A marvellous stillness pervaded the
world, and the stars, together with the serenity of
their rays, seemed to shed upon the earth the assurance
of everlasting security. The young moon recurved,
and shining low in the west, was like a slender shaving
thrown up from a bar of gold, and the Arabian Sea,
smooth and cool to the eye like a sheet of ice, extended
its perfect level to the perfect circle of a dark horizon.
The propeller turned without a check, as though its
beat had been part of the scheme of a safe universe;
and on each side of the Patna two deep folds of water,
permanent and sombre on the unwrinkled shimmer, enclosed
within their straight and diverging ridges a few white
swirls of foam bursting in a low hiss, a few wavelets,
a few ripples, a few undulations that, left behind,
agitated the surface of the sea for an instant after
the passage of the ship, subsided splashing gently,
calmed down at last into the circular stillness of
water and sky with the black speck of the moving hull
remaining everlastingly in its centre.
Jim on the bridge was penetrated by
the great certitude of unbounded safety and peace
that could be read on the silent aspect of nature like
the certitude of fostering love upon the placid tenderness
of a mother’s face. Below the roof of awnings,
surrendered to the wisdom of white men and to their
courage, trusting the power of their unbelief and the
iron shell of their fire-ship, the pilgrims of an
exacting faith slept on mats, on blankets, on bare
planks, on every deck, in all the dark corners, wrapped
in dyed cloths, muffled in soiled rags, with their
heads resting on small bundles, with their faces pressed
to bent forearms: the men, the women, the children;
the old with the young, the decrepit with the lusty—all
equal before sleep, death’s brother.
A draught of air, fanned from forward
by the speed of the ship, passed steadily through
the long gloom between the high bulwarks, swept over
the rows of prone bodies; a few dim flames in globe-lamps
were hung short here and there under the ridge-poles,
and in the blurred circles of light thrown down and
trembling slightly to the unceasing vibration of the
ship appeared a chin upturned, two closed eyelids,
a dark hand with silver rings, a meagre limb draped
in a torn covering, a head bent back, a naked foot,
a throat bared and stretched as if offering itself
to the knife. The well-to-do had made for their
families shelters with heavy boxes and dusty mats;
the poor reposed side by side with all they had on
earth tied up in a rag under their heads; the lone
old men slept, with drawn-up legs, upon their prayer-carpets,
with their hands over their ears and one elbow on
each side of the face; a father, his shoulders up
and his knees under his forehead, dozed dejectedly
by a boy who slept on his back with tousled hair and
one arm commandingly extended; a woman covered from
head to foot, like a corpse, with a piece of white
sheeting, had a naked child in the hollow of each arm;
the Arab’s belongings, piled right aft, made
a heavy mound of broken outlines, with a cargo-lamp
swung above, and a great confusion of vague forms
behind: gleams of paunchy brass pots, the foot-rest
of a deck-chair, blades of spears, the straight scabbard
of an old sword leaning against a heap of pillows,
the spout of a tin coffee-pot. The patent log
on the taffrail periodically rang a single tinkling
stroke for every mile traversed on an errand of faith.
Above the mass of sleepers a faint and patient sigh
at times floated, the exhalation of a troubled dream;
and short metallic clangs bursting out suddenly in
the depths of the ship, the harsh scrape of a shovel,
the violent slam of a furnace-door, exploded brutally,
as if the men handling the mysterious things below
had their breasts full of fierce anger: while
the slim high hull of the steamer went on evenly ahead,
without a sway of her bare masts, cleaving continuously
the great calm of the waters under the inaccessible
serenity of the sky.
Jim paced athwart, and his footsteps
in the vast silence were loud to his own ears, as
if echoed by the watchful stars: his eyes, roaming
about the line of the horizon, seemed to gaze hungrily
into the unattainable, and did not see the shadow
of the coming event. The only shadow on the sea
was the shadow of the black smoke pouring heavily from
the funnel its immense streamer, whose end was constantly
dissolving in the air. Two Malays, silent and
almost motionless, steered, one on each side of the
wheel, whose brass rim shone fragmentarily in the oval
of light thrown out by the binnacle. Now and then
a hand, with black fingers alternately letting go
and catching hold of revolving spokes, appeared in
the illumined part; the links of wheel-chains ground
heavily in the grooves of the barrel. Jim would
glance at the compass, would glance around the unattainable
horizon, would stretch himself till his joints cracked,
with a leisurely twist of the body, in the very excess
of well-being; and, as if made audacious by the invincible
aspect of the peace, he felt he cared for nothing
that could happen to him to the end of his days.
From time to time he glanced idly at a chart pegged
out with four drawing-pins on a low three-legged table
abaft the steering-gear case. The sheet of paper
portraying the depths of the sea presented a shiny
surface under the light of a bull’s-eye lamp
lashed to a stanchion, a surface as level and smooth
as the glimmering surface of the waters. Parallel
rulers with a pair of dividers reposed on it; the
ship’s position at last noon was marked with
a small black cross, and the straight pencil-line
drawn firmly as far as Perim figured the course of
the ship—the path of souls towards the holy
place, the promise of salvation, the reward of eternal
life—while the pencil with its sharp end
touching the Somali coast lay round and still like
a naked ship’s spar floating in the pool of
a sheltered dock. ‘How steady she goes,’
thought Jim with wonder, with something like gratitude
for this high peace of sea and sky. At such times
his thoughts would be full of valorous deeds:
he loved these dreams and the success of his imaginary
achievements. They were the best parts of life,
its secret truth, its hidden reality. They had
a gorgeous virility, the charm of vagueness, they
passed before him with an heroic tread; they carried
his soul away with them and made it drunk with the
divine philtre of an unbounded confidence in itself.
There was nothing he could not face. He was so
pleased with the idea that he smiled, keeping perfunctorily
his eyes ahead; and when he happened to glance back
he saw the white streak of the wake drawn as straight
by the ship’s keel upon the sea as the black
line drawn by the pencil upon the chart.
The ash-buckets racketed, clanking
up and down the stoke-hold ventilators, and this tin-pot
clatter warned him the end of his watch was near.
He sighed with content, with regret as well at having
to part from that serenity which fostered the adventurous
freedom of his thoughts. He was a little sleepy
too, and felt a pleasurable languor running through
every limb as though all the blood in his body had
turned to warm milk. His skipper had come up noiselessly,
in pyjamas and with his sleeping-jacket flung wide
open. Red of face, only half awake, the left
eye partly closed, the right staring stupid and glassy,
he hung his big head over the chart and scratched
his ribs sleepily. There was something obscene
in the sight of his naked flesh. His bared breast
glistened soft and greasy as though he had sweated
out his fat in his sleep. He pronounced a professional
remark in a voice harsh and dead, resembling the rasping
sound of a wood-file on the edge of a plank; the fold
of his double chin hung like a bag triced up close
under the hinge of his jaw. Jim started, and
his answer was full of deference; but the odious and
fleshy figure, as though seen for the first time in
a revealing moment, fixed itself in his memory for
ever as the incarnation of everything vile and base
that lurks in the world we love: in our own hearts
we trust for our salvation, in the men that surround
us, in the sights that fill our eyes, in the sounds
that fill our ears, and in the air that fills our
lungs.
The thin gold shaving of the moon
floating slowly downwards had lost itself on the darkened
surface of the waters, and the eternity beyond the
sky seemed to come down nearer to the earth, with the
augmented glitter of the stars, with the more profound
sombreness in the lustre of the half-transparent dome
covering the flat disc of an opaque sea. The
ship moved so smoothly that her onward motion was imperceptible
to the senses of men, as though she had been a crowded
planet speeding through the dark spaces of ether behind
the swarm of suns, in the appalling and calm solitudes
awaiting the breath of future creations. ’Hot
is no name for it down below,’ said a voice.
Jim smiled without looking round.
The skipper presented an unmoved breadth of back:
it was the renegade’s trick to appear pointedly
unaware of your existence unless it suited his purpose
to turn at you with a devouring glare before he let
loose a torrent of foamy, abusive jargon that came
like a gush from a sewer. Now he emitted only
a sulky grunt; the second engineer at the head of
the bridge-ladder, kneading with damp palms a dirty
sweat-rag, unabashed, continued the tale of his complaints.
The sailors had a good time of it up here, and what
was the use of them in the world he would be blowed
if he could see. The poor devils of engineers
had to get the ship along anyhow, and they could very
well do the rest too; by gosh they—’Shut
up!’ growled the German stolidly. ’Oh
yes! Shut up—and when anything goes
wrong you fly to us, don’t you?’ went
on the other. He was more than half cooked, he
expected; but anyway, now, he did not mind how much
he sinned, because these last three days he had passed
through a fine course of training for the place where
the bad boys go when they die—b’gosh,
he had—besides being made jolly well deaf
by the blasted racket below. The durned, compound,
surface-condensing, rotten scrap-heap rattled and
banged down there like an old deck-winch, only more
so; and what made him risk his life every night and
day that God made amongst the refuse of a breaking-up
yard flying round at fifty-seven revolutions, was more
than he could tell. He must have been born
reckless, b’gosh. He . . . ‘Where
did you get drink?’ inquired the German, very
savage; but motionless in the light of the binnacle,
like a clumsy effigy of a man cut out of a block of
fat. Jim went on smiling at the retreating horizon;
his heart was full of generous impulses, and his thought
was contemplating his own superiority. ‘Drink!’
repeated the engineer with amiable scorn: he
was hanging on with both hands to the rail, a shadowy
figure with flexible legs. ’Not from you,
captain. You’re far too mean, b’gosh.
You would let a good man die sooner than give him a
drop of schnapps. That’s what you Germans
call economy. Penny wise, pound foolish.’
He became sentimental. The chief had given him
a four-finger nip about ten o’clock—’only
one, s’elp me!’—good old chief;
but as to getting the old fraud out of his bunk—a
five-ton crane couldn’t do it. Not it.
Not to-night anyhow. He was sleeping sweetly like
a little child, with a bottle of prime brandy under
his pillow. From the thick throat of the commander
of the Patna came a low rumble, on which the sound
of the word schwein fluttered high and low like a capricious
feather in a faint stir of air. He and the chief
engineer had been cronies for a good few years—serving
the same jovial, crafty, old Chinaman, with horn-rimmed
goggles and strings of red silk plaited into the venerable
grey hairs of his pigtail. The quay-side opinion
in the Patna’s home-port was that these two
in the way of brazen peculation ‘had done together
pretty well everything you can think of.’
Outwardly they were badly matched: one dull-eyed,
malevolent, and of soft fleshy curves; the other lean,
all hollows, with a head long and bony like the head
of an old horse, with sunken cheeks, with sunken temples,
with an indifferent glazed glance of sunken eyes.
He had been stranded out East somewhere—in
Canton, in Shanghai, or perhaps in Yokohama; he probably
did not care to remember himself the exact locality,
nor yet the cause of his shipwreck. He had been,
in mercy to his youth, kicked quietly out of his ship
twenty years ago or more, and it might have been so
much worse for him that the memory of the episode
had in it hardly a trace of misfortune. Then,
steam navigation expanding in these seas and men of
his craft being scarce at first, he had ‘got
on’ after a sort. He was eager to let strangers
know in a dismal mumble that he was ’an old
stager out here.’ When he moved, a skeleton
seemed to sway loose in his clothes; his walk was
mere wandering, and he was given to wander thus around
the engine-room skylight, smoking, without relish,
doctored tobacco in a brass bowl at the end of a cherrywood
stem four feet long, with the imbecile gravity of
a thinker evolving a system of philosophy from the
hazy glimpse of a truth. He was usually anything
but free with his private store of liquor; but on
that night he had departed from his principles, so
that his second, a weak-headed child of Wapping, what
with the unexpectedness of the treat and the strength
of the stuff, had become very happy, cheeky, and talkative.
The fury of the New South Wales German was extreme;
he puffed like an exhaust-pipe, and Jim, faintly amused
by the scene, was impatient for the time when he could
get below: the last ten minutes of the watch were
irritating like a gun that hangs fire; those men did
not belong to the world of heroic adventure; they
weren’t bad chaps though. Even the skipper
himself . . . His gorge rose at the mass of panting
flesh from which issued gurgling mutters, a cloudy
trickle of filthy expressions; but he was too pleasurably
languid to dislike actively this or any other thing.
The quality of these men did not matter; he rubbed
shoulders with them, but they could not touch him;
he shared the air they breathed, but he was different.
. . . Would the skipper go for the engineer? .
. . The life was easy and he was too sure of
himself—too sure of himself to . . .
The line dividing his meditation from a surreptitious
doze on his feet was thinner than a thread in a spider’s
web.
The second engineer was coming by
easy transitions to the consideration of his finances
and of his courage.
’Who’s drunk? I?
No, no, captain! That won’t do. You
ought to know by this time the chief ain’t free-hearted
enough to make a sparrow drunk, b’gosh.
I’ve never been the worse for liquor in my life;
the stuff ain’t made yet that would make me
drunk. I could drink liquid fire against your
whisky peg for peg, b’gosh, and keep as cool
as a cucumber. If I thought I was drunk I would
jump overboard—do away with myself, b’gosh.
I would! Straight! And I won’t go off
the bridge. Where do you expect me to take the
air on a night like this, eh? On deck amongst
that vermin down there? Likely—ain’t
it! And I am not afraid of anything you can do.’
The German lifted two heavy fists
to heaven and shook them a little without a word.
‘I don’t know what fear
is,’ pursued the engineer, with the enthusiasm
of sincere conviction. ‘I am not afraid
of doing all the bloomin’ work in this rotten
hooker, b’gosh! And a jolly good thing for
you that there are some of us about the world that
aren’t afraid of their lives, or where would
you be—you and this old thing here with
her plates like brown paper—brown paper,
s’elp me? It’s all very fine for you—you
get a power of pieces out of her one way and another;
but what about me—what do I get? A
measly hundred and fifty dollars a month and find
yourself. I wish to ask you respectfully—respectfully,
mind—who wouldn’t chuck a dratted
job like this? ’Tain’t safe, s’elp
me, it ain’t! Only I am one of them fearless
fellows . . .’
He let go the rail and made ample
gestures as if demonstrating in the air the shape
and extent of his valour; his thin voice darted in
prolonged squeaks upon the sea, he tiptoed back and
forth for the better emphasis of utterance, and suddenly
pitched down head-first as though he had been clubbed
from behind. He said ‘Damn!’ as he
tumbled; an instant of silence followed upon his screeching:
Jim and the skipper staggered forward by common accord,
and catching themselves up, stood very stiff and still
gazing, amazed, at the undisturbed level of the sea.
Then they looked upwards at the stars.
What had happened? The wheezy
thump of the engines went on. Had the earth been
checked in her course? They could not understand;
and suddenly the calm sea, the sky without a cloud,
appeared formidably insecure in their immobility,
as if poised on the brow of yawning destruction.
The engineer rebounded vertically full length and collapsed
again into a vague heap. This heap said ‘What’s
that?’ in the muffled accents of profound grief.
A faint noise as of thunder, of thunder infinitely
remote, less than a sound, hardly more than a vibration,
passed slowly, and the ship quivered in response, as
if the thunder had growled deep down in the water.
The eyes of the two Malays at the wheel glittered
towards the white men, but their dark hands remained
closed on the spokes. The sharp hull driving
on its way seemed to rise a few inches in succession
through its whole length, as though it had become
pliable, and settled down again rigidly to its work
of cleaving the smooth surface of the sea. Its
quivering stopped, and the faint noise of thunder
ceased all at once, as though the ship had steamed
across a narrow belt of vibrating water and of humming
air.