With these words Marlow had ended
his narrative, and his audience had broken up forthwith,
under his abstract, pensive gaze. Men drifted
off the verandah in pairs or alone without loss of
time, without offering a remark, as if the last image
of that incomplete story, its incompleteness itself,
and the very tone of the speaker, had made discussion
in vain and comment impossible. Each of them seemed
to carry away his own impression, to carry it away
with him like a secret; but there was only one man
of all these listeners who was ever to hear the last
word of the story. It came to him at home, more
than two years later, and it came contained in a thick
packet addressed in Marlow’s upright and angular
handwriting.
The privileged man opened the packet,
looked in, then, laying it down, went to the window.
His rooms were in the highest flat of a lofty building,
and his glance could travel afar beyond the clear panes
of glass, as though he were looking out of the lantern
of a lighthouse. The slopes of the roofs glistened,
the dark broken ridges succeeded each other without
end like sombre, uncrested waves, and from the depths
of the town under his feet ascended a confused and
unceasing mutter. The spires of churches, numerous,
scattered haphazard, uprose like beacons on a maze
of shoals without a channel; the driving rain mingled
with the falling dusk of a winter’s evening;
and the booming of a big clock on a tower, striking
the hour, rolled past in voluminous, austere bursts
of sound, with a shrill vibrating cry at the core.
He drew the heavy curtains.
The light of his shaded reading-lamp
slept like a sheltered pool, his footfalls made no
sound on the carpet, his wandering days were over.
No more horizons as boundless as hope, no more twilights
within the forests as solemn as temples, in the hot
quest for the Ever-undiscovered Country over the hill,
across the stream, beyond the wave. The hour
was striking! No more! No more!—but
the opened packet under the lamp brought back the
sounds, the visions, the very savour of the past—a
multitude of fading faces, a tumult of low voices,
dying away upon the shores of distant seas under a
passionate and unconsoling sunshine. He sighed
and sat down to read.
At first he saw three distinct enclosures.
A good many pages closely blackened and pinned together;
a loose square sheet of greyish paper with a few words
traced in a handwriting he had never seen before, and
an explanatory letter from Marlow. From this last
fell another letter, yellowed by time and frayed on
the folds. He picked it up and, laying it aside,
turned to Marlow’s message, ran swiftly over
the opening lines, and, checking himself, thereafter
read on deliberately, like one approaching with slow
feet and alert eyes the glimpse of an undiscovered
country.
‘. . . I don’t suppose
you’ve forgotten,’ went on the letter.
’You alone have showed an interest in him that
survived the telling of his story, though I remember
well you would not admit he had mastered his fate.
You prophesied for him the disaster of weariness and
of disgust with acquired honour, with the self-appointed
task, with the love sprung from pity and youth.
You had said you knew so well “that kind of thing,”
its illusory satisfaction, its unavoidable deception.
You said also—I call to mind—that
“giving your life up to them” (them meaning
all of mankind with skins brown, yellow, or black
in colour) “was like selling your soul to a
brute.” You contended that “that kind
of thing” was only endurable and enduring when
based on a firm conviction in the truth of ideas racially
our own, in whose name are established the order, the
morality of an ethical progress. “We want
its strength at our backs,” you had said.
“We want a belief in its necessity and its justice,
to make a worthy and conscious sacrifice of our lives.
Without it the sacrifice is only forgetfulness, the
way of offering is no better than the way to perdition.”
In other words, you maintained that we must fight
in the ranks or our lives don’t count. Possibly!
You ought to know—be it said without malice—you
who have rushed into one or two places single-handed
and came out cleverly, without singeing your wings.
The point, however, is that of all mankind Jim had
no dealings but with himself, and the question is
whether at the last he had not confessed to a faith
mightier than the laws of order and progress.
’I affirm nothing. Perhaps
you may pronounce—after you’ve read.
There is much truth—after all—in
the common expression “under a cloud.”
It is impossible to see him clearly—especially
as it is through the eyes of others that we take our
last look at him. I have no hesitation in imparting
to you all I know of the last episode that, as he used
to say, had “come to him.” One wonders
whether this was perhaps that supreme opportunity,
that last and satisfying test for which I had always
suspected him to be waiting, before he could frame
a message to the impeccable world. You remember
that when I was leaving him for the last time he had
asked whether I would be going home soon, and suddenly
cried after me, “Tell them . . .”
I had waited—curious I’ll own, and
hopeful too—only to hear him shout, “No—nothing.”
That was all then—and there will be nothing
more; there will be no message, unless such as each
of us can interpret for himself from the language
of facts, that are so often more enigmatic than the
craftiest arrangement of words. He made, it is
true, one more attempt to deliver himself; but that
too failed, as you may perceive if you look at the
sheet of greyish foolscap enclosed here. He had
tried to write; do you notice the commonplace hand?
It is headed “The Fort, Patusan.”
I suppose he had carried out his intention of making
out of his house a place of defence. It was an
excellent plan: a deep ditch, an earth wall topped
by a palisade, and at the angles guns mounted on platforms
to sweep each side of the square. Doramin had
agreed to furnish him the guns; and so each man of
his party would know there was a place of safety,
upon which every faithful partisan could rally in
case of some sudden danger. All this showed his
judicious foresight, his faith in the future.
What he called “my own people”—the
liberated captives of the Sherif—were to
make a distinct quarter of Patusan, with their huts
and little plots of ground under the walls of the
stronghold. Within he would be an invincible host
in himself “The Fort, Patusan.” No
date, as you observe. What is a number and a name
to a day of days? It is also impossible to say
whom he had in his mind when he seized the pen:
Stein—myself—the world at large—or
was this only the aimless startled cry of a solitary
man confronted by his fate? “An awful thing
has happened,” he wrote before he flung the pen
down for the first time; look at the ink blot resembling
the head of an arrow under these words. After
a while he had tried again, scrawling heavily, as if
with a hand of lead, another line. “I must
now at once . . .” The pen had spluttered,
and that time he gave it up. There’s nothing
more; he had seen a broad gulf that neither eye nor
voice could span. I can understand this.
He was overwhelmed by the inexplicable; he was overwhelmed
by his own personality—the gift of that
destiny which he had done his best to master.
’I send you also an old letter—a
very old letter. It was found carefully preserved
in his writing-case. It is from his father, and
by the date you can see he must have received it a
few days before he joined the Patna. Thus it
must be the last letter he ever had from home.
He had treasured it all these years. The good
old parson fancied his sailor son. I’ve
looked in at a sentence here and there. There
is nothing in it except just affection. He tells
his “dear James” that the last long letter
from him was very “honest and entertaining.”
He would not have him “judge men harshly or
hastily.” There are four pages of it, easy
morality and family news. Tom had “taken
orders.” Carrie’s husband had “money
losses.” The old chap goes on equably trusting
Providence and the established order of the universe,
but alive to its small dangers and its small mercies.
One can almost see him, grey-haired and serene in
the inviolable shelter of his book-lined, faded, and
comfortable study, where for forty years he had conscientiously
gone over and over again the round of his little thoughts
about faith and virtue, about the conduct of life
and the only proper manner of dying; where he had
written so many sermons, where he sits talking to his
boy, over there, on the other side of the earth.
But what of the distance? Virtue is one all over
the world, and there is only one faith, one conceivable
conduct of life, one manner of dying. He hopes
his “dear James” will never forget that
“who once gives way to temptation, in the very
instant hazards his total depravity and everlasting
ruin. Therefore resolve fixedly never, through
any possible motives, to do anything which you believe
to be wrong.” There is also some news of
a favourite dog; and a pony, “which all you
boys used to ride,” had gone blind from old age
and had to be shot. The old chap invokes Heaven’s
blessing; the mother and all the girls then at home
send their love. . . . No, there is nothing much
in that yellow frayed letter fluttering out of his
cherishing grasp after so many years. It was
never answered, but who can say what converse he may
have held with all these placid, colourless forms of
men and women peopling that quiet corner of the world
as free of danger or strife as a tomb, and breathing
equably the air of undisturbed rectitude. It
seems amazing that he should belong to it, he to whom
so many things “had come.” Nothing
ever came to them; they would never be taken unawares,
and never be called upon to grapple with fate.
Here they all are, evoked by the mild gossip of the
father, all these brothers and sisters, bone of his
bone and flesh of his flesh, gazing with clear unconscious
eyes, while I seem to see him, returned at last, no
longer a mere white speck at the heart of an immense
mystery, but of full stature, standing disregarded
amongst their untroubled shapes, with a stern and
romantic aspect, but always mute, dark—under
a cloud.
’The story of the last events
you will find in the few pages enclosed here.
You must admit that it is romantic beyond the wildest
dreams of his boyhood, and yet there is to my mind
a sort of profound and terrifying logic in it, as
if it were our imagination alone that could set loose
upon us the might of an overwhelming destiny.
The imprudence of our thoughts recoils upon our heads;
who toys with the sword shall perish by the sword.
This astounding adventure, of which the most astounding
part is that it is true, comes on as an unavoidable
consequence. Something of the sort had to happen.
You repeat this to yourself while you marvel that
such a thing could happen in the year of grace before
last. But it has happened—and there
is no disputing its logic.
’I put it down here for you
as though I had been an eyewitness. My information
was fragmentary, but I’ve fitted the pieces together,
and there is enough of them to make an intelligible
picture. I wonder how he would have related it
himself. He has confided so much in me that at
times it seems as though he must come in presently
and tell the story in his own words, in his careless
yet feeling voice, with his offhand manner, a little
puzzled, a little bothered, a little hurt, but now
and then by a word or a phrase giving one of these
glimpses of his very own self that were never any
good for purposes of orientation. It’s
difficult to believe he will never come. I shall
never hear his voice again, nor shall I see his smooth
tan-and-pink face with a white line on the forehead,
and the youthful eyes darkened by excitement to a
profound, unfathomable blue.’