THE HERMIT OF RAKATA INTRODUCED.
Nothing worthy of particular note
occurred during the boat-voyage along the northern
shore of Java to Sunda Straits. A fair, steady
breeze wafted them westward, and, on the morning of
the third day, they came in sight of the comparatively
small uninhabited island of Krakatoa.
The boat in which they voyaged, although
a little one, had a small portion of the bow decked
over, so that our hero and his sable friend could
find shelter from the night air when disposed to sleep
and from the fierce rays of the sun at noon.
By the advice of his father, Nigel
had changed his sailor costume for the “shore-goin’
toggery” in which he had landed on the Keeling
Islands, as being more suitable to his new character
as a traveller, namely, a white cloth cap with a peak
in front and a curtain behind to protect his neck,
a light-grey tunic belted at the waist, and a pair
of strong canvas trousers. He had also purchased
an old-fashioned double-barrelled fowling-piece, muzzle-loading
and with percussion locks.
“For you see, Nigel,”
the captain had said, “it’s all very well
to use breech-loaders when you’ve got towns
and railways and suchlike to supply you wi’
cartridges, but when you’ve got to cruise in
out-o’-the-way waters, there’s nothin’
like the old style. It’s not difficult to
carry a few thousand percussion-caps an’ a bullet-mould
about wi’ you wherever you go. As to powder,
why, you’ll come across that ‘most everywhere,
an’ lead too; and, for the matter o’ that,
if your life depended on it you could shove a handful
of gravel or a pen-knife or tooth-pick into your gun
an’ blaze away, but with a breech-loader, if
you run out o’ cartridges, where are you?”
So, as Nigel could not say where he
was, the percussion-gun had been purchased.
The peak of Rakata—the
highest in the island—a little over 2600
feet, came in sight first; gradually the rest of the
island rose out of the horizon, and ere long the rich
tropical verdure became distinguishable.
Krakatoa—destined so soon
to play a thrilling part in the world’s history;
to change the aspect of the heavens everywhere; to
attract the wondering gaze of nearly all nations,
and to devastate its immediate neighbourhood—is
of volcanic origin, and, at the time we write of (1883)
was beginning to awaken from a long, deep slumber of
two hundred years. Its last explosion occurred
in the year 1680. Since that date it had remained
quiet. But now the tremendous subterranean forces
which had originally called it into being were beginning
to reassert their existence and their power.
Vulcan was rousing himself again and beginning once
more to blow his bellows. So said some of the
sailors who were constantly going close past the island
and through Sunda Straits, which may be styled the
narrows of the world’s highway to the China
seas.
Subterranean forces, however, are
so constantly at work more or less violently in those
regions that people took little notice of these indications
in the comparatively small island of Krakatoa, which
was between five and six miles long by four broad.
As we have said, it was uninhabited,
and lying as it does between Sumatra and Java, about
sixteen miles from the former and over twenty miles
from the latter, it was occasionally visited by fishermen.
The hermit whom Nigel was about to visit might, in
some sort, be counted an inhabitant, for he had dwelt
there many years, but he lived in a cave which was
difficult of access, and held communication with no
one. How he spent his time was a mystery, for
although his negro servant went to the neighbouring
town of Anjer in Java for supplies, and sometimes to
Batavia, as we have seen, no piece of inanimate ebony
from the forest could have been less communicative
than he. Indeed, our hero was the first to unlock
the door of his lips, with that key of mysterious
sympathy to which reference has already been made.
Some of the bolder of the young fishermen of the neighbouring
coasts had several times made futile efforts to find
out where and how the hermit lived, but the few who
got a glimpse of him at a distance brought back such
a report that a kind of superstitious fear of him
was generated which kept them at a respectful distance.
He was ten feet high, some romancers
said, with shoulders four feet broad, a chest like
a sugar-hogshead, and a countenance resembling a compound
of orang-utan and tiger.
Of course our hero knew nothing of
these rumours, and as Moses declined to give any information
regarding his master beyond that already given, he
was left to the full play of his imagination.
Moses was quite candid about it.
He made no pretence to shroud things in mystery.
“You mus’ know, Massa
Nadgel,” he said, as they slowly drew near to
the island, “I’s ’fraid ob ’im
dough I lub ’im.”
“But why do you love him, Moses?”
“‘Cause he sabe my life an’ set
me free.”
“Indeed? well, that is good reason. And
why do you fear him?”
“Da’s what I don’ know, massa,”
replied the negro with a puzzled look.
“Is he harsh, then?”
“No.”
“Passionate?”
“No. Gentle as a lamb.”
“Strong?”
“Yes—oh! mighty strong an’
big.”
“Surely you’re not afraid of his giving
you a licking, Moses?”
“Oh no,” returned the
negro, with a smile of expansive benignity; “I’s
not ’fraid ob dat. I’s bin a slabe
once, got used to lickin’s. Don’t
care nuffin’ at all for a lickin’!”
“Then it must be that you’re
afraid of hurting his feelings, Moses, for I know
of no other kind of fear.”
“Pr’aps da’s it!”
said the negro with a bright look, “now I wouldn’t
wonder if you’s right, Massa Nadgel. It
neber come into my head in dat light before.
I used to be t’ink, t’inkin’ ob nights—when
I’s tired ob countin’ my fingers an’
toes—But I couldn’t make nuffin’
ob it. Now I knows! It’s ‘fraid
I am ob hurtin’ his feelin’s.”
In the excess of his satisfaction
at the solution of this long-standing puzzle, Moses
threw back his head, shut his eyes, opened his enormous
mouth and chuckled.
By the time he had reversed this process
they were sufficiently near to Krakatoa to distinguish
all its features clearly, and the negro began to point
out to Nigel its various localities. There were
three prominent peaks on it, he said, named respectively,
Perboewatan about 400 feet high, at the northern end
of the island; Danan, near the centre, 1500 feet;
and Rakata, at the southern end, over 2600 feet.
It was high up on the sides of the last cone that
the residence of the hermit was situated.
“And you won’t tell me your master’s
name?” said Nigel.
Moses shook his woolly head.
“No, sar, no. I’s ’fraid ob
him—he! he! ‘fraid ob hurtin’
his feelin’s!”
“Well, never mind; I’ll
find it out from himself soon. By the way, what
were you telling me about explosions yesterday when
that little white gull came to admire your pretty
face, and took off our attention?”
“Well, I dun know. Not
got much to tell, only dar’s bin rumblin’
an’ grumblin’s an’ heavin’s
lately in de mountains as didn’t use to be, an’
cracks like somet’in’ bustin’ down
blow, an’ massa he shook ’is head two
or free times an’ look solemn. He don’t
often do dat—shook ’is head, I mean—for
he mostly always looks solemn.”
A few minutes later the boat, running
through a narrow opening among the rocks into a small
circular harbour not more than fifty yards in diameter,
rested its keel gently on a little bed of pure yellow
sand. The shore there was so densely covered
with bushes that the harbour might easily have been
passed without being observed.
Jumping ashore, Moses made the painter fast to a tree.
“What a quiet, cosy place!”
said Nigel, as he sprang on the beach and looked admiringly
round.
“Yes, an’ not easy to
find if you don’t knows ’im. We will
leabe de boat here,—no danger ob bein’
tooked away—an’ den go up to de cave.”
“Is it far?” asked Nigel.
“A good bit—near
de top ob de mountain,”—answered the
negro, who looked at his companion somewhat uneasily.
“Why, what’s the matter, Moses?”
“Nuffin’—oh!
nuffin’—but—but when massa
axes you who you is, an’ what you bin up to,
an’ whar your a-gwine to, an’ what wages
you want, jist you answer ‘im in a sorter permiscuous
way, an’ don’t be too partikler.”
“Wages! man, what d’ ye mean?”
“Well, you’ll ’scuse
me, sar,” returned the negro with an air of
profound humility, “but my massa lost a old sarvint—a
nigger like myself—only last munt’,
an’ he wants to go on one ob his usual expeditions
jus’ now, so he sends me to Batavia to git anoder
man—’a good one, you know,’
says massa,—an’ as you, sar, was good
’nuff to ax me what you should do, an’
you looked a pritty smart man, I——”
“You scoundrel!” cried
Nigel, interrupting him, “do you really mean
to tell me that you’ve brought me here as a
hired servant?”
“Well, not zackly,” returned
Moses, with solemn simplicity, “you needn’t
ax no wages unless you like.”
“But what if I don’t want
to take service?” demanded our hero, with a
savage frown.
“You kin go home agin,” answered Moses,
humbly.
Nigel could contain himself no longer.
As he observed the man’s deprecatory air, and
thought of his own position, he burst into a fit of
hearty laughter, whereupon the negro recovered himself
and smiled the smile of the guiltless.
“Come,” said Nigel at
last. “Lead on, you rascal! When I
see your master I shall know what to say.”
“All right, Massa Nadgel, but
mind what you say, else I won’t answer for de
consikences. Foller me an’ look arter your
feet, for de road is roughish.”
The negro’s last remark was
unquestionably true, for the road—if a mere
footpath merits the name—was rugged in the
extreme—here winding round the base of
steep cliffs, there traversing portions of luxuriant
forest, elsewhere skirting the margin of the sea.
Moses walked at such a pace that Nigel,
young and active though he was, found it no easy matter
to keep up with him. Pride, however, forbade him
to show the slightest sign of difficulty, and made
him even converse now and then in tones of simulated
placidity. At last the path turned abruptly towards
the face of a precipice and seemed to terminate in
a small shallow cave. Any one following the path
out of mere curiosity would have naturally imagined
that the cave was the termination of it; and a very
poor termination too, seeing that it was a rather
uninteresting cave, the whole of the interior of which
could be seen at a single glance from its mouth.
But this cave served in reality as
a blind. Climbing by one or two projecting points,
the negro, closely followed by Nigel, reached a narrow
ledge and walked along it a short distance. On
coming to the end of the ledge he jumped down into
a mass of undergrowth, where the track again became
visible—winding among great masses of weatherworn
lava. Here the ascent became very steep, and
Moses put on what sporting men call a spurt, which
took him far ahead of Nigel, despite the best efforts
of the latter to keep up. Still our hero scorned
to run or call out to his guide to wait, and thereby
admit himself beaten. He pushed steadily on,
and managed to keep the active Moses in view.
Presently the negro stepped upon a
platform of rock high up on the cliffs, where his
form could be distinctly seen against the bright sky.
There Nigel observed that he was joined by a man whose
tall commanding figure seemed in such a position to
be of gigantic proportions.
The two stood engaged in earnest conversation
while watching Nigel. The latter immediately
slackened his pace, in order at once to recover breath
and approach with a leisurely aspect.
“The wild man of the island,
I suppose,” he thought as he drew near; but
on coming still nearer he saw that he must be mistaken,
for the stranger who advanced to meet him with gracious
ease and self-possession was obviously a gentleman,
and dressed, not unlike himself, in a sort of mixed
travelling and shooting costume.
“I must apologise, Mr. Roy,
for the presumption of my man, in bringing you here
under something like false pretences,” said the
stranger, holding out his hand, which Nigel shook
heartily. “Moses, I find, has failed to
execute my commission, and has partially deceived you;
but as you are now here, the least I can do is to
bid you welcome, and offer you the hospitality of
my roof.”
There was something so courteous and
kindly in the tone and manner of the stranger, and
something so winning in his soft gentle tones, which
contrasted strangely with his grand towering figure
and massive bearded countenance, that Nigel felt drawn
to him instantly. Indeed there was a peculiar
and mysterious something about him which quite fascinated
our hero as he looked up at him, for, bordering on
six feet though Nigel was, the stranger stood several
inches above him.
“You are very kind,” said
the visitor, “and I don’t think that Moses
can fairly be charged with deceiving me, although
he has been somewhat unwise in his way of going about
this business, for I had told him I wanted to see
something of these regions, and perhaps it may be to
my advantage to travel in your service—that
is, if I can be of any use to you; but the time at
my disposal may be too limited.”
“How much time have you to spare?” asked
the stranger.
“Well, say perhaps three months.”
“That will do,” returned
his questioner, looking thoughtfully at the ground.
“We will talk of this hereafter.”
“But—excuse me,”
said Nigel, “your man spoke of you as a hermit—a
sort of—of—forgive me—a
wild-man-of-the-island, if I may—”
“No, I didn’t, Massa Nadgel,”
said the negro, the edge of whose flat contradiction
was taken off by the extreme humility of his look.
“Well,” returned Nigel,
with a laugh; “you at least gave me to understand
that other people said something of that sort.”
“Da’s right, Massa Nadgel—kite
right. You’re k’rect now.”
“People have indeed got some
strange ideas about me, I believe,” interposed
the hermit, with a grave almost sad expression and
tone. “But come, let me introduce you to
my hermitage and you shall judge for yourself.”
So saying, this singular being turned
and led the way further up the rugged side of the
peak of Rakata.
After about five minutes’ walk
in silence, the trio reached a spot where there was
a clear view over the tree-tops, revealing the blue
waters of the strait, with the Java shores and mountains
in the distance.
Behind them there yawned, dark and
mysterious, a mighty cavern, so black and high that
it might well suggest a portal leading to the regions
below, where Vulcan is supposed to stir those tremendous
fires which have moulded much of the configuration
of the world, and which are ever seething—an
awful Inferno—under the thin crust of the
globe on which we stand.
Curiously formed and large-leaved
trees of the tropics, with their pendent parasites,
as well as rank grasses, sprouting from below and
hanging from above, partially concealed this cavern
from Nigel when he first turned towards it, but a
few steps further on he could see it in all its rugged
grandeur.
“My home,” said the hermit,
with a very slight smile and the air of a prince,
as he turned towards his visitor and waved his hand
towards it.
“A magnificent entrance at all
events,” said Nigel, returning the smile with
something of dubiety, for he was not quite sure that
his host was in earnest.
“Follow me,” said the
hermit, leading the way down a narrow well-worn path
which seemed to lose itself in profound darkness.
After being a few minutes within the cavern, however,
Nigel’s eyes became accustomed to the dim light,
and he perceived that the roof rapidly lowered, while
its walls narrowed until they reached a spot which
was not much wider than an ordinary corridor.
Here, however, it was so dark that it was barely possible
to see a small door in the right-hand wall before which
they halted. Lifting a latch the hermit threw
the door wide open, and a glare of dazzling light
almost blinded the visitor.
Passing through the entrance, Nigel
followed his guide, and the negro let the heavy door
shut behind him with a clang that was depressingly
suggestive of a prison.
“Again I bid you welcome to
my home,” said the hermit, turning round and
extending his hand, which Nigel mechanically took and
pressed, but without very well knowing what he did,
for he was almost dumfounded by what he saw, and for
some minutes gazed in silence around him.
And, truly, there was ground for surprise.
The visitor found himself in a small but immensely
high and brilliantly lighted cavern or natural chamber,
the walls of which were adorned with drawings of scenery
and trees and specimens of plants, while on various
shelves stood innumerable stuffed birds, and shells,
and other specimens of natural history.
A table and two chairs stood at one
end of the cave, and, strangest of all, a small but
well-filled book-case ornamented the other end.
“Arabian Nights!” thought Nigel.
“I must be dreaming.”
His wandering eyes travelled slowly
round the cavern until they rested at last on the
door by which they had entered, beside which stood
the negro with a broad grin on his sable visage.