’Late in the evening I entered
his study, after traversing an imposing but empty
dining-room very dimly lit. The house was silent.
I was preceded by an elderly grim Javanese servant
in a sort of livery of white jacket and yellow sarong,
who, after throwing the door open, exclaimed low,
“O master!” and stepping aside, vanished
in a mysterious way as though he had been a ghost
only momentarily embodied for that particular service.
Stein turned round with the chair, and in the same
movement his spectacles seemed to get pushed up on
his forehead. He welcomed me in his quiet and
humorous voice. Only one corner of the vast room,
the corner in which stood his writing-desk, was strongly
lighted by a shaded reading-lamp, and the rest of
the spacious apartment melted into shapeless gloom
like a cavern. Narrow shelves filled with dark
boxes of uniform shape and colour ran round the walls,
not from floor to ceiling, but in a sombre belt about
four feet broad. Catacombs of beetles. Wooden
tablets were hung above at irregular intervals.
The light reached one of them, and the word Coleoptera
written in gold letters glittered mysteriously upon
a vast dimness. The glass cases containing the
collection of butterflies were ranged in three long
rows upon slender-legged little tables. One of
these cases had been removed from its place and stood
on the desk, which was bestrewn with oblong slips
of paper blackened with minute handwriting.
’”So you see me—so,”
he said. His hand hovered over the case where
a butterfly in solitary grandeur spread out dark bronze
wings, seven inches or more across, with exquisite
white veinings and a gorgeous border of yellow spots.
“Only one specimen like this they have in your
London, and then—no more. To my small
native town this my collection I shall bequeath.
Something of me. The best.”
’He bent forward in the chair
and gazed intently, his chin over the front of the
case. I stood at his back. “Marvellous,”
he whispered, and seemed to forget my presence.
His history was curious. He had been born in
Bavaria, and when a youth of twenty-two had taken an
active part in the revolutionary movement of 1848.
Heavily compromised, he managed to make his escape,
and at first found a refuge with a poor republican
watchmaker in Trieste. From there he made his
way to Tripoli with a stock of cheap watches to hawk
about,—not a very great opening truly,
but it turned out lucky enough, because it was there
he came upon a Dutch traveller—a rather
famous man, I believe, but I don’t remember
his name. It was that naturalist who, engaging
him as a sort of assistant, took him to the East.
They travelled in the Archipelago together and separately,
collecting insects and birds, for four years or more.
Then the naturalist went home, and Stein, having no
home to go to, remained with an old trader he had
come across in his journeys in the interior of Celebes—if
Celebes may be said to have an interior. This
old Scotsman, the only white man allowed to reside
in the country at the time, was a privileged friend
of the chief ruler of Wajo States, who was a woman.
I often heard Stein relate how that chap, who was slightly
paralysed on one side, had introduced him to the native
court a short time before another stroke carried him
off. He was a heavy man with a patriarchal white
beard, and of imposing stature. He came into
the council-hall where all the rajahs, pangerans, and
headmen were assembled, with the queen, a fat wrinkled
woman (very free in her speech, Stein said), reclining
on a high couch under a canopy. He dragged his
leg, thumping with his stick, and grasped Stein’s
arm, leading him right up to the couch. “Look,
queen, and you rajahs, this is my son,” he proclaimed
in a stentorian voice. “I have traded with
your fathers, and when I die he shall trade with you
and your sons.”
’By means of this simple formality
Stein inherited the Scotsman’s privileged position
and all his stock-in-trade, together with a fortified
house on the banks of the only navigable river in the
country. Shortly afterwards the old queen, who
was so free in her speech, died, and the country became
disturbed by various pretenders to the throne.
Stein joined the party of a younger son, the one of
whom thirty years later he never spoke otherwise but
as “my poor Mohammed Bonso.” They
both became the heroes of innumerable exploits; they
had wonderful adventures, and once stood a siege in
the Scotsman’s house for a month, with only
a score of followers against a whole army. I believe
the natives talk of that war to this day. Meantime,
it seems, Stein never failed to annex on his own account
every butterfly or beetle he could lay hands on.
After some eight years of war, negotiations, false
truces, sudden outbreaks, reconciliation, treachery,
and so on, and just as peace seemed at last permanently
established, his “poor Mohammed Bonso”
was assassinated at the gate of his own royal residence
while dismounting in the highest spirits on his return
from a successful deer-hunt. This event rendered
Stein’s position extremely insecure, but he
would have stayed perhaps had it not been that a short
time afterwards he lost Mohammed’s sister (“my
dear wife the princess,” he used to say solemnly),
by whom he had had a daughter—mother and
child both dying within three days of each other from
some infectious fever. He left the country, which
this cruel loss had made unbearable to him. Thus
ended the first and adventurous part of his existence.
What followed was so different that, but for the reality
of sorrow which remained with him, this strange part
must have resembled a dream. He had a little
money; he started life afresh, and in the course of
years acquired a considerable fortune. At first
he had travelled a good deal amongst the islands,
but age had stolen upon him, and of late he seldom
left his spacious house three miles out of town, with
an extensive garden, and surrounded by stables, offices,
and bamboo cottages for his servants and dependants,
of whom he had many. He drove in his buggy every
morning to town, where he had an office with white
and Chinese clerks. He owned a small fleet of
schooners and native craft, and dealt in island produce
on a large scale. For the rest he lived solitary,
but not misanthropic, with his books and his collection,
classing and arranging specimens, corresponding with
entomologists in Europe, writing up a descriptive
catalogue of his treasures. Such was the history
of the man whom I had come to consult upon Jim’s
case without any definite hope. Simply to hear
what he would have to say would have been a relief.
I was very anxious, but I respected the intense, almost
passionate, absorption with which he looked at a butterfly,
as though on the bronze sheen of these frail wings,
in the white tracings, in the gorgeous markings, he
could see other things, an image of something as perishable
and defying destruction as these delicate and lifeless
tissues displaying a splendour unmarred by death.
’”Marvellous!” he repeated,
looking up at me. “Look! The beauty—but
that is nothing—look at the accuracy, the
harmony. And so fragile! And so strong!
And so exact! This is Nature—the balance
of colossal forces. Every star is so—and
every blade of grass stands so—and the mighty
Kosmos il perfect equilibrium produces—this.
This wonder; this masterpiece of Nature—the
great artist.”
’”Never heard an entomologist
go on like this,” I observed cheerfully.
“Masterpiece! And what of man?”
’”Man is amazing, but he is
not a masterpiece,” he said, keeping his eyes
fixed on the glass case. “Perhaps the artist
was a little mad. Eh? What do you think?
Sometimes it seems to me that man is come where he
is not wanted, where there is no place for him; for
if not, why should he want all the place? Why
should he run about here and there making a great
noise about himself, talking about the stars, disturbing
the blades of grass? . . .”
’”Catching butterflies,” I chimed in.
’He smiled, threw himself back
in his chair, and stretched his legs. “Sit
down,” he said. “I captured this rare
specimen myself one very fine morning. And I
had a very big emotion. You don’t know what
it is for a collector to capture such a rare specimen.
You can’t know.”
’I smiled at my ease in a rocking-chair.
His eyes seemed to look far beyond the wall at which
they stared; and he narrated how, one night, a messenger
arrived from his “poor Mohammed,” requiring
his presence at the “residenz”—as
he called it—which was distant some nine
or ten miles by a bridle-path over a cultivated plain,
with patches of forest here and there. Early
in the morning he started from his fortified house,
after embracing his little Emma, and leaving the “princess,”
his wife, in command. He described how she came
with him as far as the gate, walking with one hand
on the neck of his horse; she had on a white jacket,
gold pins in her hair, and a brown leather belt over
her left shoulder with a revolver in it. “She
talked as women will talk,” he said, “telling
me to be careful, and to try to get back before dark,
and what a great wikedness it was for me to go alone.
We were at war, and the country was not safe; my men
were putting up bullet-proof shutters to the house
and loading their rifles, and she begged me to have
no fear for her. She could defend the house against
anybody till I returned. And I laughed with pleasure
a little. I liked to see her so brave and young
and strong. I too was young then. At the
gate she caught hold of my hand and gave it one squeeze
and fell back. I made my horse stand still outside
till I heard the bars of the gate put up behind me.
There was a great enemy of mine, a great noble—and
a great rascal too—roaming with a band
in the neighbourhood. I cantered for four or five
miles; there had been rain in the night, but the musts
had gone up, up—and the face of the earth
was clean; it lay smiling to me, so fresh and innocent—like
a little child. Suddenly somebody fires a volley—twenty
shots at least it seemed to me. I hear bullets
sing in my ear, and my hat jumps to the back of my
head. It was a little intrigue, you understand.
They got my poor Mohammed to send for me and then laid
that ambush. I see it all in a minute, and I think—This
wants a little management. My pony snort, jump,
and stand, and I fall slowly forward with my head
on his mane. He begins to walk, and with one eye
I could see over his neck a faint cloud of smoke hanging
in front of a clump of bamboos to my left. I
think—Aha! my friends, why you not wait
long enough before you shoot? This is not yet
gelungen. Oh no! I get hold of my revolver
with my right hand—quiet—quiet.
After all, there were only seven of these rascals.
They get up from the grass and start running with
their sarongs tucked up, waving spears above their
heads, and yelling to each other to look out and catch
the horse, because I was dead. I let them come
as close as the door here, and then bang, bang, bang—take
aim each time too. One more shot I fire at a man’s
back, but I miss. Too far already. And then
I sit alone on my horse with the clean earth smiling
at me, and there are the bodies of three men lying
on the ground. One was curled up like a dog,
another on his back had an arm over his eyes as if
to keep off the sun, and the third man he draws up
his leg very slowly and makes it with one kick straight
again. I watch him very carefully from my horse,
but there is no more—bleibt ganz ruhig—keep
still, so. And as I looked at his face for some
sign of life I observed something like a faint shadow
pass over his forehead. It was the shadow of
this butterfly. Look at the form of the wing.
This species fly high with a strong flight. I
raised my eyes and I saw him fluttering away.
I think—Can it be possible? And then
I lost him. I dismounted and went on very slow,
leading my horse and holding my revolver with one
hand and my eyes darting up and down and right and
left, everywhere! At last I saw him sitting on
a small heap of dirt ten feet away. At once my
heart began to beat quick. I let go my horse,
keep my revolver in one hand, and with the other snatch
my soft felt hat off my head. One step.
Steady. Another step. Flop! I got him!
When I got up I shook like a leaf with excitement,
and when I opened these beautiful wings and made sure
what a rare and so extraordinary perfect specimen I
had, my head went round and my legs became so weak
with emotion that I had to sit on the ground.
I had greatly desired to possess myself of a specimen
of that species when collecting for the professor.
I took long journeys and underwent great privations;
I had dreamed of him in my sleep, and here suddenly
I had him in my fingers—for myself!
In the words of the poet” (he pronounced it
“boet”)—
“‘So halt’
ich’s endlich denn in meinen Handen,
Und nenn’ es in
gewissem Sinne mein.’”
He gave to the last word the emphasis
of a suddenly lowered voice, and withdrew his eyes
slowly from my face. He began to charge a long-stemmed
pipe busily and in silence, then, pausing with his
thumb on the orifice of the bowl, looked again at
me significantly.
’”Yes, my good friend.
On that day I had nothing to desire; I had greatly
annoyed my principal enemy; I was young, strong; I
had friendship; I had the love” (he said “lof”)
“of woman, a child I had, to make my heart very
full—and even what I had once dreamed in
my sleep had come into my hand too!”
’He struck a match, which flared
violently. His thoughtful placid face twitched
once.
’”Friend, wife, child,”
he said slowly, gazing at the small flame—“phoo!”
The match was blown out. He sighed and turned
again to the glass case. The frail and beautiful
wings quivered faintly, as if his breath had for an
instant called back to life that gorgeous object of
his dreams.
’”The work,” he began
suddenly, pointing to the scattered slips, and in
his usual gentle and cheery tone, “is making
great progress. I have been this rare specimen
describing. . . . Na! And what is your good
news?”
’”To tell you the truth, Stein,”
I said with an effort that surprised me, “I
came here to describe a specimen. . . .”
’”Butterfly?” he asked,
with an unbelieving and humorous eagerness.
’”Nothing so perfect,”
I answered, feeling suddenly dispirited with all sorts
of doubts. “A man!”
’”Ach so!” he murmured,
and his smiling countenance, turned to me, became
grave. Then after looking at me for a while he
said slowly, “Well—I am a man too.”
’Here you have him as he was;
he knew how to be so generously encouraging as to
make a scrupulous man hesitate on the brink of confidence;
but if I did hesitate it was not for long.
’He heard me out, sitting with
crossed legs. Sometimes his head would disappear
completely in a great eruption of smoke, and a sympathetic
growl would come out from the cloud. When I finished
he uncrossed his legs, laid down his pipe, leaned
forward towards me earnestly with his elbows on the
arms of his chair, the tips of his fingers together.
’”I understand very well. He is romantic.”
’He had diagnosed the case for
me, and at first I was quite startled to find how
simple it was; and indeed our conference resembled
so much a medical consultation—Stein, of
learned aspect, sitting in an arm-chair before his
desk; I, anxious, in another, facing him, but a little
to one side—that it seemed natural to ask—
’”What’s good for it?”
’He lifted up a long forefinger.
’”There is only one remedy!
One thing alone can us from being ourselves cure!”
The finger came down on the desk with a smart rap.
The case which he had made to look so simple before
became if possible still simpler—and altogether
hopeless. There was a pause. “Yes,”
said I, “strictly speaking, the question is
not how to get cured, but how to live.”
’He approved with his head,
a little sadly as it seemed. “Ja! ja!
In general, adapting the words of your great poet:
That is the question. . . .” He went on
nodding sympathetically. . . . “How to be!
Ach! How to be.”
’He stood up with the tips of
his fingers resting on the desk.
’”We want in so many different
ways to be,” he began again. “This
magnificent butterfly finds a little heap of dirt and
sits still on it; but man he will never on his heap
of mud keep still. He want to be so, and again
he want to be so. . . .” He moved his hand
up, then down. . . . “He wants to be a
saint, and he wants to be a devil—and every
time he shuts his eyes he sees himself as a very fine
fellow—so fine as he can never be. . .
. In a dream. . . .”
’He lowered the glass lid, the
automatic lock clicked sharply, and taking up the
case in both hands he bore it religiously away to its
place, passing out of the bright circle of the lamp
into the ring of fainter light—into shapeless
dusk at last. It had an odd effect—as
if these few steps had carried him out of this concrete
and perplexed world. His tall form, as though
robbed of its substance, hovered noiselessly over
invisible things with stooping and indefinite movements;
his voice, heard in that remoteness where he could
be glimpsed mysteriously busy with immaterial cares,
was no longer incisive, seemed to roll voluminous
and grave—mellowed by distance.
’”And because you not always
can keep your eyes shut there comes the real trouble—the
heart pain—the world pain. I tell you,
my friend, it is not good for you to find you cannot
make your dream come true, for the reason that you
not strong enough are, or not clever enough. . . .
Ja! . . . And all the time you are such a fine
fellow too! Wie? Was? Gott im Himmel!
How can that be? Ha! ha! ha!”
’The shadow prowling amongst
the graves of butterflies laughed boisterously.
’”Yes! Very funny this
terrible thing is. A man that is born falls into
a dream like a man who falls into the sea. If
he tries to climb out into the air as inexperienced
people endeavour to do, he drowns—nicht
wahr? . . . No! I tell you! The way
is to the destructive element submit yourself, and
with the exertions of your hands and feet in the water
make the deep, deep sea keep you up. So if you
ask me—how to be?”
’His voice leaped up extraordinarily
strong, as though away there in the dusk he had been
inspired by some whisper of knowledge. “I
will tell you! For that too there is only one
way.”
’With a hasty swish-swish of
his slippers he loomed up in the ring of faint light,
and suddenly appeared in the bright circle of the lamp.
His extended hand aimed at my breast like a pistol;
his deepset eyes seemed to pierce through me, but
his twitching lips uttered no word, and the austere
exaltation of a certitude seen in the dusk vanished
from his face. The hand that had been pointing
at my breast fell, and by-and-by, coming a step nearer,
he laid it gently on my shoulder. There were
things, he said mournfully, that perhaps could never
be told, only he had lived so much alone that sometimes
he forgot—he forgot. The light had
destroyed the assurance which had inspired him in the
distant shadows. He sat down and, with both elbows
on the desk, rubbed his forehead. “And
yet it is true—it is true. In the destructive
element immerse.” . . . He spoke in a subdued
tone, without looking at me, one hand on each side
of his face. “That was the way. To
follow the dream, and again to follow the dream—and
so—ewig—usque ad finem. . . .”
The whisper of his conviction seemed to open before
me a vast and uncertain expanse, as of a crepuscular
horizon on a plain at dawn—or was it, perchance,
at the coming of the night? One had not the courage
to decide; but it was a charming and deceptive light,
throwing the impalpable poesy of its dimness over
pitfalls—over graves. His life had
begun in sacrifice, in enthusiasm for generous ideas;
he had travelled very far, on various ways, on strange
paths, and whatever he followed it had been without
faltering, and therefore without shame and without
regret. In so far he was right. That was
the way, no doubt. Yet for all that, the great
plain on which men wander amongst graves and pitfalls
remained very desolate under the impalpable poesy of
its crepuscular light, overshadowed in the centre,
circled with a bright edge as if surrounded by an
abyss full of flames. When at last I broke the
silence it was to express the opinion that no one
could be more romantic than himself.
’He shook his head slowly, and
afterwards looked at me with a patient and inquiring
glance. It was a shame, he said. There we
were sitting and talking like two boys, instead of
putting our heads together to find something practical—a
practical remedy—for the evil—for
the great evil—he repeated, with a humorous
and indulgent smile. For all that, our talk did
not grow more practical. We avoided pronouncing
Jim’s name as though we had tried to keep flesh
and blood out of our discussion, or he were nothing
but an erring spirit, a suffering and nameless shade.
“Na!” said Stein, rising. “To-night
you sleep here, and in the morning we shall do something
practical—practical. . . .” He
lit a two-branched candlestick and led the way.
We passed through empty dark rooms, escorted by gleams
from the lights Stein carried. They glided along
the waxed floors, sweeping here and there over the
polished surface of a table, leaped upon a fragmentary
curve of a piece of furniture, or flashed perpendicularly
in and out of distant mirrors, while the forms of
two men and the flicker of two flames could be seen
for a moment stealing silently across the depths of
a crystalline void. He walked slowly a pace in
advance with stooping courtesy; there was a profound,
as it were a listening, quietude on his face; the long
flaxen locks mixed with white threads were scattered
thinly upon his slightly bowed neck.
’”He is romantic—romantic,”
he repeated. “And that is very bad—very
bad. . . . Very good, too,” he added.
“But is he?” I queried.
’”Gewiss,” he said, and
stood still holding up the candelabrum, but without
looking at me. “Evident! What is it
that by inward pain makes him know himself? What
is it that for you and me makes him—exist?”
’At that moment it was difficult
to believe in Jim’s existence—starting
from a country parsonage, blurred by crowds of men
as by clouds of dust, silenced by the clashing claims
of life and death in a material world—but
his imperishable reality came to me with a convincing,
with an irresistible force! I saw it vividly,
as though in our progress through the lofty silent
rooms amongst fleeting gleams of light and the sudden
revelations of human figures stealing with flickering
flames within unfathomable and pellucid depths, we
had approached nearer to absolute Truth, which, like
Beauty itself, floats elusive, obscure, half submerged,
in the silent still waters of mystery. “Perhaps
he is,” I admitted with a slight laugh, whose
unexpectedly loud reverberation made me lower my voice
directly; “but I am sure you are.”
With his head dropping on his breast and the light
held high he began to walk again. “Well—I
exist, too,” he said.
’He preceded me. My eyes
followed his movements, but what I did see was not
the head of the firm, the welcome guest at afternoon
receptions, the correspondent of learned societies,
the entertainer of stray naturalists; I saw only the
reality of his destiny, which he had known how to
follow with unfaltering footsteps, that life begun
in humble surroundings, rich in generous enthusiasms,
in friendship, love, war—in all the exalted
elements of romance. At the door of my room he
faced me. “Yes,” I said, as though
carrying on a discussion, “and amongst other
things you dreamed foolishly of a certain butterfly;
but when one fine morning your dream came in your
way you did not let the splendid opportunity escape.
Did you? Whereas he . . .” Stein lifted
his hand. “And do you know how many opportunities
I let escape; how many dreams I had lost that had
come in my way?” He shook his head regretfully.
“It seems to me that some would have been very
fine—if I had made them come true.
Do you know how many? Perhaps I myself don’t
know.” “Whether his were fine or
not,” I said, “he knows of one which he
certainly did not catch.” “Everybody
knows of one or two like that,” said Stein; “and
that is the trouble—the great trouble.
. . .”
’He shook hands on the threshold,
peered into my room under his raised arm. “Sleep
well. And to-morrow we must do something practical—practical.
. . .”
’Though his own room was beyond
mine I saw him return the way he came. He was
going back to his butterflies.’