Who hath desired the Sea — the
sight of salt-water unbounded? The heave and
the halt and the hurl and the crash of the comber
wind-hounded? The sleek-barrelled swell before
storm — grey, foamless, enormous, and growing?
Stark calm on the lap of the Line — or the crazy-eyed
hurricane blowing? His Sea in no showing the
same — his Sea and the same ’neath all
showing — His Sea that his being fulfils?
So and no otherwise — so and no otherwise hill-men
desire their Hills!
The Sea and the Hills.
‘I have found my heart again,’
said E23, under cover of the platform’s tumult.
’Hunger and fear make men dazed, or I might
have thought of this escape before. I was right.
They come to hunt for me. Thou hast saved my
head.’
A group of yellow-trousered Punjab
policemen, headed by a hot and perspiring young Englishman,
parted the crowd about the carriages. Behind
them, inconspicuous as a cat, ambled a small fat person
who looked like a lawyer’s tout.
’See the young Sahib reading
from a paper. My description is in his hand,’
said E23. ’Thev go carriage by carriage,
like fisher-folk netting a pool.’
When the procession reached their
compartment, E23 was counting his beads with a steady
jerk of the wrist; while Kim jeered at him for being
so drugged as to have lost the ringed fire-tongs which
are the Saddhu’s distinguishing mark.
The lama, deep in meditation, stared straight before
him; and the farmer, glancing furtively, gathered up
his belongings.
‘Nothing here but a parcel of
holy-bolies,’ said the Englishman aloud, and
passed on amid a ripple of uneasiness; for native police
mean extortion to the native all India over.
‘The trouble now,’ whispered
E23, ’lies in sending a wire as to the place
where I hid that letter I was sent to find. I
cannot go to the tar-office in this guise.’
‘Is it not enough I have saved thy neck?’
’Not if the work be left unfinished.
Did never the healer of sick pearls tell thee so?
Comes another Sahib! Ah!’
This was a tallish, sallowish District
Superintendent of Police — belt, helmet, polished
spurs and all — strutting and twirling his dark
moustache.
‘What fools are these Police
Sahibs!’ said Kim genially.
E23 glanced up under his eyelids.
‘It is well said,’ he muttered in a changed
voice. ‘I go to drink water. Keep
my place.’
He blundered out almost into the Englishman’s
arms, and was bad-worded in clumsy Urdu.
’Tum mut? You drunk?
You mustn’t bang about as though Delhi station
belonged to you, my friend.’
E23, not moving a muscle of his countenance,
answered with a stream of the filthiest abuse, at
which Kim naturally rejoiced. It reminded him
of the drummer-boys and the barrack-sweepers at Umballa
in the terrible time of his first schooling.
‘My good fool,’ the Englishman
drawled. ’Nickle-jao! Go back to
your carriage.’
Step by step, withdrawing deferentially
and dropping his voice, the yellow Saddhu clomb back
to the carriage, cursing the D.S.P. to remotest posterity,
by — here Kim almost jumped — by the curse
of the Queen’s Stone, by the writing under the
Queen’s Stone, and by an assortment of Gods
“with wholly, new names.
‘I don’t know what you’re
saying,’ — the Englishman flushed angrily
- ‘but it’s some piece of blasted impertinence.
Come out of that!’
E23, affecting to misunderstand, gravely
produced his ticket, which the Englishman wrenched
angrily from his hand.
‘Oh, zoolum! What oppression!’
growled the Jat from his corner. ‘All
for the sake of a jest too.’ He had been
grinning at the freedom of the Saddhu’s tongue.
’Thy charms do not work well today, Holy One!’
The Saddhu followed the policeman,
fawning and supplicating. The ruck of passengers,
busy, with their babies and their bundles, had not
noticed the affair. Kim slipped out behind him;
for it flashed through his head that he had heard
this angry, stupid Sahib discoursing loud personalities
to an old lady near Umballa three years ago.
‘It is well’, the Saddhu
whispered, jammed in the calling, shouting, bewildered
press — a Persian greyhound between his feet
and a cageful of yelling hawks under charge of a Rajput
falconer in the small of his back. ’He
has gone now to send word of the letter which I hid.
They told me he was in Peshawur. I might have
known that he is like the crocodile — always
at the other ford. He has saved me from present
calamity, but I owe my life to thee.’
‘Is he also one of Us?’
Kim ducked under a Mewar camel-driver’s greasy
armpit and cannoned off a covey of jabbering Sikh matrons.
’Not less than the greatest.
We are both fortunate! I will make report to
him of what thou hast done. I am safe under his
protection.’
He bored through the edge of the crowd
besieging the carriages, and squatted by the bench
near the telegraph-office.
’Return, or they take thy place!
Have no fear for the work, brother – or my life.
Thou hast given me breathing-space, and Strickland
Sahib has pulled me to land. We may work together
at the Game yet. Farewell!’
Kim hurried to his carriage:
elated, bewildered, but a little nettled in that
he had no key to the secrets about him.
’I am only a beginner at the
Game, that is sure. I could not have leaped
into safety as did the Saddhu. He knew it was
darkest under the lamp. I could not have thought
to tell news under pretence of cursing … and how
clever was the Sahib! No matter, I saved the
life of one … Where is the Kamboh gone, Holy
One?’ he whispered, as he took his seat in
the now crowded compartment.
‘A fear gripped him,’
the lama replied, with a touch of tender malice.
’He saw thee change the Mahratta to a Saddhu
in the twinkling of an eye, as a protection against
evil. That shook him. Then he saw the Saddhu
fall sheer into the hands of the polis — all
the effect of thy art. Then he gathered up his
son and fled; for he said that thou didst change a
quiet trader into an impudent bandier of words with
the Sahibs, and he feared a like fate. Where
is the Saddhu?’
‘With the polis,’ said
Kim … ‘Yet I saved the Kamboh’s
child.’
The lama snuffed blandly.
’Ah, chela, see how thou art
overtaken! Thou didst cure the Kamboh’s
child solely to acquire merit. But thou didst
put a spell on the Mahratta with prideful workings
— I watched thee — and with sidelong glances
to bewilder an old old man and a foolish farmer:
whence calamity and suspicion.’
Kim controlled himself with an effort
beyond his years. Not more than any other youngster
did he like to eat dirt or to be misjudged, but he
saw himself in a cleft stick. The train rolled
out of Delhi into the night.
‘It is true,’ he murmured.
’Where I have offended thee I have done wrong.’
’It is more, chela. Thou
hast loosed an Act upon the world, and as a stone
thrown into a pool so spread the consequences thou
canst not tell how far.’
This ignorance was well both for Kim’s
vanity and for the lama’s peace of mind, when
we think that there was then being handed in at Simla
a code-wire reporting the arrival of E23 at Delhi,
and, more important, the whereabouts of a letter he
had been commissioned to — abstract. Incidentally,
an over-zealous policeman had arrested, on charge
of murder done in a far southern State, a horribly
indignant Ajmir cotton-broker, who was explaining
himself to a Mr Strickland on Delhi platform, while
E23 was paddling through byways into the locked heart
of Delhi city. In two hours several telegrams
had reached the angry minister of a southern State
reporting that all trace of a somewhat bruised Mahratta
had been lost; and by the time the leisurely train
halted at Saharunpore the last ripple of the stone
Kim had helped to heave was lapping against the steps
of a mosque in far-away Roum — where it disturbed
a pious man at prayers.
The lama made his in ample form near
the dewy bougainvillea-trellis near the platform,
cheered by the clear sunshine and the presence of
his disciple. ‘We will put these things
behind us,’ he said, indicating the brazen engine
and the gleaming track. ’The jolting of
the te-rain — though a wonderful thing —
has turned my bones to water. We will use clean
air henceforward.’
‘Let us go to the Kulu woman’s
house’ said Kim, and stepped forth cheerily
under the bundles. Early morning Saharunpore-way
is clean and well scented. He thought of the
other mornings at St Xavier’s, and it topped
his already thrice-heaped contentment.
’Where is this new haste born
from? Wise men do not run about like chickens
in the sun. We have come hundreds upon hundreds
of koss already, and, till now, I have scarcely been
alone with thee an instant. How canst thou receive
instruction all jostled of crowds? How can I,
whelmed by a flux of talk, meditate upon the Way?’
‘Her tongue grows no shorter
with the years, then?’ the disciple smiled.
’Nor her desire for charms.
I remember once when I spoke of the Wheel of Life’
— the lama fumbled in his bosom for his latest
copy — ’she was only curious about the
devils that besiege children. She shall acquire
merit by entertaining us — in a little while
— at an after-occasion — softly, softly.
Now we will wander loose-foot, waiting upon the Chain
of Things. The Search is sure.’
So they travelled very easily across
and among the broad bloomful fruit-gardens —
by way of Aminabad, Sahaigunge, Akrola of the Ford,
and little Phulesa — the line of the Siwaliks
always to the north, and behind them again the snows.
After long, sweet sleep under the dry stars came
the lordly, leisurely passage through a waking village
— begging-bowl held forth in silence, but eyes
roving in defiance of the Law from sky’s edge
to sky’s edge. Then would Kim return soft-footed
through the soft dust to his master under the shadow
of a mango-tree or the thinner shade of a white Doon
siris, to eat and drink at ease. At mid-day,
after talk and a little wayfaring, they slept; meeting
the world refreshed when the air was cooler.
Night found them adventuring into new territory —
some chosen village spied three hours before across
the fat land, and much discussed upon the road.
There they told their tale —
a new one each evening so far as Kim was concerned
— and there were they made welcome, either by
priest or headman, after the custom of the kindly
East.
When the shadows shortened and the
lama leaned more heavily upon Kim, there was always
the Wheel of Life to draw forth, to hold flat under
wiped stones, and with a long straw to expound cycle
by cycle. Here sat the Gods on high — and
they were dreams of dreams. Here was our Heaven
and the world of the demi-Gods — horsemen fighting
among the hills. Here were the agonies done
upon the beasts, souls ascending or descending the
ladder and therefore not to be interfered with.
Here were the Hells, hot and cold, and the abodes
of tormented ghosts. Let the chela study the
troubles that come from over-eating — bloated
stomach and burning bowels. Obediently, then,
with bowed head and brown finger alert to follow the
pointer, did the chela study; but when they came to
the Human World, busy and profitless, that is just
above the Hells, his mind was distracted; for by the
roadside trundled the very Wheel itself, eating, drinking,
trading, marrying, and quarrelling — all warmly
alive. Often the lama made the living pictures
the matter of his text, bidding Kim — too ready
— note how the flesh takes a thousand shapes,
desirable or detestable as men reckon, but in truth
of no account either way; and how the stupid spirit,
bond-slave to the Hog, the Dove, and the Serpent —
lusting after betel-nut, a new yoke of oxen, women,
or the favour of kings — is bound to follow the
body through all the Heavens and all the Hells, and
strictly round again. Sometimes a woman or a
poor man, watching the ritual — it was nothing
less — when the great yellow chart was unfolded,
would throw a few flowers or a handful of cowries
upon its edge. It sufficed these humble ones
that they had met a Holy One who might be moved to
remember them in his prayers.
‘Cure them if they are sick,’
said the lama, when Kim’s sporting instincts
woke. ’Cure them if they have fever, but
by no means work charms. Remember what befell
the Mahratta.’
‘Then all Doing is evil?’
Kim replied, lying out under a big tree at the fork
of the Doon road, watching the little ants run over
his hand.
‘To abstain from action is well
— except to acquire merit.’
’At the Gates of Learning we
were taught that to abstain from action was unbefitting
a Sahib. And I am a Sahib.’
‘Friend of all the World,’
— the lama looked directly at Kim — ’I
am an old man — pleased with shows as are children.
To those who follow the Way there is neither black
nor white, Hind nor Bhotiyal. We be all souls
seeking escape. No matter what thy wisdom learned
among Sahibs, when we come to my River thou wilt be
freed from all illusion — at my side.
Hai! My bones ache for that River, as they ached
in the te-rain; but my spirit sits above my bones,
waiting. The Search is sure!’
‘I am answered. Is it permitted to ask
a question?’
The lama inclined his stately head.
’I ate thy bread for three years
— as thou knowest. Holy One, whence came
-?’
‘There is much wealth, as men
count it, in Bhotiyal,’ the lama returned with
composure. ’In my own place I have the
illusion of honour. I ask for that I need.
I am not concerned with the account. That is
for my monastery. Ai! The black high seats
in the monastery, and novices all in order!’
And he told stories, tracing with
a finger in the dust, of the immense and sumptuous
ritual of avalanche-guarded cathedrals; of processions
and devil-dances; of the changing of monks and nuns
into swine; of holy cities fifteen thousand feet in
the air; of intrigue between monastery and monastery;
of voices among the hills, and of that mysterious
mirage that dances on dry snow. He spoke even
of Lhassa and of the Dalai Lama, whom he had seen
and adored.
Each long, perfect day rose behind
Kim for a barrier to cut him off from his race and
his mother-tongue. He slipped back to thinking
and dreaming in the vernacular, and mechanically followed
the lama’s ceremonial observances at eating,
drinking, and the like. The old man’s
mind turned more and more to his monastery as his eyes
turned to the steadfast snows. His River troubled
him nothing. Now and again, indeed, he would
gaze long and long at a tuft or a twig, expecting,
he said, the earth to cleave and deliver its blessing;
but he was content to be with his disciple, at ease
in the temperate wind that comes down from the Doon.
This was not Ceylon, nor Buddh Gaya, nor Bombay,
nor some grass-tangled ruins that he seemed to have
stumbled upon two years ago. He spoke of those
places as a scholar removed from vanity, as a Seeker
walking in humility, as an old man, wise and temperate,
illumining knowledge with brilliant insight.
Bit by bit, disconnectedly, each tale called up by
some wayside thing, he spoke of all his wanderings
up and down Hind; till Kim, who had loved him without
reason, now loved him for fifty good reasons.
So they enjoyed themselves in high felicity, abstaining,
as the Rule demands, from evil words, covetous desires;
not over-eating, not lying on high beds, nor wearing
rich clothes. Their stomachs told them the time,
and the people brought them their food, as the saying
is. They were lords of the villages of Aminabad,
Sahaigunge, Akrola of the Ford, and little Phulesa,
where Kim gave the soulless woman a blessing.
But news travels fast in India, and
too soon shuffled across the crop-land, bearing a
basket of fruits with a box of Kabul grapes and gilt
oranges, a white-whiskered servitor — a lean,
dry Oorya — begging them to bring the honour
of their presence to his mistress, distressed in her
mind that the lama had neglected her so long.
‘Now do I remember’ —
the lama spoke as though it were a wholly new proposition.
‘She is virtuous, but an inordinate talker.’
Kim was sitting on the edge of a cow’s
manger, telling stories to a village smith’s
children.
’She will only ask for another
son for her daughter. I have not forgotten her,’
he said. ’Let her acquire merit.
Send word that we will come.’
They covered eleven miles through
the fields in two days, and were overwhelmed with
attentions at the end; for the old lady held a fine
tradition of hospitality, to which she forced her son-in-law,
who was under the thumb of his women-folk and bought
peace by borrowing of the money-lender. Age
had not weakened her tongue or her memory, and from
a discreetly barred upper window, in the hearing of
not less than a dozen servants, she paid Kim compliments
that would have flung European audiences into unclean
dismay.
‘But thou art still the shameless
beggar-brat of the parao,’ she shrilled.
’I have not forgotten thee. Wash ye and
eat. The father of my daughter’s son is
gone away awhile. So we poor women are dumb and
useless.’
For proof, she harangued the entire
household unsparingly till food and drink were brought;
and in the evening — the smoke-scented evening,
copper-dun and turquoise across the fields —
it pleased her to order her palanquin to be set down
in the untidy forecourt by smoky torchlight; and there,
behind not too closely drawn curtains, she gossiped.
’Had the Holy One come alone,
I should have received him otherwise; but with this
rogue, who can be too careful?’
‘Maharanee,’ said Kim, choosing as always
the amplest title, ’is it
my fault that none other than a Sahib — a polis-Sahib
— called the
Maharanee whose face he -’
’Chutt! That was on the pilgrimage.
When we travel — thou knowest the proverb.’
’Called the Maharanee a Breaker
of Hearts and a Dispenser of Delights?’
’To remember that! It
was true. So he did. That was in the time
of the bloom of my beauty.’ She chuckled
like a contented parrot above the sugar lump.
’Now tell me of thy goings and comings —
as much as may be without shame. How many maids,
and whose wives, hang upon thine eyelashes?
Ye hail from Benares? I would have gone there
again this year, but my daughter — we have only
two sons. Phaii! Such is the effect of
these low plains. Now in Kulu men are elephants.
But I would ask thy Holy One — stand aside,
rogue — a charm against most lamentable windy
colics that in mango-time overtake my daughter’s
eldest. Two years back he gave me a powerful
spell.’
‘Oh, Holy One!’ said
Kim, bubbling with mirth at the lama’s rueful
face.
‘It is true. I gave her one against wind.’
’Teeth — teeth — teeth, ’
snapped the old woman.
“‘Cure them if they are
sick,”’ Kim quoted relishingly, “’but
by no means work charms. Remember what befell
the Mahratta.”’
’That was two Rains ago; she
wearied me with her continual importunity.’
The lama groaned as the Unjust Judge had groaned
before him. ’Thus it comes — take
note, my chela — that even those who would follow
the Way are thrust aside by idle women. Three
days through, when the child was sick, she talked
to me.’
’Arre! and to whom else should
I talk? The boy’s mother knew nothing,
and the father — in the nights of the cold weather
it was — “Pray to the Gods,” said
he, forsooth, and turning over, snored!’
‘I gave her the charm. What is an old
man to do?’
“‘To abstain from action is well —
except to acquire merit.”’
‘Ah chela, if thou desertest me, I am all alone.’
‘He found his milk-teeth easily
at any rate,’ said the old lady. ‘But
all priests are alike.’
Kim coughed severely. Being
young, he did not approve of her flippancy.
’To importune the wise out of season is to invite
calamity.’
‘There is a talking mynah’
— the thrust came back with the well-remembered
snap of the jewelled fore-finger — ’over
the stables which has picked up the very tone of the
family priest. Maybe I forget honour to my guests,
but if ye had seen him double his fists into his belly,
which was like a half-grown gourd, and cry: “Here
is the pain!” ye would forgive. I am
half minded to take the hakim’s medicine.
He sells it cheap, and certainly it makes him fat
as Shiv’s own bull. He does not deny remedies,
but I doubted for the child because of the in-auspicious
colour of the bottles.’
The lama, under cover of the monologue,
had faded out into the darkness towards the room prepared.
‘Thou hast angered him, belike,’ said
Kim.
’Not he. He is wearied,
and I forgot, being a grandmother. (None but a grandmother
should ever oversee a child. Mothers are only
fit for bearing.) Tomorrow, when he sees how my daughter’s
son is grown, he will write the charm. Then,
too, he can judge of the new hakim’s drugs.’
‘Who is the hakim, Maharanee?’
’A wanderer, as thou art, but
a most sober Bengali from Dacca — a master of
medicine. He relieved me of an oppression after
meat by means of a small pill that wrought like a
devil unchained. He travels about now, vending
preparations of great value. He has even papers,
printed in Angrezi, telling what things he has done
for weak-backed men and slack women. He has
been here four days; but hearing ye were coming (hakims
and priests are snake and tiger the world over) he
has, as I take it, gone to cover.’
While she drew breath after this volley,
the ancient servant, sitting unrebuked on the edge
of the torchlight, muttered: ’This house
is a cattle-pound, as it were, for all charlatans and
— priests. Let the boy stop eating mangoes
... but who can argue with a grandmother?’
He raised his voice respectfully: ’Sahiba,
the hakim sleeps after his meat. He is in the
quarters behind the dovecote.’
Kim bristled like an expectant terrier.
To outface and down-talk a Calcutta-taught Bengali,
a voluble Dacca drug-vendor, would be a good game.
It was not seemly that the lama, and incidentally
himself, should be thrown aside for such an one.
He knew those curious bastard English advertisements
at the backs of native newspapers. St Xavier’s
boys sometimes brought them in by stealth to snigger
over among their mates; for the language of the grateful
patient recounting his symptoms is most simple and
revealing. The Oorya, not unanxious to play
off one parasite against the other, slunk away towards
the dovecote.
‘Yes,’ said Kim, with
measured scorn. ’Their stock-in-trade is
a little coloured water and a very great shamelessness.
Their prey are broken-down kings and overfed Bengalis.
Their profit is in children – who are not born.’
The old lady chuckled. ’Do not be envious.
Charms are better, eh? I never gainsaid it.
See that thy Holy One writes me a good amulet by
the morning.’
‘None but the ignorant deny’
— a thick, heavy voice boomed through the darkness,
as a figure came to rest squatting — ’None
but the ignorant deny the value of charms. None
but the ignorant deny the value of medicines.’
’A rat found a piece of turmeric.
Said he: “I will open a grocer’s
shop,”’ Kim retorted.
Battle was fairly joined now, and
they heard the old lady stiffen to attention.
’The priest’s son knows
the names of his nurse and three Gods. Says
he: “Hear me, or I will curse you by the
three million Great Ones.”’ Decidedly this invisible
had an arrow or two in his quiver. He went on:
’I am but a teacher of the alphabet. I
have learned all the wisdom of the Sahibs.’
’The Sahibs never grow old.
They dance and they play like children when they
are grandfathers. A strong-backed breed,’
piped the voice inside the palanquin.
’I have, too, our drugs which
loosen humours of the head in hot and angry men.
Sina well compounded when the moon stands in the proper
House; yellow earths I have — arplan from China
that makes a man renew his youth and astonish his
household; saffron from Kashmir, and the best salep
of Kabul. Many people have died before -’
‘That I surely believe,’ said Kim.
’They knew the value of my drugs.
I do not give my sick the mere ink in which a charm
is written, but hot and rending drugs which descend
and wrestle with the evil.’
‘Very mightily they do so,’ sighed the
old lady.
The voice launched into an immense
tale of misfortune and bankruptcy, studded with plentiful
petitions to the Government. ’But for
my fate, which overrules all, I had been now in Government
employ. I bear a degree from the great school
at Calcutta — whither, maybe, the son of this
House shall go.’
’He shall indeed. If our
neighbour’s brat can in a few years be made
an F A’ (First Arts — she used the English
word, of which she had heard so often), ’how
much more shall children clever as some that I know
bear away prizes at rich Calcutta.’
‘Never,’ said the voice,
’have I seen such a child! Born in an
auspicious hour, and — but for that colic which,
alas! turning into black cholers, may carry him off
like a pigeon — destined to many years, he is
enviable.’
‘Hai mai!’ said the old
lady. ’To praise children is inauspicious,
or I could listen to this talk. But the back
of the house is unguarded, and even in this soft air
men think themselves to be men, and women we know
... The child’s father is away too, and
I must be chowkedar [watchman] in my old age.
Up! Up! Take up the palanquin. Let
the hakim and the young priest settle between them
whether charms or medicine most avail. Ho!
worthless people, fetch tobacco for the guests, and
— round the homestead go I!’
The palanquin reeled off, followed
by straggling torches and a horde of dogs. Twenty
villages knew the Sahiba — her failings, her
tongue, and her large charity. Twenty villages
cheated her after immemorial custom, but no man would
have stolen or robbed within her jurisdiction for
any gift under heaven. None the less, she made
great parade of her formal inspections, the riot of
which could be heard half-way to Mussoorie.
Kim relaxed, as one augur must when
he meets another. The hakim, still squatting,
slid over his hookah with a friendly foot, and Kim
pulled at the good weed. The hangers-on expected
grave professional debate, and perhaps a little free
doctoring.
’To discuss medicine before
the ignorant is of one piece with teaching the peacock
to sing,’ said the hakim.
‘True courtesy,’ Kim echoed,
‘is very often inattention.’
These, be it understood, were company-manners,
designed to impress.
‘Hi! I have an ulcer on
my leg,’ cried a scullion. ‘Look
at it!’
‘Get hence! Remove!’
said the hakim. ’Is it the habit of the
place to pester honoured guests? Ye crowd in
like buffaloes.’
‘If the Sahiba knew -’ Kim began.
’Ai! Ai! Come away.
They are meat for our mistress. When her young
Shaitan’s colics are cured perhaps we poor people
may be suffered to -’
’The mistress fed thy wife when
thou wast in jail for breaking the money-lender’s
head. Who speaks against her?’ The old
servitor curled his white moustaches savagely in the
young moonlight. ’I am responsible for
the honour of this house. Go!’ and he
drove the underlings before him.
Said the hakim, hardly more than shaping
the words with his lips: ‘How do you do,
Mister O’Hara? I am jolly glad to see you
again.’
Kim’s hand clenched about the
pipe-stem. Anywhere on the open road, perhaps,
he would not have been astonished; but here, in this
quiet backwater of life, he was not prepared for Hurree
Babu. It annoyed him, too, that he had been
hoodwinked.
’Ah ha! I told you at
Lucknow — resurgam — I shall rise again
and you shall not know me. How much did you
bet — eh?’
He chewed leisurely upon a few cardamom
seeds, but he breathed uneasily.
‘But why come here, Babuji?’
’Ah! Thatt is the question,
as Shakespeare hath it. I come to congratulate
you on your extraordinary effeecient performance at
Delhi. Oah! I tell you we are all proud
of you. It was verree neat and handy.
Our mutual friend, he is old friend of mine.
He has been in some dam’-tight places.
Now he will be in some more. He told me; I
tell Mr Lurgan; and he is pleased you graduate so nicely.
All the Department is pleased.’
For the first time in his life, Kim
thrilled to the clean pride (it can be a deadly pitfall,
none the less) of Departmental praise — ensnaring
praise from an equal of work appreciated by fellow-workers.
Earth has nothing on the same plane to compare with
it. But, cried the Oriental in him, Babus do
not travel far to retail compliments.
‘Tell thy tale, Babu,’ he said authoritatively.
’Oah, it is nothing. Onlee
I was at Simla when the wire came in about what our
mutual friend said he had hidden, and old Creighton
-’ He looked to see how Kim would take this
piece of audacity.
‘The Colonel Sahib,’ the
boy from St Xavier’s corrected. ’Of
course. He found me at a loose string, and I
had to go down to Chitor to find that beastly letter.
I do not like the South — too much railway
travel; but I drew good travelling allowance.
Ha! Ha! I meet our mutual at Delhi on
the way back. He lies quiett just now, and says
Saddhu-disguise suits him to the ground. Well,
there I hear what you have done so well, so quickly,
upon the instantaneous spur of the moment. I
tell our mutual you take the bally bun, by Jove!
It was splendid. I come to tell you so.’
‘Umm!’
The frogs were busy in the ditches,
and the moon slid to her setting. Some happy
servant had gone out to commune with the night and
to beat upon a drum. Kim’s next sentence
was in the vernacular.
‘How didst thou follow us?’
’Oah. Thatt was nothing.
I know from our mutual friend you go to Saharunpore.
So I come on. Red Lamas are not inconspicuous
persons. I buy myself my drug-box, and I am very
good doctor really. I go to Akrola of the Ford,
and hear all about you, and I talk here and talk there.
All the common people know what you do. I knew
when the hospitable old lady sent the dooli.
They have great recollections of the old lama’s
visits here. I know old ladies cannot keep their
hands from medicines. So I am a doctor, and —
you hear my talk? I think it is verree good.
My word, Mister O’Hara, they know about you
and the lama for fifty miles — the common people.
So I come. Do you mind?’
‘Babuji,’ said Kim, looking
up at the broad, grinning face, ’I am a Sahib.’
‘My dear Mister O’Hara -’
‘And I hope to play the Great Game.’
‘You are subordinate to me departmentally at
present.’
’Then why talk like an ape in
a tree? Men do not come after one from Simla
and change their dress, for the sake of a few sweet
words. I am not a child. Talk Hindi and
let us get to the yolk of the egg. Thou art here
— speaking not one word of truth in ten.
Why art thou here? Give a straight answer.’
’That is so verree disconcerting
of the Europeans, Mister O’Hara. You should
know a heap better at your time of life.’
‘But I want to know,’
said Kim, laughing. ’If it is the Game,
I may help. How can I do anything if you bukh
[babble] all round the shop?’
Hurree Babu reached for the pipe,
and sucked it till it gurgled again.
’Now I will speak vernacular.
You sit tight, Mister O’Hara … It concerns
the pedigree of a white stallion.’
‘Still? That was finished long ago.’
’When everyone is dead the Great
Game is finished. Not before. Listen to
me till the end. There were Five Kings who prepared
a sudden war three years ago, when thou wast given
the stallion’s pedigree by Mahbub Ali.
Upon them, because of that news, and ere they were
ready, fell our Army.’
‘Ay — eight thousand men
with guns. I remember that night.’
’But the war was not pushed.
That is the Government custom. The troops were
recalled because the Government believed the Five Kings
were cowed; and it is not cheap to feed men among the
high Passes. Hilas and Bunar — Rajahs with
guns — undertook for a price to guard the Passes
against all coming from the North. They protested
both fear and friendship.’ He broke off
with a giggle into English: ’Of course,
I tell you this unoffeecially to elucidate political
situation, Mister O’Hara. Offeecially,
I am debarred from criticizing any action of superiors.
Now I go on. — This pleased the Government,
anxious to avoid expense, and a bond was made for so
many rupees a month that Hilas and Bunar should guard
the Passes as soon as the State’s troops were
withdrawn. At that time — it was after
we two met — I, who had been selling tea in Leh,
became a clerk of accounts in the Army. When
the troops were withdrawn, I was left behind to pay
the coolies who made new roads in the Hills.
This road-making was part of the bond between Bunar,
Hilas, and the Government.’
‘So? And then?’
‘I tell you, it was jolly-beastly
cold up there too, after summer,’ said Hurree
Babu confidentially. ’I was afraid these
Bunar men would cut my throat every night for thee
pay-chest. My native sepoy-guard, they laughed
at me! By Jove! I was such a fearful man.
Nevar mind thatt. I go on colloquially …
I send word many times that these two Kings were
sold to the North; and Mahbub Ali, who was yet farther
North, amply confirmed it. Nothing was done.
Only my feet were frozen, and a toe dropped off.
I sent word that the roads for which I was paying
money to the diggers were being made for the feet
of strangers and enemies.’
‘For?’
’For the Russians. The
thing was an open jest among the coolies. Then
I was called down to tell what I knew by speech of
tongue. Mahbub came South too. See the
end! Over the Passes this year after snow-melting’
— he shivered afresh — ’come two
strangers under cover of shooting wild goats.
They bear guns, but they bear also chains and levels
and compasses.’
‘Oho! The thing gets clearer.’
’They are well received by Hilas
and Bunar. They make great promises; they speak
as the mouthpiece of a Kaisar with gifts. Up
the valleys, down the valleys go they, saying, “Here
is a place to build a breastwork; here can ye pitch
a fort. Here can ye hold the road against an
army” — the very roads for which I paid
out the rupees monthly. The Government knows,
but does nothing. The three other Kings, who
were not paid for guarding the Passes, tell them by
runner of the bad faith of Bunar and Hilas. When
all the evil is done, look you — when these
two strangers with the levels and the compasses make
the Five Kings to believe that a great army will sweep
the Passes tomorrow or the next day — Hill-people
are all fools — comes the order to me, Hurree
Babu, “Go North and see what those strangers
do.” I say to Creighton Sahib, “This
is not a lawsuit, that we go about to collect evidence.”’
Hurree returned to his English with a jerk:
“’By Jove,” I said, “why the
dooce do you not issue demi-offeecial orders to some
brave man to poison them, for an example? It
is, if you permit the observation, most reprehensible
laxity on your part.” And Colonel Creighton,
he laughed at me! It is all your beastly English
pride. You think no one dare conspire!
That is all tommy-rott.’
Kim smoked slowly, revolving the business,
so far as he understood it, in his quick mind.
‘Then thou goest forth to follow the strangers?’
’No. To meet them.
They are coming in to Simla to send down their horns
and heads to be dressed at Calcutta. They are
exclusively sporting gentlemen, and they are allowed
special faceelities by the Government. Of course,
we always do that. It is our British pride.’
‘Then what is to fear from them?’
’By Jove, they are not black
people. I can do all sorts of things with black
people, of course. They are Russians, and highly
unscrupulous people. I — I do not want
to consort with them without a witness.’
‘Will they kill thee?’
’Oah, thatt is nothing.
I am good enough Herbert Spencerian, I trust, to
meet little thing like death, which is all in my fate,
you know. But — but they may beat me.’
‘Why?’
Hurree Babu snapped his fingers with
irritation. ’Of course I shall affeeliate
myself to their camp in supernumerary capacity as perhaps
interpreter, or person mentally impotent and hungree,
or some such thing. And then I must pick up
what I can, I suppose. That is as easy for me
as playing Mister Doctor to the old lady. Onlee
— onlee – you see, Mister O’Hara, I am
unfortunately Asiatic, which is serious detriment
in some respects. And all-so I am Bengali —
a fearful man.’
‘God made the Hare and the Bengali.
What shame?’ said Kim, quoting the proverb.
’It was process of Evolution,
I think, from Primal Necessity, but the fact remains
in all the cui bono. I am, oh, awfully fearful!
— I remember once they wanted to cut off my
head on the road to Lhassa. (No, I have never
reached to Lhassa.) I sat down and cried, Mister O’Hara,
anticipating Chinese tortures. I do not suppose
these two gentlemen will torture me, but I like to
provide for possible contingency with European assistance
in emergency.’ He coughed and spat out
the cardamoms. ’It is purely unoffeecial
indent, to which you can say “No, Babu”.
If you have no pressing engagement with your old
man — perhaps you might divert him; perhaps I
can seduce his fancies — I should like you to
keep in Departmental touch with me till I find those
sporting coves. I have great opeenion of you
since I met my friend at Delhi. And also I will
embody your name in my offeecial report when matter
is finally adjudicated. It will be a great feather
in your cap. That is why I come really.’
’Humph! The end of the
tale, I think, is true; but what of the fore-part?’
’About the Five Kings?
Oah! there is ever so much truth in it. A
lots more than you would suppose,’ said Hurree
earnestly. ’You come – eh? I go
from here straight into the Doon. It is verree
verdant and painted meads. I shall go to Mussoorie
to good old Munsoorie Pahar, as the gentlemen and
ladies say. Then by Rampur into Chini.
That is the only way they can come. I do not
like waiting in the cold, but we must wait for them.
I want to walk with them to Simla. You see,
one Russian is a Frenchman, and I know my French pretty
well. I have friends in Chandernagore.’
‘He would certainly rejoice
to see the Hills again,’ said Kim meditatively.
’All his speech these ten days past has been
of little else. If we go together -’
’Oah! We can be quite
strangers on the road, if your lama prefers.
I shall just be four or five miles ahead. There
is no hurry for Hurree – that is an Europe pun, ha!
ha! — and you come after. There is plenty
of time; they will plot and survey and map, of course.
I shall go tomorrow, and you the next day, if you
choose. Eh? You go think on it till morning.
By Jove, it is near morning now.’ He
yawned ponderously, and with never a civil word lumbered
off to his sleeping-place. But Kim slept little,
and his thoughts ran in Hindustani:
’Well is the Game called great!
I was four days a scullion at Quetta, waiting on
the wife of the man whose book I stole. And that
was part of the Great Game! From the South —
God knows how far — came up the Mahratta, playing
the Great Game in fear of his life. Now I shall
go far and far into the North playing the Great Game.
Truly, it runs like a shuttle throughout all Hind.
And my share and my joy’ — he smiled
to the darkness- ’I owe to the lama here.
Also to Mahbub Ali — also to Creighton Sahib,
but chiefly to the Holy One. He is right —
a great and a wonderful world — and I am Kim
— Kim — Kim — alone — one
person — in the middle of it all. But I
will see these strangers with their levels and chains
...’
‘What was the upshot of last
night’s babble?’ said the lama, after
his orisons
’There came a strolling seller
of drugs — a hanger-on of the Sahiba’s.
Him I abolished by arguments and prayers, proving
that our charms are worthier than his coloured waters.’
‘Alas, my charms! Is the
virtuous woman still bent upon a new one?’
‘Very strictly.’
‘Then it must be written, or
she will deafen me with her clamour.’ He
fumbled at his pencase.
‘In the Plains,’ said
Kim, ’are always too many people. In the
Hills, as I understand, there are fewer.’
‘Oh! the Hills, and the snows
upon the Hills.’ The lami tore off a tiny
square of paper fit to go in an amulet. ’But
what dost thou know of the Hills?’
‘They are very close.’
Kim thrust open the door and looked at the long,
peaceful line of the Himalayas flushed in morning-gold.
‘Except in the dress of a Sahib, I have never
set foot among them.’
The lama snuffed the wind wistfully.
‘If we go North,’ —
Kim put the question to the waking sunrise —
’would not much mid-day heat be avoided by walking
among the lower hills at least? ... Is the
charm made, Holy One?’
’I have written the names of
seven silly devils — not one of whom is worth
a grain of dust in the eye. Thus do foolish women
drag us from the Way!’
Hurree Babu came out from behind the
dovecote washing his teeth with ostentatious ritual.
Full-fleshed, heavy-haunched, bull-necked, and deep-voiced,
he did not look like ‘a fearful man’.
Kim signed almost imperceptibly that matters were
in good train, and when the morning toilet was over,
Hurree Babu, in flowery speech, came to do honour
to the lama. They ate, of course, apart, and
afterwards the old lady, more or less veiled behind
a window, returned to the vital business of green-mango
colics in the young. The lama’s knowledge
of medicine was, of course, sympathetic only.
He believed that the dung of a black horse, mixed
with sulphur, and carried in a snake-skin, was a
sound remedy for cholera; but the symbolism interested
him far more than the science. Hurree Babu deferred
to these views with enchanting politeness, so that
the lama called him a courteous physician. Hurree
Babu replied that he was no more than an inexpert
dabbler in the mysteries; but at least — he thanked
the Gods therefore — he knew when he sat in
the presence of a master. He himself had been
taught by the Sahibs, who do not consider expense,
in the lordly halls of Calcutta; but, as he was ever
first to acknowledge, there lay a wisdom behind earthly
wisdom — the high and lonely lore of meditation.
Kim looked on with envy. The Hurree Babu of
his knowledge — oily, effusive, and nervous —
was gone; gone, too, was the brazen drug-vendor of
overnight. There remained — polished,
polite, attentive — a sober, learned son of experience
and adversity, gathering wisdom from the lama’s
lips. The old lady confided to Kim that these
rare levels were beyond her. She liked charms
with plenty of ink that one could wash off in water,
swallow, and be done with. Else what was the
use of the Gods? She liked men and women, and
she spoke of them — of kinglets she had known
in the past; of her own youth and beauty; of the depredations
of leopards and the eccentricities of love Asiatic;
of the incidence of taxation, rack-renting, funeral
ceremonies, her son-in-law (this by allusion, easy
to be followed), the care of the young, and the age’s
lack of decency. And Kim, as interested in the
life of this world as she soon to leave it, squatted
with his feet under the hem of his robe, drinking
all in, while the lama demolished one after another
every theory of body-curing put forward by Hurree Babu.
At noon the Babu strapped up his brass-bound
drug-box, took his patent-leather shoes of ceremony
in one hand, a gay blue-and-white umbrella in the
other, and set off northwards to the Doon, where, he
said, he was in demand among the lesser kings of those
parts.
‘We will go in the cool of the
evening, chela,’ said the lama. ’That
doctor, learned in physic and courtesy, affirms that
the people among these lower hills are devout, generous,
and much in need of a teacher. In a very short
time — so says the hakim — we come to cool
air and the smell of pines.’
‘Ye go to the Hills? And
by Kulu road? Oh, thrice happy!’ shrilled
the old lady. ’But that I am a little pressed
with the care of the homestead I would take palanquin
... but that would be shameless, and my reputation
would be cracked. Ho! Ho! I know
the road — every march of the road I know.
Ye will find charity throughout — it is not
denied to the well-looking. I will give orders
for provision. A servant to set you forth upon
your journey? No … Then I will at least
cook ye good food.’
‘What a woman is the Sahiba!’
said the white-bearded Oorya, when a tumult rose
by the kitchen quarters. ’She has never
forgotten a friend: she has never forgotten
an enemy in all her years. And her cookery —
wah!’ He rubbed his slim stomach.
There were cakes, there were sweetmeats,
there was cold fowl stewed to rags with rice and prunes
— enough to burden Kim like a mule.
‘I am old and useless,’
she said. ’None now love me — and
none respect — but there are few to compare
with me when I call on the Gods and squat to my cooking-pots.
Come again, O people of good will. Holy One
and disciple, come again. The room is always
prepared; the welcome is always ready … See
the women do not follow thy chela too openly.
I know the women of Kulu. Take heed, chela,
lest he run away when he smells his Hills again …
Hai! Do not tilt the rice-bag upside down …
Bless the household, Holy One, and forgive thy servant
her stupidities.’
She wiped her red old eyes on a corner
of her veil, and clucked throatily.
‘Women talk,’ said the
lama at last, ’but that is a woman’s infirmity.
I gave her a charm. She is upon the Wheel and
wholly given over to the shows of this life, but none
the less, chela, she is virtuous, kindly, hospitable
— of a whole and zealous heart. Who shall
say she does not acquire merit?’
‘Not I, Holy One,’ said
Kim, reslinging the bountiful provision on his shoulders.
’In my mind — behind my eyes — I
have tried to picture such an one altogether freed
from the Wheel — desiring nothing, causing nothing
— a nun, as it were.’
‘And, O imp?’ The lama almost laughed
aloud.
‘I cannot make the picture.’
’Nor I. But there are many,
many millions of lives before her. She will
get wisdom a little, it may be, in each one.’
‘And will she forget how to make stews with
saffron upon that road?’
’Thy mind is set on things unworthy.
But she has skill. I am refreshed all over.
When we reach the lower hills I shall be yet stronger.
The hakim spoke truly to me this morn when he said
a breath from the snows blows away twenty years from
the life of a man. We will go up into the Hills
— the high hills — up to the sound of
snow-waters and the sound of the trees — for
a little while. The hakim said that at any time
we may return to the Plains, for we do no more than
skirt the pleasant places. The hakim is full
of learning; but he is in no way proud. I spoke
to him — when thou wast talking to the Sahiba
— of a certain dizziness that lays hold upon
the back of my neck in the night, and he said it rose
from excessive heat — to be cured by cool air.
Upon consideration, I marvelled that I had not thought
of such a simple remedy.’
‘Didst thou tell him of thy
Search?’ said Kim, a little jealously.
He preferred to sway the lama by his own speech —
not through the wiles of Hurree Babu.
’Assuredly. I told him
of my dream, and of the manner by which I had acquired
merit by causing thee to be taught wisdom.’
‘Thou didst not say I was a Sahib?’
’What need? I have told
thee many times we be but two souls seeking escape.
He said — and he is just herein — that
the River of Healing will break forth even as I dreamed
— at my feet, if need be. Having found
the Way, seest thou, that shall free me from the Wheel,
need I trouble to find a way about the mere fields
of earth — which are illusion? That were
senseless. I have my dreams, night upon night
repeated; I have Jataka; and I have thee, Friend of
all the World. It was written in thy horoscope
that a Red Bull on a green field — I have not
forgotten — should bring thee to honour.
Who but I saw that prophecy accomplished? Indeed,
I was the instrument. Thou shalt find me my
River, being in return the instrument. The Search
is sure!’
He set his ivory-yellow face, serene
and untroubled, towards the beckoning Hills; his shadow
shouldering far before him in the dust.