IN this way I became one among the
Beast People in the Island of Doctor Moreau.
When I awoke, it was dark about me. My arm ached
in its bandages. I sat up, wondering at first
where I might be. I heard coarse voices talking
outside. Then I saw that my barricade had gone,
and that the opening of the hut stood clear.
My revolver was still in my hand.
I heard something breathing, saw something
crouched together close beside me. I held my
breath, trying to see what it was. It began to
move slowly, interminably. Then something soft
and warm and moist passed across my hand. All
my muscles contracted. I snatched my hand away.
A cry of alarm began and was stifled in my throat.
Then I just realised what had happened sufficiently
to stay my fingers on the revolver.
“Who is that?” I said
in a hoarse whisper, the revolver still pointed.
“I—Master.”
“Who are you?”
“They say there is no Master
now. But I know, I know. I carried the
bodies into the sea, O Walker in the Sea! the bodies
of those you slew. I am your slave, Master.”
“Are you the one I met on the beach?”
I asked.
“The same, Master.”
The Thing was evidently faithful enough,
for it might have fallen upon me as I slept.
“It is well,” I said, extending my hand
for another licking kiss. I began to realise
what its presence meant, and the tide of my courage
flowed. “Where are the others?”
I asked.
“They are mad; they are fools,”
said the Dog-man. “Even now they talk
together beyond there. They say, ’The Master
is dead. The Other with the Whip is dead.
That Other who walked in the Sea is as we are.
We have no Master, no Whips, no House of Pain, any
more. There is an end. We love the Law,
and will keep it; but there is no Pain, no Master,
no Whips for ever again.’ So they say.
But I know, Master, I know.”
I felt in the darkness, and patted
the Dog-man’s head. “It is well,”
I said again.
“Presently you will slay them all,” said
the Dog-man.
“Presently,” I answered,
“I will slay them all,—after certain
days and certain things have come to pass. Every
one of them save those you spare, every one of them
shall be slain.”
“What the Master wishes to kill,
the Master kills,” said the Dog-man with a certain
satisfaction in his voice.
“And that their sins may grow,”
I said, “let them live in their folly until
their time is ripe. Let them not know that I
am the Master.”
“The Master’s will is
sweet,” said the Dog-man, with the ready tact
of his canine blood.
“But one has sinned,”
said I. “Him I will kill, whenever I may
meet him. When I say to you, ‘That is he,’
see that you fall upon him. And now I will go
to the men and women who are assembled together.”
For a moment the opening of the hut
was blackened by the exit of the Dog-man. Then
I followed and stood up, almost in the exact spot
where I had been when I had heard Moreau and his staghound
pursuing me. But now it was night, and all the
miasmatic ravine about me was black; and beyond, instead
of a green, sunlit slope, I saw a red fire, before
which hunched, grotesque figures moved to and fro.
Farther were the thick trees, a bank of darkness, fringed
above with the black lace of the upper branches.
The moon was just riding up on the edge of the ravine,
and like a bar across its face drove the spire of
vapour that was for ever streaming from the fumaroles
of the island.
“Walk by me,” said I,
nerving myself; and side by side we walked down the
narrow way, taking little heed of the dim Things that
peered at us out of the huts.
None about the fire attempted to salute
me. Most of them disregarded me, ostentatiously.
I looked round for the Hyena-swine, but he was not
there. Altogether, perhaps twenty of the Beast
Folk squatted, staring into the fire or talking to
one another.
“He is dead, he is dead! the
Master is dead!” said the voice of the Ape-man
to the right of me. “The House of Pain—there
is no House of Pain!”
“He is not dead,” said
I, in a loud voice. “Even now he watches
us!”
This startled them. Twenty pairs of eyes regarded
me.
“The House of Pain is gone,” said I.
“It will come again.
The Master you cannot see; yet even now he listens
among you.”
“True, true!” said the Dog-man.
They were staggered at my assurance.
An animal may be ferocious and cunning enough, but
it takes a real man to tell a lie.
“The Man with the Bandaged Arm
speaks a strange thing,” said one of the Beast
Folk.
“I tell you it is so,”
I said. “The Master and the House of Pain
will come again. Woe be to him who breaks the
Law!”
They looked curiously at one another.
With an affectation of indifference I began to chop
idly at the ground in front of me with my hatchet.
They looked, I noticed, at the deep cuts I made in
the turf.
Then the Satyr raised a doubt.
I answered him. Then one of the dappled things
objected, and an animated discussion sprang up round
the fire. Every moment I began to feel more convinced
of my present security. I talked now without
the catching in my breath, due to the intensity of
my excitement, that had troubled me at first.
In the course of about an hour I had really convinced
several of the Beast Folk of the truth of my assertions,
and talked most of the others into a dubious state.
I kept a sharp eye for my enemy the Hyena-swine, but
he never appeared. Every now and then a suspicious
movement would startle me, but my confidence grew
rapidly. Then as the moon crept down from the
zenith, one by one the listeners began to yawn (showing
the oddest teeth in the light of the sinking fire),
and first one and then another retired towards the
dens in the ravine; and I, dreading the silence and
darkness, went with them, knowing I was safer with
several of them than with one alone.
In this manner began the longer part
of my sojourn upon this Island of Doctor Moreau.
But from that night until the end came, there was
but one thing happened to tell save a series of innumerable
small unpleasant details and the fretting of an incessant
uneasiness. So that I prefer to make no chronicle
for that gap of time, to tell only one cardinal incident
of the ten months I spent as an intimate of these
half-humanised brutes. There is much that sticks
in my memory that I could write,—things
that I would cheerfully give my right hand to forget;
but they do not help the telling of the story.
In the retrospect it is strange to
remember how soon I fell in with these monsters’
ways, and gained my confidence again. I had my
quarrels with them of course, and could show some of
their teeth-marks still; but they soon gained a wholesome
respect for my trick of throwing stones and for the
bite of my hatchet. And my Saint-Bernard-man’s
loyalty was of infinite service to me. I found
their simple scale of honour was based mainly on the
capacity for inflicting trenchant wounds. Indeed,
I may say—without vanity, I hope—that
I held something like pre-eminence among them.
One or two, whom in a rare access of high spirits I
had scarred rather badly, bore me a grudge; but it
vented itself chiefly behind my back, and at a safe
distance from my missiles, in grimaces.
The Hyena-swine avoided me, and I
was always on the alert for him. My inseparable
Dog-man hated and dreaded him intensely. I really
believe that was at the root of the brute’s attachment
to me. It was soon evident to me that the former
monster had tasted blood, and gone the way of the
Leopard-man. He formed a lair somewhere in the
forest, and became solitary. Once I tried to
induce the Beast Folk to hunt him, but I lacked the
authority to make them co-operate for one end.
Again and again I tried to approach his den and come
upon him unaware; but always he was too acute for
me, and saw or winded me and got away. He too
made every forest pathway dangerous to me and my ally
with his lurking ambuscades. The Dog-man scarcely
dared to leave my side.
In the first month or so the Beast
Folk, compared with their latter condition, were human
enough, and for one or two besides my canine friend
I even conceived a friendly tolerance. The little
pink sloth-creature displayed an odd affection for
me, and took to following me about. The Monkey-man
bored me, however; he assumed, on the strength of
his five digits, that he was my equal, and was for
ever jabbering at me,—jabbering the most
arrant nonsense. One thing about him entertained
me a little: he had a fantastic trick of coining
new words. He had an idea, I believe, that to
gabble about names that meant nothing was the proper
use of speech. He called it “Big Thinks”
to distinguish it from “Little Thinks,”
the sane every-day interests of life. If ever
I made a remark he did not understand, he would praise
it very much, ask me to say it again, learn it by
heart, and go off repeating it, with a word wrong
here or there, to all the milder of the Beast People.
He thought nothing of what was plain and comprehensible.
I invented some very curious “Big Thinks”
for his especial use. I think now that he was
the silliest creature I ever met; he had developed
in the most wonderful way the distinctive silliness
of man without losing one jot of the natural folly
of a monkey.
This, I say, was in the earlier weeks
of my solitude among these brutes. During that
time they respected the usage established by the Law,
and behaved with general decorum. Once I found
another rabbit torn to pieces,—by the Hyena-swine,
I am assured,—but that was all. It
was about May when I first distinctly perceived a growing
difference in their speech and carriage, a growing
coarseness of articulation, a growing disinclination
to talk. My Monkey-man’s jabber multiplied
in volume but grew less and less comprehensible, more
and more simian. Some of the others seemed altogether
slipping their hold upon speech, though they still
understood what I said to them at that time.
(Can you imagine language, once clear-cut and exact,
softening and guttering, losing shape and import,
becoming mere lumps of sound again?) And they walked
erect with an increasing difficulty. Though they
evidently felt ashamed of themselves, every now and
then I would come upon one or another running on toes
and finger-tips, and quite unable to recover the vertical
attitude. They held things more clumsily; drinking
by suction, feeding by gnawing, grew commoner every
day. I realised more keenly than ever what Moreau
had told me about the “stubborn beast-flesh.”
They were reverting, and reverting very rapidly.
Some of them—the pioneers
in this, I noticed with some surprise, were all females—began
to disregard the injunction of decency, deliberately
for the most part. Others even attempted public
outrages upon the institution of monogamy. The
tradition of the Law was clearly losing its force.
I cannot pursue this disagreeable subject.
My Dog-man imperceptibly slipped back
to the dog again; day by day he became dumb, quadrupedal,
hairy. I scarcely noticed the transition from
the companion on my right hand to the lurching dog
at my side.
As the carelessness and disorganisation
increased from day to day, the lane of dwelling places,
at no time very sweet, became so loathsome that I
left it, and going across the island made myself a
hovel of boughs amid the black ruins of Moreau’s
enclosure. Some memory of pain, I found, still
made that place the safest from the Beast Folk.
It would be impossible to detail every
step of the lapsing of these monsters,—to
tell how, day by day, the human semblance left them;
how they gave up bandagings and wrappings, abandoned
at last every stitch of clothing; how the hair began
to spread over the exposed limbs; how their foreheads
fell away and their faces projected; how the quasi-human
intimacy I had permitted myself with some of them
in the first month of my loneliness became a shuddering
horror to recall.
The change was slow and inevitable.
For them and for me it came without any definite
shock. I still went among them in safety, because
no jolt in the downward glide had released the increasing
charge of explosive animalism that ousted the human
day by day. But I began to fear that soon now
that shock must come. My Saint-Bernard-brute
followed me to the enclosure every night, and his
vigilance enabled me to sleep at times in something
like peace. The little pink sloth-thing became
shy and left me, to crawl back to its natural life
once more among the tree-branches. We were in
just the state of equilibrium that would remain in
one of those “Happy Family” cages which
animal-tamers exhibit, if the tamer were to leave it
for ever.
Of course these creatures did not
decline into such beasts as the reader has seen in
zoological gardens,—into ordinary bears,
wolves, tigers, oxen, swine, and apes. There
was still something strange about each; in each Moreau
had blended this animal with that. One perhaps
was ursine chiefly, another feline chiefly, another
bovine chiefly; but each was tainted with other creatures,—a
kind of generalised animalism appearing through the
specific dispositions. And the dwindling shreds
of the humanity still startled me every now and then,—a
momentary recrudescence of speech perhaps, an unexpected
dexterity of the fore-feet, a pitiful attempt to walk
erect.
I too must have undergone strange
changes. My clothes hung about me as yellow
rags, through whose rents showed the tanned skin.
My hair grew long, and became matted together.
I am told that even now my eyes have a strange brightness,
a swift alertness of movement.
At first I spent the daylight hours
on the southward beach watching for a ship, hoping
and praying for a ship. I counted on the “Ipecacuanha”
returning as the year wore on; but she never came.
Five times I saw sails, and thrice smoke; but nothing
ever touched the island. I always had a bonfire
ready, but no doubt the volcanic reputation of the
island was taken to account for that.
It was only about September or October
that I began to think of making a raft. By that
time my arm had healed, and both my hands were at
my service again. At first, I found my helplessness
appalling. I had never done any carpentry or
such-like work in my life, and I spent day after day
in experimental chopping and binding among the trees.
I had no ropes, and could hit on nothing wherewith
to make ropes; none of the abundant creepers seemed
limber or strong enough, and with all my litter of
scientific education I could not devise any way of
making them so. I spent more than a fortnight
grubbing among the black ruins of the enclosure and
on the beach where the boats had been burnt, looking
for nails and other stray pieces of metal that might
prove of service. Now and then some Beast-creature
would watch me, and go leaping off when I called to
it. There came a season of thunder-storms and
heavy rain, which greatly retarded my work; but at
last the raft was completed.
I was delighted with it. But
with a certain lack of practical sense which has always
been my bane, I had made it a mile or more from the
sea; and before I had dragged it down to the beach
the thing had fallen to pieces. Perhaps it is
as well that I was saved from launching it; but at
the time my misery at my failure was so acute that
for some days I simply moped on the beach, and stared
at the water and thought of death.
I did not, however, mean to die, and
an incident occurred that warned me unmistakably of
the folly of letting the days pass so,—for
each fresh day was fraught with increasing danger
from the Beast People.
I was lying in the shade of the enclosure
wall, staring out to sea, when I was startled by something
cold touching the skin of my heel, and starting round
found the little pink sloth-creature blinking into
my face. He had long since lost speech and active
movement, and the lank hair of the little brute grew
thicker every day and his stumpy claws more askew.
He made a moaning noise when he saw he had attracted
my attention, went a little way towards the bushes
and looked back at me.
At first I did not understand, but
presently it occurred to me that he wished me to follow
him; and this I did at last,—slowly, for
the day was hot. When we reached the trees he
clambered into them, for he could travel better among
their swinging creepers than on the ground. And
suddenly in a trampled space I came upon a ghastly
group. My Saint-Bernard-creature lay on the ground,
dead; and near his body crouched the Hyena-swine,
gripping the quivering flesh with its misshapen claws,
gnawing at it, and snarling with delight. As
I approached, the monster lifted its glaring eyes to
mine, its lips went trembling back from its red-stained
teeth, and it growled menacingly. It was not
afraid and not ashamed; the last vestige of the human
taint had vanished. I advanced a step farther,
stopped, and pulled out my revolver. At last
I had him face to face.
The brute made no sign of retreat;
but its ears went back, its hair bristled, and its
body crouched together. I aimed between the eyes
and fired. As I did so, the Thing rose straight
at me in a leap, and I was knocked over like a ninepin.
It clutched at me with its crippled hand, and struck
me in the face. Its spring carried it over me.
I fell under the hind part of its body; but luckily
I had hit as I meant, and it had died even as it leapt.
I crawled out from under its unclean weight and stood
up trembling, staring at its quivering body.
That danger at least was over; but this, I knew was
only the first of the series of relapses that must
come.
I burnt both of the bodies on a pyre
of brushwood; but after that I saw that unless I left
the island my death was only a question of time.
The Beast People by that time had, with one or two
exceptions, left the ravine and made themselves lairs
according to their taste among the thickets of the
island. Few prowled by day, most of them slept,
and the island might have seemed deserted to a new-comer;
but at night the air was hideous with their calls and
howling. I had half a mind to make a massacre
of them; to build traps, or fight them with my knife.
Had I possessed sufficient cartridges, I should not
have hesitated to begin the killing. There could
now be scarcely a score left of the dangerous carnivores;
the braver of these were already dead. After
the death of this poor dog of mine, my last friend,
I too adopted to some extent the practice of slumbering
in the daytime in order to be on my guard at night.
I rebuilt my den in the walls of the enclosure, with
such a narrow opening that anything attempting to
enter must necessarily make a considerable noise.
The creatures had lost the art of fire too, and recovered
their fear of it. I turned once more, almost
passionately now, to hammering together stakes and
branches to form a raft for my escape.
I found a thousand difficulties.
I am an extremely unhandy man (my schooling was over
before the days of Slojd); but most of the requirements
of a raft I met at last in some clumsy, circuitous
way or other, and this time I took care of the strength.
The only insurmountable obstacle was that I had no
vessel to contain the water I should need if I floated
forth upon these untravelled seas. I would have
even tried pottery, but the island contained no clay.
I used to go moping about the island trying with all
my might to solve this one last difficulty.
Sometimes I would give way to wild outbursts of rage,
and hack and splinter some unlucky tree in my intolerable
vexation. But I could think of nothing.
And then came a day, a wonderful day,
which I spent in ecstasy. I saw a sail to the
southwest, a small sail like that of a little schooner;
and forthwith I lit a great pile of brushwood, and
stood by it in the heat of it, and the heat of the
midday sun, watching. All day I watched that
sail, eating or drinking nothing, so that my head reeled;
and the Beasts came and glared at me, and seemed to
wonder, and went away. It was still distant
when night came and swallowed it up; and all night
I toiled to keep my blaze bright and high, and the
eyes of the Beasts shone out of the darkness, marvelling.
In the dawn the sail was nearer, and I saw it was the
dirty lug-sail of a small boat. But it sailed
strangely. My eyes were weary with watching,
and I peered and could not believe them. Two
men were in the boat, sitting low down,—one
by the bows, the other at the rudder. The head
was not kept to the wind; it yawed and fell away.
As the day grew brighter, I began
waving the last rag of my jacket to them; but they
did not notice me, and sat still, facing each other.
I went to the lowest point of the low headland, and
gesticulated and shouted. There was no response,
and the boat kept on her aimless course, making slowly,
very slowly, for the bay. Suddenly a great white
bird flew up out of the boat, and neither of the men
stirred nor noticed it; it circled round, and then
came sweeping overhead with its strong wings outspread.
Then I stopped shouting, and sat down
on the headland and rested my chin on my hands and
stared. Slowly, slowly, the boat drove past towards
the west. I would have swum out to it, but something—a
cold, vague fear—kept me back. In
the afternoon the tide stranded the boat, and left
it a hundred yards or so to the westward of the ruins
of the enclosure. The men in it were dead, had
been dead so long that they fell to pieces when I
tilted the boat on its side and dragged them out.
One had a shock of red hair, like the captain of the
“Ipecacuanha,” and a dirty white cap lay
in the bottom of the boat.
As I stood beside the boat, three
of the Beasts came slinking out of the bushes and
sniffing towards me. One of my spasms of disgust
came upon me. I thrust the little boat down the
beach and clambered on board her. Two of the
brutes were Wolf-beasts, and came forward with quivering
nostrils and glittering eyes; the third was the horrible
nondescript of bear and bull. When I saw them
approaching those wretched remains, heard them snarling
at one another and caught the gleam of their teeth,
a frantic horror succeeded my repulsion. I turned
my back upon them, struck the lug and began paddling
out to sea. I could not bring myself to look
behind me.
I lay, however, between the reef and
the island that night, and the next morning went round
to the stream and filled the empty keg aboard with
water. Then, with such patience as I could command,
I collected a quantity of fruit, and waylaid and killed
two rabbits with my last three cartridges. While
I was doing this I left the boat moored to an inward
projection of the reef, for fear of the Beast People.