspect; but no assumed expression could
conceal this innate irremediable abjectness of his nature, any more than an
arrangement of clothing can conceal some monstrous deformity of the body.
'I don't know whether
it was the demoralisation of my utter defeat in my encounter with a spectre of
fear less than an hour ago, but I let him capture me without even a show of
resistance. I was doomed to be the recipient of confidences, and to be confronted
with unanswerable questions. It was trying; but the contempt, the unreasoned
contempt, the man's appearance provoked, made it easier to bear. He couldn't
possibly matter. Nothing mattered, since I had made up my mind that Jim, for
whom alone I cared, had at last mastered his fate. He had told me he was
satisfied . . . nearly. This is going further than most of us dare. I -- who
have the right to think myself good enough -- dare not. Neither does any of you
here, I suppose? . . .'
Marlow paused, as if
expecting an answer. Nobody spoke.
'Quite right,' he began
again. 'Let no soul know, since the truth can be wrung out of us only by some
cruel, little, awful catastrophe. But he is one of us, and he could say he was
satisfied . . . nearly. Just fancy this! Nearly satisfied. One could almost
envy him his catastrophe. Nearly satisfied. After this nothing could matter. It
did not matter who suspected him, who trusted him, who loved him, who hated him
-- especially as it was Cornelius who hated him.
'Yet after all this was
a kind of recognition. You shall judge of a man by his foes as well as by his
friends, and this enemy of Jim was such as no decent man would be ashamed to
own, without, however, making too much of him. This was the view Jim took, and
in which I shared; but Jim disregarded him on general grounds. "My dear
Marlow," he said, "I feel that if I go straight nothing can touch me.
Indeed I do. Now you have been long enough here to have a good look round --
and, frankly, don't you think I am pretty safe? It all depends upon me, and, by
Jove! I have lots of confidence in myself. The worst thing he could do would be
to kill me, I suppose. I don't think for a moment he would. He couldn't, you
know -- not if I were myself to hand him a loaded rifle for the purpose, and
then turn my back on him. That's the sort of thing he is. And suppose he would
-- suppose he could? Well -- what of that? I didn't come here flying for my
life -- did I? I came here to set my back against the wall, and I am going to
stay here . . ."
' "Till you are
quite satisfied," I struck in.
'We were sitting at the
time under the roof in the stern of his boat; twenty paddles flashed like one,
ten on a side, striking the water with a single splash, while behind our backs
Tamb' Itam dipped silently right and left, and stared right down the river,
attentive to keep the long canoe in the greatest strength of the current. Jim
bowed his head, and our last talk seemed to flicker out for good. He was seeing
me off as far as the mouth of the river. The schooner had left the day before,
working down and drifting on the ebb, while I had prolonged my stay overnight.
And now he was seeing me off.
'Jim had been a little
angry with me for mentioning Cornelius at all. I had not, in truth, said much.
The man was too insignificant to be dangerous, though he was as full of hate as
he could hold. He had called me "honourable sir" at every second
sentence, and had whined at my elbow as he followed me from the grave of his
"late wife" to the gate of Jim's compound. He declared himself the
most unhappy of men, a victim, crushed like a worm; he entreated me to look at
him. I wouldn't turn my head to do so; but I could see out of the corner of my
eye his obsequious shadow gliding after mine, while the moon, suspended on our
right hand, seemed to gloat serenely upon the spectacle. He tried to explain --
as I've told you -- his share in the events of the memorable night. It was a
matter of expediency. How could he know who was going to get the upper hand?
"I would have saved him, honourable sir! I would have saved him for eighty
dollars," he protested in dulcet tones, keeping a pace behind me. "He
has saved himself," I said, "and he has forgiven you." I heard a
sort of tittering, and turned upon him; at once he appeared ready to take to
his heels. "What are you laughing at?" I asked, standing still.
"Don't be deceived, honourable sir!" he shrieked, seemingly losing all
control over his feelings. "He save himself! He knows nothing, honourable
sir -- nothing whatever. Who is he? What does he want here -- the big thief?
What does he want here? He throws dust into everybody's eyes; he throws dust
into your eyes, honourable sir; but he can't throw dust into my eyes. He is a
big fool, honourable sir." I laughed contemptuously, and, turning on my
heel, began to walk on again. He ran up to my elbow and whispered forcibly,
"He's no more than a little child here -- like a little child -- a little
child." Of course I didn't take the slightest notice, and seeing the time
pressed, because we were approaching the bamboo fence that glittered over the
blackened ground of the clearing, he came to the point. He commenced by being
abjectly lachrymose. His great misfortunes had affected his head. He hoped I
would kindly forget what nothing but his troubles made him say. He didn't mean
anything by it; only the honourable sir did not know what it was to be ruined,
broken down, trampled upon. After this introduction he approached the matter
near his heart, but in such a rambling, ejaculatory, craven fashion, that for a
long time I couldn't make out what he was driving at. He wanted me to intercede
with Jim in his favour. It seemed, too, to be some sort of money affair. I
heard time and again the words, "Moderate provision -- suitable
present." He seemed to be claiming value for something, and he even went
the length of saying with some warmth that life was not worth having if a man were
to be robbed of everything. I did not breathe a word, of course, but neither
did I stop my ears. The gist of the affair, which became clear to me gradually,
was in this, that he regarded himself as entitled to some money in exchange for
the girl. He had brought her up. Somebody else's child. Great trouble and pains
-- old man now -- suitable present. If the honourable sir would say a word....
I stood still to look at him with curiosity, and fearful lest I should think
him extortionate, I suppose, he hastily brought himself to make a concession.
In consideration of a "suitable present" given at once, he would, he
declared, be willing to undertake the charge of the girl, "without any
other provision -- when the time came for the gentleman to go home." His
little yellow face, all crumpled as though it had been squeezed together,
expressed the most anxious, eager avarice. His voice whined coaxingly, "No
more trouble -- natural guardian -- a sum of money . . . "
'I stood there and
marvelled. That kind of thing, with him, was evidently a vocation. I discovered
suddenly in his cringing attitude a sort of assurance, as though he had been
all his life dealing in certitudes. He must have thought I was dispassionately
considering his proposal, because he became as sweet as honey. "Every
gentleman made a provision when the time came to go home," he began
insinuatingly. I slammed the little gate. "In this case, Mr.
Cornelius," I said, "the time will never come." He took a few
seconds to gather this in. "What!" he fairly squealed.
"Why," I continued from my side of the gate,"haven't you heard
him say so himself? He will never go home." "Oh! this is too
much," he shouted. He would not address me as "honoured sir" any
more. He was very still for a time, and then without a trace of humility began
very low: "Never go -- ah! He -- he -- he comes here devil knows from
where -- comes here -- devil knows why -- to trample on me till I die -- ah --
trample" (he stamped softly with both feet), "trample like this --
nobody knows why -- till I die.. .. " His voice became quite extinct; he
was bothered by a little cough; he came up close to the fence and told me,
dropping into a confidential and piteous tone, that he would not be trampled
upon. "Patience -- patience," he muttered, striking his breast. I had
done laughing at him, but unexpectedly he treated me to a wild cracked burst of
it. "Ha! ha! ha! We shall see! We shall see! What! Steal from me! Steal
from me everything! Everything! Everything! " His head drooped on one
shoulder, his hands were hanging before him lightly clasped. One would have
thought he had cherished the girl with surpassing love, that his spirit had
been crushed and his heart broken by the most cruel of spoliations. Suddenly he
lifted his head and shot out an infamous word. "Like her mother -- she is
like her deceitful mother. Exactly. In her face too. In her face. The devil!
" He leaned his forehead against the fence, and in that position uttered
threats and horrible blasphemies in Portuguese in very weak ejaculations, mingled
with miserable plaints and groans, coming out with a heave of the shoulders as
though he had been overtaken by a deadly fit of sickness. It was an
inexpressibly grotesque and vile performance, and I hastened away. He tried to
shout something after me. Some disparagement of Jim, I believe -- not too loud
though, we were too near the house . All I heard distinctly was, "No more
than a little child -- a little child." '
'But next morning, at
the first bend of the river shutting off the houses of Patusan, all this
dropped out of my sight bodily, with its colour, its design, and its meaning,
like a picture created by fancy on a canvas, upon which, after long
contemplation, you turn your back for the last time. It remains in the memory
motionless, unfaded, with its life arrested, in an unchanging light. There are
the ambitions, the fears, the hate, the hopes, and they remain in my mind just
as I had seen them -- intense and as if for ever suspended in their expression.
I had turned away from the picture and was going back to the world where events
move, men change, light flickers, life flows in a clear stream, no matter
whether over mud or over stones . I wasn't going to dive into it; I would have
enough to do to keep my head above the surface. But as to what I was leaving
behind, I cannot imagine any alteration. The immense and magnanimous Doramin
and his little motherly witch of a wife, gazing together upon the land and
nursing secretly their dreams of parental ambition; Tunku Allang, wizened and
greatly perplexed; Dain Waris, intelligent and brave, with his faith in Jim,
with his firm glance and his ironic friendliness; the girl, absorbed in her
frightened, suspicious adoration; Tamb' Itam, surly and faithful; Cornelius,
leaning his forehead against the fence under the moonlight -- I am certain of
them. They exist as if under un enchanter's wand. But the figure round which
all these are grouped -- that one lives, and I am not certain of him. No
magician's wand can immobilise him under my eyes. He is one of us.
'Jim, as I've told you,
accompanied me on the first stage of my journey back to the world he had
renounced, and the way at times seemed to lead through the very heart of
untouched wilderness. The empty reaches sparkled under the high sun; between
the high walls of vegetation the heat drowsed upon the water, and the boat,
impelled vigorously, cut her way through the air that seemed to have settled
dense and warm under the shelter of lofty trees.
'The shadow of the
impending separation had already put an immense space between us, and when we
spoke it was with an effort, as if to force our low voices across a vast and
increasing distance. The boat fairly flew; we sweltered side by side in the
stagnant superheated air; the smell of mud, of mush, the primeval smell of
fecund earth, seemed to sting our faces; till suddenly at a bend it was as if a
great hand far away had lifted a heavy curtain, had flung open un immense
portal. The light itself seemed to stir, the sky above our heads widened, a far-off
murmur reached our ears, a freshness enveloped us, filled our lungs, quickened
our thoughts, our blood, our regrets -- and, straight ahead, the forests sank
down against the dark-blue ridge of the sea.
'I breathed deeply, I
revelled in the vastness of the opened horizon, in the different atmosphere
that seemed to vibrate with the toil of life, with the energy of an impeccable
world. This sky and this sea were open to me. The girl was right -- there was a
sign, a call in them -- something to which I responded with every fibre of my
being. I let my eyes roam through space, like a man released from bonds who
stretches his cramped limbs, runs, leaps, responds to the inspiring elation of
freedom. "This is glorious!" I cried, and then I looked at the sinner
by my side . He sat with his head sunk on his breast and said "Yes,"
without raising his eyes, as if afraid to see writ large on the clear sky of
the offing the reproach of his romantic conscience.
'I remember the
smallest details of that afternoon. We landed on a bit of white beach. It was
backed by a low cliff wooded on the brow, draped in creepers to the very foot.
Below us the plain of the sea, of a serene and intense blue, stretched with a
slight upward tilt to the thread-like horizon drawn at the height of our eyes.
Great waves of glitter blew lightly along the pitted dark surface, as swift as
feathers chased by the breeze . A chain of islands sat broken and massive
facing the wide estuary, displayed in a sheet of pale glassy water reflecting
faithfully the contour of the shore. High in the colourless sunshine a solitary
bird, all black, hovered, dropping and soaring above the same spot with a
slight rocking motion of the wings. A ragged, sooty bunch of flimsy mat hovels
was perched over its own inverted image upon a crooked multitude of high piles
the colour of ebony. A tiny black canoe put off from amongst them with two tiny
men, all black, who toiled exceedingly, striking down at the pale water: and
the canoe seemed to slide painfully on a mirror. This bunch of miserable hovels
was the fishing village that boasted of the white lord's especial protection,
and the two men crossing over were the old headman and his son-in-law. They
landed and walked up to us on the white sand, lean, dark-brown as if dried in
smoke, with ashy patches on the skin of their naked shoulders and breasts .
Their heads were bound in dirty but carefully folded headkerchiefs, and the old
man began at once to state a complaint, voluble, stretching a lank arm,
screwing up at Jim his old bleared eyes confidently . The Rajah's people would
not leave them alone; there had been some trouble about a lot of turtles' eggs
his people had collected on the islets there -- and leaning at arm's- length
upon his paddle, he pointed with a brown skinny hand over the sea. Jim listened
for a time without looking up, and at last told him gently to wait. He would
hear him by-and-by. They withdrew obediently to some little distance, and sat
on their heels, with their paddles lying before them on the sand; the silvery
gleams in their eyes followed our movements patiently; and the immensity of the
outspread sea, the stillness of the coast, passing north and south beyond the
limits of my vision, made up one colossal Presence watching us four dwarfs
isolated on a strip of glistening sand.
' "The trouble
is," remarked Jim moodily, "that for generations these beggars of
fishermen in that village there had been considered as the Rajah's personal
slaves -- and the old rip can't get it into his head that . . ."
'He paused. "That
you have changed all that," I said.
' "Yes I've
changed all that," he muttered in a gloomy voice.
' "You have had
your opportunity," I pursued.
' "Have I?"
he said. "Well, yes. I suppose so. Yes. I have got back my confidence in myself
-- a good name -- yet sometimes I wish . . . No! I shall hold what I've got.
Can't expect anything more." He flung his arm out towards the sea.
"Not out there anyhow." He stamped his foot upon the sand. "This
is my limit, because nothing less will do."
'We continued pacing
the beach. "Yes, I've changed all that," he went on, with a sidelong
glance at the two patient squatting fishermen; "but only try to think what
it would be if I went away. Jove! can't you see it? Hell loose. No! To-morrow I
shall go and take my chance of drinking that silly old Tunku Allang's coffee,
and I shall make no end of fuss over these rotten turtles' eggs. No. I can't
say -- enough. Never. I must go on, go on for ever holding up my end, to feel
sure that nothing can touch me. I must stick to their belief in me to feel safe
and to -- to" . . . He cast about for a word, seemed to look for it on the
sea . . . "to keep in touch with" . . . His voice sank suddenly to a
murmur . . . "with those whom, perhaps, I shall never see any more. With
-- with -- you, for instance."
'I was profoundly
humbled by his words. "For God's sake," I said, "don't set me
up, my dear fellow; just look to yourself." I felt a gratitude, an
affection, for that straggler whose eyes had singled me out, keeping my place
in the ranks of an insignificant multitude. How little that was to boast of,
after all! I turned my burning face away; under the low sun, glowing, darkened
and crimson, like un ember snatched from the fire, the sea lay outspread,
offering all its immense stillness to the approach of the fiery orb. Twice he
was going to speak, but checked himself; at last, as if he had found a formula
--
' "I shall be
faithful," he said quietly. "I shall be faithful," he repeated,
without looking at me, but for the first time letting his eyes wander upon the
waters, whose blueness had changed to a gloomy purple under the fires of
sunset. Ah! he was romantic, romantic. I recalled some words of Stein's....
"In the destructive element immerse! . . . To follow the dream, and again
to follow the dream -- and so -- always -- usque ad finem . . ." He was
romantic, but none the less true. Who could tell what forms, what visions, what
faces, what forgiveness he could see in the glow of the west! . . . A small boat,
leaving the schooner, moved slowly, with a regular beat of two oars, towards
the sandbank to take me off. "And then there's Jewel," he said, out
of the great silence of earth, sky, and sea, which had mastered my very
thoughts so that his voice made me start. "There's Jewel. "
"Yes," I murmured. "I need not tell you what she is to me,"
he pursued. "You've seen. In time she will come to understand . . . "
"I hope so," I interrupted. "She trusts me, too," he mused,
and then changed his tone. "When shall we meet next, I wonder?" he
said.
' "Never -- unless
you come out," I answered, avoiding his glance. He didn't seem to be
surprised; he kept very quiet for a while.
' "Good-bye,
then," he said, after a pause. "Perhaps it's just as well."
'We shook hands, and I
walked to the boat, which waited with her nose on the beach. The schooner, her
mainsail set and jib-sheet to windward, curveted on the purple sea; there was a
rosy tinge on her sails. "Will you be going home again soon?" asked
Jim, just as I swung my leg over the gunwale. "In a year or so if I
live," I said. The forefoot grated on the sand, the boat floated, the wet
oars flashed and dipped once, twice. Jim, at the water's edge, raised his
voice. "Tell them . . . " he began. I signed to the men to cease rowing,
and waited in wonder. Tell who? The half-submerged sun faced him; I could see
its red gleam in his eyes that looked dumbly at me.... "No --
nothing," he said, and with a slight wave of his hand motioned the boat
away. I did not look again at the shore till I had clambered on board the
schooner.
'By that time the sun
had set. The twilight lay over the east, and the coast, turned black, extended
infinitely its sombre wall that seemed the very stronghold of the night; the
western horizon was one great blaze of gold and crimson in which a big detached
cloud floated dark and still, casting a slaty shadow on the water beneath, and
I saw Jim on the beach watching the schooner fall off and gather headway.
'The two half-naked
fishermen had arisen as soon as I had gone; they were no doubt pouring the
plaint of their trifling, miserable, oppressed lives into the ears of the white
lord, a no doubt he was listening to it, making it his own, for was it not a
part of his luck -- the luck "from the word Go" -- the luck to which
he had assured me he was so completely equal? They too, I should think, were in
luck, and I was sure their pertinacity would be equal to it. Their dark-skinned
bodies vanished on the dark background long before I had lost sight of their
protector. He was white from head to foot, and remained persistently visible
with the stronghold of the night at his back, the sea at his feet, the
opportunity by his side -- still veiled. What do you say? Was it still veiled?
I don't know. For me that white figure in the stillness of coast and sea seemed
to stand at the heart of a vast enigma. The twilight was ebbing fast from the
sky above his head, the strip of sand had sunk already under his feet, he
himself appeared no bigger than a child -- then only a speck, a tiny white
speck, that seemed to catch all the light left in a darkened world .. .. And,
suddenly, I lost him. . ..
With these words Marlow
had ended his narrative, and his audience had broken up forthwith, under his
abstract, pensive gaze. Men drifted off the verandah in pairs or alone without
loss of time, without offering a remark, as if the last image of that
incomplete story, its incompleteness itself, and the very tone of the speaker,
had made discussion vain and comment impossible. Each of them seemed to carry
away his own impression, to carry it away with him like a secret; but there was
only one man of all these listeners who was ever to hear the last word of the
story. It came to him at home, more than two years later, and it came contained
in a thick packet addressed in Marlow's upright and angular handwriting.
The privileged man
opened the packet, looked in, then, laying it down, went to the window. His
rooms were in the highest flat of a lofty building, and his glance could travel
afar beyond the clear panes of glass, as though he were looking out of the
lantern of a lighthouse. The slopes of the roofs glistened, the dark broken
ridges succeeded each other without end like sombre, uncrested waves, and from
the depths of the town under his feet ascended a confused and unceasing mutter.
The spires of churches, numerous, scattered haphazard, uprose like beacons on a
maze of shoals without a channel; the driving rain mingled with the falling
dusk of a winter's evening; and the booming of a big clock on a tower, striking
the hour, rolled past in voluminous, austere bursts of sound, with a shrill
vibrating cry at the core. He drew the heavy curtains.
The light of his shaded
reading-lamp slept like a sheltered pool, his footfalls made no sound on the
carpet, his wandering days were over. No more horizons as boundless as hope, no
more twilights within the forests as solemn as temples, in the hot quest for
the Ever-undiscovered Country over the hill, across the stream, beyond the wave.
The hour was striking! No more! No more! -- but the opened packet under the
lamp brought back the sounds, the visions, the very savour of the past -- a
multitude of fading faces, a tumult of low voices, dying away upon the shores
of distant seas under a passionate and unconsoling sunshine. He sighed and sat
down to read.
At first he saw three
distinct enclosures. A good many pages closely blackened and pinned together; a
loose square sheet of greyish paper with a few words traced in a handwriting he
had never seen before, and an explanatory letter from Marlow. From this last
fell another letter, yellowed by time and frayed on the folds. He picked it up
and, laying it aside, turned to Marlow's message, ran swiftly over the opening
lines, and, checking himself, thereafter read on deliberately, like one
approaching with slow feet and alert eyes the glimpse of an undiscovered
country.
'. . . I don't suppose
you've forgotten,' went on the letter. 'You alone have showed an interest in
him that survived the telling of his story, though I remember well you would
not admit he had mastered his fate. You prophesied for him the disaster of weariness
and of disgust with acquired honour, with the self-appointed task, with the
love sprung from pity and youth. You had said you knew so well "that kind
of thing," its illusory satisfaction, its unavoidable deception. You said
also -- I call to mind -- that "giving your life up to them" (them
meaning all of mankind with skins brown, yellow, or black in colour) "was
like selling your soul to a brute." You contended that "that kind of
thing" was only endurable and enduring when based on a firm conviction in
the truth of ideas racially our own, in whose name are established the order,
the morality of an ethical progress. "We want its strength at our
backs," you had said. "We want a belief in its necessity and its
justice, to make a worthy and conscious sacrifice of our lives. Without it the
sacrifice is only forgetfulness, the way of offering is no better than the way
to perdition." In other words, you maintained that we must fight in the
ranks or our lives don't count. Possibly! You ought to know -- be it said
without malice -- you who have rushed into one or two places single-handed and
came out cleverly, without singeing your wings. The point, however, is that of
all mankind Jim had no dealings but with himself, and the question is whether
at the last he had not confessed to a faith mightier than the laws of order and
progress.
'I affirm nothing.
Perhaps you may pronounce -- after you've read. There is much truth -- after
all -- in the common expression "under a cloud." It is impossible to
see him clearly -- especially as it is through the eyes of others that we take
our last look at him. I have no hesitation in imparting to you all I know of
the last episode that, as he used to say, had "come to him." One
wonders whether this was perhaps that supreme opportunity, that last and
satisfying test for which I had always suspected him to be waiting, before he
could frame a message to the impeccable world. You remember that when I was
leaving him for the last time he had asked whether I would be going home soon,
and suddenly cried after me, "Tell them . . ." I had waited --
curious I'll own, and hopeful too -- only to hear him shout, "No --
nothing." That was all then -- and there will be nothing more; there will
be no message, unless such as each of us can interpret for himself from the
language of facts, that are so often more enigmatic than the craftiest
arrangement of words. He made, it is true, one more attempt to deliver himself;
but that too failed, as you may perceive if you look at the sheet of greyish foolscap
enclosed here. He had tried to write; do you notice the commonplace hand? It is
headed "The Fort, Patusun." I suppose he had carried out his
intention of making out of his house a place of defence. It was an excellent
plan: a deep ditch, an earth wall topped by a palisade, and at the angles guns
mounted on platforms to sweep each side of the square. Doramin had agreed to
furnish him the guns; and so each man of his party would know there was a place
of safety, upon which every faithful partisan could rally in case of some
sudden danger. All this showed his judicious foresight, his faith in the
future. What he called "my own people" -- the liberated captives of
the Sherif -- were to make a distinct quarter of Patusan, with their huts and
little plots of ground under the walls of the stronghold. Within he would be an
invincible host in himself "The Fort, Patusan." No date, as you
observe. What is a number and a name to a day of days? It is also impossible to
say whom he had in his mind when he seized the pen: Stein -- myself -- the
world at large -- or was this only the aimless startled cry of a solitary man
confronted by his fate? "An awful thing has happened," he wrote
before he flung the pen down for the first time; look at the ink blot resembling
the head of an arrow under these words. After a while he had tried again,
scrawling heavily, as if with a hand of lead, another line. "I must now at
once . . ." The pen had spluttered, and that time he gave it up. There's
nothing more; he had seen a broad gulf that neither eye nor voice could span. I
can understand this. He was overwhelmed by the inexplicable; he was overwhelmed
by his own personality -- the gift of that destiny which he had done his best
to master.
'I send you also an old
letter -- a very old letter. It was found carefully preserved in his
writing-case. It is from his father, and by the date you can see he must have
received it a few days before he joined the Patna. Thus it must be the last
letter he ever had from home. He had treasured it all these years. The good old
parson fancied his sailor son. I've looked in at a sentence here and there.
There is nothing in it except just affection. He tells his "dear
James" that the last long letter from him was very "honest and
entertaining." He would not have him "judge men harshly or hastily.
" There are four pages of it, easy morality and family news. Tom had
"taken orders." Carrie's husband had "money losses." The
old chap goes on equably trusting Providence and the established order of the
universe, but alive to its small dangers and its small mercies. One can almost
see him, grey- haired and serene in the inviolable shelter of his book-lined,
faded, and comfortable study, where for forty years he had conscientiously gone
over and over again the round of his little thoughts about faith and virtue,
about the conduct of life and the only proper manner of dying; where he had
written so many sermons, where he sits talking to his boy, over there, on the
other side of the earth. But what of the distance? Virtue is one all over the
world, and there is only one faith, one conceivable conduct of life, one manner
of dying. He hopes his "dear James" will never forget that "who
once gives way to temptation, in the very instant hazards his total depravity
and everlasting ruin. Therefore resolve fixedly never, through any possible
motives, to do anything which you believe to be wrong." There is also some
news of a favourite dog; and a pony, "which all you boys used to
ride," had gone blind from old age and had to be shot. The old chap
invokes Heaven's blessing; the mother and all the girls then at home send their
love.... No, there is nothing much in that yellow frayed letter fluttering out
of his cherishing grasp after so many years. It was never answered, but who can
say what converse he may have held with all these placid, colourless forms of
men and women peopling that quiet corner of the world as free of danger or
strife as a tomb, and breathing equably the air of undisturbed rectitude. It
seems amazing that he should belong to it, he to whom so many things "had
come." Nothing ever came to them; they would never be taken unawares, and
never be called upon to grapple with fate. Here they all are, evoked by the
mild gossip of the father, all these brothers and sisters, bone of his bone and
flesh of his flesh, gazing with clear unconscious eyes, while I seem to see
him, returned at last, no longer a mere white speck at the heart of an immense
mystery, but of full stature, standing disregarded amongst their untroubled shapes,
with a stern and romantic aspect, but always mute, dark -- under a cloud.
'The story of the last
events you will find in the few pages enclosed here. You must admit that it is
romantic beyond the wildest dreams of his boyhood, and yet there is to my mind
a sort of profound and terrifying logic in it, as if it were our imagination
alone that could set loose upon us the might of an overwhelming destiny. The
imprudence of our thoughts recoils upon our heads; who toys with the sword
shall perish by the sword. This astounding adventure, of which the most
astounding part is that it is true, comes on as an unavoidable consequence.
Something of the sort had to happen. You repeat this to yourself while you
marvel that such a thing could happen in the year of grace before last. But it
has happened -- and there is no disputing its logic.
'I put it down here for
you as though I had been an eyewitness. My information was fragmentary, but
I've fitted the pieces together, and there is enough of them to make an intelligible
picture. I wonder how he would have related it himself. He has confided so much
in me that at times it seems as though he must come in presently and tell the
story in his own words, in his careless yet feeling voice, with his offhand
manner, a little puzzled, a little bothered, a little hurt, but now and then by
a word or a phrase giving one of these glimpses of his very own self that were
never any good for purposes of orientation. It's difficult to believe he will
never come. I shall never hear his voice again, nor shall I see his smooth
tan-and-pink face with a white line on the forehead, and the youthful eyes
darkened by excitement to a profound, unfathomable blue.'
'It all begins with a
remarkable exploit of a man called Brown, who stole with complete success a
Spanish schooner out of a small bay near Zamboanga. Till I discovered the
fellow my information was incomplete, but most unexpectedly I did come upon him
a few hours before he gave up his arrogant ghost. Fortunately he was willing
and able to talk between the choking fits of asthma, and his racked body
writhed with malicious exultation at the bare thought of Jim. He exulted thus
at the idea that he had "paid out the stuckup beggar after all." He
gloated over his action. I had to bear the sunken glare of his fierce
crow-footed eyes if I wanted to know; and so I bore it, reflecting how much
certain forms of evil are akin to madness, derived from intense egoism,
inflamed by resistance, tearing the soul to pieces, and giving factitious
vigour to the body. The story also reveals unsuspected depths of cunning in the
wretched Cornelius, whose abject and intense hate acts like a subtle
inspiration, pointing out an unerring way towards revenge.
' "I could see
directly I set my eyes on him what sort of a fool he was," gasped the
dying Brown. "He a man! Hell! He was a hollow sham. As if he couldn't have
said straight out, 'Hands off my plunder!' blast him! That would have been like
a man! Rot his superior soul! He had me there -- but he hadn't devil enough in
him to make an end of me. Not he! A thing like that letting me off as if I
wasn't worth a kick! ..." Brown struggled desperately for breath....
"Fraud.... Letting me off.... And so I did make an end of him after
all...." He choked again.... "I expect this thing'll kill me, but I
shall die easy now. You . . . you here . . . I don't know your name -- I would
give you a five-pound note if -- if I had it -- for the news -- or my name's
not Brown...." He grinned horribly.... "Gentleman Brown."
'He said all these
things in profound gasps, staring at me with his yellow eyes out of a long,
ravaged, brown face; he jerked his left arm; a pepper-and-salt matted beard
hung almost into his lap; a dirty ragged blanket covered his legs. I had found
him out in Bankok through that busybody Schomberg, the hotel-keeper, who had,
confidentially, directed me where to look. It appears that a sort of loafing,
fuddled vagabond -- a white man living amongst the natives with a Siamese woman
-- had considered it a great privilege to give a shelter to the last days of
the famous Gentleman Brown. While he was talking to me in the wretched hovel,
and, as it were, fighting for every minute of his life, the Siamese woman, with
big bare legs and a stupid coarse face, sat in a dark corner chewing betel
stolidly. Now and then she would get up for the purpose of shooing a chicken
away from the door. The whole hut shook when she walked. An ugly yellow child,
naked and pot-bellied like a little heathen god, stood at the foot of the
couch, finger in mouth, lost in a profound and calm contemplation of the dying
man.
'He talked feverishly;
but in the middle of a word, perhaps, an invisible hand would take him by the
throat, and he would look at me dumbly with an expression of doubt and anguish.
He seemed to fear that I would get tired of waiting and go away, leaving him
with his tale untold, with his exultation unexpressed. He died during the
night, I believe, but by that time I had nothing more to learn.
'So much as to Brown,
for the present.
'Eight months before
this, coming into Samarang, I went as usual to see Stein. On the garden side of
the house a Malay on the verandah greeted me shyly, and I remembered that I had
seen him in Patusan, in Jim's house, amongst other Bugis men who used to come
in the evening to talk interminably over their war reminiscences and to discuss
State affairs. Jim had pointed him out to me once as a respectable petty trader
owning a small seagoing native craft, who had showed himself "one of the
best at the taking of the stockade. " I was not very surprised to see him,
since any Patusan trader venturing as far as Samarang would naturally find his
way to Stein's house. I returned his greeting and passed on. At the door of
Stein's room I came upon another Malay in whom I recognised Tamb' Itam.
'I asked him at once
what he was doing there; it occurred to me that Jim might have come on a visit.
I own I was pleased and excited at the thought. Tamb' Itam looked as if he did
not know what to say. "Is Tuan Jim inside?" I asked impatiently.
"No," he mumbled, hanging his head for a moment, and then with sudden
earnestness, "He would not fight. He would not fight," he repeated
twice. As he seemed unable to say anything else, I pushed him aside and went in,
'Stein, tall and
stooping, stood alone in the middle of the room between the rows of butterfly
cases. "Ach! is it you, my friend?" he said sadly, peering through
his glasses. A drab sack-coat of alpaca hung, unbuttoned, down to his knees. He
had a Panama hat on his head, and there were deep furrows on his pale cheeks.
"What's the matter now?" I asked nervously. "There's Tamb' Itam
there...." "Come and see the girl. Come and see the girl. She is
here," he said, with a half-hearted show of activity. I tried to detain
him, but with gentle obstinacy he would take no notice of my eager questions.
"She is here, she is here," he repeated, in great perturbation.
"They came here two days ago. An old man like me, a stranger -- sehen Sie
-- cannot do much.... Come this way.... Young hearts are unforgiving...."
I could see he was in utmost distress.... "The strength of life in them,
the cruel strength of life...." He mumbled, leading me round the house; I
followed him, lost in dismal and angry conjectures. At the door of the
drawing-room he barred my way. "He loved her very much," he said
interrogatively, and I only nodded, feeling so bitterly disappointed that I
would not trust myself to speak . "Very frightful," he murmured.
"She can' t understand me. I am only a strange old man. Perhaps you . . .
she knows you. Talk to her. We can't leave it like this. Tell her to forgive
him. It was very frightful." "No doubt," I said, exasperated at
being in the dark; "but have you forgiven him?" He looked at me
queerly. "You shall hear," he said, and opening the door, absolutely
pushed me in.
'You know Stein's big
house and the two immense reception- rooms, uninhabited and uninhabitable,
clean, full of solitude and of shining things that look as if never beheld by
the eye of man? They are cool on the hottest days, and you enter them as you
would a scrubbed cave underground. I passed through one, and in the other I saw
the girl sitting at the end of a big mahogany table, on which she rested her
head, the face hidden in her arms. The waxed floor reflected her dimly as
though it had been a sheet of frozen water. The rattan screens were down, and
through the strange greenish gloom made by the foliage of the trees outside a
strong wind blew in gusts, swaying the long draperies of windows and doorways.
Her white figure seemed shaped in snow; the pendent crystals of a great
chandelier clicked above her head like glittering icicles. She looked up and
watched my approach. I was chilled as if these vast apartments had been the
cold abode of despair.
'She recognised me at
once, and as soon as I had stopped, looking down at her: "He has left
me," she said quietly; "you always leave us -- for your own
ends." Her face was set. All the heat of life seemed withdrawn within some
inaccessible spot in her breast. "It would have been easy to die with
him," she went on, and made a slight weary gesture as if giving up the
incomprehensible. "He would not! It was like a blindness -- and yet it was
I who was speaking to him; it was I who stood before his eyes; it was at me
that he looked all the time! Ah! you are hard, treacherous, without truth,
without compassion. What makes you so wicked? Or is it that you are all
mad?"
'I took her hand; it
did not respond, and when I dropped it, it hung down to the floor. That
indifference, more awful than tears, cries, and reproaches, seemed to defy time
and consolation. You felt that nothing you could say would reach the seat of
the still and benumbing pain.
'Stein had said,
"You shall hear." I did hear. I heard it all, listening with
amazement, with awe, to the tones of her inflexible weariness. She could not
grasp the real sense of what she was telling me, and her resentment filled me
with pity for her -- for him too. I stood rooted to the spot after she had finished.
Leaning on her arm, she stared with hard eyes, and the wind passed in gusts,
the crystals kept on clicking in the greenish gloom. She went on whispering to
herself: "And yet he was looking at me! He could see my face, hear my
voice, hear my grief! When I used to sit at his feet, with my cheek against his
knee and his hand on my head, the curse of cruelty and madness was already
within him, waiting for the day. The day came! . . . and before the sun had set
he could not see me any more -- he was made blind and deaf and without pity, as
you all are. He shall have no tears from me. Never, never. Not one tear. I will
not! He went away from me as if I had been worse than death. He fled as if
driven by some accursed thing he had heard or seen in his sleep...."
'Her steady eyes seemed
to strain after the shape of a man torn out of her arms by the strength of a
dream. She made no sign to my silent bow. I was glad to escape.
'I saw her once again,
the same afternoon. On leaving her I had gone in search of Stein, whom I could
not find indoors; and I wandered out, pursued by distressful thoughts, into the
gardens, those famous gardens of Stein, in which you can find every plant and
tree of tropical lowlands. I followed the course of the canalised stream, and sat
for a long time on a shaded bench near the ornamental pond, where some
waterfowl with clipped wings were diving and splashing noisily. The branches of
casuarina trees behind me swayed lightly, incessantly, reminding me of the
soughing of fir trees at home.
'This mournful and
restless sound was a fit accompaniment to my meditations. She had said he had
been driven away from her by a dream, -- and there was no answer one could make
her -- there seemed to be no forgiveness for such a transgression. And yet is
not mankind itself, pushing on its blind way, driven by a dream of its
greatness and its power upon the dark paths of excessive cruelty and of
excessive devotion? And what is the pursuit of truth, after all?
'When I rose to get
back to the house I caught sight of Stein's drab coat through a gap in the
foliage, and very soon at a turn of the path I came upon him walking with the
girl. Her little hand rested on his forearm, and under the broad, flat rim of
his Panama hat he bent over her, grey-haired, paternal, with compassionate and
chivalrous deference. I stood aside, but they stopped, facing me. His gaze was
bent on the ground at his feet; the girl, erect and slight on his arm, stared
somberly beyond my shoulder with black, clear, motionless eyes. "Schrecklich,"
he murmured. "Terrible! Terrible! What can one do?" He seemed to be
appealing to me, but her youth, the length of the days suspended over her head,
appealed to me more; and suddenly, even as I realised that nothing could be
said, I found myself pleading his cause for her sake. "You must forgive
him," I concluded, and my own voice seemed to me muffled, lost in un
irresponsive deaf immensity. "We all want to be forgiven," I added
after a while.
' "What have I
done?" she asked with her lips only.
' "You always
mistrusted him," I said.
' "He was like the
others," she pronounced slowly.
' "Not like the
others," I protested, but she continued evenly, without any feeling --
' "He was
false." And suddenly Stein broke in. "No! no! no! My poor child! . .
." He patted her hand lying passively on his sleeve. "No! no! Not
false! True! True! True!" He tried to look into her stony face. "You
don't understand. Ach! Why you do not understand? . . . Terrible," he said
to me. "Some day she shall understand."
' "Will you
explain?" I asked, looking hard at him. They moved on.
'I watched them. Her
gown trailed on the path, her black hair fell loose. She walked upright and
light by the side of the tall man, whose long shapeless coat hung in
perpendicular folds from the stooping shoulders, whose feet moved slowly. They
disappeared beyond that spinney (you may remember) where sixteen different
kinds of bamboo grow together, all distinguishable to the learned eye. For my
part, I was fascinated by the exquisite grace and beauty of that fluted grove,
crowned with pointed leaves and feathery heads, the lightness, the vigour, the
charm as distinct as a voice of that unperplexed luxuriating life. I remember
staying to look at it for a long time, as one would linger within reach of a
consoling whisper. The sky was pearly grey. It was one of those overcast days
so rare in the tropics, in which memories crowd upon one -- memories of other
shores, of other faces.
'I drove back to town
the same afternoon, taking with me Tamb' Itam and the other Malay, in whose
seagoing craft they had escaped in the bewilderment, fear, and gloom of the
disaster. The shock of it seemed to have changed their natures. It had turned
her passion into stone, and it made the surly taciturn Tamb' Itam almost
loquacious. His surliness, too, was subdued into puzzled humility, as though he
had seen the failure of a potent charm in a supreme moment. The Bugis trader, a
shy hesitating man, was very clear in the little he had to say. Both were
evidently overawed by a sense of deep inexpressible wonder, by the touch of an
inscrutable mystery.'
There with Marlow's
signature the letter proper ended. The privileged reader screwed up his lump,
and solitary above the billowy roofs of the town, like a lighthouse-keeper
above the sea, he turned to the pages of the story.
'It all begins, as I've
told you, with the man called Brown,' ran the opening sentence of Marlow's
narrative. 'You who have knocked about the Western Pacific must have heard of
him. He was the show ruffian on the Australian coast -- not that he was often
to be seen there, but because he was always trotted out in the stones of
lawless life a visitor from home is treated to; and the mildest of these
stories which were told about him from Cape York to Eden Bay was more than
enough to hang a man if told in the right place. They never failed to let you
know, too, that he was supposed to be the son of a baronet. Be it as it may, it
is certain he had deserted from a home ship in the early gold-digging days, and
in a few years became talked about as the terror of this or that group of
islands in Polynesia. He would kidnap natives, he would strip some lonely white
trader to the very pyjamas he stood in, and after he had robbed the poor devil,
he would as likely as not invite him to fight a duel with shot-guns on the
beach -- which would have been fair enough as these things go, if the other man
hadn't been by that time already half-dead with fright. Brown was a latter-day
buccaneer, sorry enough, like his more celebrated prototypes; but what
distinguished him from his contemporary brother ruffians, like Bully Hayes or
the mellifluous Pease, or that perfumed, Dundreary-whiskered, dandified
scoundrel known as Dirty Dick, was the arrogant temper of his misdeeds and a
vehement scorn for mankind at large and for his victims in particular. The
others were merely vulgar and greedy brutes, but he seemed moved by some
complex intention. He would rob a man as if only to demonstrate his poor
opinion of the creature, and he would bring to the shooting or maiming of some
quiet, unoffending stranger a savage and vengeful earnestness fit to terrify
the most reckless of desperadoes. In the days of his greatest glory he owned an
armed barque, manned by a mixed crew of Kanakas and runaway whalers, and
boasted, I don't know with what truth, of being financed on the quiet by a most
respectable firm of copra merchants. Later on he ran off -- it was reported --
with the wife of a missionary, a very young girl from Clapham way, who had
married the mild, flat-footed fellow in a moment of enthusiasm, and, suddenly
transplanted to Melanesia, lost her bearings somehow. It was a dark story. She
was ill at the time he carried her off, and died on board his ship. It is said
-- as the most wonderful put of the tale -- that over her body he gave way to an
outburst of sombre and violent grief. His luck left him, too, very soon after.
He lost his ship on some rocks off Malaita, and disappeared for a time as
though he had gone down with her. He is heard of next at Nuka-Hiva, where he
bought an old French schooner out of Government service. What creditable
enterprise he might have had in view when he made that purchase I can't say,
but it is evident that what with High Commissioners, consuls, men-of-war, and
international control, the South Seas were getting too hot to hold gentlemen of
his kidney. Clearly he must have shifted the scene of his operations farther
west, because a year later he plays an incredibly audacious, but not a very
profitable part, in a serio-comic business in Manila Bay, in which a peculating
governor and an absconding treasurer are the principal figures; thereafter he
seems to have hung around the Philippines in his rotten schooner battling with
un adverse fortune, till at last, running his appointed course, he sails into
Jim's history, a blind accomplice of the Dark Powers.
'His tale goes that
when a Spanish patrol cutter captured him he was simply trying to run a few
guns for the insurgents. If so, then I can't understand what he was doing off
the south coast of Mindanao. My belief, however, is that he was blackmailing
the native villages along the coast. The principal thing is that the cutter,
throwing a guard on board, made him sail in company towards Zamboanga. On the
way, for some reason or other, both vessels had to call at one of these new
Spanish settlements -- which never came to anything in the end -- where there
was not only a civil official in charge on shore, but a good stout coasting
schooner lying at anchor in the little bay; and this craft, in every way much
better than his own, Brown made up his mind to steal.
'He was down on his
luck -- as he told me himself. The world he had bullied for twenty years with
fierce, aggressive disdain, had yielded him nothing in the way of material
advantage except a small bag of silver dollars, which was concealed in his
cabin so that "the devil himself couldn't smell it out." And that was
all -- absolutely all. He was tired of his life, and not afraid of death. But
this man, who would stake his existence on a whim with a bitter and jeering
recklessness, stood in mortal fear of imprisonment. He had an unreasoning
cold-sweat, nerve-shaking, blood-to-water-turning sort of horror at the bare
possibility of being locked up -- the sort of terror a superstitious man would
feel at the thought of being embraced by a spectre. Therefore the civil
official who came on board to make a preliminary investigation into the
capture, investigated arduously all day long, and only went ashore after dark,
muffled up in a cloak, and taking great care not to let Brown's little all
clink in its bag. Afterwards, being a man of his word, he contrived (the very
next evening, I believe) to send off the Government cutter on some urgent bit
of special service. As her commander could not spare a prize crew, he contented
himself by taking away before he left all the sails of Brown's schooner to the
very last rag, and took good care to tow his two boats on to the beach a couple
of miles off.
'But in Brown's crew
there was a Solomon Islander, kidnapped in his youth and devoted to Brown, who
was the best man of the whole gang. That fellow swam off to the coaster -- five
hundred yards or so -- with the end of a warp made up of all the running gear
unrove for the purpose. The water was smooth, and the bay dark, "like the
inside of a cow," as Brown described it. The Solomon Islander clambered
over the bulwarks with the end of the rope in his teeth. The crew of the
coaster -- all Tagals -- were ashore having a jollification in the native
village. The two shipkeepers left on board woke up suddenly and saw the devil.
It had glittering eyes and leaped quick as lightning about the deck. They fell
on their knees, paralysed with fear, crossing themselves and mumbling prayers.
With a long knife he found in the caboose the Solomon Islander, without
interrupting their orisons, stabbed first one, then the other; with the same
knife he st to sawing patiently at the shipkeepers table till suddenly it
parted under the blade with a splash. Then in the silence of the bay he let out
a cautious shout, and Brown's gang, who meantime had been peering and straining
their hopeful ears in the darkness, began to pull gently at their end of the
warp. In less than five minutes the two schooners came together with a slight
shock and a creak of spars.
'Brown's crowd
transferred themselves without losing an instant, taking with them their
firearms and a large supply of ammunition. They were sixteen in all: two
runaway blue-jackets, a lanky deserter from a Yankee man-of-war, a couple of
simple, blond Scandinavians, a mulatto of sorts, one bland Chinaman who cooked
-- and the rest of the nondescript spawn of the South Seas. None of them cared;
Brown bent them to his will, and Brown, indifferent to gallows, was running
away from the spectre of a Spanish prison. He didn't give them the time to
trans-ship enough provisions; the weather was calm, the air was charged with
dew, and when they cast off the ropes and set sail to a faint off-shore draught
there was no flutter in the damp canvas; their old schooner seemed to detach
itself gently from the stolen craft and slip away silently, together with the
black mass of the coast, into the night.
'They got clear away.
Brown related to me in detail their passage down the Straits of Macassar. It is
a harrowing and desperate story. They were short of food and water; they
boarded several native craft and got a little from each. With a stolen ship
Brown did not dare to put into any port, of course. He had no money to buy
anything, no papers to show, and no lie plausible enough to get him out again.
An Arab barque, under the Dutch flag, surprised one night at anchor off Poulo
Laut, yielded a little dirty rice, a bunch of bananas, and a cask of water;
three days of squally, misty weather from the north-east shot the schooner across
the Java Sea. The yellow muddy waves drenched that collection of hungry
ruffians. They sighted mail-boats moving on their appointed routes; passed
well-found home ships with rusty iron sides anchored in the shallow sea waiting
for a change of weather or the turn of the tide; an English gunboat, white and
trim, with two slim masts, crossed their bows one day in the distance; and on
another occasion a Dutch corvette, black and heavily sparred, loomed up on
their quarter, steaming dead slow in the mist. They slipped through unseen or
disregarded, a wan, sallow-faced band of utter outcasts, enraged with hunger
and hunted by fear. Brown's idea was to make for Madagascar, where he expected,
on grounds not altogether illusory, to sell the schooner in Tamatave, and no
questions asked, or perhaps obtain some more or less forged papers for her. Yet
before he could face the long passage across the Indian Ocean food was wanted
-- water too.
'Perhaps he had heard
of Patusan -- or perhaps he just only happened to see the name written in small
letters on the chart -- probably that of a largish village up a river in a
native state, perfectly defenceless, far from the beaten tracks of the sea and
from the ends of submarine cables. He had done that kind of thing before -- in
the way of business; and this now was an absolute necessity, a question of life
and death -- or rather of liberty. Of liberty! He was sure to get provisions --
bullocks -- rice -- sweet-potatoes. The sorry gang licked their chops. A cargo
of produce for the schooner perhaps could be extorted -- and, who knows? --
some real ringing coined money! Some of these chiefs and village headmen can be
made to part freely. He told me he would have roasted their toes rather than be
baulked. I believe him. His men believed him too. They didn't cheer aloud,
being a dumb pack, but made ready wolfishly.
'Luck served him as to
weather. A few days of calm would have brought unmentionable horrors on board
that schooner, but with the help of land and sea breezes, in less than a week
after clearing the Sunda Straits, he anchored off the Batu Kring mouth within a
pistol-shot of the fishing village.
'Fourteen of them
packed into the schooner's long-boat (which was big, having been used for
cargo-work) and started up the river, while two remained in charge of the
schooner with food enough to keep starvation off for ten days. The tide and
wind helped, and early one afternoon the big white boat under a ragged sail
shouldered its way before the sea breeze into Patusan Reach, manned by fourteen
assorted scarecrows glaring hungrily ahead, and fingering the breech-blocks of
cheap rifles. Brown calculated upon the terrifying surprise of his appearance.
They sailed in with the last of the flood; the Rajah's stockade gave no sign;
the first houses on both sides of the stream seemed deserted. A few canoes were
seen up the reach in full flight. Brown was astonished at the size of the
place. A profound silence reigned. The wind dropped between the houses; two
oars were got out and the boat held on up-stream, the idea being to effect a
lodgment in the centre of the town before the inhabitants could think of
resistance.
'It seems, however,
that the headman of the fishing village at Batu Kring had managed to send off a
timely warning. When the long-boat came abreast of the mosque (which Doramin
had built: a structure with gables and roof finials of carved coral) the open
space before it was full of people. A shout went up, and was followed by a
clash of gongs all up the river. From a point above two little brass 6-pounders
were discharged, and the round-shot came skipping down the empty reach,
spirting glittering jets of water in the sunshine. In front of the mosque a
shouting lot of men began firing in volleys that whipped athwart the current of
the river; an irregular, rolling fusillade was opened on the boat from both
banks, and Brown's men replied with a wild, rapid fire. The oars had been got
in.
'The turn of the tide
at high water comes on very quickly in that river, and the boat in mid-stream,
nearly hidden in smoke, began to drift back stern foremost. Along both shores
the smoke thickened also, lying below the roofs in a level streak as you may
see a long cloud cutting the slope of a mountain. A tumult of war-cries, the
vibrating clang of gongs, the deep snoring of drums, yells of rage, crashes of
volley-firing, made an awful din, in which Brown sat confounded but steady at
the tiller, working himself into a fury of hate and rage against those people
who dared to defend themselves. Two of his men had been wounded, and he saw his
retreat cut off below the town by some boats that had put off from Tunku
Allang's stockade. There were six of them, full of men. While he was thus beset
he perceived the entrance of the narrow creek (the same which Jim had jumped at
low water). It was then brim full. Steering the long-boat in, they landed, and,
to make a long story short, they established themselves on a little knoll about
900 yards from the stockade, which, in fact, they commanded from that position.
The slopes of the knoll were bare, but there were a few trees on the summit.
They went to work cutting these down for a breastwork, and were fairly
entrenched before dark; meantime the Rajah's boats remained in the river with
curious neutrality. When the sun set the glue of many brushwood blazes lighted
on the river-front, and between the double line of houses on the land side
threw into black relief the roofs, the groups of slender palms, the heavy
clumps of fruit trees. Brown ordered the grass round his position to be fired;
a low ring of thin flames under the slow ascending smoke wriggled rapidly down
the slopes of the knoll; here and there a dry bush caught with a tall, vicious
roar. The conflagration made a clear zone of fire for the rifles of the small
party, and expired smouldering on the edge of the forests and along the muddy
bank of the creek. A strip of jungle luxuriating in a damp hollow between the
knoll and the Rajah's stockade stopped it on that side with a great crackling
and detonations of bursting bamboo stems. The sky was sombre, velvety, and
swarming with stars. The blackened ground smoked quietly with low creeping
wisps, till a little breeze came on and blew everything away. Brown expected an
attack to be delivered as soon as the tide had flowed enough again to enable
the war-boats which had cut off his retreat to enter the creek. At any rate he
was sure there would be an attempt to carry off his long-boat, which lay below
the hill, a dark high lump on the feeble sheen of a wet mudflat. But no move of
any sort was made by the boats in the river. Over the stockade and the Rajah's
buildings Brown saw their lights on the water. They seemed to be anchored
across the stream. Other lights afloat were moving in the reach, crossing and
recrossing from side to side. There were also lights twinkling motionless upon
the long walls of houses up the reach, as far as the bend, and more still
beyond, others isolated inland. The loom of the big fires disclosed buildings,
roofs, black piles as far as he could see. It was an immense place. The
fourteen desperate invaders lying flat behind the felled trees raised their
chins to look over at the stir of that town that seemed to extend up-river for
miles and swarm with thousands of angry men. They did not speak to each other.
Now and then they would hear a loud yell, or a single shot rang out, fired very
far somewhere. But round their position everything was still, dark, silent.
They seemed to be forgotten, as if the excitement keeping awake all the
population had nothing to do with them, as if they had been dead already.'
'All the events of that
night have a great importance, since they brought about a situation which
remained unchanged till Jim's return. Jim had been away in the interior for
more than a week, and it was Dain Waris who had directed the first repulse.
That brave and intelligent youth ("who knew how to fight after the manner
of white men") wished to settle the business off-hand, but his people were
too much for him. He had not Jim's racial prestige and the reputation of
invincible, supernatural power. He was not the visible, tangible incarnation of
unfailing truth and of unfailing victory. Beloved, trusted, and admired as he
was, he was still one of them, while Jim was one of us. Moreover, the white
man, a tower of strength in himself, was invulnerable, while Dain Waris could
be killed. Those unexpressed thoughts guided the opinions of the chief men of
the town, who elected to assemble in Jim's fort for deliberation upon the
emergency, as if expecting to find wisdom and courage in the dwelling of the
absent white man. The shooting of Brown's ruffians was so far good, or lucky,
that there had been half- a-dozen casualties amongst the defenders. The wounded
were lying on the verandah tended by their women-folk. The women and children
from the lower part of the town had been sent into the fort at the first alarm.
There Jewel was in command, very efficient and high-spirited, obeyed by Jim's
"own people," who, quitting in a body their little settlement under
the stockade, had gone in to form the garrison. The refugees crowded round her;
and through the whole affair, to the very disastrous last, she showed an
extraordinary martial ardour. It was to her that Dain Waris had gone at once at
the first intelligence of danger, for you must know that Jim was the only one
in Patusan who possessed a store of gunpowder. Stein, with whom he had kept up
intimate relations by letters, had obtained from the Dutch Government a special
authorisation to export five hundred kegs of it to Patusan. The powder-magazine
was a small hut of rough logs covered entirely with earth, and in Jim's absence
the girl had the key. In the council, held at eleven o'clock in the evening in
Jim's dining-room, she backed up Waris's advice for immediate and vigorous
action. I am told that she stood up by the side of Jim's empty chair at the
head of the long table and made a warlike impassioned speech, which for the
moment extorted murmurs of approbation from the assembled headmen. Old Doramin,
who had not showed himself outside his own gate for more than a year, had been
brought across with great difficulty. He was, of course, the chief man there.
The temper of the council was very unforgiving, and the old man's word would
have been decisive; but it is my opinion that, well aware of his son's fiery
courage, he dared not pronounce the word. More dilatory counsels prevailed. A
certain Haji Saman pointed out at great length that "these tyrannical and
ferocious men had delivered themselves to a certain death in any case. They
would stand fast on their hill and starve, or they would try to regain their
boat and be shot from ambushes across the creek, or they would break and fly
into the forest and perish singly there." He argued that by the use of
proper stratagems these evil-minded strangers could be destroyed without the
risk of a battle, and his words had a great weight, especially with the Patusan
men proper. What unsettled the minds of the townfolk was the failure of the
Rajah's boats to act at the decisive moment. It was the diplomatic Kassim who
represented the Rajah at the council. He spoke very little, listened smilingly,
very friendly and impenetrable. During the sitting messengers kept arriving
every few minutes almost, with reports of the invaders' proceedings. Wild and
exaggerated rumours were flying: there was a large ship at the mouth of the
river with big guns and many more men -- some white, others with black skins
and of bloodthirsty appearance. They were coming with many more boats to
exterminate every living thing. A sense of near, incomprehensible danger
affected the common people. At one moment there was a panic in the courtyard
amongst the women; shrieking; a rush; children crying -- Haji Saman went out to
quiet them. Then a fort sentry fired at something moving on the river, and
nearly killed a villager bringing in his women-folk in a canoe together with
the best of his domestic utensils and a dozen fowls. This caused more
confusion. Meantime the palaver inside Jim's house went on in the presence of
the girl. Doramin sat fierce-faced, heavy, looking at the speakers in turn, and
breathing slow like a bull. He didn't speak till the last, after Kassim had
declared that the Rajah's boats would be called in because the men were required
to defend his master's stockade. Dain Waris in his father's presence would
offer no opinion, though the girl entreated him in Jim's name to speak out. She
offered him Jim's own men in her anxiety to have these intruders driven out at
once. He only shook his head, after a glance or two at Doramin. Finally, when
the council broke up it had been decided that the houses nearest the creek
should be strongly occupied to obtain the command of the enemy's boat. The boat
itself was not to be interfered with openly, so that the robbers on the hill
should be tempted to embark, when a well-directed fire would kill most of them,
no doubt. To cut off the escape of those who might survive, and to prevent more
of them coming up, Dain Waris was ordered by Doramin to take an armed party of
Bugis down the river to a certain spot ten miles below Patusan, and there form
a camp on the shore and blockade the stream with the canoes. I don't believe
for a moment that Doramin feared the arrival of fresh forces. My opinion is that
his conduct was guided solely by his wish to keep his son out of harm's way. To
prevent a rush being made into the town the construction of a stockade was to
be commenced at daylight at the end of the street on the left bank. The old
nakhoda declared his intention to command there himself. A distribution of
powder, bullets, and percussion-caps was made immediately under the girl's
supervision. Several messengers were to be dispatched in different directions
after Jim, whose exact whereabouts were unknown. These men started at dawn, but
before that time Kassim had managed to open communications with the besieged
Brown.
'That accomplished
diplomatist and confidant of the Rajah, on leaving the fort to go back to his
master, took into his boat Cornelius, whom he found slinking mutely amongst the
people in the courtyard. Kassim had a little plan of his own and wanted him for
an interpreter. Thus it came about that towards morning Brown, reflecting upon
the desperate nature of his position, heard from the marshy overgrown hollow an
amicable, quavering, strained voice crying -- in English -- for permission to
come up, under a promise of personal safety and on a very important errand. He
was overjoyed. If he was spoken to he was no longer a hunted wild beast. These
friendly sounds took off at once the awful stress of vigilant watchfulness as
of so many blind men not knowing whence the deathblow might come. He pretended
a great reluctance. The voice declared itself "a white man -- a poor,
ruined, old man who had been living here for years." A mist, wet and
chilly, lay on the slopes of the hill, and after some more shouting from one to
the other, Brown called out, "Come on, then, but alone, mind!" As a
matter of fact -- he told me, writhing with rage at the recollection of his
helplessness -- it made no difference. They couldn't see more than a few yards
before them, and no treachery could make their position worse. By-and-by
Cornelius, in his week-day attire of a ragged dirty shirt and pants,
barefooted, with a broken-rimmed pith hat on his head, was made out vaguely,
sidling up to the defences, hesitating, stopping to listen in a peering
posture. "Come along! You are safe," yelled Brown, while his men
stared. All their hopes of life became suddenly centred in that dilapidated,
mean newcomer, who in profound silence clambered clumsily over a felled
tree-trunk, and shivering, with his sour, mistrustful face, looked about at the
knot of bearded, anxious, sleepless desperadoes.
'Half an hour's
confidential talk with Cornelius opened Brown's eyes as to the home affairs of
Patusan. He was on the alert at once. There were possibilities, immense
possibilities; but before he would talk over Cornelius's proposals he demanded
that some food should be sent up as a guarantee of good faith. Cornelius went
off, creeping sluggishly down the hill on the side of the Rajah's palace, and
after some delay a few of Tunku Allang's men came up, bringing a scanty supply
of rice, chillies, and dried fish. This was immeasurably better than nothing.
Later on Cornelius returned accompanying Kassim, who stepped out with an air of
perfect good-humoured trustfulness, in sandals, and muffled up from neck to
ankles in dark-blue sheeting. He shook hands with Brown discreetly, and the
three drew aside for a conference. Brown's men, recovering their confidence,
were slapping each other on the back, and cast knowing glances at their captain
while they busied themselves with preparations for cooking.
'Kassim disliked
Doramin and his Bugis very much, but he hated the new order of things still
more. It had occurred to him that these whites, together with the Rajah's
followers, could attack and defeat the Bugis before Jim's return. Then, he
reasoned, general defection of the townfolk was sure to follow, and the reign
of the white man who protected poor people would be over. Afterwards the new
allies could be dealt with. They would have no friends. The fellow was
perfectly able to perceive the difference of character, and had seen enough of
white men to know that these newcomers were outcasts, men without country.
Brown preserved a stern and inscrutable demeanour. When he first heard
Cornelius's voice demanding admittance, it brought merely the hope of a
loophole for escape. In less than an hour other thoughts were seething in his
head. Urged by an extreme necessity, he had come there to steal food, a few
tons of rubber or gum may be, perhaps a handful of dollars, and had found
himself enmeshed by deadly dangers. Now in consequence of these overtures from
Kassim he began to think of stealing the whole country. Some confounded fellow
had apparently accomplished something of the kind -- single-handed at that.
Couldn't have done it very well though. Perhaps they could work together --
squeeze everything dry and then go out quietly. In the course of his
negotiations with Kassim he became aware that he was supposed to have a big
ship with plenty of men outside. Kassim begged him earnestly to have this big
ship with his many guns and men brought up the river without delay for the
Rajah's service. Brown professed himself willing, and on this basis the
negotiation was carried on with mutual distrust. Three times in the course of
the morning the courteous and active Kassim went down to consult the Rajah and
came up busily with his long stride. Brown, while bargaining, had a sort of
grim enjoyment in thinking of his wretched schooner, with nothing but a heap of
dirt in her hold, that stood for an armed ship, and a Chinaman and a lame
ex-beachcomber of Levuka on board, who represented all his many men. In the
afternoon he obtained further doles of food, a promise of some money, and a
supply of mats for his men to make shelters for themselves. They lay down and
snored, protected from the burning sunshine; but Brown, sitting fully exposed
on one of the felled trees, feasted his eyes upon the view of the town and the
river. There was much loot there. Cornelius, who had made himself at home in
the camp, talked at his elbow, pointing out the localities, imparting advice,
giving his own version of Jim's character, and commenting in his own fashion
upon the events of the last three years. Brown, who, apparently indifferent and
gazing away, listened with attention to every word, could not make out clearly
what sort of man this Jim could be. "What's his name? Jim! Jim! That's not
enough for a man's name." "They call him," said Cornelius
scornfully, "Tuan Jim here. As you may say Lord Jim." "What is
he? Where does he come from?" inquired Brown. "What sort of man is
he? Is he an Englishman?" "Yes, yes, he's an Englishman. I am an
Englishman too. From Malacca. He is a fool. All you have to do is to kill him
and then you are king here. Everything belongs to him," explained
Cornelius. "It strikes me he may be made to share with somebody before
very long," commented Brown half aloud. "No, no. The proper way is to
kill him the first chance you get, and then you can do what you like,"
Cornelius would insist earnestly. "I have lived for many years here, and I
am giving you a friend's advice."
'In such converse and
in gloating over the view of Patusan, which he had determined in his mind
should become his prey, Brown whiled away most of the afternoon, his men,
meantime, resting. On that day Dain Waris's fleet of canoes stole one by one
under the shore farthest from the creek, and went down to close the river
against his retreat. Of this Brown was not aware, and Kassim, who came up the
knoll an hour before sunset, took good care not to enlighten him. He wanted the
white man's ship to come up the river, and this news, he feared, would be
discouraging. He was very pressing with Brown to send the "order,"
offering at the same time a trusty messenger, who for greater secrecy (as he
explained) would make his way by land to the mouth of the river and deliver the
"order" on board. After some reflection Brown judged it expedient to
tear a page out of his pocket-book, on which he simply wrote, "We are
getting on. Big job. Detain the man." The stolid youth selected by Kassim
for that service performed it faithfully, and was rewarded by being suddenly
tipped, head first, into the schooner's empty hold by the ex-beachcomber and
the Chinaman, who there- upon hastened to put on the hatches. What became of
him after- wards Brown did not say.'
'Brown's object was to
gain time by fooling with Kassim's diplomacy. For doing a real stroke of
business he could not help thinking the white man was the person to work with.
He could not imagine such a chap (who must be confoundedly clever after all to
get hold of the natives like that) refusing a help that would do away with the
necessity for slow, cautious, risky cheating, that imposed itself as the only
possible line of conduct for a single-handed man. He, Brown, would offer him
the power. No man could hesitate. Everything was in coming to a clear
understanding. Of course they would share. The idea of there being a fort --
all ready to his hand -- a real fort, with artillery (he knew this from
Cornelius), excited him. Let him only once get in and . . . He would impose modest
conditions. Not too low, though. The man was no fool, it seemed. They would
work like brothers till . . . till the time came for a quarrel and a shot that
would settle all accounts. With grim impatience of plunder he wished himself to
be talking with the man now. The land already seemed to be his to tear to
pieces, squeeze, and throw away. Meantime Kassim had to be fooled for the sake
of food first -- and for a second string. But the principal thing was to get
something to eat from day to day. Besides, he was not averse to begin fighting
on that Rajah's account, and teach a lesson to those people who had received
him with shots. The lust of battle was upon him.
'I am sorry that I
can't give you this part of the story, which of course I have mainly from
Brown, in Brown's own words. There was in the broken, violent speech of that
man, unveiling before me his thoughts with the very hand of Death upon his
throat, an undisguised ruthlessness of purpose, a strange vengeful attitude
towards his own past, and a blind belief in the righteousness of his will
against all mankind, something of that feeling which could induce the leader of
a horde of wandering cut-throats to call himself proudly the Scourge of God. No
doubt the natural senseless ferocity which is the basis of such a character was
exasperated by failure ill-luck, and the recent privations, as well as by the
desperate position in which he found himself; but what was most remarkable of
all was this, that while he planned treacherous alliances, had already settled
in his own mind the fate of the white man, and intrigued in an overbearing,
offhand manner with Kassim, one could perceive that what he had really desired,
almost in spite of himself, was to play havoc with that jungle town which had
defied him, to see it strewn over with corpses and enveloped in flames.
Listening to his pitiless, panting voice, I could imagine how he must have
looked at it from the hillock, peopling it with images of murder and rapine.
The part nearest to the creek wore an abandoned aspect, though as a matter of
fact every house concealed a few armed men on the alert. Suddenly beyond the
stretch of waste ground, interspersed with small patches of low dense bush,
excavations, heaps of rubbish, with trodden paths between, a man, solitary and
looking very small, strolled out into the deserted opening of the street
between the shut-up, dark, lifeless buildings at the end. Perhaps one of the
inhabitants, who had fled to the other bank of the river, coming back for some
object of domestic use. Evidently he supposed himself quite safe at that
distance from the hill on the other side of the creek. A light stockade, set up
hastily, was just round the turn of the street, full of his friends. He moved
leisurely. Brown saw him, and instantly called to his side the Yankee deserter,
who acted as a sort of second in command. This lanky, loose-jointed fellow came
forward, wooden-faced, trailing his rifle lazily. When he understood what was
wanted from him a homicidal and conceited smile uncovered his teeth, making two
deep folds down his sallow, leathery cheeks. He prided himself on being a dead
shot. He dropped on one knee, and taking aim from a steady rest through the
unlopped branches of a felled tree, fired, and at once stood up to look. The man,
far away, turned his head to the report, made another step forward, seemed to
hesitate, and abruptly got down on his hands and knees. In the silence that
fell upon the sharp crack of the rifle, the dead shot, keeping his eyes fixed
upon the quarry, guessed that "this there coon's health would never be a
source of anxiety to his friends any more." The man's limbs were seen to
move rapidly under his body in an endeavour to run on all-fours. In that empty
space arose a multitudinous shout of dismay and surprise. The man sank flat,
face down, and moved no more. "That showed them what we could do,"
said Brown to me. "Struck the fear of sudden death into them. That was
what we wanted. They were two hundred to one, and this gave them something to
think over for the night. Not one of them had an idea of such a long shot
before. That beggar belonging to the Rajah scooted down-hill with his eyes
hanging out of his head."
'As he was telling me
this he tried with a shaking hand to wipe the thin foam on his blue lips.
"Two hundred to one. Two hundred to one ..strike terror ..terror, terror,
I tell you..." His own eyes were starting out of their sockets. He fell back,
clawing the air with skinny fingers, sat up again, bowed and hairy, glared at
me sideways like some man-beast of folk-lore, with open mouth in his miserable
and awful agony before he got his speech back after that fit. There are sights
one never forgets.
'Furthermore, to draw
the enemy's fire and locate such parties as might have been hiding in the
bushes along the creek, Brown ordered the Solomon Islander to go down to the
boat and bring an oar, as you send a spaniel after a stick into the water. This
failed, and the fellow came back without a single shot having been fired at him
from anywhere. "There's nobody," opined some of the men. It is
"onnatural," remarked the Yankee. Kassim had gone, by that time, very
much impressed, pleased too, and also uneasy. Pursuing his tortuous policy, he
had dispatched a message to Dain Waris warning him to look out for the white
men's ship, which, he had had information, was about to come up the river. He
minimised its strength and exhorted him to oppose its passage. This double-dealing
answered his purpose, which was to keep the Bugis forces divided and to weaken
them by fighting. On the other hand, he had in the course of that day sent word
to the assembled Bugis chiefs in town, assuring them that he was trying to
induce the invaders to retire; his messages to the fort asked earnestly for
powder for the Rajah's men. It was a long time since Tunku Allang had had
ammunition for the score or so of old muskets rusting in their arm-racks in the
audience-hall. The open intercourse between the hill and the palace unsettled
all the minds. It was already time for men to take sides, it began to be said.
There would soon be much bloodshed, and thereafter great trouble for many
people. The social fabric of orderly, peaceful life, when every man was sure of
to-morrow, the edifice raised by Jim's hands, seemed on that evening ready to
collapse into a ruin reeking with blood. The poorer folk were already taking to
the bush or flying up the river. A good many of the upper class judged it
necessary to go and pay their court to the Rajah. The Rajah's youths jostled
them rudely. Old Tunku Allang, almost out of his mind with fear and indecision,
either kept a sullen silence or abused them violently for daring to come with
empty hands: they departed very much frightened; only old Doramin kept his
countrymen together and pursued his tactics inflexibly. Enthroned in a big
chair behind the improvised stockade, he issued his orders in a deep veiled
rumble, unmoved, like a deaf man, in the flying rumours.
'Dusk fell, hiding
first the body of the dead man, which had been left lying with arms
outstretched as if nailed to the ground, and then the revolving sphere of the
night rolled smoothly over Patusan and came to a rest, showering the glitter of
countless worlds upon the earth. Again, in the exposed part of the town big
fires blazed along the only street, revealing from distance to distance upon
their glares the falling straight lines of roofs, the fragments of wattled
walls jumbled in confusion, here and there a whole hut elevated in the glow
upon the vertical black stripes of a group of high piles and all this line of
dwellings, revealed in patches by the swaying flames, seemed to flicker
tortuously away up-river into the gloom at the heart of the land. A great
silence, in which the looms of successive fires played without noise, extended
into the darkness at the foot of the hill; but the other bank of the river, all
dark save for a solitary bonfire at the river-front before the fort, sent out
into the air an increasing tremor that might have been the stamping of a
multitude of feet, the hum of many voices, or the fall of an immensely distant
waterfall. It was then, Brown confessed to me, while, turning his back on his
men, he sat looking at it all, that notwithstanding his disdain, his ruthless
faith in himself, a feeling came over him that at last he had run his head
against a stone wall. Had his boat been afloat at the time, he believed he
would have tried to steal away, taking his chances of a long chase down the
river and of starvation at sea. It is very doubtful whether he would have
succeeded in getting away. However, he didn't try this. For another moment he
had a passing thought of trying to rush the town, but he perceived very well
that in the end he would find himself in the lighted street, where they would
be shot down like dogs from the houses. They were two hundred to one -- he
thought, while his men, huddling round two heaps of smouldering embers, munched
the last of the bananas and roasted the few yams they owed to Kassim's
diplomacy. Cornelius sat amongst them dozing sulkily.
'Then one of the whites
remembered that some tobacco had been left in the boat, and, encouraged by the
impunity of the Solomon Islander, said he would go to fetch it. At this all the
others shook off their despondency. Brown applied to, said, "Go, and be d
-- d to you," scornfully. He didn't think there was any danger in going to
the creek in the dark. The man threw a leg over the tree-trunk and disappeared.
A moment later he was heard clambering into the boat and then clambering out.
"I've got it," he cried. A flash and a report at the very foot of the
hill followed. "I am hit," yelled the man. "Look out, look out
-- I am hit," and instantly all the rifles went off. The hill squirted
fire and noise into the night like a little volcano, and when Brown and the
Yankee with curses and cuffs stopped the panic-stricken firing, a profound,
weary groan floated up from the creek, succeeded by a plaint whose heartrending
sadness was like some poison turning the blood cold in the veins. Then a strong
voice pronounced several distinct incomprehensible words somewhere beyond the
creek. "Let no one fire," shouted Brown. "What does it
mean?" . . . "Do you hear on the hill? Do you hear? Do you
hear?" repeated the voice three times. Cornelius translated, and then
prompted the answer. "Speak," cried Brown, "we hear." Then
the voice, declaiming in the sonorous inflated tone of a herald, and shifting
continually on the edge of the vague waste-land, proclaimed that between the
men of the Bugis nation living in Patusan and the white men on the hill and
those with them, there would be no faith, no compassion, no speech, no peace. A
bush rustled; a haphazard volley rang out. "Dam' foolishness,"
muttered the Yankee, vexedly grounding the butt. Cornelius translated. The
wounded man below the hill, after crying out twice, "Take me up! take me
up!" went on complaining in moans. While he had kept on the blackened
earth of the slope, and afterwards crouching in the boat, he had been safe
enough. It seems that in his joy at finding the tobacco he forgot himself and
jumped out on her off-side, as it were. The white boat, lying high and dry,
showed him up; the creek was no more than seven yards wide in that place, and
there happened to be a man crouching in the bush on the other bank.
'He was a Bugis of
Tondano only lately come to Patusan, and a relation of the man shot in the
afternoon. That famous long shot had indeed appalled the beholders. The man in
utter security had been struck down, in full view of his friends, dropping with
a joke on his lips, and they seemed to see in the act an atrocity which had
stirred a bitter rage. That relation of his, Si-Lapa by name, was then with
Doramin in the stockade only a few feet away. You who know these chaps must
admit that the fellow showed an unusual pluck by volunteering to carry the
message, alone, in the dark. Creeping across the open ground, he had deviated
to the left and found himself opposite the boat. He was startled when Brown's
man shouted. He came to a sitting position with his gun to his shoulder, and
when the other jumped out, exposing himself, he pulled the trigger and lodged
three jagged slugs point-blank into the poor wretch's stomach. Then, lying flat
on his face, he gave himself up for dead, while a thin hail of lead chopped and
swished the bushes close on his right hand; afterwards he delivered his speech
shouting, bent double, dodging all the time in cover. With the last word he
leaped sideways, lay close for a while, and afterwards got back to the houses
unharmed, having achieved on that night such a renown as his children will not
willingly allow to die.
'And on the hill the
forlorn band let the two little heaps of embers go out under their bowed heads.
They sat dejected on the ground with compressed lips and downcast eyes,
listening to their comrade below. He was a strong man and died hard, with moans
now loud, now sinking to a strange confidential note of pain. Sometimes he
shrieked, and again, after a period of silence, he could be heard muttering
deliriously a long and unintelligible complaint. Never for a moment did he
cease.
' "What's the
good?" Brown had said unmoved once, seeing the Yankee, who had been
swearing under his breath, prepare to go down. "That's so," assented
the deserter, reluctantly desisting. "There's no encouragement for wounded
men here. Only his noise is calculated to make all the others think too much of
the hereafter, cap'n." "Water!" cried the wounded man in an
extraordinarily clear vigorous voice, and then went off moaning feebly.
"Ay, water. Water will do it," muttered the other to himself,
resignedly. "Plenty by-and-by. The tide is flowing."
'At last the tide
flowed, silencing the plaint and the cries of pain, and the dawn was near when
Brown, sitting with his chin in the palm of his hand before Patusan, as one
might stare at the unscalable side of a mountain, heard the brief ringing bark
of a brass 6-pounder far away in town somewhere. "What's this?" he asked
of Cornelius, who hung about him. Cornelius listened. A muffled roaring shout
rolled down-river over the town; a big drum began to throb, and others
responded, pulsating and droning. Tiny scattered lights began to twinkle in the
dark half of the town, while the part lighted by the loom of fires hummed with
a deep and prolonged murmur. "He has come," said Cornelius.
"What? Already? Are you sure?" Brown asked. "Yes! yes! Sure.
Listen to the noise." "What are they making that row about?"
pursued Brown. "For joy," snorted Cornelius; "he is a very great
man, but all the same, he knows no more than a child, and so they make a great
noise to please him, because they know no better." "Look here,"
said Brown, "how is one to get at him?" "He shall come to talk
to you," Cornelius declared. "What do you mean? Come down here
strolling as it were?" Cornelius nodded vigorously in the dark. "Yes.
He will come straight here and talk to you. He is just like a fool. You shall
see what a fool he is." Brown was incredulous. "You shall see; you
shall see," repeated Cornelius. "He is not afraid -- not afraid of
anything. He will come and order you to leave his people alone. Everybody must
leave his people alone. He is like a little child. He will come to you
straight." Alas! he knew Jim well -- that "mean little skunk,"
as Brown called him to me. "Yes, certainly," he pursued with ardour,
"and then, captain, you tell that tall man with a gun to shoot him. Just
you kill him, and you will frighten everybody so much that you can do anything
you like with them afterwards -- get what you like -- go away when you like.
Ha! ha! ha! Fine . . ." He almost danced with impatience and eagerness;
and Brown, looking over his shoulder at him, could see, shown up by the
pitiless dawn, his men drenched with dew, sitting amongst the cold ashes and
the litter of the camp, haggard, cowed, and in rags.'
'To the very last
moment, till the full day came upon them with a spring, the fires on the west
bank blazed bright and clear; and then Brown saw in a knot of coloured figures
motionless between the advanced houses a man in European clothes, in a helmet,
all white. "That's him; look! look!" Cornelius said excitedly. All
Brown's men had sprung up and crowded at his back with lustreless eyes. The
group of vivid colours and dark faces with the white figure in their midst were
observing the knoll. Brown could see naked arms being raised to shade the eyes
and other brown arms pointing. What should he do? He looked around, and the
forests that faced him on all sides walled the cock-pit of an unequal contest.
He looked once more at his men. A contempt, a weariness, the desire of life,
the wish to try for one more chance -- for some other grave -- struggled in his
breast. From the outline the figure presented it seemed to him that the white
man there, backed up by all the power of the land, was examining his position
through binoculars. Brown jumped up on the log, throwing his arms up, the palms
outwards. The coloured group closed round the white man, and fell back twice
before he got clear of them, walking slowly alone. Brown remained standing on
the log till Jim, appearing and disappearing between the patches of thorny
scrub, had nearly reached the creek; then Brown jumped off and went down to
meet him on his side.
'They met, I should
think, not very far from the place, perhaps on the very spot, where Jim took
the second desperate leap of his life -- the leap that landed him into the life
of Patusan, into the trust, the love, the confidence of the people. They faced
each other across the creek, and with steady eyes tried to understand each
other before they opened their lips. Their antagonism must have been expressed
in their glances; I know that Brown hated Jim at first sight. Whatever hopes he
might have had vanished at once. This was not the man he had expected to see.
He hated him for this -- and in a checked flannel shirt with sleeves cut off at
the elbows, grey bearded, with a sunken, sun-blackened face -- he cursed in his
heart the other's youth and assurance, his clear eyes and his untroubled
bearing. That fellow had got in a long way before him! He did not look like a
man who would be willing to give anything for assistance. He had all the
advantages on his side -- possession, security, power; he was on the side of an
overwhelming force! He was not hungry and desperate, and he did not seem in the
least afraid. And there was something in the very neatness of Jim's clothes,
from the white helmet to the canvas leggings and the pipe-clayed shoes, which
in Brown's sombre irritated eyes seemed to belong to things he had in the very
shaping of his life contemned and flouted.
' "Who are
you?" asked Jim at last, speaking in his usual voice. "My name's
Brown," answered the other loudly; "Captain Brown. What's yours?"
and Jim after a little pause went on quietly, as If he had not heard:
"What made you come here?" "You want to know," said Brown
bitterly. "It's easy to tell. Hunger. And what made you?"
' "The fellow
started at this," said Brown, relating to me the opening of this strange
conversation between those two men, separated only by the muddy bed of a creek,
but standing on the opposite poles of that conception of life which includes
all mankind -- "The fellow started at this and got very red in the face.
Too big to be questioned, I suppose. I told him that if he looked upon me as a
dead man with whom you may take liberties, he himself was not a whit better off
really. I had a fellow up there who had a bead drawn on him all the time, and
only waited for a sign from me. There was nothing to be shocked at in this. He
had come down of his own free will. 'Let us agree,' said I, 'that we are both
dead men, and let us talk on that basis, as equals. We are all equal before
death,' I said. I admitted I was there like a rat in a trap, but we had been
driven to it, and even a trapped rat can give a bite. He caught me up in a
moment. 'Not if you don't go near the trap till the rat is dead.' I told him
that sort of game was good enough for these native friends of his, but I would
have thought him too white to serve even a rat so. Yes, I had wanted to talk
with him. Not to beg for my life, though. My fellows were -- well -- what they
were -- men like himself, anyhow. All we wanted from him was to come on in the
devil's name and have it out. 'God d -- n it,' said I, while he stood there as
still as a wooden post, 'you don't want to come out here every day with your
glasses to count how many of us are left on our feet. Come. Either bring your
infernal crowd along or let us go out and starve in the open sea, by God! You
have been white once, for all your tall talk of this being your own people and
you being one with them. Are you? And what the devil do you get for it; what is
it you've found here that is so d -- d precious? Hey? You don't want us to come
down here perhaps
-- do you? You are two
hundred to one. You don't want us to come down into the open. Ah! I promise you
we shall give you some sport before you've done. You talk about me making a
cowardly set upon unoffending people. What's that to me that they are
unoffending, when I am starving for next to no offence? But I am not a coward.
Don't you be one. Bring them along or, by all the fiends, we shall yet manage
to send half your unoffending town to heaven with us in smoke!' "
'He was terrible --
relating this to me -- this tortured skeleton of a man drawn up together with
his face over his knees, upon a miserable bed in that wretched hovel, and
lifting his head to look at me with malignant triumph.
' "That's what I
told him -- I knew what to say," he began again, feebly at first, but
working himself up with incredible speed into a fiery utterance of his scorn.
" 'We aren't going into the forest to wander like a string of living
skeletons dropping one after another for ants to go to work upon us before we
are fairly dead . Oh no! . . . ' 'You don't deserve a better fate,' he said.
'And what do you deserve,' I shouted at him, 'you that I find skulking here
with your mouth full of your responsibility, of innocent lives, of your
infernal duty? What do you know more of me than I know of you? I came here for
food. D'ye hear? -- food to fill our bellies. And what did you come for? What
did you ask for when you came here? We don't ask you for anything but to give
us a fight or a clear road to go back whence we came....' 'I would fight with
you now,' says he, pulling at his little moustache. 'And I would let you shoot
me, and welcome,' I said. 'This is as good a jumping-off place for me as
another. I am sick of my infernal luck. But it would be too easy. There are my
men in the same boat -- and, by God, I am not the sort to jump out of trouble
and leave them in a d -- d lurch,' I said. He stood thinking for a while and
then wanted to know what I had done ('out there' he says, tossing his head
down-stream) to be hazed about so. 'Have we met to tell each other the story of
our lives?' I asked him. 'Suppose you begin. No? Well, I am sure I don't want
to hear. Keep it to yourself. I know it is no better than mine. I've lived --
and so did you, though you talk as if you were one of those people that should
have wings so as to go about without touching the dirty earth. Well -- it is
dirty. I haven't got any wings. I am here because I was afraid once in my life.
Want to know what of? Of a prison. That scares me, and you may know it -- if
it's any good to you. I won't ask you what scared you into this infernal hole,
where you seem to have found pretty pickings. That's your luck and this is mine
-- the privilege to beg for the favour of being shot quickly, or else kicked
out to go free and starve in my own way.' . . ."
'His debilitated body
shook with an exultation so vehement, so assured, and so malicious that it
seemed to have driven off the death waiting for him in that hut. The corpse of
his mad self-love uprose from rags and destitution as from the dark horrors of
a tomb. It is impossible to say how much he lied to Jim then, how much he lied
to me now -- and to himself always. Vanity plays lurid tricks with our memory,
and the truth of every passion wants some pretence to make it live. Standing at
the gate of the other world in the guise of a beggar, he had slapped this
world's face, he had spat on it, he had thrown upon it an immensity of scorn
and revolt at the bottom of his misdeeds. He had overcome them all -- men,
women, savages, traders, ruffians, missionaries -- and Jim -- "that
beefy-faced beggar." I did not begrudge him this triumph in articulo
mortis, this almost posthumous illusion of having trampled all the earth under
his feet. While he was boasting to me, in his sordid and repulsive agony, I
couldn't help thinking of the chuckling talk relating to the time of his
greatest splendour when, during a year or more, Gentleman Brown's ship was to
be seen, for many days on end, hovering off an islet befringed with green upon
azure, with the dark dot of the mission-house on a white beach; while Gentleman
Brown, ashore, was casting his spells over a romantic girl for whom Melanesia
had been too much, and giving hopes of a remarkable conversion to her husband.
The poor man, some time or other, had been heard to express the intention of
winning "Captain Brown to a better way of life." . . . "Bag
Gentleman Brown for Glory" - as a leery-eyed loafer expressed it once --
"just to let them see up above what a Western Pacific trading skipper
looks like." And this was the man, too, who had run off with a dying
woman, and had shed tears over her body. "Carried on like a big
baby," his then mate was never tired of telling, "and where the fun
came in may I be kicked to death by diseased Kanakas if I know. Why, gents! she
was too far gone when he brought her aboard to know him; she just lay there on
her back in his bunk staring at the beam with awful shining eyes -- and then
she died. Dam' bad sort of fever, I guess...." I remembered all these
stories while, wiping his matted lump of a beard with a livid hand, he was
telling me from his noisome couch how he got round, got in, got home, on that
confounded, immaculate, don't-you-touch-me sort of fellow. He admitted that he
couldn't be scared, but there was a way, "as broad as a turnpike, to get
in and shake his twopenny soul around and inside out and upside down -- by
God!" '
'I don't think he could
do more than perhaps look upon that straight path. He seemed to have been
puzzled by what he saw, for he interrupted himself in his narrative more than
once to exclaim, "He nearly slipped from me there. I could not make him
out. Who was he?" And after glaring at me wildly he would go on, jubilating
and sneering. To me the conversation of these two across the creek appears now
as the deadliest kind of duel on which Fate looked on with her cold-eyed
knowledge of the end. No, he didn't turn Jim's soul inside out, but I am much
mistaken if the spirit so utterly out of his reach had not been made to taste
to the full the bitterness of that contest. These were the emissaries with whom
the world he had renounced was pursuing him in his retreat -- white men from
"out there" where he did not think himself good enough to live. This
was all that came to him -- a menace, a shock, a danger to his work. I suppose
it is this sad, half-resentful, half-resigned feeling, piercing through the few
words Jim said now and then, that puzzled Brown so much in the reading of his character.
Some great men owe most of their greatness to the ability of detecting in those
they destine for their tools the exact quality of strength that matters for
their work; and Brown, as though he had been really great, had a satanic gift
of finding out the best and the weakest spot in his victims. He admitted to me
that Jim wasn't of the sort that can be got over by truckling, and accordingly
he took care to show himself as a man confronting without dismay ill-luck,
censure, and disaster. The smuggling of a few guns was no great crime, he
pointed out. As to coming to Patusan, who had the right to say he hadn't come
to beg? The infernal people here let loose at him from both banks without
staying to ask questions. He made the point brazenly, for, in truth, Dain
Waris's energetic action had prevented the greatest calamities; because Brown
told me distinctly that, perceiving the size of the place, he had resolved
instantly in his mind that as soon as he had gained a footing he would set fire
right and left, and begin by shooting down everything living in sight, in order
to cow and terrify the population. The disproportion of forces was so great
that this was the only way giving him the slightest chance of attaining his
ends -- he argued in a fit of coughing. But he didn't tell Jim this. As to the
hardships and starvation they had gone through, these had been very real; it
was enough to look at his band. He made, at the sound of a shrill whistle, all
his men appear standing in a row on the logs in full view, so that Jim could
see them. For the killing of the man, it had been done -- well, it had -- but
was not this war, bloody war -- in a corner? and the fellow had been killed
cleanly, shot through the chest, not like that poor devil of his lying now in
the creek. They had to listen to him dying for six hours, with his entrails
torn with slugs. At any rate this was a life for a life.... And all this was
said with the weariness, with the recklessness of a man spurred on and on by
ill-luck till he cares not where he runs. When he asked Jim, with a sort of
brusque despairing frankness, whether he himself -- straight now -- didn't
understand that when "it came to saving one's life in the dark, one didn't
care who else went -- three, thirty, three hundred people" -- it was as if
a demon had been whispering advice in his ear. "I made him wince,"
boasted Brown to me. "He very soon left off coming the righteous over me.
He just stood there with nothing to say, and looking as black as thunder -- not
at me -- on the ground." He asked Jim whether he had nothing fishy in his
life to remember that he was so damnedly hard upon a man trying to get out of a
deadly hole by the first means that came to hand -- and so on, and so on. And
there ran through the rough talk a vein of subtle reference to their common
blood, an assumption of common experience; a sickening suggestion of common
guilt, of secret knowledge that was like a bond of their minds and of their
hearts.
'At last Brown threw
himself down full length and watched Jim out of the corners of his eyes. Jim on
his side of the creek stood thinking and switching his leg. The houses in view
were silent, as if a pestilence had swept them clean of every breath of life;
but many invisible eyes were turned, from within, upon the two men with the
creek between them, a stranded white boat, and the body of the third man half
sunk in the mud. On the river canoes were moving again, for Patusan was
recovering its belief in the stability of earthly institutions since the return
of the white lord. The right bank, the platforms of the houses, the rafts
moored along the shores, even the roofs of bathing-huts, were covered with
people that, far away out of earshot and almost out of sight, were straining
their eyes towards the knoll beyond the Rajah's stockade. Within the wide
irregular ring of forests, broken in two places by the sheen of the river,
there was a silence. "Will you promise to leave the coast?" Jim
asked. Brown lifted and let fall his hand, giving everything up as it were --
accepting the inevitable. "And surrender your arms?" Jim went on.
Brown sat up and glared across. "Surrender our arms! Not till you come to
take them out of our stiff hands. You think I am gone crazy with funk? Oh no!
That and the rags I stand in is all I have got in the world, besides a few more
breechloaders on board; and I expect to sell the lot in Madagascar, if I ever
get so far -- begging my way from ship to ship."
'Jim said nothing to
this. At last, throwing away the switch he held in his hand, he said, as if
speaking to himself, "I don't know whether I have the power." . . .
"You don't know! And you wanted me just now to give up my arms! That's
good, too," cried Brown; "Suppose they say one thing to you, and do
the other thing to me." He calmed down markedly. "I dare say you have
the power, or what's the meaning of all this talk?" he continued.
"What did you come down here for? To pass the time of day?"
' "Very
well," said Jim, lifting his head suddenly after a long silence. "You
shall have a clear road or else a clear fight." He turned on his heel and
walked away.
'Brown got up at once,
but he did not go up the hill till he had seen Jim disappear between the first
houses. He never set his eyes on him again. On his way back he met Cornelius
slouching down with his head between his shoulders. He stopped before Brown.
"Why didn't you kill him?" he demanded in a sour, discontented voice.
"Because I could do better than that," Brown said with an amused
smile. "Never! never!" protested Cornelius with energy. "Couldn't.
I have lived here for many years." Brown looked up at him curiously. There
were many sides to the life of that place in arms against him; things he would
never find out. Cornelius slunk past dejectedly in the direction of the river.
He was now leaving his new friends; he accepted the disappointing course of
events with a sulky obstinacy which seemed to draw more together his little
yellow old face; and as he went down he glanced askant here and there, never
giving up his fixed idea.
'Henceforth events move
fast without a check, flowing from the very hearts of men like a stream from a
dark source, and we see Jim amongst them, mostly through Tamb' Itam's eyes. The
girl's eyes had watched him too, but her life is too much entwined with his:
there is her passion, her wonder, her anger, and, above all, her fear and her
unforgiving love. Of the faithful servant, uncomprehending as the rest of them,
it is the fidelity alone that comes into play; a fidelity and a belief in his
lord so strong that even amazement is subdued to a sort of saddened acceptance
of a mysterious failure. He has eyes only for one figure, and through all the
mazes of bewilderment he preserves his air of guardianship, of obedience, of
care.
'His master came back
from his talk with the white men, walking slowly towards the stockade in the
street. Everybody was rejoiced to see him return, for while he was away every
man had been afraid not only of him being killed, but also of what would come
after. Jim went into one of the houses, where old Doramin had retired, and
remained alone for a long time with the head of the Bugis settlers. No doubt he
discussed the course to follow with him then, but no man was present at the
conversation. Only Tamb' Itam, keeping as close to the door as he could, heard
his master say, "Yes. I shall let all the people know that such is my
wish; but I spoke to you, O Doramin, before all the others, and alone; for you
know my heart as well as I know yours and its greatest desire. And you know
well also that I have no thought but for the people's good." Then his
master, lifting the sheeting in the doorway, went out, and he, Tamb' Itam, had
a glimpse of old Doramin within, sitting in the chair with his hands on his
knees, and looking between his feet. Afterwards he followed his master to the
fort, where all the principal Bugis and Patusan inhabitants had been summoned
for a talk. Tamb' Itam himself hoped there would be some fighting. "What
was it but the taking of another hill?" he exclaimed regretfully. However,
in the town many hoped that the rapacious strangers would be induced, by the
sight of so many brave men making ready to fight, to go away. It would be a
good thing if they went away. Since Jim's arrival had been made known before
daylight by the gun fired from the fort and the beating of the big drum there,
the fear that had hung over Patusan had broken and subsided like a wave on a
rock, leaving the seething foam of excitement, curiosity, and endless
speculation. Half of the population had been ousted out of their homes for
purposes of defence, and were living in the street on the left side of the
river, crowding round the fort, and in momentary expectation of seeing their
abandoned dwellings on the threatened bank burst into flames. The general
anxiety was to see the matter settled quickly. Food, through Jewel's care, had
been served out to the refugees. Nobody knew what their white man would do.
Some remarked that it was worse than in Sherif Ali's war. Then many people did
not care; now everybody had something to lose. The movements of canoes passing
to and fro between the two parts of the town were watched with interest. A
couple of Bugis war-boats lay anchored in the middle of the stream to protect
the river, and a thread of smoke stood at the bow of each; the men in them were
cooking their midday rice when Jim, after his interviews with Brown and
Doramin, crossed the river and entered by the water-gate of his fort. The
people inside crowded round him, so that he could hardly make his way to the
house. They had not seen him before, because on his arrival during the night he
had only exchanged a few words with the girl, who had come down to the
landing-stage for the purpose, and had then gone on at once to join the chiefs
and the fighting men on the other bank. People shouted greetings after him. One
old woman raised a laugh by pushing her way to the front madly and enjoining
him in a scolding voice to see to it that her two sons, who were with Doramin,
did not come to harm at the hands of the robbers. Several of the bystanders
tried to pull her away, but she struggled and cried, "Let me go. What is
this, O Muslims? This laughter is unseemly. Are they not cruel, bloodthirsty
robbers bent on killing?" "Let her be," said Jim, and as a
silence fell suddenly, he said slowly, "Everybody shall be safe." He
entered the house before the great sigh, and the loud murmurs of satisfaction,
had died out.
'There's no doubt his
mind was made up that Brown should have his way clear back to the sea. His
fate, revolted, was forcing his hand. He had for the first time to affirm his
will in the face of outspoken opposition. "There was much talk, and at
first my master was silent," Tamb' Itam said. "Darkness came, and
then I lit the candles on the long table. The chiefs sat on each side, and the
lady remained by my master's right hand."
'When he began to
speak, the unaccustomed difficulty seemed only to fix his resolve more
immovably. The white men were now waiting for his answer on the hill. Their
chief had spoken to him in the language of his own people, making clear many
things difficult to explain in any other speech. They were erring men whom
suffering had made blind to right and wrong. It is true that lives had been
lost already, but why lose more? He declared to his hearers, the assembled
heads of the people, that their welfare was his welfare, their losses his
losses, their mourning his mourning. He looked round at the grave listening
faces and told them to remember that they had fought and worked side by side.
They knew his courage . . . Here a murmur interrupted him . . . And that he had
never deceived them. For many years they had dwelt together. He loved the land
and the people living in it with a very great love. He was ready to answer with
his life for any harm that should come to them if the white men with beards
were allowed to retire. They were evil-doers, but their destiny had been evil
too. Had he ever advised them ill? Had his words ever brought suffering to the
people? he asked. He believed that it would be best to let these whites and
their followers go with their lives. It would be a small gift. "I whom you
have tried and found always true ask you to let them go." He turned to
Doramin. The old nakhoda made no movement. "Then," said Jim,
"call in Dain Waris, your son, my friend, for in this business I shall not
lead." '
'Tamb' Itam behind his
chair was thunderstruck. The declaration produced an immense sensation.
"Let them go because this is best in my knowledge, which has never
deceived you," Jim insisted. There was a silence. In the darkness of the
courtyard could be heard the subdued whispering, shuffling noise of many
people. Doramin raised his heavy head and said that there was no more reading
of hearts than touching the sky with the hand, but -- he consented. The others
gave their opinion in turn. "It is best," "Let them go,"
and so on. But most of them simply said that they "believed Tuan
Jim."
'In this simple form of
assent to his will lies the whole gist of the situation; their creed, his
truth; and the testimony to that faithfulness which made him in his own eyes
the equal of the impeccable men who never fall out of the ranks. Stein's words,
"Romantic! -- Romantic!" seem to ring over those distances that will
never give him up now to a world indifferent to his failings and his virtues,
and to that ardent and clinging affection that refuses him the dole of tears in
the bewilderment of a great grief and of eternal separation. From the moment
the sheer truthfulness of his last three years of life carries the day against
the ignorance, the fear, and the anger of men, he appears no longer to me as I
saw him last -- a white speck catching all the dim light left upon a sombre
coast and the darkened sea -- but greater and more pitiful in the loneliness of
his soul, that remains even for her who loved him best a cruel and insoluble
mystery.
'It is evident that he
did not mistrust Brown; there was no reason to doubt the story, whose truth
seemed warranted by the rough frankness, by a sort of virile sincerity in
accepting the morality and the consequences of his acts. But Jim did not know
the almost inconceivable egotism of the man which made him, when resisted and
foiled in his will, mad with the indignant and revengeful rage of a thwarted
autocrat. But if Jim did not mistrust Brown, he was evidently anxious that some
misunderstanding should not occur, ending perhaps in collision and bloodshed.
It was for this reason that directly the Malay chiefs had gone he asked Jewel
to get him something to eat, as he was going out of the fort to take command in
the town. On her remonstrating against this on the score of his fatigue, he
said that something might happen for which he would never forgive himself.
"I am responsible for every life in the land," he said. He was moody
at first; she served him with her own hands, taking the plates and dishes (of
the dinner-service presented him by Stein) from Tamb' Itam. He brightened up
after a while; told her she would be again in command of the fort for another
night. "There's no sleep for us, old girl," he said, "while our
people are in danger." Later on he said jokingly that she was the best man
of them all. "If you and Dain Waris had done what you wanted, not one of
these poor devils would be alive to-day." "Are they very bad?"
she asked, leaning over his chair. "Men act badly sometimes without being
much worse than others," he said after some hesitation.
'Tamb' Itam followed
his master to the landing-stage outside the fort. The night was clear but
without a moon, and the middle of the river was dark, while the water under
each bank reflected the light of many fires "as on a night of
Ramadan," Tamb' Itam said. War-boats drifted silently in the dark lane or,
anchored, floated motionless with a loud ripple. That night there was much
paddling in a canoe and walking at his master's heels for Tamb' Itam: up and
down the street they tramped, where the fires were burning, inland on the
outskirts of the town where small parties of men kept guard in the fields. Tuan
Jim gave his orders and was obeyed. Last of all they went to the Rajah's stockade,
which a detachment of Jim's people manned on that night. The old Rajah had fled
early in the morning with most of his women to a small house he had near a
jungle village on a tributary stream. Kassim, left behind, had attended the
council with his air of diligent activity to explain away the diplomacy of the
day before. He was considerably cold-shouldered, but managed to preserve his
smiling, quiet alertness, and professed himself highly delighted when Jim told
him sternly that he proposed to occupy the stockade on that night with his own
men. After the council broke up he was heard outside accosting this and that
deputing chief, and speaking in a loud, gratified tone of the Rajah's property
being protected in the Rajah's absence.
'About ten or so Jim's
men marched in. The stockade commanded the mouth of the creek, and Jim meant to
remain there till Brown had passed below. A small fire was lit on the flat,
grassy point outside the wall of stakes, and Tamb' Itam placed a little
folding-stool for his master. Jim told him to try and sleep. Tamb' Itam got a
mat and lay down a little way off; but he could not sleep, though he knew he
had to go on an important journey before the night was out. His master walked
to and fro before the fire with bowed head and with his hands behind his back.
His face was sad. Whenever his master approached him Tamb' Itam pretended to
sleep, not wishing his master to know he had been watched. At last his master
stood still, looking down on him as he lay, and said softly, "It is
time."
'Tamb' Itam arose
directly and made his preparations. His mission was to go down the river,
preceding Brown's boat by an hour or more, to tell Dain Waris finally and
formally that the whites were to be allowed to pass out unmolested. Jim would
not trust anybody else with that service. Before starting, Tamb' Itam, more as
a matter of form (since his position about Jim made him perfectly known), asked
for a token. "Because, Tuan," he said, "the message is
important, and these are thy very words I carry." His master first put his
hand into one pocket, then into another, and finally took off his forefinger
Stein's silver ring, which he habitually wore, and gave it to Tamb' Itam. When
Tamb' Itam left on his mission, Brown's camp on the knoll was dark but for a
single small glow shining through the branches of one of the trees the white
men had cut down.
'Early in the evening
Brown had received from Jim a folded piece of paper on which was written,
"You get the clear road. Start as soon as your boat floats on the morning
tide. Let your men be careful. The bushes on both sides of the creek and the
stockade at the mouth are full of well-armed men. You would have no chance, but
I don't believe you want bloodshed." Brown read it, tore the paper into small
pieces, and, turning to Cornelius, who had brought it, said jeeringly,
"Good-bye, my excellent friend." Cornelius had been in the fort, and
had been sneaking around Jim's house during the afternoon. Jim chose him to
carry the note because he could speak English, was known to Brown, and was not
likely to be shot by some nervous mistake of one of the men as a Malay,
approaching in the dusk, perhaps might have been.
'Cornelius didn't go
away after delivering the paper. Brown was sitting up over a tiny fire; all the
others were lying down. "I could tell you something you would like to
know," Cornelius mumbled crossly. Brown paid no attention. "You did
not kill him," went on the other, "and what do you get for it? You
might have had money from the Rajah, besides the loot of all the Bugis houses,
and now you get nothing." "You had better clear out from here,"
growled Brown, without even looking at him. But Cornelius let himself drop by
his side and began to whisper very fast, touching his elbow from time to time.
What he had to say made Brown sit up at first, with a curse. He had simply
informed him of Dain Waris's armed party down the river. At first Brown saw
himself completely sold and betrayed, but a moment's reflection convinced him
that there could be no treachery intended. He said nothing, and after a while
Cornelius remarked, in a tone of complete indifference, that there was another
way out of the river which he knew very well. "A good thing to know,
too," said Brown, pricking up his ears; and Cornelius began to talk of
what went on in town and repeated all that had been said in council, gossiping
in an even undertone at Brown's ear as you talk amongst sleeping men you do not
wish to wake. "He thinks he has made me harmless, does he?" mumbled
Brown very low.... "Yes. He is a fool. A little child. He came here and
robbed me," droned on Cornelius, "and he made all the people believe
him. But if something happened that they did not believe him any more, where
would he be? And the Bugis Dain who is waiting for you down the river there,
captain, is the very man who chased you up here when you first came."
Brown observed nonchalantly that it would be just as well to avoid him, and
with the same detached, musing air Cornelius declared himself acquainted with a
backwater broad enough to take Brown's boat past Waris's camp. "You will
have to be quiet," he said as an afterthought, "for in one place we
pass close behind his camp. Very close. They are camped ashore with their boats
hauled up." "Oh, we know how to be as quiet as mice; never
fear," said Brown. Cornelius stipulated that in case he were to pilot
Brown out, his canoe should be towed. "I'll have to get back quick,"
he explained.
'It was two hours
before the dawn when word was passed to the stockade from outlying watchers
that the white robbers were coming down to their boat. In a very short time
every armed man from one end of Patusan to the other was on the alert, yet the
banks of the river remained so silent that but for the fires burning with
sudden blurred flares the town might have been asleep as if in peacetime. A
heavy mist lay very low on the water, making a sort of illusive grey light that
showed nothing. When Brown's long-boat glided out of the creek into the river,
Jim was standing on the low point of land before the Rajah's stockade -- on the
very spot where for the first time he put his foot on Patusan shore. A shadow
loomed up, moving in the greyness, solitary, very bulky, and yet constantly
eluding the eye. A murmur of low talking came out of it. Brown at the tiller
heard Jim speak calmly: "A clear road. You had better trust to the current
while the fog lasts; but this will lift presently." "Yes, presently
we shall see clear," replied Brown.
'The thirty or forty
men standing with muskets at ready outside the stockade held their breath. The
Bugis owner of the prau, whom I saw on Stein's verandah, and who was amongst
them, told me that the boat, shaving the low point close, seemed for a moment
to grow big and hang over it like a mountain. "If you think it worth your
while to wait a day outside," called out Jim, "I'll try to send you
down something -- a bullock, some yams -- what I can." The shadow went on
moving. "Yes. Do," said a voice, blank and muffled out of the fog.
Not one of the many attentive listeners understood what the words meant; and
then Brown and his men in their boat floated away, fading spectrally without
the slightest sound.
'Thus Brown, invisible
in the mist, goes out of Patusan elbow to elbow with Cornelius in the
stern-sheets of the long-boat. "Perhaps you shall get a small
bullock," said Cornelius. "Oh yes. Bullock. Yam. You'll get it if he
said so. He always speaks the truth. He stole everything I had. I suppose you
like a small bullock better than the loot of many houses." "I would
advise you to hold your tongue, or somebody here may fling you overboard into
this damned fog," said Brown. The boat seemed to be standing still;
nothing could be seen, not even the river alongside, only the water-dust flew
and trickled, condensed, down their beards and faces. It was weird, Brown told
me. Every individual man of them felt as though he were adrift alone in a boat,
haunted by an almost imperceptible suspicion of sighing, muttering ghosts.
"Throw me out, would you? But I would know where I was," mumbled
Cornelius surlily. "I've lived many years here." "Not long
enough to see through a fog like this," Brown said, lolling back with his
arm swinging to and fro on the useless tiller. "Yes. Long enough for that,"
snarled Cornelius. "That's very useful," commented Brown. "Am I
to believe you could find that backway you spoke of blindfold, like this?"
Cornelius grunted. "Are you too tired to row?" he asked after a
silence. "No, by God!" shouted Brown suddenly. "Out with your
oars there." There was a great knocking in the fog, which after a while
settled into a regular grind of invisible sweeps against invisible thole-pins.
Otherwise nothing was changed, and but for the slight splash of a dipped blade
it was like rowing a balloon car in a cloud, said Brown. Thereafter Cornelius
did not open his lips except to ask querulously for somebody to bale out his
canoe, which was towing behind the long-boat. Gradually the fog whitened and
became luminous ahead. To the left Brown saw a darkness as though he had been
looking at the back of the deputing night. All at once a big bough covered with
leaves appeared above his head, and ends of twigs, dripping and still, curved
slenderly close alongside. Cornelius, without a word, took the tiller from his
hand.'
'I don't think they
spoke together again. The boat entered a narrow by-channel, where it was pushed
by the oar-blades set into crumbling banks, and there was a gloom as if
enormous black wings had been outspread above the mist that filled its depth to
the summits of the trees. The branches overhead showered big drops through the
gloomy fog. At a mutter from Cornelius, Brown ordered his men to load.
"I'll give you a chance to get even with them before we're done, you
dismal cripples, you," he said to his gang. "Mind you don't throw it
away -- you hounds." Low growls answered that speech. Cornelius showed
much fussy concern for the safety of his canoe.
'Meantime Tamb' Itam
had reached the end of his journey. The fog had delayed him a little, but he
had paddled steadily, keeping in touch with the south bank. By-and-by daylight
came like a glow in a ground glass globe. The shores made on each side of the
river a dark smudge, in which one could detect hints of columnar forms and
shadows of twisted branches high up. The mist was still thick on the water, but
a good watch was being kept, for as Iamb' Itam approached the camp the figures
of two men emerged out of the white vapour, and voices spoke to him
boisterously. He answered, and presently a canoe lay alongside, and he
exchanged news with the paddlers. All was well. The trouble was over. Then the
men in the canoe let go their grip on the side of his dug-out and incontinently
fell out of sight. He pursued his way till he heard voices coming to him
quietly over the water, and saw, under the now lifting, swirling mist, the glow
of many little fires burning on a sandy stretch, backed by lofty thin timber
and bushes. There again a look-out was kept, for he was challenged. He shouted
his name as the two last sweeps of his paddle ran his canoe up on the strand.
It was a big camp. Men crouched in many little knots under a subdued murmur of
early morning talk. Many thin threads of smoke curled slowly on the white mist.
Little shelters, elevated above the ground, had been built for the chiefs.
Muskets were stacked in small pyramids, and long spears were stuck singly into
the sand near the fires.
'Tamb' Itam, assuming
an air of importance, demanded to be led to Dain Waris. He found the friend of
his white lord lying on a raised couch made of bamboo, and sheltered by a sort
of shed of sticks covered with mats. Dain Waris was awake, and a bright fire
was burning before his sleeping-place, which resembled a rude shrine. The only
son of nakhoda Doramin answered his greeting kindly. Tamb' Itam began by
handing him the ring which vouched for the truth of the messenger's words. Dain
Waris, reclining on his elbow, bade him speak and tell all the news. Beginning
with the consecrated formula, "The news is good," Tamb' Itam delivered
Jim's own words. The white men, deputing with the consent of all the chiefs,
were to be allowed to pass down the river. In answer to a question or two Tamb'
Itam then reported the proceedings of the last council. Dain Waris listened
attentively to the end, toying with the ring which ultimately he slipped on the
forefinger of his right hand. After hearing all he had to say he dismissed
Tamb' Itam to have food and rest. Orders for the return in the afternoon were
given immediately. Afterwards Dain Waris lay down again, open-eyed, while his
personal attendants were preparing his food at the fire, by which Tamb' Itam
also sat talking to the men who lounged up to hear the latest intelligence from
the town. The sun was eating up the mist. A good watch was kept upon the reach
of the main stream where the boat of the whites was expected to appear every
moment.
'It was then that Brown
took his revenge upon the world which, after twenty years of contemptuous and
reckless bullying, refused him the tribute of a common robber's success. It was
an act of cold-blooded ferocity, and it consoled him on his deathbed like a
memory of an indomitable defiance. Stealthily he landed his men on the other
side of the island opposite to the Bugis camp, and led them across. After a
short but quite silent scuffle, Cornelius, who had tried to slink away at the
moment of landing, resigned himself to show the way where the undergrowth was
most sparse. Brown held both his skinny hands together behind his back in the
grip of one vast fist, and now and then impelled him forward with a fierce
push. Cornelius remained as mute as a fish, abject but faithful to his purpose,
whose accomplishment loomed before him dimly. At the edge of the patch of
forest Brown's men spread themselves out in cover and waited. The camp was
plain from end to end before their eyes, and no one looked their way. Nobody
even dreamed that the white men could have any knowledge of the narrow channel
at the back of the island. When he judged the moment come, Brown yelled,
"Let them have it," and fourteen shots rang out like one.
'Tamb' Itam told me the
surprise was so great that, except for those who fell dead or wounded, not a
soul of them moved for quite an appreciable time after the first discharge.
Then a man screamed, and after that scream a great yell of amazement and fear
went up from all the throats. A blind panic drove these men in a surging
swaying mob to and fro along the shore like a herd of cattle afraid of the
water. Some few jumped into the river then, but most of them did so only after
the last discharge. Three times Brown's men fired into the ruck, Brown, the
only one in view, cursing and yelling, "Aim low! aim low!"
'Tamb' Itam says that,
as for him, he understood at the first volley what had happened. Though
untouched he fell down and lay as if dead, but with his eyes open. At the sound
of the first shots Dain Waris, reclining on the couch, jumped up and ran out
upon the open shore, just in time to receive a bullet in his forehead at the
second discharge. Tamb' Itam saw him fling his arms wide open before he fell.
Then, he says, a great fear came upon him -- not before. The white men retired
as they had come -- unseen.
'Thus Brown balanced
his account with the evil fortune. Notice that even in this awful outbreak
there is a superiority as of a man who carries right -- the abstract thing --
within the envelope of his common desires. It was not a vulgar and treacherous
massacre; it was a lesson, a retribution -- a demonstration of some obscure and
awful attribute of our nature which, I am afraid, is not so very far under the
surface as we like to think.
'Afterwards the whites
depart unseen by Tamb' Itam, and seem to vanish from before men's eyes
altogether; and the schooner, too, vanishes after the manner of stolen goods.
But a story is told of a white long-boat picked up a month later in the Indian
Ocean by a cargo steamer. Two parched, yellow, glassy-eyed, whispering
skeletons in her recognised the authority of a third, who declared that his
name was Brown. His schooner, he reported, bound south with a cargo of Java
sugar, had sprung a bad leak and sank under his feet. He and his companions
were the survivors of a crew of six. The two died on board the steamer which
rescued them. Brown lived to be seen by me, and I can testify that he had
played his part to the last.
'It seems, however,
that in going away they had neglected to cast off Cornelius's canoe. Cornelius
himself Brown had let go at the beginning of the shooting, with a kick for a
parting benediction. Tamb' Itam, after arising from amongst the dead, saw the
Nazarene running up and down the shore amongst the corpses and the expiring
fires. He uttered little cries. Suddenly he rushed to the water, and made
frantic efforts to get one of the Bugis boats into the water. "Afterwards,
till he had seen me," related Tamb' Itam, "he stood looking at the
heavy canoe and scratching his head." "What became of him?" I
asked. Tamb' Itam, staring hard at me, made an expressive gesture with his
right arm. "Twice I struck, Tuan," he said. "When he beheld me
approaching he cast himself violently on the ground and made a great outcry,
kicking. He screeched like a frightened hen till he felt the point; then he was
still, and lay staring at me while his life went out of his eyes."
'This done, Tamb' Itam
did not tarry. He understood the importance of being the first with the awful
news at the fort. There were, of course, many survivors of Dain Waris's party;
but in the extremity of panic some had swum across the river, others had bolted
into the bush. The fact is that they did not know really who struck that blow
-- whether more white robbers were not coming, whether they had not already got
hold of the whole land. They imagined themselves to be the victims of a vast treachery,
and utterly doomed to destruction. It is said that some small parties did not
come in till three days afterwards. However, a few tried to make their way back
to Patusan at once, and one of the canoes that were patrolling the river that
morning was in sight of the camp at the very moment of the attack. It is true
that at first the men in her leaped overboard and swam to the opposite bank,
but afterwards they returned to their boat and started fearfully up-stream. Of
these Tamb' Itam had an hour's advance.'
'When Tamb' Itam,
paddling madly, came into the town-reach, the women, thronging the platforms
before the houses, were looking out for the return of Dain Waris's little fleet
of boats. The town had a festive air; here and there men, still with spears or guns
in their hands, could be seen moving or standing on the shore in groups.
Chinamen's shops had been opened early; but the marketplace was empty, and a
sentry, still posted at the corner of the fort, made out Tamb' Itam, and
shouted to those within. The gate was wide open. Tamb' Itam jumped ashore and
ran in headlong. The first person he met was the girl coming down from the
house.
'Tamb' Itam,
disordered, panting, with trembling lips and wild eyes, stood for a time before
her as if a sudden spell had been laid on him. Then he broke out very quickly:
"They have killed Dain Waris and many more." She clapped her hands,
and her first words were, "Shut the gates." Most of the fortmen had
gone back to their houses, but Tamb' Itam hurried on the few who remained for
their turn of duty within. The girl stood in the middle of the courtyard while
the others ran about. "Doramin," she cried despairingly as Tamb' Itam
passed her. Next time he went by he answered her thought rapidly, "Yes.
But we have all the powder in Patusan." She caught him by the arm, and,
pointing at the house, "Call him out," she whispered, trembling.
'Tamb' Itam ran up the
steps. His master was sleeping. "It is I, Tamb' Itam," he cried at
the door, "with tidings that cannot wait." He saw Jim turn over on
the pillow and open his eyes, and he burst out at once. "This, Tuan, is a
day of evil, an accursed day." His master raised himself on his elbow to
listen -- just as Dain Waris had done. And then Tamb' Itam began his tale,
trying to relate the story in order, calling Dain Waris Panglima, and saying:
"The Panglima then called out to the chief of his own boatmen, 'Give Tamb'
Itam something to eat' " -- when his master put his feet to the ground and
looked at him with such a discomposed face that the words remained in his
throat.
' "Speak
out," said Jim. "Is he dead?" "May you live long,"
cried Tamb' Itam. "It was a most cruel treachery. He ran out at the first
shots and fell." . . . His master walked to the window and with his fist
struck at the shutter. The room was made light; and then in a steady voice, but
speaking fast, he began to give him orders to assemble a fleet of boats for
immediate pursuit, go to this man, to the other -- send messengers; and as he
talked he sat down on the bed, stooping to lace his boots hurriedly, and
suddenly looked up. "Why do you stand here?" he asked very red-faced.
"Waste no time." Tamb' Itam did not move. "Forgive me, Tuan, but
. . . but," he began to stammer. "What?" cried his master aloud,
looking terrible, leaning forward with his hands gripping the edge of the bed.
"It is not safe for thy servant to go out amongst the people," said
Tamb' Itam, after hesitating a moment.
'Then Jim understood.
He had retreated from one world, for a small matter of an impulsive jump, and
now the other, the work of his own hands, had fallen in ruins upon his head. It
was not safe for his servant to go out amongst his own people! I believe that
in that very moment he had decided to defy the disaster in the only way it
occurred to him such a disaster could be defied; but all I know is that,
without a word, he came out of his room and sat before the long table, at the
head of which he was accustomed to regulate the affairs of his world,
proclaiming daily the truth that surely lived in his heart. The dark powers
should not rob him twice of his peace. He sat like a stone figure. Tamb' Itam,
deferential, hinted at preparations for defence. The girl he loved came in and
spoke to him, but he made a sign with his hand, and she was awed by the dumb
appeal for silence in it. She went out on the verandah and sat on the
threshold, as if to guard him with her body from dangers outside.
'What thoughts passed
through his head -- what memories? Who can tell? Everything was gone, and he
who had been once unfaithful to his trust had lost again all men's confidence.
It was then, I believe, he tried to write -- to somebody -- and gave it up.
Loneliness was closing on him. People had trusted him with their lives -- only
for that; and yet they could never, as he had said, never be made to understand
him. Those without did not hear him make a sound. Later, towards the evening,
he came to the door and called for Tamb' Itam. "Well?" he asked.
"There is much weeping. Much anger too," said Tamb' Itam. Jim looked
up at him. "You know," he murmured. "Yes, Tuan," said Tamb'
Itam. "Thy servant does know, and the gates are closed. We shall have to
fight." "Fight! What for?" he asked. "For our lives."
"I have no life," he said. Tamb' Itam heard a cry from the girl at
the door. "Who knows?" said Tamb' Itam. "By audacity and cunning
we may even escape. There is much fear in men's hearts too." He went out,
thinking vaguely of boats and of open sea, leaving Jim and the girl together.
'I haven't the heart to
set down here such glimpses as she had given me of the hour or more she passed
in there wrestling with him for the possession of her happiness. Whether he had
any hope -what he expected, what he imagined -- it is impossible to say. He was
inflexible, and with the growing loneliness of his obstinacy his spirit seemed
to rise above the ruins of his existence. She cried "Fight!" into his
ear. She could not understand. There was nothing to fight for. He was going to
prove his power in another way and conquer the fatal destiny itself. He came
out into the courtyard, and behind him, with streaming hair, wild of face,
breathless, she staggered out and leaned on the side of the doorway. "Open
the gates," he ordered. Afterwards, turning to those of his men who were inside,
he gave them leave to depart to their homes. "For how long, Tuan?"
asked one of them timidly. "For all life," he said, in a sombre tone.
'A hush had fallen upon
the town after the outburst of wailing and lamentation that had swept over the
river, like a gust of wind from the opened abode of sorrow. But rumours flew in
whispers, filling the hearts with consternation and horrible doubts. The
robbers were coming back, bringing many others with them, in a great ship, and
there would be no refuge in the land for any one. A sense of utter insecurity
as during an earthquake pervaded the minds of men, who whispered their
suspicions, looking at each other as if in the presence of some awful portent.
'The sun was sinking
towards the forests when Dain Waris's body was brought into Doramin's campong.
Four men carried it in, covered decently with a white sheet which the old
mother had sent out down to the gate to meet her son on his return. They laid
him at Doramin's feet, and the old man sat still for a long time, one hand on
each knee, looking down. The fronds of palms swayed gently, and the foliage of
fruit trees stirred above his head. Every single man of his people was there,
fully armed, when the old nakhoda at last raised his eyes. He moved them slowly
over the crowd, as if seeking for a missing face. Again his chin sank on his
breast. The whispers of many men mingled with the slight rustling of the
leaves.
'The Malay who had
brought Tamb' Itam and the girl to Samarang was there too. "Not so angry
as many," he said to me, but struck with a great awe and wonder at the
"suddenness of men's fate, which hangs over their heads like a cloud
charged with thunder." He told me that when Dain Waris's body was
uncovered at a sign of Doramin's, he whom they often called the white lord's
friend was disclosed lying unchanged with his eyelids a little open as if about
to wake. Doramin leaned forward a little more, like one looking for something
fallen on the ground. His eyes searched the body from its feet to its head, for
the wound maybe. It was in the forehead and small; and there was no word spoken
while one of the by-standers, stooping, took off the silver ring from the cold
stiff hand. In silence he held it up before Doramin. A murmur of dismay and
horror ran through the crowd at the sight of that familiar token. The old
nakhoda stared at it, and suddenly let out one great fierce cry, deep from the
chest, a roar of pain and fury, as mighty as the bellow of a wounded bull,
bringing great fear into men's hearts, by the magnitude of his anger and his
sorrow that could be plainly discerned without words. There was a great
stillness afterwards for a space, while the body was being borne aside by four
men. They laid it down under a tree, and on the instant, with one long shriek,
all the women of the household began to wail together; they mourned with shrill
cries; the sun was setting, and in the intervals of screamed lamentations the
high sing-song voices of two old men intoning the Koran chanted alone.
'About this time Jim,
leaning on a gun-carriage, looked at the river, and turned his back on the
house; and the girl, in the doorway, panting as if she had run herself to a
standstill, was looking at him across the yard. Tamb' Itam stood not far from
his master, waiting patiently for what might happen. All at once Jim, who
seemed to be lost in quiet thought, turned to him and said, "Time to
finish this."
' "Tuan?"
said Tamb' Itam, advancing with alacrity. He did not know what his master
meant, but as soon as Jim made a movement the girl started too and walked down
into the open space. It seems that no one else of the people of the house was
in sight. She tottered slightly, and about half-way down called out to Jim, who
had apparently resumed his peaceful contemplation of the river. He turned
round, setting his back against the gun. "Will you fight?" she cried.
"There is nothing to fight for," he said; "nothing is
lost." Saying this he made a step towards her. "Will you fly?"
she cried again. "There is no escape," he said, stopping short, and
she stood still also, silent, devouring him with her eyes. "And you shall
go?" she said slowly. He bent his head. "Ah!" she exclaimed,
peering at him as it were, "you are mad or false. Do you remember the
night I prayed you to leave me, and you said that you could not? That it was
impossible! Impossible! Do you remember you said you would never leave me? Why?
I asked you for no promise. You promised unasked -- remember."
"Enough, poor girl," he said. "I should not be worth having."
'Tamb' Itam said that
while they were talking she would laugh loud and senselessly like one under the
visitation of God. His master put his hands to his head. He was fully dressed
as for every day, but without a hat. She stopped laughing suddenly. "For
the last time," she cried menacingly, "will you defend
yourself?" "Nothing can touch me," he said in a last flicker of
superb egoism. Tamb' Itam saw her lean forward where she stood, open her arms,
and run at him swiftly. She flung herself upon his breast and clasped him round
the neck.
' "Ah! but I shall
hold thee thus," she cried.... "Thou art mine!"
'She sobbed on his
shoulder. The sky over Patusan was blood- red, immense, streaming like an open
vein. An enormous sun nestled crimson amongst the tree-tops, and the forest below
had a black and forbidding face.
'Tamb' Itam tells me
that on that evening the aspect of the heavens was angry and frightful. I may
well believe it, for I know that on that very day a cyclone passed within sixty
miles of the coast, though there was hardly more than a languid stir of air in
the place.
'Suddenly Tamb' Itam
saw Jim catch her arms, trying to unclasp her hands. She hung on them with her
head fallen back; her hair touched the ground. "Come here!" his
master called, and Tamb' Itam helped to ease her down. It was difficult to
separate her fingers. Jim, bending over her, looked earnestly upon her face,
and all at once ran to the landing-stage. Tamb' Itam followed him, but turning
his head, he saw that she had struggled up to her feet. She ran after them a
few steps, then fell down heavily on her knees. "Tuan! Tuan!" called
Tamb' Itam, "look back;" but Jim was already in a canoe, standing up
paddle in hand. He did not look back. Tamb' Itam had just time to scramble in
after him when the canoe floated clear. The girl was then on her knees, with
clasped hands, at the water-gate. She remained thus for a time in a
supplicating attitude before she sprang up. "You are false!" she
screamed out after Jim. "Forgive me," he cried. "Never!
Never!" she called back.
'Tamb' Itam took the
paddle from Jim's hands, it being unseemly that he should sit while his lord
paddled. When they reached the other shore his master forbade him to come any
farther; but Tamb' Itam did follow him at a distance, walking up the slope to
Doramin's campong.
'It was beginning to
grow dark. Torches twinkled here and there. Those they met seemed awestruck,
and stood aside hastily to let Jim pass. The wailing of women came from above.
The courtyard was full of armed Bugis with their followers, and of Patusan
people.
'I do not know what
this gathering really meant. Were these preparations for war, or for vengeance,
or to repulse a threatened invasion? Many days elapsed before the people had
ceased to look out, quaking, for the return of the white men with long beards
and in rags, whose exact relation to their own white man they could never
understand. Even for those simple minds poor Jim remains under a cloud.
'Doramin, alone!
immense and desolate, sat in his arm-chair with the pair of flintlock pistols
on his knees, faced by a armed throng. When Jim appeared, at somebody's
exclamation, all the heads turned round together, and then the mass opened
right and left, and he walked up a lane of averted glances. Whispers followed
him; murmurs: "He has worked all the evil." "He hath a
charm." . . . He heard them -- perhaps!
'When he came up into
the light of torches the wailing of the women ceased suddenly. Doramin did not
lift his head, and Jim stood silent before him for a time. Then he looked to
the left, and moved in that direction with measured steps. Dain Waris's mother
crouched at the head of the body, and the grey dishevelled hair concealed her
face. Jim came up slowly, looked at his dead friend, lifting the sheet, than
dropped it without a word. Slowly he walked back.
' "He came! He
came!" was running from lip to lip, making a murmur to which he moved.
"He hath taken it upon his own head," a voice said aloud. He heard
this and turned to the crowd. "Yes. Upon my head." A few people
recoiled. Jim waited awhile before Doramin, and then said gently, "I am
come in sorrow." He waited again. "I am come ready and unarmed,"
he repeated.
'The unwieldy old man,
lowering his big forehead like an ox under a yoke, made an effort to rise, clutching
at the flintlock pistols on his knees. From his throat came gurgling, choking,
inhuman sounds, and his two attendants helped him from behind. People remarked
that the ring which he had dropped on his lap fell and rolled against the foot
of the white man, and that poor Jim glanced down at the talisman that had
opened for him the door of fame, love, and success within the wall of forests
fringed with white foam, within the coast that under the western sun looks like
the very stronghold of the night. Doramin, struggling to keep his feet, made
with his two supporters a swaying, tottering group; his little eyes stared with
an expression of mad pain, of rage, with a ferocious glitter, which the
bystanders noticed; and then, while Jim stood stiffened and with bared head in
the light of torches, looking him straight in the face, he clung heavily with
his left arm round the neck of a bowed youth, and lifting deliberately his
right, shot his son's friend through the chest.
'The crowd, which had
fallen apart behind Jim as soon as Doramin had raised his hand, rushed
tumultuously forward after the shot. They say that the white man sent right and
left at all those faces a proud and unflinching glance. Then with his hand over
his lips he fell forward, dead.
'And that's the end. He
passes away under a cloud, inscrutable at heart, forgotten, unforgiven, and
excessively romantic. Not in the wildest days of his boyish visions could he
have seen the alluring shape of such an extraordinary success! For it may very
well be that in the short moment of his last proud and unflinching glance, he
had beheld the face of that opportunity which, like an Eastern bride, had come
veiled to his side.
'But we can see him, an
obscure conqueror of fame, tearing himself out of the arms of a jealous love at
the sign, at the call of his exalted egoism. He goes away from a living woman
to celebrate his pitiless wedding with a shadowy ideal of conduct. Is he
satisfied -- quite, now, I wonder? We ought to know. He is one of us -- and
have I not stood up once, like an evoked ghost, to answer for his eternal
constancy? Was I so very wrong after all? Now he is no more, there are days
when the reality of his existence comes to me with an immense, with an
overwhelming force; and yet upon my honour there are moments too when he passes
from my eyes like a disembodied spirit astray amongst the passions of this
earth, ready to surrender himself faithfully to the claim of his own world of
shades.
'Who knows? He is gone,
inscrutable at heart, and the poor girl is leading a sort of soundless, inert
life in Stein's house. Stein has aged greatly of late. He feels it himself, and
says often that he is "preparing to leave all this; preparing to leave . .
." while he waves his hand sadly at his butterflies.'
September 1899 -- July 1900.