XXXII.
THE COUNTRY OF THE BLIND.
Three hundred miles and more from
Chimborazo, one hundred from the snows of Cotopaxi,
in the wildest wastes of Ecuador’s Andes, there
lies that mysterious mountain valley, cut off from
the world of men, the Country of the Blind. Long
years ago that valley lay so far open to the world
that men might come at last through frightful gorges
and over an icy pass into its equable meadows; and
thither indeed men came, a family or so of Peruvian
half-breeds fleeing from the lust and tyranny of an
evil Spanish ruler. Then came the stupendous
outbreak of Mindobamba, when it was night in Quito
for seventeen days, and the water was boiling at Yaguachi
and all the fish floating dying even as far as Guayaquil;
everywhere along the Pacific slopes there were land-slips
and swift thawings and sudden floods, and one whole
side of the old Arauca crest slipped and came down
in thunder, and cut off the Country of the Blind for
ever from the exploring feet of men. But one
of these early settlers had chanced to be on the hither
side of the gorges when the world had so terribly shaken
itself, and he perforce had to forget his wife and
his child and all the friends and possessions he had
left up there, and start life over again in the lower
world. He started it again but ill, blindness
overtook him, and he died of punishment in the mines;
but the story he told begot a legend that lingers
along the length of the Cordilleras of the Andes to
this day.
He told of his reason for venturing
back from that fastness, into which he had first been
carried lashed to a llama, beside a vast bale of gear,
when he was a child. The valley, he said, had
in it all that the heart of man could desire—sweet
water, pasture, and even climate, slopes of rich brown
soil with tangles of a shrub that bore an excellent
fruit, and on one side great hanging forests of pine
that held the avalanches high. Far overhead,
on three sides, vast cliffs of grey-green rock were
capped by cliffs of ice; but the glacier stream came
not to them but flowed away by the farther slopes,
and only now and then huge ice masses fell on the valley
side. In this valley it neither rained nor snowed,
but the abundant springs gave a rich green pasture,
that irrigation would spread over all the valley space.
The settlers did well indeed there. Their beasts
did well and multiplied, and but one thing marred
their happiness. Yet it was enough to mar it
greatly. A strange disease had come upon them,
and had made all the children born to them there—and
indeed, several older children also—blind.
It was to seek some charm or antidote against this
plague of blindness that he had with fatigue and danger
and difficulty returned down the gorge. In those
days, in such cases, men did not think of germs and
infections but of sins; and it seemed to him that the
reason of this affliction must lie in the negligence
of these priestless immigrants to set up a shrine
so soon as they entered the valley. He wanted
a shrine—a handsome, cheap, effectual shrine—to
be erected in the valley; he wanted relics and such-like
potent things of faith, blessed objects and mysterious
medals and prayers. In his wallet he had a bar
of native silver for which he would not account; he
insisted there was none in the valley with something
of the insistence of an inexpert liar. They had
all clubbed their money and ornaments together, having
little need for such treasure up there, he said, to
buy them holy help against their ill. I figure
this dim-eyed young mountaineer, sunburnt, gaunt, and
anxious, hat-brim clutched feverishly, a man all unused
to the ways of the lower world, telling this story
to some keen-eyed, attentive priest before the great
convulsion; I can picture him presently seeking to
return with pious and infallible remedies against
that trouble, and the infinite dismay with which he
must have faced the tumbled vastness where the gorge
had once come out. But the rest of his story
of mischances is lost to me, save that I know of his
evil death after several years. Poor stray from
that remoteness! The stream that had once made
the gorge now bursts from the mouth of a rocky cave,
and the legend his poor, ill-told story set going
developed into the legend of a race of blind men somewhere
“over there” one may still hear to-day.
And amidst the little population of
that now isolated and forgotten valley the disease
ran its course. The old became groping and purblind,
the young saw but dimly, and the children that were
born to them saw never at all. But life was very
easy in that snow-rimmed basin, lost to all the world,
with neither thorns nor briars, with no evil insects
nor any beasts save the gentle breed of llamas they
had lugged and thrust and followed up the beds of
the shrunken rivers in the gorges up which they had
come. The seeing had become purblind so gradually
that they scarcely noted their loss. They guided
the sightless youngsters hither and thither until they
knew the whole Valley marvellously, and when at last
sight died out among them the race lived on.
They had even time to adapt themselves to the blind
control of fire, which they made carefully in stoves
of stone. They were a simple strain of people
at the first, unlettered, only slightly touched with
the Spanish civilisation, but with something of a tradition
of the arts of old Peru and of its lost philosophy.
Generation followed generation. They forgot many
things; they devised many things. Their tradition
of the greater world they came from became mythical
in colour and uncertain. In all things save sight
they were strong and able, and presently the chance
of birth and heredity sent one who had an original
mind and who could talk and persuade among them, and
then afterwards another. These two passed, leaving
their effects, and the little community grew in numbers
and in understanding, and met and settled social and
economic problems that arose. Generation followed
generation. Generation followed generation.
There came a time when a child was born who was fifteen
generations from that ancestor who went out of the
valley with a bar of silver to seek God’s aid,
and who never returned. Thereabouts it chanced
that a man came into this community from the outer
world. And this is the story of that man.
He was a mountaineer from the country
near Quito, a man who had been down to the sea and
had seen the world, a reader of books in an original
way, an acute and enterprising man, and he was taken
on by a party of Englishmen who had come out to Ecuador
to climb mountains, to replace one of their three
Swiss guides who had fallen ill. He climbed here
and he climbed there, and then came the attempt on
Parascotopetl, the Matterhorn of the Andes, in which
he was lost to the outer world. The story of the
accident has been written a dozen times. Pointer’s
narrative is the best. He tells how the little
party worked their difficult and almost vertical way
up to the very foot of the last and greatest precipice,
and how they built a night shelter amidst the snow
upon a little shelf of rock, and, with a touch of
real dramatic power, how presently they found Nunez
had gone from them. They shouted, and there was
no reply; shouted and whistled, and for the rest of
that night they slept no more.
As the morning broke they saw the
traces of his fall. It seems impossible he could
have uttered a sound. He had slipped eastward
towards the unknown side of the mountain; far below
he had struck a steep slope of snow, and ploughed
his way down it in the midst of a snow avalanche.
His track went straight to the edge of a frightful
precipice, and beyond that everything was hidden.
Far, far below, and hazy with distance, they could
see trees rising out of a narrow, shut-in valley—the
lost Country of the Blind. But they did not know
it was the lost Country of the Blind, nor distinguish
it in any way from any other narrow streak of upland
valley. Unnerved by this disaster, they abandoned
their attempt in the afternoon, and Pointer was called
away to the war before he could make another attack.
To this day Parascotopetl lifts an unconquered crest,
and Pointer’s shelter crumbles unvisited amidst
the snows.
And the man who fell survived.
At the end of the slope he fell a
thousand feet, and came down in the midst of a cloud
of snow upon a snow slope even steeper than the one
above. Down this he was whirled, stunned and insensible,
but without a bone broken in his body; and then at
last came to gentler slopes, and at last rolled out
and lay still, buried amidst a softening heap of the
white masses that had accompanied and saved him.
He came to himself with a dim fancy that he was ill
in bed; then realised his position with a mountaineer’s
intelligence, and worked himself loose and, after a
rest or so, out until he saw the stars. He rested
flat upon his chest for a space, wondering where he
was and what had happened to him. He explored
his limbs, and discovered that several of his buttons
were gone and his coat turned over his head.
His knife had gone from his pocket and his hat was
lost, though he had tied it under his chin. He
recalled that he had been looking for loose stones
to raise his piece of the shelter wall. His ice-axe
had disappeared.
He decided he must have fallen, and
looked up to see, exaggerated by the ghastly light
of the rising moon, the tremendous flight he had taken.
For a while he lay, gazing blankly at that vast pale
cliff towering above, rising moment by moment out
of a subsiding tide of darkness. Its phantasmal,
mysterious beauty held him for a space, and then he
was seized with a paroxysm of sobbing laughter…
After a great interval of time he
became aware that he was near the lower edge of the
snow. Below, down what was now a moonlit and practicable
slope, he saw the dark and broken appearance of rock-strewn
turf. He struggled to his feet, aching in every
joint and limb, got down painfully from the heaped
loose snow about him, went downward until he was on
the turf, and there dropped rather than lay beside
a boulder, drank deep from the flask in his inner
pocket, and instantly fell asleep…
He was awakened by the singing of
birds in the trees far below.
He sat up and perceived he was on
a little alp at the foot of a vast precipice, that
was grooved by the gully down which he and his snow
had come. Over against him another wall of rock
reared itself against the sky. The gorge between
these precipices ran east and west and was full of
the morning sunlight, which lit to the westward the
mass of fallen mountain that closed the descending
gorge. Below him it seemed there was a precipice
equally steep, but behind the snow in the gully he
found a sort of chimney-cleft dripping with snow-water
down which a desperate man might venture. He
found it easier than it seemed, and came at last to
another desolate alp, and then after a rock climb
of no particular difficulty to a steep slope of trees.
He took his bearings and turned his face up the gorge,
for he saw it opened out above upon green meadows,
among which he now glimpsed quite distinctly a cluster
of stone huts of unfamiliar fashion. At times
his progress was like clambering along the face of
a wall, and after a time the rising sun ceased to
strike along the gorge, the voices of the singing
birds died away, and the air grew cold and dark about
him. But the distant valley with its houses was
all the brighter for that. He came presently
to talus, and among the rocks he noted—for
he was an observant man—an unfamiliar fern
that seemed to clutch out of the crevices with intense
green hands. He picked a frond or so and gnawed
its stalk and found it helpful.
About midday he came at last out of
the throat of the gorge into the plain and the sunlight.
He was stiff and weary; he sat down in the shadow of
a rock, filled up his flask with water from a spring
and drank it down, and remained for a time resting
before he went on to the houses.
They were very strange to his eyes,
and indeed the whole aspect of that valley became,
as he regarded it, queerer and more unfamiliar.
The greater part of its surface was lush green meadow,
starred with many beautiful flowers, irrigated with
extraordinary care, and bearing evidence of systematic
cropping piece by piece. High up and ringing the
valley about was a wall, and what appeared to be a
circumferential water-channel, from which the little
trickles of water that fed the meadow plants came,
and on the higher slopes above this flocks of llamas
cropped the scanty herbage. Sheds, apparently
shelters or feeding-places for the llamas, stood against
the boundary wall here and there. The irrigation
streams ran together into a main channel down the
centre of the valley, and this was enclosed on either
side by a wall breast high. This gave a singularly
urban quality to this secluded place, a quality that
was greatly enhanced by the fact that a number of
paths paved with black and white stones, and each with
a curious little kerb at the side, ran hither and
thither in an orderly manner. The houses of the
central village were quite unlike the casual and higgledy-piggledy
agglomeration of the mountain villages he knew; they
stood in a continuous row on either side of a central
street of astonishing cleanness; here and there their
particoloured facade was pierced by a door, and not
a solitary window broke their even frontage.
They were particoloured with extraordinary irregularity,
smeared with a sort of plaster that was sometimes
grey, sometimes drab, sometimes slate-coloured or
dark brown; and it was the sight of this wild plastering
first brought the word “blind” into the
thoughts of the explorer. “The good man
who did that,” he thought, “must have been
as blind as a bat.”
He descended a steep place, and so
came to the wall and channel that ran about the valley,
near where the latter spouted out its surplus contents
into the deeps of the gorge in a thin and wavering
thread of cascade. He could now see a number
of men and women resting on piled heaps of grass,
as if taking a siesta, in the remoter part of the meadow,
and nearer the village a number of recumbent children,
and then nearer at hand three men carrying pails on
yokes along a little path that ran from the encircling
wall towards the houses. These latter were clad
in garments of llama cloth and boots and belts of
leather, and they wore caps of cloth with back and
ear flaps. They followed one another in single
file, walking slowly and yawning as they walked, like
men who have been up all night. There was something
so reassuringly prosperous and respectable in their
bearing that after a moment’s hesitation Nunez
stood forward as conspicuously as possible upon his
rock, and gave vent to a mighty shout that echoed round
the valley.
The three men stopped, and moved their
heads as though they were looking about them.
They turned their faces this way and that, and Nunez
gesticulated with freedom. But they did not appear
to see him for all his gestures, and after a time,
directing themselves towards the mountains far away
to the right, they shouted as if in answer. Nunez
bawled again, and then once more, and as he gestured
ineffectually the word “blind” came up
to the top of his thoughts. “The fools must
be blind,” he said.
When at last, after much shouting
and wrath, Nunez crossed the stream by a little bridge,
came through a gate in the wall, and approached them,
he was sure that they were blind. He was sure
that this was the Country of the Blind of which the
legends told. Conviction had sprung upon him,
and a sense of great and rather enviable adventure.
The three stood side by side, not looking at him,
but with their ears directed towards him, judging
him by his unfamiliar steps. They stood close
together like men a little afraid, and he could see
their eyelids closed and sunken, as though the very
balls beneath had shrunk away. There was an expression
near awe on their faces.
“A man,” one said, in
hardly recognisable Spanish—“a man
it is—a man or a spirit—coming
down from the rocks.”
But Nunez advanced with the confident
steps of a youth who enters upon life. All the
old stories of the lost valley and the Country of the
Blind had come back to his mind, and through his thoughts
ran this old proverb, as if it were a refrain—
“In the Country of the Blind the One-eyed Man
is King.”
“In the Country of the Blind the One-eyed Man
is King.”
And very civilly he gave them greeting.
He talked to them and used his eyes.
“Where does he come from, brother Pedro?”
asked one.
“Down out of the rocks.”
“Over the mountains I come,”
said Nunez, “out of the country beyond there—where
men can see. From near Bogota, where there are
a hundred thousands of people, and where the city
passes out of sight.”
“Sight?” muttered Pedro. “Sight?”
“He comes,” said the second blind man,
“out of the rocks.”
The cloth of their coats Nunez saw
was curiously fashioned, each with a different sort
of stitching.
They startled him by a simultaneous
movement towards him, each with a hand outstretched.
He stepped back from the advance of these spread fingers.
“Come hither,” said the
third blind man, following his motion and clutching
him neatly.
And they held Nunez and felt him over,
saying no word further until they had done so.
“Carefully,” he cried,
with a finger in his eye, and found they thought that
organ, with its fluttering lids, a queer thing in him.
They went over it again.
“A strange creature, Correa,”
said the one called Pedro. “Feel the coarseness
of his hair. Like a llama’s hair.”
“Rough he is as the rocks that
begot him,” said Correa, investigating Nunez’s
unshaven chin with a soft and slightly moist hand.
“Perhaps he will grow finer.” Nunez
struggled a little under their examination, but they
gripped him firm.
“Carefully,” he said again.
“He speaks,” said the third man.
“Certainly he is a man.”
“Ugh!” said Pedro, at the roughness of
his coat.
“And you have come into the world?” asked
Pedro.
“Out of the world.
Over mountains and glaciers; right over above there,
half-way to the sun. Out of the great big world
that goes down, twelve days’ journey to the
sea.”
They scarcely seemed to heed him.
“Our fathers have told us men may be made by
the forces of Nature,” said Correa. “It
is the warmth of things and moisture, and rottenness—rottenness.”
“Let us lead him to the elders,” said
Pedro.
“Shout first,” said Correa,
“lest the children be afraid… This is
a marvellous occasion.”
So they shouted, and Pedro went first
and took Nunez by the hand to lead him to the houses.
He drew his hand away. “I can see,”
he said.
“See?” said Correa.
“Yes, see,” said Nunez,
turning towards him, and stumbled against Pedro’s
pail.
“His senses are still imperfect,”
said the third blind man. “He stumbles,
and talks unmeaning words. Lead him by the hand.”
“As you will,” said Nunez, and was led
along, laughing.
It seemed they knew nothing of sight.
Well, all in good time he would teach them.
He heard people shouting, and saw
a number of figures gathering together in the middle
roadway of the village.
He found it tax his nerve and patience
more than he had anticipated, that first encounter
with the population of the Country of the Blind.
The place seemed larger as he drew near to it, and
the smeared plasterings queerer, and a crowd of children
and men and women (the women and girls, he was pleased
to note, had some of them quite sweet faces, for all
that their eyes were shut and sunken) came about him,
holding on to him, touching him with soft, sensitive
hands, smelling at him, and listening at every word
he spoke. Some of the maidens and children, however,
kept aloof as if afraid, and indeed his voice seemed
coarse and rude beside their softer notes. They
mobbed him. His three guides kept close to him
with an effect of proprietorship, and said again and
again, “A wild man out of the rock.”
“Bogota,” he said. “Bogota.
Over the mountain crests.”
“A wild man—using
wild words,” said Pedro. “Did you
hear that— Bogota? His mind
is hardly formed yet. He has only the beginnings
of speech.”
A little boy nipped his hand. “Bogota!”
he said mockingly.
“Ay! A city to your village.
I come from the great world—where men have
eyes and see.”
“His name’s Bogota,” they said.
“He stumbled,” said Correa, “stumbled
twice as we came hither.”
“Bring him to the elders.”
And they thrust him suddenly through
a doorway into a room as black as pitch, save at the
end there faintly glowed a fire. The crowd closed
in behind him and shut out all but the faintest glimmer
of day, and before he could arrest himself he had
fallen headlong over the feet of a seated man.
His arm, outflung, struck the face of someone else
as he went down; he felt the soft impact of features
and heard a cry of anger, and for a moment he struggled
against a number of hands that clutched him. It
was a one-sided fight. An inkling of the situation
came to him, and he lay quiet.
“I fell down,” he said; “I couldn’t
see in this pitchy darkness.”
There was a pause as if the unseen
persons about him tried to understand his words.
Then the voice of Correa said: “He is but
newly formed. He stumbles as he walks and mingles
words that mean nothing with his speech.”
Others also said things about him that he heard or
understood imperfectly.
“May I sit up?” he asked,
in a pause. “I will not struggle against
you again.”
They consulted and let him rise.
The voice of an older man began to
question him, and Nunez found himself trying to explain
the great world out of which he had fallen, and the
sky and mountains and sight and such-like marvels,
to these elders who sat in darkness in the Country
of the Blind. And they would believe and understand
nothing whatever he told them, a thing quite outside
his expectation. They would not even understand
many of his words. For fourteen generations these
people had been blind and cut off from all the seeing
world; the names for all the things of sight had faded
and changed; the story of the outer world was faded
and changed to a child’s story; and they had
ceased to concern themselves with anything beyond the
rocky slopes above their circling wall. Blind
men of genius had arisen among them and questioned
the shreds of belief and tradition they had brought
with them from their seeing days, and had dismissed
all these things as idle fancies, and replaced them
with new and saner explanations. Much of their
imagination had shrivelled with their eyes, and they
had made for themselves new imaginations with their
ever more sensitive ears and finger-tips. Slowly
Nunez realised this; that his expectation of wonder
and reverence at his origin and his gifts was not to
be borne out; and after his poor attempt to explain
sight to them had been set aside as the confused version
of a new-made being describing the marvels of his
incoherent sensations, he subsided, a little dashed,
into listening to their instruction. And the
eldest of the blind men explained to him life and
philosophy and religion, how that the world (meaning
their valley) had been first an empty hollow in the
rocks, and then had come, first, inanimate things
without the gift of touch, and llamas and a few other
creatures that had little sense, and then men, and
at last angels, whom one could hear singing and making
fluttering sounds, but whom no one could touch at
all, which puzzled Nunez greatly until he thought of
the birds.
He went on to tell Nunez how this
time had been divided into the warm and the cold,
which are the blind equivalents of day and night, and
how it was good to sleep in the warm and work during
the cold, so that now, but for his advent, the whole
town of the blind would have been asleep. He said
Nunez must have been specially created to learn and
serve the wisdom, they had acquired, and that for
all his mental incoherency and stumbling behaviour
he must have courage, and do his best to learn, and
at that all the people in the doorway murmured encouragingly.
He said the night—for the blind call their
day night—was now far gone, and it behoved
every one to go back to sleep. He asked Nunez
if he knew how to sleep, and Nunez said he did, but
that before sleep he wanted food.
They brought him food—llama’s
milk in a bowl, and rough salted bread—and
led him into a lonely place, to eat out of their hearing,
and afterwards to slumber until the chill of the mountain
evening roused them to begin their day again.
But Nunez slumbered not at all.
Instead, he sat up in the place where
they had left him, resting his limbs and turning the
unanticipated circumstances of his arrival over and
over in his mind.
Every now and then he laughed, sometimes
with amusement, and sometimes with indignation.
“Unformed mind!” he said.
“Got no senses yet! They little know they’ve
been insulting their heaven-sent king and master.
I see I must bring them to reason. Let me think—let
me think.”
He was still thinking when the sun set.
Nunez had an eye for all beautiful
things, and it seemed to him that the glow upon the
snowfields and glaciers that rose about the valley
on every side was the most beautiful thing he had
ever seen. His eyes went from that inaccessible
glory to the village and irrigated fields, fast sinking
into the twilight, and suddenly a wave of emotion took
him, and he thanked God from the bottom of his heart
that the power of sight had been given him.
He heard a voice calling to him from
out of the village. “Ya ho there, Bogota!
Come hither!”
At that he stood up smiling.
He would show these people once and for all what sight
would do for a man. They would seek him, but not
find him.
“You move not, Bogota,” said the voice.
He laughed noiselessly, and made two stealthy steps
aside from the path.
“Trample not on the grass, Bogota; that is not
allowed.”
Nunez had scarcely heard the sound he made himself.
He stopped amazed.
The owner of the voice came running up the piebald
path towards him.
He stepped back into the pathway. “Here
I am,” he said.
“Why did you not come when I
called you?” said the blind man. “Must
you be led like a child? Cannot you hear the
path as you walk?”
Nunez laughed. “I can see it,” he
said.
“There is no such word as see,”
said the blind man, after a pause. “Cease
this folly, and follow the sound of my feet.”
Nunez followed, a little annoyed.
“My time will come,” he said.
“You’ll learn,”
the blind man answered. “There is much to
learn in the world.”
“Has no one told you, ’In
the Country of the Blind the One-eyed Man is King’?”
“What is blind?” asked the blind man carelessly
over his shoulder.
Four days passed, and the fifth found
the King of the Blind still incognito, as a clumsy
and useless stranger among his subjects.
It was, he found, much more difficult
to proclaim himself than he had supposed, and in the
meantime, while he meditated his coup d’état,
he did what he was told and learnt the manners and
customs of the Country of the Blind. He found
working and going about at night a particularly irksome
thing, and he decided that that should be the first
thing he would change.
They led a simple, laborious life,
these people, with all the elements of virtue and
happiness, as these things can be understood by men.
They toiled, but not oppressively; they had food and
clothing sufficient for their needs; they had days
and seasons of rest; they made much of music and singing,
and there was love among them, and little children.
It was marvellous with what confidence
and precision they went about their ordered world.
Everything, you see, had been made to fit their needs;
each of the radiating paths of the valley area had
a constant angle to the others, and was distinguished
by a special notch upon its kerbing; all obstacles
and irregularities of path or meadow had long since
been cleared away; all their methods and procedure
arose naturally from their special needs. Their
senses had become marvellously acute; they could hear
and judge the slightest gesture of a man a dozen paces
away—could hear the very beating of his
heart. Intonation had long replaced expression
with them, and touches gesture, and their work with
hoe and spade and fork was as free and confident as
garden work can be. Their sense of smell was
extraordinarily fine; they could distinguish individual
differences as readily as a dog can, and they went
about the tending of the llamas, who lived among the
rocks above and came to the wall for food and shelter,
with ease and confidence. It was only when at
last Nunez sought to assert himself that he found
how easy and confident their movements could be.
He rebelled only after he had tried persuasion.
He tried at first on several occasions
to tell them of sight. “Look you here,
you people,” he said. “There are things
you do not understand in me.”
Once or twice one or two of them attended
to him; they sat with faces downcast and ears turned
intelligently towards him, and he did his best to
tell them what it was to see. Among his hearers
was a girl, with eyelids less red and sunken than
the others, so that one could almost fancy she was
hiding eyes, whom especially he hoped to persuade.
He spoke of the beauties of sight, of watching the
mountains, of the sky and the sunrise, and they heard
him with amused incredulity that presently became
condemnatory. They told him there were indeed
no mountains at all, but that the end of the rocks
where the llamas grazed was indeed the end of the
world; thence sprang a cavernous roof of the universe,
from which the dew and the avalanches fell; and when
he maintained stoutly the world had neither end nor
roof such as they supposed, they said his thoughts
were wicked. So far as he could describe sky
and clouds and stars to them it seemed to them a hideous
void, a terrible blankness in the place of the smooth
roof to things in which they believed—it
was an article of faith with them that the cavern
roof was exquisitely smooth to the touch. He saw
that in some manner he shocked them, and gave up that
aspect of the matter altogether, and tried to show
them the practical value of sight. One morning
he saw Pedro in the path called Seventeen and coming
towards the central houses, but still too far off
for hearing or scent, and he told them as much.
“In a little while,” he prophesied, “Pedro
will be here.” An old man remarked that
Pedro had no business on path Seventeen, and then,
as if in confirmation, that individual as he drew near
turned and went transversely into path Ten, and so
back with nimble paces towards the outer wall.
They mocked Nunez when Pedro did not arrive, and afterwards,
when he asked Pedro questions to clear his character,
Pedro denied and outfaced him, and was afterwards
hostile to him.
Then he induced them to let him go
a long way up the sloping meadows towards the wall
with one complacent individual, and to him he promised
to describe all that happened among the houses.
He noted certain goings and comings, but the things
that really seemed to signify to these people happened
inside of or behind the windowless houses—the
only things they took note of to test him by—and
of these he could see or tell nothing; and it was
after the failure of this attempt, and the ridicule
they could not repress, that he resorted to force.
He thought of seizing a spade and suddenly smiting
one or two of them to earth, and so in fair combat
showing the advantage of eyes. He went so far
with that resolution as to seize his spade, and then
he discovered a new thing about himself, and that
was that it was impossible for him to hit a blind man
in cold blood.
He hesitated, and found them all aware
that he had snatched up the spade. They stood
alert, with their heads on one side, and bent ears
towards him for what he would do next.
“Put that spade down,”
said one, and he felt a sort of helpless horror.
He came near obedience.
Then he thrust one backwards against
a house wall, and fled past him and out of the village.
He went athwart one of their meadows,
leaving a track of trampled grass behind his feet,
and presently sat down by the side of one of their
ways. He felt something of the buoyancy that
comes to all men in the beginning of a fight, but
more perplexity. He began to realise that you
cannot even fight happily with creatures who stand
upon a different mental basis to yourself. Far
away he saw a number of men carrying spades and sticks
come out of the street of houses, and advance in a
spreading line along the several paths towards him.
They advanced slowly, speaking frequently to one another,
and ever and again the whole cordon would halt and
sniff the air and listen.
The first time they did this Nunez
laughed. But afterwards he did not laugh.
One struck his trail in the meadow
grass, and came stooping and feeling his way along
it.
For five minutes he watched the slow
extension of the cordon, and then his vague disposition
to do something forthwith became frantic. He stood
up, went a pace or so towards the circumferential
wall, turned, and went back a little way. There
they all stood in a crescent, still and listening.
He also stood still, gripping his
spade very tightly in both hands. Should he charge
them?
The pulse in his ears ran into the
rhythm of “In the Country of the Blind the One-eyed
Man is King!”
Should he charge them?
He looked back at the high and unclimbable
wall behind—unclimbable because of its
smooth plastering, but withal pierced with many little
doors, and at the approaching line of seekers.
Behind these others were now coming out of the street
of houses.
Should he charge them?
“Bogota!” called one. “Bogota!
where are you?”
He gripped his spade still tighter,
and advanced down the meadows towards the place of
habitations, and directly he moved they converged upon
him. “I’ll hit them if they touch
me,” he swore; “by Heaven, I will.
I’ll hit.” He called aloud, “Look
here, I’m going to do what I like in this valley.
Do you hear? I’m going to do what I like
and go where I like!”
They were moving in upon him quickly,
groping, yet moving rapidly. It was like playing
blind man’s buff, with everyone blindfolded except
one. “Get hold of him!” cried one.
He found himself in the arc of a loose curve of pursuers.
He felt suddenly he must be active and resolute.
“You don’t understand,”
he cried in a voice that was meant to be great and
resolute, and which broke. “You are blind,
and I can see. Leave me alone!”
“Bogota! Put down that spade, and come
off the grass!”
The last order, grotesque in its urban
familiarity, produced a gust of anger.
“I’ll hurt you,”
he said, sobbing with emotion. “By Heaven,
I’ll hurt you. Leave me alone!”
He began to run, not knowing clearly
where to run. He ran from the nearest blind man,
because it was a horror to hit him. He stopped,
and then made a dash to escape from their closing
ranks. He made for where a gap was wide, and
the men on either side, with a quick perception of
the approach of his paces, rushed in on one another.
He sprang forward, and then saw he must be caught,
and swish! the spade had struck. He felt
the soft thud of hand and arm, and the man was down
with a yell of pain, and he was through.
Through! And then he was close
to the street of houses again, and blind men, whirling
spades and stakes, were running with a sort of reasoned
swiftness hither and thither.
He heard steps behind him just in
time, and found a tall man rushing forward and swiping
at the sound of him. He lost his nerve, hurled
his spade a yard wide at his antagonist, and whirled
about and fled, fairly yelling as he dodged another.
He was panic-stricken. He ran
furiously to and fro, dodging when there was no need
to dodge, and in his anxiety to see on every side of
him at once, stumbling. For a moment he was down
and they heard his fall. Far away in the circumferential
wall a little doorway looked like heaven, and he set
off in a wild rush for it. He did not even look
round at his pursuers until it was gained, and he
had stumbled across the bridge, clambered a little
way among the rocks, to the surprise and dismay of
a young llama, who went leaping out of sight, and
lay down sobbing for breath.
And so his coup d’état came to an end.
He stayed outside the wall of the
valley of the Blind for two nights and days without
food or shelter, and meditated upon the unexpected.
During these meditations he repeated very frequently
and always with a profounder note of derision the
exploded proverb: “In the Country of the
Blind the One-Eyed Man is King.” He thought
chiefly of ways of fighting and conquering these people,
and it grew clear that for him no practicable way
was possible. He had no weapons, and now it would
be hard to get one.
The canker of civilisation had got
to him even in Bogota, and he could not find it in
himself to go down and assassinate a blind man.
Of course, if he did that, he might then dictate terms
on the threat of assassinating them all. But—sooner
or later he must sleep!...
He tried also to find food among the
pine trees, to be comfortable under pine boughs while
the frost fell at night, and—with less confidence—to
catch a llama by artifice in order to try to kill it—perhaps
by hammering it with a stone—and so finally,
perhaps, to eat some of it. But the llamas had
a doubt of him and regarded him with distrustful brown
eyes, and spat when he drew near. Fear came on
him the second day and fits of shivering. Finally
he crawled down to the wall of the Country of the Blind
and tried to make terms. He crawled along by the
stream, shouting, until two blind men came out to
the gate and talked to him.
“I was mad,” he said. “But
I was only newly made.”
They said that was better.
He told them he was wiser now, and repented of all
he had done.
Then he wept without intention, for
he was very weak and ill now, and they took that as
a favourable sign.
They asked him if he still thought he could “see”
“No,” he said. “That
was folly. The word means nothing—less
than nothing!”
They asked him what was overhead.
“About ten times ten the height
of a man there is a roof above the world—
of rock—and very, very smooth.” ...
He burst again into hysterical tears. “Before
you ask me any more, give me some food or I shall die.”
He expected dire punishments, but
these blind people were capable of toleration.
They regarded his rebellion as but one more proof of
his general idiocy and inferiority; and after they
had whipped him they appointed him to do the simplest
and heaviest work they had for anyone to do, and he,
seeing no other way of living, did submissively what
he was told.
He was ill for some days, and they
nursed him kindly. That refined his submission.
But they insisted on his lying in the dark, and that
was a great misery. And blind philosophers came
and talked to him of the wicked levity of his mind,
and reproved him so impressively for his doubts about
the lid of rock that covered their cosmic casserole
that he almost doubted whether indeed he was not the
victim of hallucination in not seeing it overhead.
So Nunez became a citizen of the Country
of the Blind, and these people ceased to be a generalised
people and became individualities and familiar to
him, while the world beyond the mountains became more
and more remote and unreal. There was Yacob,
his master, a kindly man when not annoyed; there was
Pedro, Yacob’s nephew; and there was Medina-saroté,
who was the youngest daughter of Yacob. She was
little esteemed in the world of the blind, because
she had a clear-cut face, and lacked that satisfying,
glossy smoothness that is the blind man’s ideal
of feminine beauty; but Nunez thought her beautiful
at first, and presently the most beautiful thing in
the whole creation. Her closed eyelids were not
sunken and red after the common way of the valley,
but lay as though they might open again at any moment;
and she had long eyelashes, which were considered a
grave disfigurement. And her voice was strong,
and did not satisfy the acute hearing of the valley
swains. So that she had no lover.
There came a time when Nunez thought
that, could he win her, he would be resigned to live
in the valley for all the rest of his days.
He watched her; he sought opportunities
of doing her little services, and presently he found
that she observed him. Once at a rest-day gathering
they sat side by side in the dim starlight, and the
music was sweet. His hand came upon hers and
he dared to clasp it. Then very tenderly she
returned his pressure. And one day, as they were
at their meal in the darkness, he felt her hand very
softly seeking him, and as it chanced the fire leapt
then and he saw the tenderness of her face.
He sought to speak to her.
He went to her one day when she was
sitting in the summer moonlight spinning. The
light made her a thing of silver and mystery.
He sat down at her feet and told her he loved her,
and told her how beautiful she seemed to him.
He had a lover’s voice, he spoke with a tender
reverence that came near to awe, and she had never
before been touched by adoration. She made him
no definite answer, but it was clear his words pleased
her.
After that he talked to her whenever
he could take an opportunity. The valley became
the world for him, and the world beyond the mountains
where men lived in sunlight seemed no more than a
fairy tale he would some day pour into her ears.
Very tentatively and timidly he spoke to her of sight.
Sight seemed to her the most poetical
of fancies, and she listened to his description of
the stars and the mountains and her own sweet white-lit
beauty as though it was a guilty indulgence. She
did not believe, she could only half understand, but
she was mysteriously delighted, and it seemed to him
that she completely understood.
His love lost its awe and took courage.
Presently he was for demanding her of Yacob and the
elders in marriage, but she became fearful and delayed.
And it was one of her elder sisters who first told
Yacob that Medina-saroté and Nunez were in love.
There was from the first very great
opposition to the marriage of Nunez and Medina-saroté;
not so much because they valued her as because they
held him as a being apart, an idiot, incompetent thing
below the permissible level of a man. Her sisters
opposed it bitterly as bringing discredit on them
all; and old Yacob, though he had formed a sort of
liking for his clumsy, obedient serf, shook his head
and said the thing could not be. The young men
were all angry at the idea of corrupting the race,
and one went so far as to revile and strike Nunez.
He struck back. Then for the first time he found
an advantage in seeing, even by twilight, and after
that fight was over no one was disposed to raise a
hand against him. But they still found his marriage
impossible.
Old Yacob had a tenderness for his
last little daughter, and was grieved to have her
weep upon his shoulder.
“You see, my dear, he’s
an idiot. He has delusions; he can’t do
anything right.”
“I know,” wept Medina-saroté.
“But he’s better than he was. He’s
getting better. And he’s strong, dear father,
and kind—stronger and kinder than any I
other man in the world. And he loves me—and,
father, I love him.”
Old Yacob was greatly distressed to
find her inconsolable, and, besides— what
made it more distressing—he liked Nunez
for many things. So he went and sat in the windowless
council-chamber with the other elders and watched
the trend of the talk, and said, at the proper time,
“He’s better than he was. Very likely,
some day, we shall find him as sane as ourselves.”
Then afterwards one of the elders,
who thought deeply, had an idea. He was the great
doctor among these people, their medicine-man, and
he had a very philosophical and inventive mind, and
the idea of curing Nunez of his peculiarities appealed
to him. One day when Yacob was present he returned
to the topic of Nunez.
“I have examined Bogota,”
he said, “and the case is clearer to me.
I think very probably he might be cured.”
“That is what I have always hoped,” said
old Yacob.
“His brain is affected,” said the blind
doctor.
The elders murmured assent.
“Now, what affects it?”
“Ah!” said old Yacob.
“This,” said the
doctor, answering his own question. “Those
queer things that are called the eyes, and which exist
to make an agreeable soft depression in the face,
are diseased, in the case of Bogota, in such a way
as to affect his brain. They are greatly distended,
he has eyelashes, and his eyelids move, and consequently
his brain is in a state of constant irritation and
distraction.”
“Yes?” said old Yacob. “Yes?”
“And I think I may say with
reasonable certainty that, in order to cure him completely,
all that we need do is a simple and easy surgical
operation—namely, to remove these irritant
bodies.”
“And then he will be sane?”
“Then he will be perfectly sane, and a quite
admirable citizen.”
“Thank Heaven for science!”
said old Yacob, and went forth at once to tell Nunez
of his happy hopes.
But Nunez’s manner of receiving
the good news struck him as being cold and disappointing.
“One might think,” he
said, “from the tone you take, that you did not
care for my daughter.”
It was Medina-saroté who persuaded
Nunez to face the blind surgeons.
“You do not want me,”
he said, “to lose my gift of sight?”
She shook her head.
“My world is sight.”
Her head drooped lower.
“There are the beautiful things,
the beautiful little things—the flowers,
the lichens among the rocks, the lightness and softness
on a piece of fur, the far sky with its drifting down
of clouds, the sunsets and the stars. And there
is you. For you alone it is good to have
sight, to see your sweet, serene face, your kindly
lips, your dear, beautiful hands folded together…
It is these eyes of mine you won, these eyes that hold
me to you, that these idiots seek. Instead, I
must touch you, hear you, and never see you again.
I must come under that roof of rock and stone and
darkness, that horrible roof under which your imagination
stoops… No; you would not have me do that?”
A disagreeable doubt had arisen in
him. He stopped, and left the thing a question.
“I wish,” she said, “sometimes——”
She paused.
“Yes,” said he, a little apprehensively.
“I wish sometimes—you would not talk
like that.”
“Like what?”
“I know it’s pretty—it’s
your imagination. I love it, but now——”
He felt cold. “Now?” he said faintly.
She sat quite still.
“You mean--you think--I should be better, better perhaps-----”
He was realising things very swiftly.
He felt anger, indeed, anger at the dull course of
fate, but also sympathy for her lack of understanding—a
sympathy near akin to pity.
“Dear,” he said,
and he could see by her whiteness how intensely her
spirit pressed against the things she could not say.
He put his arms about her, he kissed her ear, and
they sat for a time in silence.
“If I were to consent to this?”
he said at last, in a voice that was very gentle.
She flung her arms about him, weeping
wildly. “Oh, if you would,” she sobbed,
“if only you would!”
* * * *
*
For a week before the operation that
was to raise him from his servitude and inferiority
to the level of a blind citizen, Nunez knew nothing
of sleep, and all through the warm sunlit hours, while
the others slumbered happily, he sat brooding or wandered
aimlessly, trying to bring his mind to bear on his
dilemma. He had given his answer, he had given
his consent, and still he was not sure. And at
last work-time was over, the sun rose in splendour
over the golden crests, and his last day of vision
began for him. He had a few minutes with Medina-saroté
before she went apart to sleep.
“To-morrow,” he said, “I shall see
no more.”
“Dear heart!” she answered, and pressed
his hands with all her strength.
“They will hurt you but little,”
she said; “and you are going through this pain—you
are going through it, dear lover, for me...
Dear, if a woman’s heart and life can do it,
I will repay you. My dearest one, my dearest
with the tender voice, I will repay.”
He was drenched in pity for himself and her.
He held her in his arms, and pressed
his lips to hers, and looked on her sweet face for
the last time. “Good-bye!” he whispered
at that dear sight, “good-bye!”
And then in silence he turned away from her.
She could hear his slow retreating
footsteps, and something in the rhythm of them threw
her into a passion of weeping.
He had fully meant to go to a lonely
place where the meadows were beautiful with white
narcissus, and there remain until the hour of his
sacrifice should come, but as he went he lifted up
his eyes and saw the morning, the morning like an
angel in golden armour, marching down the steeps…
It seemed to him that before this
splendour he, and this blind world in the valley,
and his love, and all, were no more than a pit of sin.
He did not turn aside as he had meant
to do, but went on, and passed through the wall of
the circumference and out upon the rocks, and his eyes
were always upon the sunlit ice and snow.
He saw their infinite beauty, and
his imagination soared over them to the things beyond
he was now to resign for ever.
He thought of that great free world
he was parted from, the world that was his own, and
he had a vision of those further slopes, distance beyond
distance, with Bogota, a place of multitudinous stirring
beauty, a glory by day, a luminous mystery by night,
a place of palaces and fountains and statues and white
houses, lying beautifully in the middle distance.
He thought how for a day or so one might come down
through passes, drawing ever nearer and nearer to
its busy streets and ways. He thought of the
river journey, day by day, from great Bogota to the
still vaster world beyond, through towns and villages,
forest and desert places, the rushing river day by
day, until its banks receded and the big steamers came
splashing by, and one had reached the sea—the
limitless sea, with its thousand islands, its thousands
of islands, and its ships seen dimly far away in their
incessant journeyings round and about that greater
world. And there, unpent by mountains, one saw
the sky—the sky, not such a disc as one
saw it here, but an arch of immeasurable blue, a deep
of deeps in which the circling stars were floating…
His eyes scrutinised the great curtain
of the mountains with a keener inquiry.
For example, if one went so, up that
gully and to that chimney there, then one might come
out high among those stunted pines that ran round in
a sort of shelf and rose still higher and higher as
it passed above the gorge. And then? That
talus might be managed. Thence perhaps a climb
might be found to take him up to the precipice that
came below the snow; and if that chimney failed, then
another farther to the east might serve his purpose
better. And then? Then one would be out upon
the amber-lit snow there, and half-way up to the crest
of those beautiful desolations.
He glanced back at the village, then
turned right round and regarded it steadfastly.
He thought of Medina-saroté, and she
had become small and remote.
He turned again towards the mountain
wall, down which the day had come to him.
Then very circumspectly he began to climb.
When sunset came he was no longer
climbing, but he was far and high. He had been
higher, but he was still very high. His clothes
were torn, his limbs were blood-stained, he was bruised
in many places, but he lay as if he were at his ease,
and there was a smile on his face.
From where he rested the valley seemed
as if it were in a pit and nearly a mile below.
Already it was dim with haze and shadow, though the
mountain summits around him were things of light and
fire. The mountain summits around him were things
of light and fire, and the little details of the rocks
near at hand were drenched with subtle beauty—a
vein of green mineral piercing the grey, the flash
of crystal faces here and there, a minute, minutely-beautiful
orange lichen close beside his face. There were
deep mysterious shadows in the gorge, blue deepening
into purple, and purple into a luminous darkness,
and overhead was the illimitable vastness of the sky.
But he heeded these things no longer, but lay quite
inactive there, smiling as if he were satisfied merely
to have escaped from the valley of the Blind in which
he had thought to be King.
The glow of the sunset passed, and
the night came, and still he lay peacefully contented
under the cold clear stars.