XXX.
THE EMPIRE OF THE ANTS.
When Captain Gerilleau received instructions
to take his new gunboat, the Benjamin Constant,
to Badama on the Batemo arm of the Guaramadema and
there assist the inhabitants against a plague of ants,
he suspected the authorities of mockery. His
promotion had been romantic and irregular, the affections
of a prominent Brazilian lady and the captain’s
liquid eyes had played a part in the process, and
the Diario and O Futuro had been lamentably
disrespectful in their comments. He felt he was
to give further occasion for disrespect.
He was a Creole, his conceptions of
etiquette and discipline were pure-blooded Portuguese,
and it was only to Holroyd, the Lancashire engineer
who had come over with the boat, and as an exercise
in the use of English—his “th”
sounds were very uncertain—that he opened
his heart.
“It is in effect,” he
said, “to make me absurd! What can a man
do against ants? Dey come, dey go.”
“They say,” said Holroyd,
“that these don’t go. That chap you
said was a Sambo——”
“Zambo;—it is a sort of mixture of
blood.”
“Sambo. He said the people are going!”
The captain smoked fretfully for a
time. “Dese tings ’ave to happen,”
he said at last. “What is it? Plagues
of ants and suchlike as God wills. Dere was a
plague in Trinidad—the little ants that
carry leaves. Orl der orange-trees, all der mangoes!
What does it matter? Sometimes ant armies come
into your houses—fighting ants; a different
sort. You go and they clean the house. Then
you come back again;—the house is clean,
like new! No cockroaches, no fleas, no jiggers
in the floor.”
“That Sambo chap,” said Holroyd, “says
these are a different sort of ant.”
The captain shrugged his shoulders,
fumed, and gave his attention to a cigarette.
Afterwards he reopened the subject.
“My dear ’Olroyd, what am I to do about
dese infernal ants?”
The captain reflected. “It
is ridiculous,” he said. But in the afternoon
he put on his full uniform and went ashore, and jars
and boxes came back to the ship and subsequently he
did. And Holroyd sat on deck in the evening coolness
and smoked profoundly and marvelled at Brazil.
They were six days up the Amazon, some hundreds of
miles from the ocean, and east and west of him there
was a horizon like the sea, and to the south nothing
but a sand-bank island with some tufts of scrub.
The water was always running like a sluice, thick
with dirt, animated with crocodiles and hovering birds,
and fed by some inexhaustible source of tree trunks;
and the waste of it, the headlong waste of it, filled
his soul. The town of Alemquer, with its meagre
church, its thatched sheds for houses, its discoloured
ruins of ampler days, seemed a little thing lost in
this wilderness of Nature, a sixpence dropped on Sahara.
He was a young man, this was his first sight of the
tropics, he came straight from England, where Nature
is hedged, ditched, and drained, into the perfection
of submission, and he had suddenly discovered the
insignificance of man. For six days they had
been steaming up from the sea by unfrequented channels;
and man had been as rare as a rare butterfly.
One saw one day a canoe, another day a distant station,
the next no men at all. He began to perceive
that man is indeed a rare animal, having but a precarious
hold upon this land.
He perceived it more clearly as the
days passed, and he made his devious way to the Batemo,
in the company of this remarkable commander, who ruled
over one big gun, and was forbidden to waste his ammunition.
Holroyd was learning Spanish industriously, but he
was still in the present tense and substantive stage
of speech, and the only other person who had any words
of English was a negro stoker, who had them all wrong.
The second in command was a Portuguese, da Cunha,
who spoke French, but it was a different sort of French
from the French Holroyd had learnt in Southport, and
their intercourse was confined to politenesses and
simple propositions about the weather. And the
weather, like everything else in this amazing new
world, the weather had no human aspect, and was hot
by night and hot by day, and the air steam, even the
wind was hot steam, smelling of vegetation in decay:
and the alligators and the strange birds, the flies
of many sorts and sizes, the beetles, the ants, the
snakes and monkeys seemed to wonder what man was doing
in an atmosphere that had no gladness in its sunshine
and no coolness in its night. To wear clothing
was intolerable, but to cast it aside was to scorch
by day, and expose an ampler area to the mosquitoes
by night; to go on deck by day was to be blinded by
glare and to stay below was to suffocate. And
in the daytime came certain flies, extremely clever
and noxious about one’s wrist and ankle.
Captain Gerilleau, who was Holroyd’s sole distraction
from these physical distresses, developed into a formidable
bore, telling the simple story of his heart’s
affections day by day, a string of anonymous women,
as if he was telling beads. Sometimes he suggested
sport, and they shot at alligators, and at rare intervals
they came to human aggregations in the waste of trees,
and stayed for a day or so, and drank and sat about,
and, one night, danced with Creole girls, who found
Holroyd’s poor elements of Spanish, without
either past tense or future, amply sufficient for their
purposes. But these were mere luminous chinks
in the long grey passage of the streaming river, up
which the throbbing engines beat. A certain liberal
heathen deity, in the shape of a demi-john, held seductive
court aft, and, it is probable, forward.
But Gerilleau learnt things about
the ants, more things and more, at this stopping-place
and that, and became interested in his mission.
“Dey are a new sort of ant,”
he said. “We have got to be—what
do you call it?—entomologie? Big.
Five centimetres! Some bigger! It is ridiculous.
We are like the monkeys—–sent to
pick insects… But dey are eating up the country.”
He burst out indignantly. “Suppose—suddenly,
there are complications with Europe. Here am
I—soon we shall be above the Rio Negro—and
my gun, useless!”
He nursed his knee and mused.
“Dose people who were dere at
de dancing place, dey ’ave come down. Dey
’ave lost all they got. De ants come to
deir house one afternoon. Everyone run out.
You know when de ants come one must—everyone
runs out and they go over the house. If you stayed
they’d eat you. See? Well, presently
dey go back; dey say, ’The ants ‘ave gone.’
... De ants ’aven’t gone.
Dey try to go in—de son, ’e goes in.
De ants fight.”
“Swarm over him?”
“Bite ’im. Presently
he comes out again—screaming and running.
He runs past them to the river. See? He
gets into de water and drowns de ants—
yes.” Gerilleau paused, brought his liquid
eyes close to Holroyd’s face, tapped Holroyd’s
knee with his knuckle. “That night he dies,
just as if he was stung by a snake.”
“Poisoned—by the ants?”
“Who knows?” Gerilleau
shrugged his shoulders. “Perhaps they bit
him badly… When I joined dis service I joined
to fight men. Dese things, dese ants, dey come
and go. It is no business for men.”
After that he talked frequently of
the ants to Holroyd, and whenever they chanced to
drift against any speck of humanity in that waste of
water and sunshine and distant trees, Holroyd’s
improving knowledge of the language enabled him to
recognise the ascendant word Saüba, more and
more completely dominating the whole.
He perceived the ants were becoming
interesting, and the nearer he drew to them the more
interesting they became. Gerilleau abandoned his
old themes almost suddenly, and the Portuguese lieutenant
became a conversational figure; he knew something
about the leaf-cutting ant, and expanded his knowledge.
Gerilleau sometimes rendered what he had to tell to
Holroyd. He told of the little workers that swarm
and fight, and the big workers that command and rule,
and how these latter always crawled to the neck and
how their bites drew blood. He told how they
cut leaves and made fungus beds, and how their nests
in Caracas are sometimes a hundred yards across.
Two days the three men spent disputing whether ants
have eyes. The discussion grew dangerously heated
on the second afternoon, and Holroyd saved the situation
by going ashore in a boat to catch ants and see.
He captured various specimens and returned, and some
had eyes and some hadn’t. Also, they argued,
do ants bite or sting?
“Dese ants,” said Gerilleau,
after collecting information at a rancho, “have
big eyes. They don’t run about blind—not
as most ants do. No! Dey get in corners
and watch what you do.”
“And they sting?” asked Holroyd.
“Yes. Dey sting. Dere
is poison in the sting.” He meditated.
“I do not see what men can do against ants.
Dey come and go.”
“But these don’t go.”
“They will,” said Gerilleau.
Past Tamandu there is a long low coast
of eighty miles without any population, and then one
comes to the confluence of the main river and the
Batemo arm like a great lake, and then the forest came
nearer, came at last intimately near. The character
of the channel changes, snags abound, and the Benjamin
Constant moored by a cable that night, under the
very shadow of dark trees. For the first time
for many days came a spell of coolness, and Holroyd
and Gerilleau sat late, smoking cigars and enjoying
this delicious sensation. Gerilleau’s mind
was full of ants and what they could do. He decided
to sleep at last, and lay down on a mattress on deck,
a man hopelessly perplexed, his last words, when he
already seemed asleep, were to ask, with a flourish
of despair, “What can one do with ants?...
De whole thing is absurd.”
Holroyd was left to scratch his bitten wrists, and
meditate alone.
He sat on the bulwark and listened
to the little changes in Gerilleau’s breathing
until he was fast asleep, and then the ripple and lap
of the stream took his mind, and brought back that
sense of immensity that had been growing upon him
since first he had left Para and come up the river.
The monitor showed but one small light, and there was
first a little talking forward and then stillness.
His eyes went from the dim black outlines of the middle
works of the gunboat towards the bank, to the black
overwhelming mysteries of forest, lit now and then
by a fire-fly, and never still from the murmur of
alien and mysterious activities…
It was the inhuman immensity of this
land that astonished and oppressed him. He knew
the skies were empty of men, the stars were specks
in an incredible vastness of space; he knew the ocean
was enormous and untamable, but in England he had
come to think of the land as man’s. In
England it is indeed man’s, the wild things live
by sufferance, grow on lease, everywhere the roads,
the fences, and absolute security runs. In an
atlas, too, the land is man’s, and all coloured
to show his claim to it— in vivid contrast
to the universal independent blueness of the sea.
He had taken it for granted that a day would come
when everywhere about the earth, plough and culture,
light tramways and good roads, an ordered security,
would prevail. But now, he doubted.
This forest was interminable, it had
an air of being invincible, and Man seemed at best
an infrequent precarious intruder. One travelled
for miles, amidst the still, silent struggle of giant
trees, of strangulating creepers, of assertive flowers,
everywhere the alligator, the turtle, and endless
varieties of birds and insects seemed at home, dwelt
irreplaceably—but man, man at most held
a footing upon resentful clearings, fought weeds,
fought beasts and insects for the barest foothold,
fell a prey to snake and beast, insect and fever, and
was presently carried away. In many places down
the river he had been manifestly driven back, this
deserted creek or that preserved the name of a casa,
and here and there ruinous white walls and a shattered
tower enforced the lesson. The puma, the jaguar,
were more the masters here…
Who were the real masters?
In a few miles of this forest there
must be more ants than there are men in the whole
world! This seemed to Holroyd a perfectly new
idea. In a few thousand years men had emerged
from barbarism to a stage of civilisation that made
them feel lords of the future and masters of the earth!
But what was to prevent the ants evolving also?
Such ants as one knew lived in little communities
of a few thousand individuals, made no concerted efforts
against the greater world. But they had a language,
they had an intelligence! Why should things stop
at that any more than men had stopped at the barbaric
stage? Suppose presently the ants began to store
knowledge, just as men had done by means of books and
records, use weapons, form great empires, sustain
a planned and organised war?
Things came back to him that Gerilleau
had gathered about these ants they were approaching.
They used a poison like the poison of snakes.
They obeyed greater leaders even as the leaf-cutting
ants do. They were carnivorous, and where they
came they stayed…
The forest was very still. The
water lapped incessantly against the side. About
the lantern overhead there eddied a noiseless whirl
of phantom moths.
Gerilleau stirred in the darkness
and sighed. “What can one do?”
he murmured, and turned over and was still again.
Holroyd was roused from meditations
that were becoming sinister by the hum of a mosquito.