A month or so afterwards, when Jim,
in answer to pointed questions, tried to tell honestly
the truth of this experience, he said, speaking of
the ship: ’She went over whatever it was
as easy as a snake crawling over a stick.’
The illustration was good: the questions were
aiming at facts, and the official Inquiry was being
held in the police court of an Eastern port.
He stood elevated in the witness-box, with burning
cheeks in a cool lofty room: the big framework
of punkahs moved gently to and fro high above his
head, and from below many eyes were looking at him
out of dark faces, out of white faces, out of red faces,
out of faces attentive, spellbound, as if all these
people sitting in orderly rows upon narrow benches
had been enslaved by the fascination of his voice.
It was very loud, it rang startling in his own ears,
it was the only sound audible in the world, for the
terribly distinct questions that extorted his answers
seemed to shape themselves in anguish and pain within
his breast,—came to him poignant and silent
like the terrible questioning of one’s conscience.
Outside the court the sun blazed—within
was the wind of great punkahs that made you shiver,
the shame that made you burn, the attentive eyes whose
glance stabbed. The face of the presiding magistrate,
clean shaved and impassible, looked at him deadly
pale between the red faces of the two nautical assessors.
The light of a broad window under the ceiling fell
from above on the heads and shoulders of the three
men, and they were fiercely distinct in the half-light
of the big court-room where the audience seemed composed
of staring shadows. They wanted facts. Facts!
They demanded facts from him, as if facts could explain
anything!
’After you had concluded you
had collided with something floating awash, say a
water-logged wreck, you were ordered by your captain
to go forward and ascertain if there was any damage
done. Did you think it likely from the force
of the blow?’ asked the assessor sitting to the
left. He had a thin horseshoe beard, salient
cheek-bones, and with both elbows on the desk clasped
his rugged hands before his face, looking at Jim with
thoughtful blue eyes; the other, a heavy, scornful
man, thrown back in his seat, his left arm extended
full length, drummed delicately with his finger-tips
on a blotting-pad: in the middle the magistrate
upright in the roomy arm-chair, his head inclined
slightly on the shoulder, had his arms crossed on
his breast and a few flowers in a glass vase by the
side of his inkstand.
‘I did not,’ said Jim.
’I was told to call no one and to make no noise
for fear of creating a panic. I thought the precaution
reasonable. I took one of the lamps that were
hung under the awnings and went forward. After
opening the forepeak hatch I heard splashing in there.
I lowered then the lamp the whole drift of its lanyard,
and saw that the forepeak was more than half full
of water already. I knew then there must be a
big hole below the water-line.’ He paused.
‘Yes,’ said the big assessor,
with a dreamy smile at the blotting-pad; his fingers
played incessantly, touching the paper without noise.
’I did not think of danger just
then. I might have been a little startled:
all this happened in such a quiet way and so very suddenly.
I knew there was no other bulkhead in the ship but
the collision bulkhead separating the forepeak from
the forehold. I went back to tell the captain.
I came upon the second engineer getting up at the foot
of the bridge-ladder: he seemed dazed, and told
me he thought his left arm was broken; he had slipped
on the top step when getting down while I was forward.
He exclaimed, “My God! That rotten bulkhead’ll
give way in a minute, and the damned thing will go
down under us like a lump of lead.” He
pushed me away with his right arm and ran before me
up the ladder, shouting as he climbed. His left
arm hung by his side. I followed up in time to
see the captain rush at him and knock him down flat
on his back. He did not strike him again:
he stood bending over him and speaking angrily but
quite low. I fancy he was asking him why the devil
he didn’t go and stop the engines, instead of
making a row about it on deck. I heard him say,
“Get up! Run! fly!” He swore also.
The engineer slid down the starboard ladder and bolted
round the skylight to the engine-room companion which
was on the port side. He moaned as he ran. . .
.’
He spoke slowly; he remembered swiftly
and with extreme vividness; he could have reproduced
like an echo the moaning of the engineer for the better
information of these men who wanted facts. After
his first feeling of revolt he had come round to the
view that only a meticulous precision of statement
would bring out the true horror behind the appalling
face of things. The facts those men were so eager
to know had been visible, tangible, open to the senses,
occupying their place in space and time, requiring
for their existence a fourteen-hundred-ton steamer
and twenty-seven minutes by the watch; they made a
whole that had features, shades of expression, a complicated
aspect that could be remembered by the eye, and something
else besides, something invisible, a directing spirit
of perdition that dwelt within, like a malevolent
soul in a detestable body. He was anxious to make
this clear. This had not been a common affair,
everything in it had been of the utmost importance,
and fortunately he remembered everything. He wanted
to go on talking for truth’s sake, perhaps for
his own sake also; and while his utterance was deliberate,
his mind positively flew round and round the serried
circle of facts that had surged up all about him to
cut him off from the rest of his kind: it was
like a creature that, finding itself imprisoned within
an enclosure of high stakes, dashes round and round,
distracted in the night, trying to find a weak spot,
a crevice, a place to scale, some opening through
which it may squeeze itself and escape. This
awful activity of mind made him hesitate at times in
his speech. . . .
’The captain kept on moving
here and there on the bridge; he seemed calm enough,
only he stumbled several times; and once as I stood
speaking to him he walked right into me as though
he had been stone-blind. He made no definite
answer to what I had to tell. He mumbled to himself;
all I heard of it were a few words that sounded like
“confounded steam!” and “infernal
steam!”—something about steam.
I thought . . .’
He was becoming irrelevant; a question
to the point cut short his speech, like a pang of
pain, and he felt extremely discouraged and weary.
He was coming to that, he was coming to that—and
now, checked brutally, he had to answer by yes or
no. He answered truthfully by a curt ‘Yes,
I did’; and fair of face, big of frame, with
young, gloomy eyes, he held his shoulders upright
above the box while his soul writhed within him.
He was made to answer another question so much to the
point and so useless, then waited again. His
mouth was tastelessly dry, as though he had been eating
dust, then salt and bitter as after a drink of sea-water.
He wiped his damp forehead, passed his tongue over
parched lips, felt a shiver run down his back.
The big assessor had dropped his eyelids, and drummed
on without a sound, careless and mournful; the eyes
of the other above the sunburnt, clasped fingers seemed
to glow with kindliness; the magistrate had swayed
forward; his pale face hovered near the flowers, and
then dropping sideways over the arm of his chair,
he rested his temple in the palm of his hand.
The wind of the punkahs eddied down on the heads,
on the dark-faced natives wound about in voluminous
draperies, on the Europeans sitting together very hot
and in drill suits that seemed to fit them as close
as their skins, and holding their round pith hats
on their knees; while gliding along the walls the
court peons, buttoned tight in long white coats, flitted
rapidly to and fro, running on bare toes, red-sashed,
red turban on head, as noiseless as ghosts, and on
the alert like so many retrievers.
Jim’s eyes, wandering in the
intervals of his answers, rested upon a white man
who sat apart from the others, with his face worn and
clouded, but with quiet eyes that glanced straight,
interested and clear. Jim answered another question
and was tempted to cry out, ’What’s the
good of this! what’s the good!’ He tapped
with his foot slightly, bit his lip, and looked away
over the heads. He met the eyes of the white man.
The glance directed at him was not the fascinated stare
of the others. It was an act of intelligent volition.
Jim between two questions forgot himself so far as
to find leisure for a thought. This fellow—ran
the thought—looks at me as though he could
see somebody or something past my shoulder. He
had come across that man before—in the street
perhaps. He was positive he had never spoken
to him. For days, for many days, he had spoken
to no one, but had held silent, incoherent, and endless
converse with himself, like a prisoner alone in his
cell or like a wayfarer lost in a wilderness.
At present he was answering questions that did not
matter though they had a purpose, but he doubted whether
he would ever again speak out as long as he lived.
The sound of his own truthful statements confirmed
his deliberate opinion that speech was of no use to
him any longer. That man there seemed to be aware
of his hopeless difficulty. Jim looked at him,
then turned away resolutely, as after a final parting.
And later on, many times, in distant
parts of the world, Marlow showed himself willing
to remember Jim, to remember him at length, in detail
and audibly.
Perhaps it would be after dinner,
on a verandah draped in motionless foliage and crowned
with flowers, in the deep dusk speckled by fiery cigar-ends.
The elongated bulk of each cane-chair harboured a silent
listener. Now and then a small red glow would
move abruptly, and expanding light up the fingers
of a languid hand, part of a face in profound repose,
or flash a crimson gleam into a pair of pensive eyes
overshadowed by a fragment of an unruffled forehead;
and with the very first word uttered Marlow’s
body, extended at rest in the seat, would become very
still, as though his spirit had winged its way back
into the lapse of time and were speaking through his
lips from the past.