’The conquest of love, honour,
men’s confidence—the pride of it,
the power of it, are fit materials for a heroic tale;
only our minds are struck by the externals of such
a success, and to Jim’s successes there were
no externals. Thirty miles of forest shut it off
from the sight of an indifferent world, and the noise
of the white surf along the coast overpowered the
voice of fame. The stream of civilisation, as
if divided on a headland a hundred miles north of
Patusan, branches east and south-east, leaving its
plains and valleys, its old trees and its old mankind,
neglected and isolated, such as an insignificant and
crumbling islet between the two branches of a mighty,
devouring stream. You find the name of the country
pretty often in collections of old voyages. The
seventeenth-century traders went there for pepper,
because the passion for pepper seemed to burn like
a flame of love in the breast of Dutch and English
adventurers about the time of James the First.
Where wouldn’t they go for pepper! For
a bag of pepper they would cut each other’s
throats without hesitation, and would forswear their
souls, of which they were so careful otherwise:
the bizarre obstinacy of that desire made them defy
death in a thousand shapes—the unknown seas,
the loathsome and strange diseases; wounds, captivity,
hunger, pestilence, and despair. It made them
great! By heavens! it made them heroic; and it
made them pathetic too in their craving for trade with
the inflexible death levying its toll on young and
old. It seems impossible to believe that mere
greed could hold men to such a steadfastness of purpose,
to such a blind persistence in endeavour and sacrifice.
And indeed those who adventured their persons and
lives risked all they had for a slender reward.
They left their bones to lie bleaching on distant shores,
so that wealth might flow to the living at home.
To us, their less tried successors, they appear magnified,
not as agents of trade but as instruments of a recorded
destiny, pushing out into the unknown in obedience
to an inward voice, to an impulse beating in the blood,
to a dream of the future. They were wonderful;
and it must be owned they were ready for the wonderful.
They recorded it complacently in their sufferings,
in the aspect of the seas, in the customs of strange
nations, in the glory of splendid rulers.
’In Patusan they had found lots
of pepper, and had been impressed by the magnificence
and the wisdom of the Sultan; but somehow, after a
century of chequered intercourse, the country seems
to drop gradually out of the trade. Perhaps the
pepper had given out. Be it as it may, nobody
cares for it now; the glory has departed, the Sultan
is an imbecile youth with two thumbs on his left hand
and an uncertain and beggarly revenue extorted from
a miserable population and stolen from him by his many
uncles.
’This of course I have from
Stein. He gave me their names and a short sketch
of the life and character of each. He was as full
of information about native states as an official
report, but infinitely more amusing. He had
to know. He traded in so many, and in some districts—as
in Patusan, for instance—his firm was the
only one to have an agency by special permit from
the Dutch authorities. The Government trusted
his discretion, and it was understood that he took
all the risks. The men he employed understood
that too, but he made it worth their while apparently.
He was perfectly frank with me over the breakfast-table
in the morning. As far as he was aware (the last
news was thirteen months old, he stated precisely),
utter insecurity for life and property was the normal
condition. There were in Patusan antagonistic
forces, and one of them was Rajah Allang, the worst
of the Sultan’s uncles, the governor of the
river, who did the extorting and the stealing, and
ground down to the point of extinction the country-born
Malays, who, utterly defenceless, had not even the
resource of emigrating—“For indeed,”
as Stein remarked, “where could they go, and
how could they get away?” No doubt they did
not even desire to get away. The world (which
is circumscribed by lofty impassable mountains) has
been given into the hand of the high-born, and this
Rajah they knew: he was of their own royal house.
I had the pleasure of meeting the gentleman later on.
He was a dirty, little, used-up old man with evil
eyes and a weak mouth, who swallowed an opium pill
every two hours, and in defiance of common decency
wore his hair uncovered and falling in wild stringy
locks about his wizened grimy face. When giving
audience he would clamber upon a sort of narrow stage
erected in a hall like a ruinous barn with a rotten
bamboo floor, through the cracks of which you could
see, twelve or fifteen feet below, the heaps of refuse
and garbage of all kinds lying under the house.
That is where and how he received us when, accompanied
by Jim, I paid him a visit of ceremony. There
were about forty people in the room, and perhaps three
times as many in the great courtyard below. There
was constant movement, coming and going, pushing and
murmuring, at our backs. A few youths in gay
silks glared from the distance; the majority, slaves
and humble dependants, were half naked, in ragged
sarongs, dirty with ashes and mud-stains. I had
never seen Jim look so grave, so self-possessed, in
an impenetrable, impressive way. In the midst
of these dark-faced men, his stalwart figure in white
apparel, the gleaming clusters of his fair hair, seemed
to catch all the sunshine that trickled through the
cracks in the closed shutters of that dim hall, with
its walls of mats and a roof of thatch. He appeared
like a creature not only of another kind but of another
essence. Had they not seen him come up in a canoe
they might have thought he had descended upon them
from the clouds. He did, however, come in a crazy
dug-out, sitting (very still and with his knees together,
for fear of overturning the thing)—sitting
on a tin box—which I had lent him—nursing
on his lap a revolver of the Navy pattern—presented
by me on parting—which, through an interposition
of Providence, or through some wrong-headed notion,
that was just like him, or else from sheer instinctive
sagacity, he had decided to carry unloaded. That’s
how he ascended the Patusan river. Nothing could
have been more prosaic and more unsafe, more extravagantly
casual, more lonely. Strange, this fatality that
would cast the complexion of a flight upon all his
acts, of impulsive unreflecting desertion of a jump
into the unknown.
’It is precisely the casualness
of it that strikes me most. Neither Stein nor
I had a clear conception of what might be on the other
side when we, metaphorically speaking, took him up
and hove him over the wall with scant ceremony.
At the moment I merely wished to achieve his disappearance;
Stein characteristically enough had a sentimental motive.
He had a notion of paying off (in kind, I suppose)
the old debt he had never forgotten. Indeed he
had been all his life especially friendly to anybody
from the British Isles. His late benefactor, it
is true, was a Scot—even to the length
of being called Alexander McNeil—and Jim
came from a long way south of the Tweed; but at the
distance of six or seven thousand miles Great Britain,
though never diminished, looks foreshortened enough
even to its own children to rob such details of their
importance. Stein was excusable, and his hinted
intentions were so generous that I begged him most
earnestly to keep them secret for a time. I felt
that no consideration of personal advantage should
be allowed to influence Jim; that not even the risk
of such influence should be run. We had to deal
with another sort of reality. He wanted a refuge,
and a refuge at the cost of danger should be offered
him—nothing more.
’Upon every other point I was
perfectly frank with him, and I even (as I believed
at the time) exaggerated the danger of the undertaking.
As a matter of fact I did not do it justice; his first
day in Patusan was nearly his last—would
have been his last if he had not been so reckless
or so hard on himself and had condescended to load
that revolver. I remember, as I unfolded our
precious scheme for his retreat, how his stubborn
but weary resignation was gradually replaced by surprise,
interest, wonder, and by boyish eagerness. This
was a chance he had been dreaming of. He couldn’t
think how he merited that I . . . He would be
shot if he could see to what he owed . . . And
it was Stein, Stein the merchant, who . . . but of
course it was me he had to . . . I cut him short.
He was not articulate, and his gratitude caused me
inexplicable pain. I told him that if he owed
this chance to any one especially, it was to an old
Scot of whom he had never heard, who had died many
years ago, of whom little was remembered besides a
roaring voice and a rough sort of honesty. There
was really no one to receive his thanks. Stein
was passing on to a young man the help he had received
in his own young days, and I had done no more than
to mention his name. Upon this he coloured, and,
twisting a bit of paper in his fingers, he remarked
bashfully that I had always trusted him.
’I admitted that such was the
case, and added after a pause that I wished he had
been able to follow my example. “You think
I don’t?” he asked uneasily, and remarked
in a mutter that one had to get some sort of show
first; then brightening up, and in a loud voice he
protested he would give me no occasion to regret my
confidence, which—which . . .
’”Do not misapprehend,”
I interrupted. “It is not in your power
to make me regret anything.” There would
be no regrets; but if there were, it would be altogether
my own affair: on the other hand, I wished him
to understand clearly that this arrangement, this—this—experiment,
was his own doing; he was responsible for it and no
one else. “Why? Why,” he stammered,
“this is the very thing that I . . .”
I begged him not to be dense, and he looked more puzzled
than ever. He was in a fair way to make life
intolerable to himself . . . “Do you think
so?” he asked, disturbed; but in a moment added
confidently, “I was going on though. Was
I not?” It was impossible to be angry with him:
I could not help a smile, and told him that in the
old days people who went on like this were on the
way of becoming hermits in a wilderness. “Hermits
be hanged!” he commented with engaging impulsiveness.
Of course he didn’t mind a wilderness. . . .
“I was glad of it,” I said. That was
where he would be going to. He would find it
lively enough, I ventured to promise. “Yes,
yes,” he said, keenly. He had shown a desire,
I continued inflexibly, to go out and shut the door
after him. . . . “Did I?” he interrupted
in a strange access of gloom that seemed to envelop
him from head to foot like the shadow of a passing
cloud. He was wonderfully expressive after all.
Wonderfully! “Did I?” he repeated
bitterly. “You can’t say I made much
noise about it. And I can keep it up, too—only,
confound it! you show me a door.” . . .
“Very well. Pass on,” I struck in.
I could make him a solemn promise that it would be
shut behind him with a vengeance. His fate, whatever
it was, would be ignored, because the country, for
all its rotten state, was not judged ripe for interference.
Once he got in, it would be for the outside world as
though he had never existed. He would have nothing
but the soles of his two feet to stand upon, and he
would have first to find his ground at that.
“Never existed—that’s it, by
Jove,” he murmured to himself. His eyes,
fastened upon my lips, sparkled. If he had thoroughly
understood the conditions, I concluded, he had better
jump into the first gharry he could see and drive
on to Stein’s house for his final instructions.
He flung out of the room before I had fairly finished
speaking.’