YOUTH
A
NARRATIVE
By Joseph
Conrad
”... But the Dwarf answered: No;
something human is dearer to me than the wealth of all the world.” GRIMM’S
TALES.
YOUTH
This could have occurred nowhere
but in England, where men and sea interpenetrate, so to speak—the sea entering
into the life of most men, and the men knowing something or everything about
the sea, in the way of amusement, of travel, or of bread-winning.
We were sitting round a mahogany
table that reflected the bottle, the claret-glasses, and our faces as we leaned
on our elbows. There was a director of companies, an accountant, a lawyer,
Marlow, and myself. The director had been a Conway boy, the accountant had
served four years at sea, the lawyer—a fine crusted Tory, High Churchman, the
best of old fellows, the soul of honour—had been chief officer in the P. &
O. service in the good old days when mail-boats were square-rigged at least on
two masts, and used to come down the China Sea before a fair monsoon with
stun’-sails set alow and aloft. We all began life in the merchant service.
Between the five of us there was the strong bond of the sea, and also the
fellowship of the craft, which no amount of enthusiasm for yachting, cruising,
and so on can give, since one is only the amusement of life and the other is
life itself.
Marlow (at least I think that is
how he spelt his name) told the story, or rather the chronicle, of a voyage:
“Yes, I have seen a little of the
Eastern seas; but what I remember best is my first voyage there. You fellows
know there are those voyages that seem ordered for the illustration of life,
that might stand for a symbol of existence. You fight, work, sweat, nearly kill
yourself, sometimes do kill yourself, trying to accomplish something—and you
can’t. Not from any fault of yours. You simply can do nothing, neither great
nor little—not a thing in the world—not even marry an old maid, or get a
wretched 600-ton cargo of coal to its port of destination.
“It was altogether a memorable
affair. It was my first voyage to the East, and my first voyage as second mate;
it was also my skipper’s first command. You’ll admit it was time. He was sixty
if a day; a little man, with a broad, not very straight back, with bowed
shoulders and one leg more bandy than the other, he had that queer
twisted-about appearance you see so often in men who work in the fields. He had
a nut-cracker face—chin and nose trying to come together over a sunken
mouth—and it was framed in iron-grey fluffy hair, that looked like a chin strap
of cotton-wool sprinkled with coal-dust. And he had blue eyes in that old face
of his, which were amazingly like a boy’s, with that candid expression some
quite common men preserve to the end of their days by a rare internal gift of
simplicity of heart and rectitude of soul. What induced him to accept me was a
wonder. I had come out of a crack Australian clipper, where I had been third
officer, and he seemed to have a prejudice against crack clippers as
aristocratic and high-toned. He said to me, ‘You know, in this ship you will
have to work.’ I said I had to work in every ship I had ever been in. ‘Ah, but
this is different, and you gentlemen out of them big ships;... but there! I
dare say you will do. Join to-morrow.’
“I joined to-morrow. It was
twenty-two years ago; and I was just twenty. How time passes! It was one of the
happiest days of my life. Fancy! Second mate for the first time—a really
responsible officer! I wouldn’t have thrown up my new billet for a fortune. The
mate looked me over carefully. He was also an old chap, but of another stamp.
He had a Roman nose, a snow-white, long beard, and his name was Mahon, but he
insisted that it should be pronounced Mann. He was well connected; yet there
was something wrong with his luck, and he had never got on.
“As to the captain, he had been
for years in coasters, then in the Mediterranean, and last in the West Indian
trade. He had never been round the Capes. He could just write a kind of sketchy
hand, and didn’t care for writing at all. Both were thorough good seamen of
course, and between those two old chaps I felt like a small boy between two
grandfathers.
“The ship also was old. Her name
was the Judea. Queer name, isn’t it? She belonged to a man Wilmer, Wilcox—some
name like that; but he has been bankrupt and dead these twenty years or more,
and his name don’t matter. She had been laid up in Shadwell basin for ever so
long. You may imagine her state. She was all rust, dust, grime—soot aloft, dirt
on deck. To me it was like coming out of a palace into a ruined cottage. She
was about 400 tons, had a primitive windlass, wooden latches to the doors, not
a bit of brass about her, and a big square stern. There was on it, below her
name in big letters, a lot of scroll work, with the gilt off, and some sort of
a coat of arms, with the motto ‘Do or Die’ underneath. I remember it took my
fancy immensely. There was a touch of romance in it, something that made me
love the old thing—something that appealed to my youth!
“We left London in ballast—sand
ballast—to load a cargo of coal in a northern port for Bankok. Bankok! I
thrilled. I had been six years at sea, but had only seen Melbourne and Sydney,
very good places, charming places in their way—but Bankok!
“We worked out of the Thames
under canvas, with a North Sea pilot on board. His name was Jermyn, and he
dodged all day long about the galley drying his handkerchief before the stove.
Apparently he never slept. He was a dismal man, with a perpetual tear sparkling
at the end of his nose, who either had been in trouble, or was in trouble, or
expected to be in trouble—couldn’t be happy unless something went wrong. He
mistrusted my youth, my common-sense, and my seamanship, and made a point of
showing it in a hundred little ways. I dare say he was right. It seems to me I
knew very little then, and I know not much more now; but I cherish a hate for
that Jermyn to this day.
“We were a week working up as far
as Yarmouth Roads, and then we got into a gale—the famous October gale of
twenty-two years ago. It was wind, lightning, sleet, snow, and a terrific sea.
We were flying light, and you may imagine how bad it was when I tell you we had
smashed bulwarks and a flooded deck. On the second night she shifted her ballast
into the lee bow, and by that time we had been blown off somewhere on the
Dogger Bank. There was nothing for it but go below with shovels and try to
right her, and there we were in that vast hold, gloomy like a cavern, the
tallow dips stuck and flickering on the beams, the gale howling above, the ship
tossing about like mad on her side; there we all were, Jermyn, the captain,
everyone, hardly able to keep our feet, engaged on that gravedigger’s work, and
trying to toss shovelfuls of wet sand up to windward. At every tumble of the
ship you could see vaguely in the dim light men falling down with a great
flourish of shovels. One of the ship’s boys (we had two), impressed by the
weirdness of the scene, wept as if his heart would break. We could hear him
blubbering somewhere in the shadows.
“On the third day the gale died
out, and by-and-by a north-country tug picked us up. We took sixteen days in
all to get from London to the Tyne! When we got into dock we had lost our turn
for loading, and they hauled us off to a tier where we remained for a month.
Mrs. Beard (the captain’s name was Beard) came from Colchester to see the old
man. She lived on board. The crew of runners had left, and there remained only
the officers, one boy, and the steward, a mulatto who answered to the name of
Abraham. Mrs. Beard was an old woman, with a face all wrinkled and ruddy like a
winter apple, and the figure of a young girl. She caught sight of me once,
sewing on a button, and insisted on having my shirts to repair. This was something
different from the captains’ wives I had known on board crack clippers. When I
brought her the shirts, she said: ‘And the socks? They want mending, I am sure,
and John’s—Captain Beard’s—things are all in order now. I would be glad of
something to do.’ Bless the old woman! She overhauled my outfit for me, and
meantime I read for the first time Sartor Resartus and Burnaby’s Ride to Khiva.
I didn’t understand much of the first then; but I remember I preferred the
soldier to the philosopher at the time; a preference which life has only
confirmed. One was a man, and the other was either more—or less. However, they
are both dead, and Mrs. Beard is dead, and youth, strength, genius, thoughts,
achievements, simple hearts—all dies .... No matter.
“They loaded us at last. We
shipped a crew. Eight able seamen and two boys. We hauled off one evening to
the buoys at the dock-gates, ready to go out, and with a fair prospect of
beginning the voyage next day. Mrs. Beard was to start for home by a late
train. When the ship was fast we went to tea. We sat rather silent through the
meal—Mahon, the old couple, and I. I finished first, and slipped away for a
smoke, my cabin being in a deck-house just against the poop. It was high water,
blowing fresh with a drizzle; the double dock-gates were opened, and the steam
colliers were going in and out in the darkness with their lights burning
bright, a great plashing of propellers, rattling of winches, and a lot of
hailing on the pier-heads. I watched the procession of head-lights gliding high
and of green lights gliding low in the night, when suddenly a red gleam flashed
at me, vanished, came into view again, and remained. The fore-end of a steamer
loomed up close. I shouted down the cabin, ‘Come up, quick!’ and then heard a startled
voice saying afar in the dark, ‘Stop her, sir.’ A bell jingled. Another voice
cried warningly, ‘We are going right into that barque, sir.’ The answer to this
was a gruff ‘All right,’ and the next thing was a heavy crash as the steamer
struck a glancing blow with the bluff of her bow about our fore-rigging. There
was a moment of confusion, yelling, and running about. Steam roared. Then
somebody was heard saying, ‘All clear, sir.’... ‘Are you all right?’ asked the
gruff voice. I had jumped forward to see the damage, and hailed back, ‘I think
so.’ ‘Easy astern,’ said the gruff voice. A bell jingled. ‘What steamer is
that?’ screamed Mahon. By that time she was no more to us than a bulky shadow
maneuvering a little way off. They shouted at us some name—a woman’s name,
Miranda or Melissa—or some such thing. ‘This means another month in this
beastly hole,’ said Mahon to me, as we peered with lamps about the splintered
bulwarks and broken braces. ‘But where’s the captain?’
“We had not heard or seen
anything of him all that time. We went aft to look. A doleful voice arose
hailing somewhere in the middle of the dock, ‘Judea ahoy!’... How the devil did
he get there?... ‘Hallo!’ we shouted. ‘I am adrift in our boat without oars,’
he cried. A belated waterman offered his services, and Mahon struck a bargain
with him for half-a-crown to tow our skipper alongside; but it was Mrs. Beard
that came up the ladder first. They had been floating about the dock in that
mizzly cold rain for nearly an hour. I was never so surprised in my life.
“It appears that when he heard my
shout ‘Come up,’ he understood at once what was the matter, caught up his wife,
ran on deck, and across, and down into our boat, which was fast to the ladder.
Not bad for a sixty-year-old. Just imagine that old fellow saving heroically in
his arms that old woman—the woman of his life. He set her down on a thwart, and
was ready to climb back on board when the painter came adrift somehow, and away
they went together. Of course in the confusion we did not hear him shouting. He
looked abashed. She said cheerfully, ‘I suppose it does not matter my losing
the train now?’ ‘No, Jenny—you go below and get warm,’ he growled. Then to us:
‘A sailor has no business with a wife—I say. There I was, out of the ship.
Well, no harm done this time. Let’s go and look at what that fool of a steamer
smashed.’
“It wasn’t much, but it delayed
us three weeks. At the end of that time, the captain being engaged with his
agents, I carried Mrs. Beard’s bag to the railway-station and put her all comfy
into a third-class carriage. She lowered the window to say, ‘You are a good
young man. If you see John—Captain Beard—without his muffler at night, just
remind him from me to keep his throat well wrapped up.’ ‘Certainly, Mrs.
Beard,’ I said. ‘You are a good young man; I noticed how attentive you are to
John—to Captain—’ The train pulled out suddenly; I took my cap off to the old
woman: I never saw her again... Pass the bottle.
“We went to sea next day. When we
made that start for Bankok we had been already three months out of London. We
had expected to be a fortnight or so—at the outside.
“It was January, and the weather
was beautiful—the beautiful sunny winter weather that has more charm than in
the summer-time, because it is unexpected, and crisp, and you know it won’t, it
can’t, last long. It’s like a windfall, like a godsend, like an unexpected
piece of luck.
“It lasted all down the North
Sea, all down Channel; and it lasted till we were three hundred miles or so to
the westward of the Lizards: then the wind went round to the sou’west and began
to pipe up. In two days it blew a gale. The Judea, hove to, wallowed on the
Atlantic like an old candlebox. It blew day after day: it blew with spite,
without interval, without mercy, without rest. The world was nothing but an
immensity of great foaming waves rushing at us, under a sky low enough to touch
with the hand and dirty like a smoked ceiling. In the stormy space surrounding
us there was as much flying spray as air. Day after day and night after night
there was nothing round the ship but the howl of the wind, the tumult of the
sea, the noise of water pouring over her deck. There was no rest for her and no
rest for us. She tossed, she pitched, she stood on her head, she sat on her
tail, she rolled, she groaned, and we had to hold on while on deck and cling to
our bunks when below, in a constant effort of body and worry of mind.
“One night Mahon spoke through
the small window of my berth. It opened right into my very bed, and I was lying
there sleepless, in my boots, feeling as though I had not slept for years, and
could not if I tried. He said excitedly—
“‘You got the sounding-rod in
here, Marlow? I can’t get the pumps to suck. By God! it’s no child’s play.’
“I gave him the sounding-rod and
lay down again, trying to think of various things—but I thought only of the
pumps. When I came on deck they were still at it, and my watch relieved at the
pumps. By the light of the lantern brought on deck to examine the sounding-rod
I caught a glimpse of their weary, serious faces. We pumped all the four hours.
We pumped all night, all day, all the week,—watch and watch. She was working
herself loose, and leaked badly—not enough to drown us at once, but enough to
kill us with the work at the pumps. And while we pumped the ship was going from
us piecemeal: the bulwarks went, the stanchions were torn out, the ventilators
smashed, the cabin-door burst in. There was not a dry spot in the ship. She was
being gutted bit by bit. The long-boat changed, as if by magic, into matchwood where
she stood in her gripes. I had lashed her myself, and was rather proud of my
handiwork, which had withstood so long the malice of the sea. And we pumped.
And there was no break in the weather. The sea was white like a sheet of foam,
like a caldron of boiling milk; there was not a break in the clouds, no—not the
size of a man’s hand—no, not for so much as ten seconds. There was for us no
sky, there were for us no stars, no sun, no universe—nothing but angry clouds
and an infuriated sea. We pumped watch and watch, for dear life; and it seemed
to last for months, for years, for all eternity, as though we had been dead and
gone to a hell for sailors. We forgot the day of the week, the name of the
month, what year it was, and whether we had ever been ashore. The sails blew
away, she lay broadside on under a weather-cloth, the ocean poured over her,
and we did not care. We turned those handles, and had the eyes of idiots. As
soon as we had crawled on deck I used to take a round turn with a rope about
the men, the pumps, and the mainmast, and we turned, we turned incessantly,
with the water to our waists, to our necks, over our heads. It was all one. We
had forgotten how it felt to be dry.
“And there was somewhere in me
the thought: By Jove! this is the deuce of an adventure—something you read
about; and it is my first voyage as second mate—and I am only twenty—and here I
am lasting it out as well as any of these men, and keeping my chaps up to the
mark. I was pleased. I would not have given up the experience for worlds. I had
moments of exultation. Whenever the old dismantled craft pitched heavily with
her counter high in the air, she seemed to me to throw up, like an appeal, like
a defiance, like a cry to the clouds without mercy, the words written on her stern:
‘Judea, London. Do or Die.’
“O youth! The strength of it, the
faith of it, the imagination of it! To me she was not an old rattle-trap
carting about the world a lot of coal for a freight—to me she was the
endeavour, the test, the trial of life. I think of her with pleasure, with
affection, with regret—as you would think of someone dead you have loved. I
shall never forget her.... Pass the bottle.
“One night when tied to the mast,
as I explained, we were pumping on, deafened with the wind, and without spirit
enough in us to wish ourselves dead, a heavy sea crashed aboard and swept clean
over us. As soon as I got my breath I shouted, as in duty bound, ‘Keep on,
boys!’ when suddenly I felt something hard floating on deck strike the calf of
my leg. I made a grab at it and missed. It was so dark we could not see each
other’s faces within a foot—you understand.
“After that thump the ship kept
quiet for a while, and the thing, whatever it was, struck my leg again. This
time I caught it—and it was a saucepan. At first, being stupid with fatigue and
thinking of nothing but the pumps, I did not understand what I had in my hand.
Suddenly it dawned upon me, and I shouted, ‘Boys, the house on deck is gone.
Leave this, and let’s look for the cook.’
“There was a deck-house forward,
which contained the galley, the cook’s berth, and the quarters of the crew. As
we had expected for days to see it swept away, the hands had been ordered to
sleep in the cabin—the only safe place in the ship. The steward, Abraham,
however, persisted in clinging to his berth, stupidly, like a mule—from sheer
fright I believe, like an animal that won’t leave a stable falling in an
earthquake. So we went to look for him. It was chancing death, since once out
of our lashings we were as exposed as if on a raft. But we went. The house was
shattered as if a shell had exploded inside. Most of it had gone
overboard—stove, men’s quarters, and their property, all was gone; but two
posts, holding a portion of the bulkhead to which Abraham’s bunk was attached,
remained as if by a miracle. We groped in the ruins and came upon this, and
there he was, sitting in his bunk, surrounded by foam and wreckage, jabbering
cheerfully to himself. He was out of his mind; completely and for ever mad,
with this sudden shock coming upon the fag-end of his endurance. We snatched
him up, lugged him aft, and pitched him head-first down the cabin companion.
You understand there was no time to carry him down with infinite precautions
and wait to see how he got on. Those below would pick him up at the bottom of
the stairs all right. We were in a hurry to go back to the pumps. That business
could not wait. A bad leak is an inhuman thing.
“One would think that the sole
purpose of that fiendish gale had been to make a lunatic of that poor devil of
a mulatto. It eased before morning, and next day the sky cleared, and as the
sea went down the leak took up. When it came to bending a fresh set of sails
the crew demanded to put back—and really there was nothing else to do. Boats
gone, decks swept clean, cabin gutted, men without a stitch but what they stood
in, stores spoiled, ship strained. We put her head for home, and—would you
believe it? The wind came east right in our teeth. It blew fresh, it blew
continuously. We had to beat up every inch of the way, but she did not leak so
badly, the water keeping comparatively smooth. Two hours’ pumping in every four
is no joke—but it kept her afloat as far as Falmouth.
“The good people there live on
casualties of the sea, and no doubt were glad to see us. A hungry crowd of
shipwrights sharpened their chisels at the sight of that carcass of a ship.
And, by Jove! they had pretty pickings off us before they were done. I fancy
the owner was already in a tight place. There were delays. Then it was decided
to take part of the cargo out and calk her topsides. This was done, the repairs
finished, cargo re-shipped; a new crew came on board, and we went out—for
Bankok. At the end of a week we were back again. The crew said they weren’t
going to Bankok—a hundred and fifty days’ passage—in a something hooker that
wanted pumping eight hours out of the twenty-four; and the nautical papers
inserted again the little paragraph: ‘ Judea. Barque. Tyne to Bankok; coals;
put back to Falmouth leaky and with crew refusing duty.’
“There were more delays—more
tinkering. The owner came down for a day, and said she was as right as a little
fiddle. Poor old Captain Beard looked like the ghost of a Geordie
skipper—through the worry and humiliation of it. Remember he was sixty, and it was
his first command. Mahon said it was a foolish business, and would end badly. I
loved the ship more than ever, and wanted awfully to get to Bankok. To Bankok!
Magic name, blessed name. Mesopotamia wasn’t a patch on it. Remember I was
twenty, and it was my first second mate’s billet, and the East was waiting for
me.
“We went out and anchored in the
outer roads with a fresh crew—the third. She leaked worse than ever. It was as
if those confounded shipwrights had actually made a hole in her. This time we
did not even go outside. The crew simply refused to man the windlass.
“They towed us back to the inner
harbour, and we became a fixture, a feature, an institution of the place.
People pointed us out to visitors as ‘That ‘ere bark that’s going to Bankok—has
been here six months—put back three times.’ On holidays the small boys pulling
about in boats would hail, ‘Judea, ahoy!’ and if a head showed above the rail
shouted, ‘Where you bound to?—Bankok?’ and jeered. We were only three on board.
The poor old skipper mooned in the cabin. Mahon undertook the cooking, and
unexpectedly developed all a Frenchman’s genius for preparing nice little
messes. I looked languidly after the rigging. We became citizens of Falmouth.
Every shopkeeper knew us. At the barber’s or tobacconist’s they asked
familiarly, ‘Do you think you will ever get to Bankok?’ Meantime the owner, the
underwriters, and the charterers squabbled amongst themselves in London, and
our pay went on.... Pass the bottle.
“It was horrid. Morally it was
worse than pumping for life. It seemed as though we had been forgotten by the
world, belonged to nobody, would get nowhere; it seemed that, as if bewitched,
we would have to live for ever and ever in that inner harbour, a derision and a
by-word to generations of long-shore loafers and dishonest boatmen. I obtained
three months’ pay and a five days’ leave, and made a rush for London. It took
me a day to get there and pretty well another to come back—but three months’
pay went all the same. I don’t know what I did with it. I went to a music-hall,
I believe, lunched, dined, and supped in a swell place in Regent Street, and
was back to time, with nothing but a complete set of Byron’s works and a new
railway rug to show for three months’ work. The boatman who pulled me off to
the ship said: ‘Hallo! I thought you had left the old thing. She will never get
to Bankok.’ ‘That’s all you know about it,’ I said scornfully—but I didn’t like
that prophecy at all.
“Suddenly a man, some kind of
agent to somebody, appeared with full powers. He had grog-blossoms all over his
face, an indomitable energy, and was a jolly soul. We leaped into life again. A
hulk came alongside, took our cargo, and then we went into dry dock to get our
copper stripped. No wonder she leaked. The poor thing, strained beyond
endurance by the gale, had, as if in disgust, spat out all the oakum of her
lower seams. She was recalked, new coppered, and made as tight as a bottle. We
went back to the hulk and re-shipped our cargo.
“Then on a fine moonlight night,
all the rats left the ship.
“We had been infested with them.
They had destroyed our sails, consumed more stores than the crew, affably
shared our beds and our dangers, and now, when the ship was made seaworthy,
concluded to clear out. I called Mahon to enjoy the spectacle. Rat after rat
appeared on our rail, took a last look over his shoulder, and leaped with a
hollow thud into the empty hulk. We tried to count them, but soon lost the
tale. Mahon said: ‘Well, well! don’t talk to me about the intelligence of rats.
They ought to have left before, when we had that narrow squeak from foundering.
There you have the proof how silly is the superstition about them. They leave a
good ship for an old rotten hulk, where there is nothing to eat, too, the
fools!... I don’t believe they know what is safe or what is good for them, any
more than you or I.’
“And after some more talk we
agreed that the wisdom of rats had been grossly overrated, being in fact no
greater than that of men.
“The story of the ship was known,
by this, all up the Channel from Land’s End to the Forelands, and we could get
no crew on the south coast. They sent us one all complete from Liverpool, and
we left once more—for Bankok.
“We had fair breezes, smooth
water right into the tropics, and the old Judea lumbered along in the sunshine.
When she went eight knots everything cracked aloft, and we tied our caps to our
heads; but mostly she strolled on at the rate of three miles an hour. What
could you expect? She was tired—that old ship. Her youth was where mine
is—where yours is—you fellows who listen to this yarn; and what friend would
throw your years and your weariness in your face? We didn’t grumble at her. To
us aft, at least, it seemed as though we had been born in her, reared in her,
had lived in her for ages, had never known any other ship. I would just as soon
have abused the old village church at home for not being a cathedral.
“And for me there was also my
youth to make me patient. There was all the East before me, and all life, and
the thought that I had been tried in that ship and had come out pretty well.
And I thought of men of old who, centuries ago, went that road in ships that
sailed no better, to the land of palms, and spices, and yellow sands, and of
brown nations ruled by kings more cruel than Nero the Roman and more splendid
than Solomon the Jew. The old bark lumbered on, heavy with her age and the
burden of her cargo, while I lived the life of youth in ignorance and hope. She
lumbered on through an interminable procession of days; and the fresh gilding
flashed back at the setting sun, seemed to cry out over the darkening sea the
words painted on her stern, ‘Judea, London. Do or Die.’
“Then we entered the Indian Ocean
and steered northerly for Java Head. The winds were light. Weeks slipped by.
She crawled on, do or die, and people at home began to think of posting us as
overdue.
“One Saturday evening, I being
off duty, the men asked me to give them an extra bucket of water or so—for
washing clothes. As I did not wish to screw on the fresh-water pump so late, I
went forward whistling, and with a key in my hand to unlock the forepeak
scuttle, intending to serve the water out of a spare tank we kept there.
“The smell down below was as
unexpected as it was frightful. One would have thought hundreds of
paraffin-lamps had been flaring and smoking in that hole for days. I was glad
to get out. The man with me coughed and said, ‘Funny smell, sir.’ I answered
negligently, ‘It’s good for the health, they say,’ and walked aft.
“The first thing I did was to put
my head down the square of the midship ventilator. As I lifted the lid a
visible breath, something like a thin fog, a puff of faint haze, rose from the
opening. The ascending air was hot, and had a heavy, sooty, paraffiny smell. I
gave one sniff, and put down the lid gently. It was no use choking myself. The
cargo was on fire.
“Next day she began to smoke in
earnest. You see it was to be expected, for though the coal was of a safe kind,
that cargo had been so handled, so broken up with handling, that it looked more
like smithy coal than anything else. Then it had been wetted—more than once. It
rained all the time we were taking it back from the hulk, and now with this
long passage it got heated, and there was another case of spontaneous
combustion.
“The captain called us into the
cabin. He had a chart spread on the table, and looked unhappy. He said, ‘The
coast of West Australia is near, but I mean to proceed to our destination. It
is the hurricane month too; but we will just keep her head for Bankok, and
fight the fire. No more putting back anywhere, if we all get roasted. We will
try first to stifle this ‘ere damned combustion by want of air.’
“We tried. We battened down
everything, and still she smoked. The smoke kept coming out through
imperceptible crevices; it forced itself through bulkheads and covers; it oozed
here and there and everywhere in slender threads, in an invisible film, in an
incomprehensible manner. It made its way into the cabin, into the forecastle; it
poisoned the sheltered places on the deck, it could be sniffed as high as the
main-yard. It was clear that if the smoke came out the air came in. This was
disheartening. This combustion refused to be stifled.
“We resolved to try water, and
took the hatches off. Enormous volumes of smoke, whitish, yellowish, thick,
greasy, misty, choking, ascended as high as the trucks. All hands cleared out
aft. Then the poisonous cloud blew away, and we went back to work in a smoke
that was no thicker now than that of an ordinary factory chimney.
“We rigged the force pump, got
the hose along, and by-and-by it burst. Well, it was as old as the ship—a
prehistoric hose, and past repair. Then we pumped with the feeble head-pump,
drew water with buckets, and in this way managed in time to pour lots of Indian
Ocean into the main hatch. The bright stream flashed in sunshine, fell into a
layer of white crawling smoke, and vanished on the black surface of coal. Steam
ascended mingling with the smoke. We poured salt water as into a barrel without
a bottom. It was our fate to pump in that ship, to pump out of her, to pump
into her; and after keeping water out of her to save ourselves from being
drowned, we frantically poured water into her to save ourselves from being
burnt.
“And she crawled on, do or die,
in the serene weather. The sky was a miracle of purity, a miracle of azure. The
sea was polished, was blue, was pellucid, was sparkling like a precious stone,
extending on all sides, all round to the horizon—as if the whole terrestrial
globe had been one jewel, one colossal sapphire, a single gem fashioned into a
planet. And on the luster of the great calm waters the Judea glided
imperceptibly, enveloped in languid and unclean vapours, in a lazy cloud that
drifted to leeward, light and slow: a pestiferous cloud defiling the splendour
of sea and sky.
“All this time of course we saw
no fire. The cargo smoldered at the bottom somewhere. Once Mahon, as we were
working side by side, said to me with a queer smile: ‘Now, if she only would spring
a tidy leak—like that time when we first left the Channel—it would put a
stopper on this fire. Wouldn’t it?’ I remarked irrelevantly, ‘Do you remember
the rats?’
“We fought the fire and sailed
the ship too as carefully as though nothing had been the matter. The steward
cooked and attended on us. Of the other twelve men, eight worked while four
rested. Everyone took his turn, captain included. There was equality, and if
not exactly fraternity, then a deal of good feeling. Sometimes a man, as he
dashed a bucketful of water down the hatchway, would yell out, ‘Hurrah for
Bankok!’ and the rest laughed. But generally we were taciturn and serious—and
thirsty. Oh! how thirsty! And we had to be careful with the water. Strict
allowance. The ship smoked, the sun blazed.... Pass the bottle.
“We tried everything. We even
made an attempt to dig down to the fire. No good, of course. No man could
remain more than a minute below. Mahon, who went first, fainted there, and the
man who went to fetch him out did likewise. We lugged them out on deck. Then I
leaped down to show how easily it could be done. They had learned wisdom by
that time, and contented themselves by fishing for me with a chain-hook tied to
a broom-handle, I believe. I did not offer to go and fetch up my shovel, which
was left down below.
“Things began to look bad. We put
the long-boat into the water. The second boat was ready to swing out. We had
also another, a fourteen-foot thing, on davits aft, where it was quite safe.
“Then behold, the smoke suddenly
decreased. We re-doubled our efforts to flood the bottom of the ship. In two
days there was no smoke at all. Everybody was on the broad grin. This was on a
Friday. On Saturday no work, but sailing the ship of course was done. The men
washed their clothes and their faces for the first time in a fortnight, and had
a special dinner given them. They spoke of spontaneous combustion with
contempt, and implied they were the boys to put out combustions. Somehow we all
felt as though we each had inherited a large fortune. But a beastly smell of
burning hung about the ship. Captain Beard had hollow eyes and sunken cheeks. I
had never noticed so much before how twisted and bowed he was. He and Mahon
prowled soberly about hatches and ventilators, sniffing. It struck me suddenly
poor Mahon was a very, very old chap. As to me, I was as pleased and proud as
though I had helped to win a great naval battle. O! Youth!
“The night was fine. In the
morning a homeward-bound ship passed us hull down,—the first we had seen for months;
but we were nearing the land at last, Java Head being about 190 miles off, and
nearly due north.
“Next day it was my watch on deck
from eight to twelve. At breakfast the captain observed, ‘It’s wonderful how
that smell hangs about the cabin.’ About ten, the mate being on the poop, I
stepped down on the main-deck for a moment. The carpenter’s bench stood abaft
the mainmast: I leaned against it sucking at my pipe, and the carpenter, a
young chap, came to talk to me. He remarked, ‘I think we have done very well,
haven’t we?’ and then I perceived with annoyance the fool was trying to tilt
the bench. I said curtly, ‘Don’t, Chips,’ and immediately became aware of a
queer sensation, of an absurd delusion,—I seemed somehow to be in the air. I
heard all round me like a pent-up breath released—as if a thousand giants
simultaneously had said Phoo!—and felt a dull concussion which made my ribs
ache suddenly. No doubt about it—I was in the air, and my body was describing a
short parabola. But short as it was, I had the time to think several thoughts
in, as far as I can remember, the following order: ‘This can’t be the
carpenter—What is it?—Some accident—Submarine volcano?—Coals, gas!—By Jove! we
are being blown up—Everybody’s dead—I am falling into the after-hatch—I see
fire in it.’
“The coal-dust suspended in the
air of the hold had glowed dull-red at the moment of the explosion. In the
twinkling of an eye, in an infinitesimal fraction of a second since the first
tilt of the bench, I was sprawling full length on the cargo. I picked myself up
and scrambled out. It was quick like a rebound. The deck was a wilderness of
smashed timber, lying crosswise like trees in a wood after a hurricane; an
immense curtain of soiled rags waved gently before me—it was the mainsail blown
to strips. I thought, The masts will be toppling over directly; and to get out
of the way bolted on all-fours towards the poop-ladder. The first person I saw
was Mahon, with eyes like saucers, his mouth open, and the long white hair
standing straight on end round his head like a silver halo. He was just about
to go down when the sight of the main-deck stirring, heaving up, and changing
into splinters before his eyes, petrified him on the top step. I stared at him
in unbelief, and he stared at me with a queer kind of shocked curiosity. I did
not know that I had no hair, no eyebrows, no eyelashes, that my young moustache
was burnt off, that my face was black, one cheek laid open, my nose cut, and my
chin bleeding. I had lost my cap, one of my slippers, and my shirt was torn to
rags. Of all this I was not aware. I was amazed to see the ship still afloat,
the poop-deck whole—and, most of all, to see anybody alive. Also the peace of
the sky and the serenity of the sea were distinctly surprising. I suppose I expected
to see them convulsed with horror.... Pass the bottle.
“There was a voice hailing the
ship from somewhere—in the air, in the sky—I couldn’t tell. Presently I saw the
captain—and he was mad. He asked me eagerly, ‘Where’s the cabin-table?’ and to
hear such a question was a frightful shock. I had just been blown up, you
understand, and vibrated with that experience,—I wasn’t quite sure whether I
was alive. Mahon began to stamp with both feet and yelled at him, ‘Good God!
don’t you see the deck’s blown out of her?’ I found my voice, and stammered out
as if conscious of some gross neglect of duty, ‘I don’t know where the
cabin-table is.’ It was like an absurd dream.
“Do you know what he wanted next?
Well, he wanted to trim the yards. Very placidly, and as if lost in thought, he
insisted on having the foreyard squared. ‘I don’t know if there’s anybody
alive,’ said Mahon, almost tearfully. ‘Surely,’ he said gently, ‘there will be
enough left to square the foreyard.’
“The old chap, it seems, was in
his own berth, winding up the chronometers, when the shock sent him spinning.
Immediately it occurred to him—as he said afterwards—that the ship had struck
something, and he ran out into the cabin. There, he saw, the cabin-table had
vanished somewhere. The deck being blown up, it had fallen down into the
lazarette of course. Where we had our breakfast that morning he saw only a
great hole in the floor. This appeared to him so awfully mysterious, and
impressed him so immensely, that what he saw and heard after he got on deck
were mere trifles in comparison. And, mark, he noticed directly the wheel
deserted and his barque off her course—and his only thought was to get that
miserable, stripped, undecked, smouldering shell of a ship back again with her
head pointing at her port of destination. Bankok! That’s what he was after. I tell
you this quiet, bowed, bandy-legged, almost deformed little man was immense in
the singleness of his idea and in his placid ignorance of our agitation. He
motioned us forward with a commanding gesture, and went to take the wheel
himself.
“Yes; that was the first thing we
did—trim the yards of that wreck! No one was killed, or even disabled, but
everyone was more or less hurt. You should have seen them! Some were in rags,
with black faces, like coal-heavers, like sweeps, and had bullet heads that
seemed closely cropped, but were in fact singed to the skin. Others, of the
watch below, awakened by being shot out from their collapsing bunks, shivered
incessantly, and kept on groaning even as we went about our work. But they all
worked. That crew of Liverpool hard cases had in them the right stuff. It’s my
experience they always have. It is the sea that gives it—the vastness, the
loneliness surrounding their dark stolid souls. Ah! Well! we stumbled, we
crept, we fell, we barked our shins on the wreckage, we hauled. The masts
stood, but we did not know how much they might be charred down below. It was
nearly calm, but a long swell ran from the west and made her roll. They might
go at any moment. We looked at them with apprehension. One could not foresee
which way they would fall.
“Then we retreated aft and looked
about us. The deck was a tangle of planks on edge, of planks on end, of
splinters, of ruined woodwork. The masts rose from that chaos like big trees
above a matted undergrowth. The interstices of that mass of wreckage were full
of something whitish, sluggish, stirring—of something that was like a greasy
fog. The smoke of the invisible fire was coming up again, was trailing, like a
poisonous thick mist in some valley choked with dead wood. Already lazy wisps
were beginning to curl upwards amongst the mass of splinters. Here and there a
piece of timber, stuck upright, resembled a post. Half of a fife-rail had been
shot through the foresail, and the sky made a patch of glorious blue in the
ignobly soiled canvas. A portion of several boards holding together had fallen
across the rail, and one end protruded overboard, like a gangway leading upon
nothing, like a gangway leading over the deep sea, leading to death—as if
inviting us to walk the plank at once and be done with our ridiculous troubles.
And still the air, the sky—a ghost, something invisible was hailing the ship.
“Someone had the sense to look
over, and there was the helmsman, who had impulsively jumped overboard, anxious
to come back. He yelled and swam lustily like a merman, keeping up with the
ship. We threw him a rope, and presently he stood amongst us streaming with
water and very crestfallen. The captain had surrendered the wheel, and apart,
elbow on rail and chin in hand, gazed at the sea wistfully. We asked ourselves,
What next? I thought, Now, this is something like. This is great. I wonder what
will happen. O youth!
“Suddenly Mahon sighted a steamer
far astern. Captain Beard said, ‘We may do something with her yet.’ We hoisted
two flags, which said in the international language of the sea, ‘On fire. Want
immediate assistance.’ The steamer grew bigger rapidly, and by-and-by spoke
with two flags on her foremast, ‘I am coming to your assistance.’
“In half an hour she was abreast,
to windward, within hail, and rolling slightly, with her engines stopped. We
lost our composure, and yelled all together with excitement, ‘We’ve been blown
up.’ A man in a white helmet, on the bridge, cried, ‘Yes! All right! all
right!’ and he nodded his head, and smiled, and made soothing motions with his
hand as though at a lot of frightened children. One of the boats dropped in the
water, and walked towards us upon the sea with her long oars. Four Calashes
pulled a swinging stroke. This was my first sight of Malay seamen. I’ve known
them since, but what struck me then was their unconcern: they came alongside,
and even the bowman standing up and holding to our main-chains with the
boat-hook did not deign to lift his head for a glance. I thought people who had
been blown up deserved more attention.
“A little man, dry like a chip
and agile like a monkey, clambered up. It was the mate of the steamer. He gave
one look, and cried, ‘O boys—you had better quit.’
“We were silent. He talked apart
with the captain for a time,—seemed to argue with him. Then they went away
together to the steamer.
“When our skipper came back we
learned that the steamer was the Sommerville, Captain Nash, from West Australia
to Singapore via Batavia with mails, and that the agreement was she should tow
us to Anjer or Batavia, if possible, where we could extinguish the fire by
scuttling, and then proceed on our voyage—to Bankok! The old man seemed
excited. ‘We will do it yet,’ he said to Mahon, fiercely. He shook his fist at
the sky. Nobody else said a word.
“At noon the steamer began to
tow. She went ahead slim and high, and what was left of the Judea followed at
the end of seventy fathom of tow-rope,—followed her swiftly like a cloud of
smoke with mastheads protruding above. We went aloft to furl the sails. We
coughed on the yards, and were careful about the bunts. Do you see the lot of
us there, putting a neat furl on the sails of that ship doomed to arrive
nowhere? There was not a man who didn’t think that at any moment the masts
would topple over. From aloft we could not see the ship for smoke, and they
worked carefully, passing the gaskets with even turns. ‘Harbour furl—aloft
there!’ cried Mahon from below.
“You understand this? I don’t
think one of those chaps expected to get down in the usual way. When we did I
heard them saying to each other, ‘Well, I thought we would come down overboard,
in a lump—sticks and all—blame me if I didn’t.’ ‘That’s what I was thinking to
myself,’ would answer wearily another battered and bandaged scarecrow. And, mind,
these were men without the drilled-in habit of obedience. To an onlooker they
would be a lot of profane scallywags without a redeeming point. What made them
do it—what made them obey me when I, thinking consciously how fine it was, made
them drop the bunt of the foresail twice to try and do it better? What? They
had no professional reputation—no examples, no praise. It wasn’t a sense of
duty; they all knew well enough how to shirk, and laze, and dodge—when they had
a mind to it—and mostly they had. Was it the two pounds ten a month that sent
them there? They didn’t think their pay half good enough. No; it was something
in them, something inborn and subtle and everlasting. I don’t say positively
that the crew of a French or German merchantman wouldn’t have done it, but I
doubt whether it would have been done in the same way. There was a completeness
in it, something solid like a principle, and masterful like an instinct—a
disclosure of something secret—of that hidden something, that gift, of good or
evil that makes racial difference, that shapes the fate of nations.
“It was that night at ten that,
for the first time since we had been fighting it, we saw the fire. The speed of
the towing had fanned the smoldering destruction. A blue gleam appeared
forward, shining below the wreck of the deck. It wavered in patches, it seemed
to stir and creep like the light of a glowworm. I saw it first, and told Mahon.
‘Then the game’s up,’ he said. ‘We had better stop this towing, or she will
burst out suddenly fore and aft before we can clear out.’ We set up a yell;
rang bells to attract their attention; they towed on. At last Mahon and I had
to crawl forward and cut the rope with an ax. There was no time to cast off the
lashings. Red tongues could be seen licking the wilderness of splinters under
our feet as we made our way back to the poop.
“Of course they very soon found
out in the steamer that the rope was gone. She gave a loud blast of her
whistle, her lights were seen sweeping in a wide circle, she came up ranging
close alongside, and stopped. We were all in a tight group on the poop looking
at her. Every man had saved a little bundle or a bag. Suddenly a conical flame
with a twisted top shot up forward and threw upon the black sea a circle of
light, with the two vessels side by side and heaving gently in its center.
Captain Beard had been sitting on the gratings still and mute for hours, but
now he rose slowly and advanced in front of us, to the mizzen-shrouds. Captain
Nash hailed: ‘Come along! Look sharp. I have mail-bags on board. I will take
you and your boats to Singapore.’
“‘Thank you! No!’ said our
skipper. ‘We must see the last of the ship.’
“‘I can’t stand by any longer,’
shouted the other. ‘Mails—you know.’
“‘Ay! ay! We are all right.’
“‘Very well! I’ll report you in
Singapore.... Good-bye!’
“He waved his hand. Our men
dropped their bundles quietly. The steamer moved ahead, and passing out of the
circle of light, vanished at once from our sight, dazzled by the fire which
burned fiercely. And then I knew that I would see the East first as commander
of a small boat. I thought it fine; and the fidelity to the old ship was fine.
We should see the last of her. Oh the glamour of youth! Oh the fire of it, more
dazzling than the flames of the burning ship, throwing a magic light on the
wide earth, leaping audaciously to the sky, presently to be quenched by time,
more cruel, more pitiless, more bitter than the sea—and like the flames of the
burning ship surrounded by an impenetrable night.”
“The old man warned us in his
gentle and inflexible way that it was part of our duty to save for the
under-writers as much as we could of the ship’s gear. According we went to work
aft, while she blazed forward to give us plenty of light. We lugged out a lot
of rubbish. What didn’t we save? An old barometer fixed with an absurd quantity
of screws nearly cost me my life: a sudden rush of smoke came upon me, and I
just got away in time. There were various stores, bolts of canvas, coils of
rope; the poop looked like a marine bazaar, and the boats were lumbered to the
gunwales. One would have thought the old man wanted to take as much as he could
of his first command with him. He was very very quiet, but off his balance
evidently. Would you believe it? He wanted to take a length of old stream-cable
and a kedge-anchor with him in the long-boat. We said, ‘Ay, ay, sir,’
deferentially, and on the quiet let the thing slip overboard. The heavy
medicine-chest went that way, two bags of green coffee, tins of paint—fancy,
paint!—a whole lot of things. Then I was ordered with two hands into the boats
to make a stowage and get them ready against the time it would be proper for us
to leave the ship.
“We put everything straight,
stepped the long-boat’s mast for our skipper, who was in charge of her, and I
was not sorry to sit down for a moment. My face felt raw, every limb ached as
if broken, I was aware of all my ribs, and would have sworn to a twist in the
back-bone. The boats, fast astern, lay in a deep shadow, and all around I could
see the circle of the sea lighted by the fire. A gigantic flame arose forward
straight and clear. It flared there, with noises like the whir of wings, with
rumbles as of thunder. There were cracks, detonations, and from the cone of
flame the sparks flew upwards, as man is born to trouble, to leaky ships, and
to ships that burn.
“What bothered me was that the
ship, lying broadside to the swell and to such wind as there was—a mere
breath—the boats would not keep astern where they were safe, but persisted, in
a pig-headed way boats have, in getting under the counter and then swinging
alongside. They were knocking about dangerously and coming near the flame,
while the ship rolled on them, and, of course, there was always the danger of
the masts going over the side at any moment. I and my two boat-keepers kept
them off as best we could with oars and boat-hooks; but to be constantly at it
became exasperating, since there was no reason why we should not leave at once.
We could not see those on board, nor could we imagine what caused the delay.
The boat-keepers were swearing feebly, and I had not only my share of the work,
but also had to keep at it two men who showed a constant inclination to lay
themselves down and let things slide.
“At last I hailed ‘On deck
there,’ and someone looked over. ‘We’re ready here,’ I said. The head
disappeared, and very soon popped up again. ‘The captain says, All right, sir,
and to keep the boats well clear of the ship.’
“Half an hour passed. Suddenly
there was a frightful racket, rattle, clanking of chain, hiss of water, and
millions of sparks flew up into the shivering column of smoke that stood
leaning slightly above the ship. The cat-heads had burned away, and the two
red-hot anchors had gone to the bottom, tearing out after them two hundred
fathom of red-hot chain. The ship trembled, the mass of flame swayed as if ready
to collapse, and the fore top-gallant-mast fell. It darted down like an arrow
of fire, shot under, and instantly leaping up within an oar’s-length of the
boats, floated quietly, very black on the luminous sea. I hailed the deck
again. After some time a man in an unexpectedly cheerful but also muffled tone,
as though he had been trying to speak with his mouth shut, informed me, ‘Coming
directly, sir,’ and vanished. For a long time I heard nothing but the whir and
roar of the fire. There were also whistling sounds. The boats jumped, tugged at
the painters, ran at each other playfully, knocked their sides together, or, do
what we would, swung in a bunch against the ship’s side. I couldn’t stand it
any longer, and swarming up a rope, clambered aboard over the stern.
“It was as bright as day. Coming
up like this, the sheet of fire facing me, was a terrifying sight, and the heat
seemed hardly bearable at first. On a settee cushion dragged out of the cabin,
Captain Beard, with his legs drawn up and one arm under his head, slept with
the light playing on him. Do you know what the rest were busy about? They were
sitting on deck right aft, round an open case, eating bread and cheese and
drinking bottled stout.
“On the background of flames
twisting in fierce tongues above their heads they seemed at home like
salamanders, and looked like a band of desperate pirates. The fire sparkled in
the whites of their eyes, gleamed on patches of white skin seen through the
torn shirts. Each had the marks as of a battle about him—bandaged heads,
tied-up arms, a strip of dirty rag round a knee—and each man had a bottle
between his legs and a chunk of cheese in his hand. Mahon got up. With his
handsome and disreputable head, his hooked profile, his long white beard, and
with an uncorked bottle in his hand, he resembled one of those reckless
sea-robbers of old making merry amidst violence and disaster. ‘The last meal on
board,’ he explained solemnly. ‘We had nothing to eat all day, and it was no
use leaving all this.’ He flourished the bottle and indicated the sleeping
skipper. ‘He said he couldn’t swallow anything, so I got him to lie down,’ he
went on; and as I stared, ‘I don’t know whether you are aware, young fellow,
the man had no sleep to speak of for days—and there will be dam’ little sleep
in the boats.’ ‘There will be no boats by-and-by if you fool about much
longer,’ I said, indignantly. I walked up to the skipper and shook him by the
shoulder. At last he opened his eyes, but did not move. ‘Time to leave her,
sir,’ I said, quietly.
“He got up painfully, looked at
the flames, at the sea sparkling round the ship, and black, black as ink
farther away; he looked at the stars shining dim through a thin veil of smoke
in a sky black, black as Erebus.
“‘Youngest first,’ he said.
“And the ordinary seaman, wiping
his mouth with the back of his hand, got up, clambered over the taffrail, and
vanished. Others followed. One, on the point of going over, stopped short to
drain his bottle, and with a great swing of his arm flung it at the fire. ‘Take
this!’ he cried.
“The skipper lingered
disconsolately, and we left him to commune alone for awhile with his first
command. Then I went up again and brought him away at last. It was time. The
ironwork on the poop was hot to the touch.
“Then the painter of the
long-boat was cut, and the three boats, tied together, drifted clear of the
ship. It was just sixteen hours after the explosion when we abandoned her.
Mahon had charge of the second boat, and I had the smallest—the 14-foot thing.
The long-boat would have taken the lot of us; but the skipper said we must save
as much property as we could—for the under-writers—and so I got my first
command. I had two men with me, a bag of biscuits, a few tins of meat, and a
breaker of water. I was ordered to keep close to the long-boat, that in case of
bad weather we might be taken into her.
“And do you know what I thought?
I thought I would part company as soon as I could. I wanted to have my first
command all to myself. I wasn’t going to sail in a squadron if there were a
chance for independent cruising. I would make land by myself. I would beat the
other boats. Youth! All youth! The silly, charming, beautiful youth.
“But we did not make a start at
once. We must see the last of the ship. And so the boats drifted about that
night, heaving and setting on the swell. The men dozed, waked, sighed, groaned.
I looked at the burning ship.
“Between the darkness of earth
and heaven she was burning fiercely upon a disc of purple sea shot by the
blood-red play of gleams; upon a disc of water glittering and sinister. A high,
clear flame, an immense and lonely flame, ascended from the ocean, and from its
summit the black smoke poured continuously at the sky. She burned furiously,
mournful and imposing like a funeral pile kindled in the night, surrounded by
the sea, watched over by the stars. A magnificent death had come like a grace,
like a gift, like a reward to that old ship at the end of her laborious days.
The surrender of her weary ghost to the keeping of stars and sea was stirring
like the sight of a glorious triumph. The masts fell just before daybreak, and
for a moment there was a burst and turmoil of sparks that seemed to fill with
flying fire the night patient and watchful, the vast night lying silent upon
the sea. At daylight she was only a charred shell, floating still under a cloud
of smoke and bearing a glowing mass of coal within.
“Then the oars were got out, and
the boats forming in a line moved round her remains as if in procession—the
long-boat leading. As we pulled across her stern a slim dart of fire shot out
viciously at us, and suddenly she went down, head first, in a great hiss of
steam. The unconsumed stern was the last to sink; but the paint had gone, had
cracked, had peeled off, and there were no letters, there was no word, no
stubborn device that was like her soul, to flash at the rising sun her creed
and her name.
“We made our way north. A breeze
sprang up, and about noon all the boats came together for the last time. I had
no mast or sail in mine, but I made a mast out of a spare oar and hoisted a
boat-awning for a sail, with a boat-hook for a yard. She was certainly
over-masted, but I had the satisfaction of knowing that with the wind aft I
could beat the other two. I had to wait for them. Then we all had a look at the
captain’s chart, and, after a sociable meal of hard bread and water, got our
last instructions. These were simple: steer north, and keep together as much as
possible. ‘Be careful with that jury rig, Marlow,’ said the captain; and Mahon,
as I sailed proudly past his boat, wrinkled his curved nose and hailed, ‘You
will sail that ship of yours under water, if you don’t look out, young fellow.’
He was a malicious old man—and may the deep sea where he sleeps now rock him
gently, rock him tenderly to the end of time!
“Before sunset a thick
rain-squall passed over the two boats, which were far astern, and that was the
last I saw of them for a time. Next day I sat steering my cockle-shell—my first
command—with nothing but water and sky around me. I did sight in the afternoon
the upper sails of a ship far away, but said nothing, and my men did not notice
her. You see I was afraid she might be homeward bound, and I had no mind to
turn back from the portals of the East. I was steering for Java—another blessed
name—like Bankok, you know. I steered many days.
“I need not tell you what it is
to be knocking about in an open boat. I remember nights and days of calm when
we pulled, we pulled, and the boat seemed to stand still, as if bewitched
within the circle of the sea horizon. I remember the heat, the deluge of
rain-squalls that kept us baling for dear life (but filled our water-cask), and
I remember sixteen hours on end with a mouth dry as a cinder and a steering-oar
over the stern to keep my first command head on to a breaking sea. I did not
know how good a man I was till then. I remember the drawn faces, the dejected
figures of my two men, and I remember my youth and the feeling that will never
come back any more—the feeling that I could last for ever, outlast the sea, the
earth, and all men; the deceitful feeling that lures us on to joys, to perils,
to love, to vain effort—to death; the triumphant conviction of strength, the
heat of life in the handful of dust, the glow in the heart that with every year
grows dim, grows cold, grows small, and expires—and expires, too soon—before
life itself.
“And this is how I see the East.
I have seen its secret places and have looked into its very soul; but now I see
it always from a small boat, a high outline of mountains, blue and afar in the
morning; like faint mist at noon; a jagged wall of purple at sunset. I have the
feel of the oar in my hand, the vision of a scorching blue sea in my eyes. And
I see a bay, a wide bay, smooth as glass and polished like ice, shimmering in
the dark. A red light burns far off upon the gloom of the land, and the night
is soft and warm. We drag at the oars with aching arms, and suddenly a puff of
wind, a puff faint and tepid and laden with strange odors of blossoms, of
aromatic wood, comes out of the still night—the first sigh of the East on my
face. That I can never forget. It was impalpable and enslaving, like a charm,
like a whispered promise of mysterious delight.
“We had been pulling this
finishing spell for eleven hours. Two pulled, and he whose turn it was to rest
sat at the tiller. We had made out the red light in that bay and steered for
it, guessing it must mark some small coasting port. We passed two vessels,
outlandish and high-sterned, sleeping at anchor, and, approaching the light,
now very dim, ran the boat’s nose against the end of a jutting wharf. We were
blind with fatigue. My men dropped the oars and fell off the thwarts as if
dead. I made fast to a pile. A current rippled softly. The scented obscurity of
the shore was grouped into vast masses, a density of colossal clumps of
vegetation, probably—mute and fantastic shapes. And at their foot the
semicircle of a beach gleamed faintly, like an illusion. There was not a light,
not a stir, not a sound. The mysterious East faced me, perfumed like a flower,
silent like death, dark like a grave.
“And I sat weary beyond
expression, exulting like a conqueror, sleepless and entranced as if before a
profound, a fateful enigma.
“A splashing of oars, a measured
dip reverberating on the level of water, intensified by the silence of the
shore into loud claps, made me jump up. A boat, a European boat, was coming in.
I invoked the name of the dead; I hailed: Judea ahoy! A thin shout answered.
“It was the captain. I had beaten
the flagship by three hours, and I was glad to hear the old man’s voice,
tremulous and tired. ‘Is it you, Marlow?’ ‘Mind the end of that jetty, sir,’ I
cried.
“He approached cautiously, and
brought up with the deep-sea lead-line which we had saved—for the
under-writers. I eased my painter and fell alongside. He sat, a broken figure
at the stern, wet with dew, his hands clasped in his lap. His men were asleep
already. ‘I had a terrible time of it,’ he murmured. ‘Mahon is behind—not very
far.’ We conversed in whispers, in low whispers, as if afraid to wake up the
land. Guns, thunder, earthquakes would not have awakened the men just then.
“Looking around as we talked, I
saw away at sea a bright light travelling in the night. ‘There’s a steamer
passing the bay,’ I said. She was not passing, she was entering, and she even
came close and anchored. ‘I wish,’ said the old man, ‘you would find out
whether she is English. Perhaps they could give us a passage somewhere.’ He
seemed nervously anxious. So by dint of punching and kicking I started one of
my men into a state of somnambulism, and giving him an oar, took another and
pulled towards the lights of the steamer.
“There was a murmur of voices in
her, metallic hollow clangs of the engine-room, footsteps on the deck. Her
ports shone, round like dilated eyes. Shapes moved about, and there was a
shadowy man high up on the bridge. He heard my oars.
“And then, before I could open my
lips, the East spoke to me, but it was in a Western voice. A torrent of words
was poured into the enigmatical, the fateful silence; outlandish, angry words,
mixed with words and even whole sentences of good English, less strange but
even more surprising. The voice swore and cursed violently; it riddled the solemn
peace of the bay by a volley of abuse. It began by calling me Pig, and from
that went crescendo into unmentionable adjectives—in English. The man up there
raged aloud in two languages, and with a sincerity in his fury that almost
convinced me I had, in some way, sinned against the harmony of the universe. I
could hardly see him, but began to think he would work himself into a fit.
“Suddenly he ceased, and I could
hear him snorting and blowing like a porpoise. I said—
“‘What steamer is this, pray?’
“‘Eh? What’s this? And who are
you?’
“‘Castaway crew of an English
barque burnt at sea. We came here to-night. I am the second mate. The captain
is in the long-boat, and wishes to know if you would give us a passage
somewhere.’
“‘Oh, my goodness! I say... This
is the Celestial from Singapore on her return trip. I’ll arrange with your
captain in the morning... and,... I say... did you hear me just now?’
“‘I should think the whole bay
heard you.’
“‘I thought you were a
shore-boat. Now, look here—this infernal lazy scoundrel of a caretaker has gone
to sleep again—curse him. The light is out, and I nearly ran foul of the end of
this damned jetty. This is the third time he plays me this trick. Now, I ask
you, can anybody stand this kind of thing? It’s enough to drive a man out of
his mind. I’ll report him.... I’ll get the Assistant Resident to give him the
sack, by... See—there’s no light. It’s out, isn’t it? I take you to witness the
light’s out. There should be a light, you know. A red light on the—’
“‘There was a light,’ I said,
mildly.
“‘But it’s out, man! What’s the
use of talking like this? You can see for yourself it’s out—don’t you? If you
had to take a valuable steamer along this God-forsaken coast you would want a
light too. I’ll kick him from end to end of his miserable wharf. You’ll see if
I don’t. I will—’
“‘So I may tell my captain you’ll
take us?’ I broke in.
“‘Yes, I’ll take you. Good
night,’ he said, brusquely.
“I pulled back, made fast again
to the jetty, and then went to sleep at last. I had faced the silence of the
East. I had heard some of its languages. But when I opened my eyes again the
silence was as complete as though it had never been broken. I was lying in a
flood of light, and the sky had never looked so far, so high, before. I opened
my eyes and lay without moving.
“And then I saw the men of the
East—they were looking at me. The whole length of the jetty was full of people.
I saw brown, bronze, yellow faces, the black eyes, the glitter, the colour of
an Eastern crowd. And all these beings stared without a murmur, without a sigh,
without a movement. They stared down at the boats, at the sleeping men who at
night had come to them from the sea. Nothing moved. The fronds of palms stood
still against the sky. Not a branch stirred along the shore, and the brown
roofs of hidden houses peeped through the green foliage, through the big leaves
that hung shining and still like leaves forged of heavy metal. This was the
East of the ancient navigators, so old, so mysterious, resplendent and somber,
living and unchanged, full of danger and promise. And these were the men. I sat
up suddenly. A wave of movement passed through the crowd from end to end,
passed along the heads, swayed the bodies, ran along the jetty like a ripple on
the water, like a breath of wind on a field—and all was still again. I see it
now—the wide sweep of the bay, the glittering sands, the wealth of green
infinite and varied, the sea blue like the sea of a dream, the crowd of
attentive faces, the blaze of vivid colour—the water reflecting it all, the
curve of the shore, the jetty, the high-sterned outlandish craft floating
still, and the three boats with tired men from the West sleeping unconscious of
the land and the people and of the violence of sunshine. They slept thrown
across the thwarts, curled on bottom-boards, in the careless attitudes of
death. The head of the old skipper, leaning back in the stern of the long-boat,
had fallen on his breast, and he looked as though he would never wake. Farther
out old Mahon’s face was upturned to the sky, with the long white beard spread
out on his breast, as though he had been shot where he sat at the tiller; and a
man, all in a heap in the bows of the boat, slept with both arms embracing the
stem-head and with his cheek laid on the gunwale. The East looked at them
without a sound.
“I have known its fascination
since: I have seen the mysterious shores, the still water, the lands of brown
nations, where a stealthy Nemesis lies in wait, pursues, overtakes so many of
the conquering race, who are proud of their wisdom, of their knowledge, of
their strength. But for me all the East is contained in that vision of my
youth. It is all in that moment when I opened my young eyes on it. I came upon
it from a tussle with the sea—and I was young—and I saw it looking at me. And
this is all that is left of it! Only a moment; a moment of strength, of
romance, of glamour—of youth!... A flick of sunshine upon a strange shore, the
time to remember, the time for a sigh, and—good-bye!—Night—Good-bye...!”
He drank.
“Ah! The good old time—the good
old time. Youth and the sea. Glamour and the sea! The good, strong sea, the
salt, bitter sea, that could whisper to you and roar at you and knock your
breath out of you.”
He drank again.
“By all that’s wonderful, it is
the sea, I believe, the sea itself—or is it youth alone? Who can tell? But you
here—you all had something out of life: money, love—whatever one gets on
shore—and, tell me, wasn’t that the best time, that time when we were young at
sea; young and had nothing, on the sea that gives nothing, except hard
knocks—and sometimes a chance to feel your strength—that only—what you all
regret?”
And we all nodded at him: the man
of finance, the man of accounts, the man of law, we all nodded at him over the
polished table that like a still sheet of brown water reflected our faces,
lined, wrinkled; our faces marked by toil, by deceptions, by success, by love;
our weary eyes looking still, looking always, looking anxiously for something
out of life, that while it is expected is already gone—has passed unseen, in a
sigh, in a flash—together with the youth, with the strength, with the romance
of illusions.
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