“Ya Zan,” came
his wife’s slow grave voice, “O Shane,
when your ship is in trouble, or does not go fast,
do the passengers beat you?”
“Of course not,” Campbell
laughed. “What put that in your little head?”
“When I went with my uncle,
Arif Bey, on the pilgrimage to Mecca-Arif
was a Moslem that year”-she bit the
thread of the embroidery she was doing with her little
sharp teeth, tkk!-“our ship
anchored for the night in Birkat Faraun-Pharaoh’s
Bay. In the morning it would not move, so the
Maghrabi pilgrims beat the captain terribly. And
once at Al-Akabah, when the captain lost sight of
shores for one whole long day, the Maghrabis beat
him again. They said he should have known better.
Don’t-don’t they ever beat you,
ya Zan?”
“Not yet, Fenzile. They only beat bad skippers.”
“But our Rais was a good
sailor. He must have been a good sailor, Zan.
He was very old. He was very pious, too.
He said the prayers. Do you ever say the prayers,
Zan, when the sea looks as if it were about to be
angry?”
“What sort of prayers, Fenzile?”
“Oh, prayers. Let me see.”
Her dark eyes had the look he loved, as if she had
turned around and were rummaging within herself, as
a woman seeks diligently and yet slowly in a chest.
“Oh, like the Moslem’s Hizb al-Bahr.
You ought to know that prayer, ya Zan.
It will make you safe at sea. I wonder you, a
great Rais, do not know that prayer.”
“What is the prayer, Fenzile?”
“’We pray Thee for safety
in our goings forth and our standings still....
Subject unto us this sea, even as Thou didst subject
the deep to Moses, and as Thou didst subject the fire
to Abraham, and as Thou didst subject the iron to
David, and as Thou didst subject the wind and the
devils and djinns and mankind to Solomon, and
as Thou didst subject the moon and Al-Burah
to Mohammed, on whom be Allah’s mercy and His
blessing! And subject unto us all the seas in
earth and heaven, in Thy visible and in Thine invisible
worlds, the sea of this life and the sea of futurity.
O Thou Who reignest over everything and unto Whom all
things return.’ ... You must know that prayer,
and say that prayer, ya Zan. What do you
do when it is very stormy?”
“Oh, take in as little sail
as possible and keep shoving ahead.”
“I don’t understand,”
she let the embroidery fall in her lap. “I
see your ship from the quays and I can’t understand
how you guide such a big ship. And how you go
at night, Zan, that I cannot understand. It is
so dark at night. There is a terrible lot I do
not understand. I am very stupid.”
“You are very dear and darling,
Fenzile. You understand how to take care of a
house and how to be very beautiful, and be very loving-”
“Do I, Zanim? That is not
hard. That is not very much. That is not
like sailing a ship on the sea.”
Without, Beirut seethed with life.
Thin, gaunt dogs barked and snarled in the narrow
staired streets. Came the cry of the donkey-boys.
Came the cry of the water-sellers. Came the shouts
of the young Syrians over the gammon game. Loped
the laden camels. Tramped the French soldiers.
Came a new hum....
Fenzile rose and went through the
courtyard, past the little fountain with the orange-trees,
past the staircase to the upper gallery, came to the
barred iron gates, looked a moment, moved modestly
back into the shadows....
“O look, ya Zan,”
her grave voice became excited. “Come quickly.
See. It is Ahmet Ali, with his attendants and
a lot of people following him.”
“And who is Ahmet Ali?”
“Ahmet Ali! don’t you
know, Zanim? The great wrestler, Ahmet Ali.
The wrestler from Aleppo....”
Section 2
Through the grilled door, in the opal
shade of the walls, Shane saw the wrestler stroll
down the street; a big bulk of a man in white robe
and turban, olive-skinned, heavy on his feet, seeming
more like a prosperous young merchant than a wrestling
champion of a vilayet. Yet underneath the white
robes Shane could sense the immense arms and shoulders,
the powerful legs. Very heavily he moved, muscle-bound
a good deal, Shane thought; a man for pushing and
crushing and resisting, but not for fast, nervous
work, sinew and brain coordinating like the crack of
a whip. A Cornish wrestler would turn him inside
out within a minute; a Japanese would pitch him like
a ball before he had even taken his stance. But
once he had a grip he would be irresistible.
“So that’s Ahmet Ali.”
“Yes, Zan,” Fenzile clapped
her hands with delight, like a child seeing a circus
procession. “Oh, he is a great wrestler.
He beat Yussuf Hussein, the Cairene, and he beat a
great Russian wrestler who came on a pilgrimage to
Jerusalem. And he beat a French sailor. And
he beat a Tartar. Oh, he is a great wrestler,
Ahmet Ali.”
The wrestler had come nearer.
Behind him came four or five supporters, in cloth
white as his. Behind them came a ruck of Syrian
youths, effeminate, vicious. Came a croud of
donkey-boys, impish, black. The wrestler walked
more slowly as he approached to pass the iron doors.
And Shane was startled into a sudden smile at the
sight of his face-a girl’s face,
with a girl’s eyes. And in his hand was
a rose. A wrestler with a rose!
“Why, a man could kill him.”
“Oh, no! Oh, no, Zan!”
Fenzile said. “He is very strong. He
conquered Yussuf Hussein, the Cairene, and Yussuf
Hussein could bend horseshoes with his bare hands.
He is very strong, very powerful Ahmet Ali.”
The wrestler was walking slowly past
the house throwing glances through the grill with
his full girl’s eyes. A quick suspicion
came into Campbell’s mind. He turned to
his wife.
“Does he come past here often?”
“Yes, yes, Zan. Every day.”
“Does he stop and look into the court like that,
every time?”
“Yes, Zan. Every time,” she smiled.
“Do you know whom he’s looking for?”
“Yes, Zan. For me.”
Campbell’s hand shot out suddenly and caught
her wrist.
“Fenzile,” his voice was
cold. “You aren’t carrying on with,
encouraging this-Ahmet Ali?”
“Zan Cam’el,” her
child’s eyes flashed unexpectedly. “I
am no cheap Cairene woman. I am a Druse girl.
The daughter of a Druse Bey.”
“I am sorry, Fenzile.”
She looked at him steadily with her
great green eyes, green of the sea, and as he looked
at her sweet roundish face, her little mouth half open
in sincerity, her calm brow, her brown arch of eyebrow,
she seemed to him no more than a beautiful proud child.
There was no guile in her.
“You mustn’t be foolish, you know, Fenzile.”
“Severim Seni. I love
only you, Zan. But it is so funny to see him go
by, I must always smile. Don’t you think
it funny, Zan?”
“No, I don’t think it at all funny.”
“Oh, but it is funny, Zan.
A big strong wrestler like that to be foolish over
a very little woman. And for a cheap showman of
the market-place to be lifting his eyes to a daughter
of the Druse émirs. It is funny.”
“It isn’t funny. And he isn’t
much of a wrestler anyway.”
“Oh, but he is, Zan. He
is a very great wrestler. They say he threw and
killed a bear.”
“O kooltooluk. Hell! I could throw
him myself.”
She said nothing, turning her head, and reaching for
her embroidery.
“Don’t you believe me,
Fenzile? I tell you I could make mince-meat of
him.”
“Of course, Zan. Of course
you could.” And she smiled. But this
time it wasn’t the delighted smile of a child.
It was the grave patient smile of a wise woman.
And Shane knew it. Past that barrier he could
not break. And on her belief he could make no
impress. There was no use arguing, talking.
She would just smile and agree. And her ideal
of strength and power would be the muscle-bound hulk
of the Aleppo man, with the girl’s face and
the girl’s eyes, and the rose in his hand.
And Shane, all his life inured to sport, hard as iron,
supple as a whip, with his science picked up from
Swedish quartermasters and Japanese gendarmes,
from mates and crimps in all parts of the world, would
always be in her eyes an infant compared to the monstrous
Syrian! Not that it mattered a tinker’s
curse, but-
Oh, damn the wrestler from Aleppo!
Section 3
He had thought, when he left Liverpool
on a gusty February day, of all the peace and quiet,
of the color and life there would be on the Asian
shore ... Europe had somehow particularly sickened
him on this last voyage.... All its repose was
sordid, all its passion was calculated. England
and its queen mourned the sudden death of the prince
consort, but it mourned him with a sort of middle-class
domesticity, and no majesty. So a grocer’s
family might have mourned, remembering how well papa
cut the mutton.... He was so damned good at everything,
Albert was, and he approved of art and science-within
reason.... There was a contest for a human ideal
in America, and in the ports of England privateers
were being fitted out, to help the South, as the Greeks
might, for a price.... And Napoleon, that solemn
comedian, was making ready his expedition to Mexico,
with fine words and a tradesman’s cunning....
And the drums of Ulster roared for Garibaldi, rejoicing
in the downfall of the harlot on seven hills, as Ulster
pleasantly considered the papal states, while Victor
Emmanuel, sly Latin that he was, thought little of
liberty and much about Rome.... Aye, kings!
And so a great nostalgia had come
over Shane Campbell on this voyage for the Syrian
port and the wife he had married there. He wanted
sunshine. He wanted color. He wanted simplicity
of life. Killing there was in Syria, great killing
too. But it was the sort of killing one understood
and could forgive. A Druse disliked a Maronite
Christian, so he went quietly and knifed him.
Another Maronite resented that, and killed a Druse;
and they were all at it, hell-for-leather. But
it was passion and fanaticism, not high-flown words
and docile armies and the tradesmen sneaking up behind....
Ave, war!
And he was sick of the damned Mersey
fog, and he was sick of the drunkenness of Scotland
Road, and he was sick of the sleet lashing Hoylake
links. He was sick of Pharisaical importers who
did the heathen in the eye on Saturday and on Sunday
in their blasted conventicles thumped their black-covered
craws in respectable humility.... In Little Asia
religion was a passion, not a smug hypocrisy; and though
the heathen was dishonest, yet it was not the mathematical
reasoned dishonesty of the Christian. It was
a childish game, like horse-coping.... And in
the East they did not blow gin in your face, smelling
like turpentine....
And he was sick of the abominable
homes, the horsehair furniture with the anti-macassars-Lord!
and they called themselves clean.... He wanted
the spotlessness of the Syrian courtyard.... The
daubs on the British walls, sentimental St. Bernard
dogs and dray-horses with calves’ eyes, brought
him to a laughing point when he thought of the subtlety
of color and line in strange Persian rugs....
And he was sick of British women,
with their knuckled hands, their splayed feet.
Their abominable dressing, too, a bust and a brooch
and a hooped skirt-their grocers’
conventions, prudish, almost obscene, avoiding of
the natural in word, deed, or thought.... He wanted
Fenzile, with her eyes, vert de mer, her full
childish face, her slim hands with the orange-tinted
finger nails, her silken trousers, her little slippers
of silver and blue.... Her soft arms, her back-thrown
head, her closed lids.... And the fountain twinkling
in the soft Syrian night, while afar off some Arab
singer chanted a poem of Lyla Khanim’s:
“Beni ser-mest u hayran eyleyen
ol yar; janim dir.... The world is a prison
and my heart is scarred.... My tears are like
a vineyard’s fountain, O absent one....”
And here was Beirut again: here
the snowy crest of Lebanon, here the roadstead crowded
with craft; here the mulberry groves. Here the
sparkling sapphire sea; here the turf blazing with
poppies; here the quiet pine road to Damascus; here
the forests, excellent with cedars. Here the
twisting unexpected streets. Here his own quiet
house, with the courtyard and its fountain. Here
the hum of the bazaars, here the ha-ha of the
donkey boys, here the growling camels. Here the
rugs on the wall; here the little orange-trees.
Here the two negress servants, clean, efficient.
Here color, and peace, and passion. Here Fenzile....
And this damned wrestler from Aleppo
must go and spoil it all.
Section 4
He might have shipped with one of
the great American clippers racing around Cape Hope
under rolling topsails, and become in his way as well
known as Donald Mackay was, who built and mastered
the Sovereign of the Seas, with her crew of
one hundred and five, four mates and two boatswains.
He might have had a ship like Phil Dumaresq’s
Surprise, that had a big eagle for her figurehead.
He might have clipped the record of the Flying
Cloud, three hundred and seventy-four miles in
one day, steering northward and westward around Cape
Horn. He might have had a ship as big as the
Great Republic, the biggest ship that ever
took the seas. He might have had one of the East
Indiamen, and the state of an admiral. He might
have had one of the new adventurers in steel and steam.
But fame and glory never allured him,
and destiny did not call him to be any man’s
servant. He was content to be his own master with
his own ship, and do whatsoever seemed to him good
and just to do. If they needed him and his boat
anywhere, he would be there. When they needed
boats to America, he was there. But if they didn’t
need him, he was not the one to thrust himself.
Let destiny call.
Success, as it was called, was a thing
of destiny. When destiny needed a man, destiny
tapped him on the shoulder. Failure, however,
was a man’s own fault. There was always
work to do. And it was up to every man to find
his work. If there was no room for him in a higher
work it was no excuse for his not working in a lower
plane. There would be no failures, he thought,
if folk were only wise. If a man came a cropper
in a big way, it was because he had rushed into a
work before Destiny, the invisible infallible nuncio
of God, had chosen her man. Or because he was
dissatisfied, ambition and ability not being equal.
Or because he was lazy.
Always there was work to do, as there
was work for him now. Clouds of sail and tubby
steamboats went the crowded tracks of the world’s
waters, not to succor and help but for gain of money.
And Lesser Asia was neglected, now that the channel
of commerce to the States was opened wide. Syria
needed more than sentimental travelers to the Holy
Land. It needed machinery for its corn-fields
and its mines. It needed prints and muslins from
the Lancashire looms. It needed rice and sugar.
And it had more to give than a religious education.
Fine soap and fruit and wine and oil and sesame it
gave, golden tobacco, and beautiful craftmanship in
silver and gold, fine rugs from Persia. Brass
and copper and ornamental woodcarving from Damascus,
mother of cities; walnuts, wheat, barley, and apricots
from its gardens and fields. Wool and cotton,
gums and saffron from Aleppo, and fine silk embroidery.
Others might race past Java Head to
China for tea and opium. Others might make easting
around the Horn to the gold-fields of California.
Others might sail up the Hooghly to Calicut, trafficking
with mysterious Indian men. Others might cross
to the hustle and welter of New York, young giant
of cities, but Campbell was content to sail to Asia
Minor. He brought them what they needed and they
sent color and rime to prosaic Britain, hashish to
the apothecaries, and pistachios from Aleppo, cambric
from Nablus and linen from Bagdad, and occasionally
for an antiquary a Damascene sword that rang like
a silver bell.
For others the glory and fame to which
destiny had called them. For others the money
that they grubbed with blunted fingers from the dross-heaps
of commerce. But for Campbell what work he could
do, well done-and Lesser Asia ...
Section 5
Of all the seas he had sailed it seemed
to Shane that Mediterranean had more color, more life,
more romance than any. Not the battles round the
Horn, not the swinging runs to China, not the starry
southern seas had for him the sense of adventure that
Mediterranean had. Mediterranean was not a sea.
It was a home haven, with traditions of the human house.
Here Sennacherib sailed in the great galleys the brown
Sidonian shipwrights had made for him. Here had
been the Phenicians with their brailed squaresail.
Here had been the men of Rhodes, sailors and fighters
both. Here the Greek penteconters with their
sails and rigging of purple and black. Here the
Cypriotes had sailed under the lee of the islands
Byron loved and where Sappho sang her songs like wine
and honey, sharp wine and golden honey. Here
had the Roman galleys splashed and here the great
Venetian boats set proud sail against the Genoese.
Here had the Lion-heart sailed gallantly to Palestine.
Here had Icarus fallen in the blue sea. Here
had Paul been shipwrecked, sailing on a ship of Andramyttium
bound to the coast of Asia, crossing the sea which
is off Cilicia and Pamphylia, and trans-shipping
at Myra. How modern it all sounded but for the
strange antique names.
“And when we had sailed slowly
many days”-only a seaman could feel
the pathos of that-“and scarce were
come over against Cnidus, the wind not suffering us,
we sailed under Crete, over against Salmone;
“And, hardly passing it, came
unto a place which is called The Fair Havens-”
Was Paul a sailor, too, Campbell often
wondered? The bearded Hebrew, like a firebrand,
possibly epileptic, not quite sane, had he at one time
been brought up to the sea? “Sirs,”
he had said, “I perceive that this voyage will
be with hurt and much damage, not only of the lading
and ship, but also of our lives.” There
spoke a man who knew the sea-not a timid
passenger. But the master of the ship thought
otherwise and yet Paul was right. And then came
“a tempestuous wind, called Euroclydon.”
And that was the Levanter of to-day, Euraquilo, they
call it-hell let loose. Then came
furious seas, and the terrors of a lee shore; the
frapping of the ship and the casting overboard of tackle,
the jettisoning of freight-
“And when neither sun nor stars
in many days appeared, and no small tempest lay on
us, all hope that we should be saved was then taken
away.” Somehow the absolute fidelity of
the sea-life of the story went to Campbell’s
heart, and the figure of Paul the mariner was clearer
than the figure of Paul the Apostle.
“Howbeit, we must be cast upon a certain island.
“But when the fourteenth night
was come, as we were driven up and down in Adria,
about midnight the shipmen deemed that they drew near
to some country-”
The intuition of seamanship.
The flash. How modern! Oh, Paul lived in
that sea. His ghost and memory were forever there,
as were the ghosts of the Lion-heart; and of Sappho,
singer of songs; and of the stout Phenician sailing
men; and of the doges of Venice, lovers and husbands
of the sea. On the tideless Mediterranean beauty
still abided, as nowhere else; would abide, when nowhere
else-
Would it, though? Would it abide
anywhere? A pang came into Campbell’s heart.
Off Finisterre he had been passed by Robert Steel of
Greenock’s Falcon, every sail drawing,
skysails and moonrakers set, a pillar of white cloud
she seemed, like some majestic womanhood. And
while boats like the Fiery Cross and the Falcon
tore along like greyhounds, there were building tubby
iron boats to go by steam. The train was beating
the post-chaise with its satiny horses, the train that
went by coal one dug from the ground. And even
now de Lesseps and his men were digging night and
day that the steamboat might push the proud clipper
from the seas. Queer! Would there come a
day when no topgallants drew? And the square-rigged
ships would be like old crones gathering fagots
on an October day. And what would become of the
men who built and mastered great racing ships?
And would the sea itself permit vile iron and smudgy
coal to speck its immaculate bosom? Must the sea,
too, be tamed like a dancing bear for the men who
are buying and selling? It seemed impossible.
But the shrewd men who trafficked
said it must be so. They were spending their
money on de Lesseps’s fabulous scheme. And
the shrewd men never spent money without a return.
They would conquer.
Poor sea of the Vikings! Poor
sea of the Lion-heart and of the Sappho of the songs!
Poor sea of Admiral Columbus! Poor sea to whom
Paul made obeisance! Sea of Drake and sea of
Nelson, and sea of Philip of Spain. Poor sea
whom the great doges of Venice wed with a ring
of gold! Christ! If they could only bottle
you, they would sell you like Holland gin!
Section 6
He had figured his work. He had
figured his field. It seemed to him that this
being done life should flow on evenly as a stream.
But there were gaps of unhappiness that all the subtle
sailing of a ship, all the commerce of the East, all
the fighting of the gales could not fill. Within
him somewhere was a space, in his heart, in his head,
somewhere, a ring, a pit of emotion-how,
where, why he could not express. It just existed.
And this was filled at times with concentration on
his work, at times with plans of the future and material
memories of the past or thoughts of ancient shipmates,
of his Uncle Robin. It was like a house, that
space was, with a strange division of time, that corresponded
not with time of day, but with recurrent actions,
memories, moods. There would be the bustle of
his work, and that seemed to be morning. There
would be the planning of future days, and that seemed
like an afternoon, of sunshine; and there would be
memories, as of old shipmates, as of Uncle Robin-God
rest his dear soul; as of Alan Donn with his hearty
cursing, his hearty laugh. And that was like an
evening with golden candle-light and red fire burning.
And then would come the quietness of night, all the
bustle, all the plans, all the memories gone.
The fire out, the rooms empty. And in the strange
place somewhere within would come a strange lucidity,
blue and cold and absolute as the stars, and into
that place would walk, as players stalk upon the stage,
each of three ghosts.
The first was his mother, who was
dead, an apparition of chilling terror. From
afar she beheld him with eyes that were queerly inimical.
She had done nothing to him, nor he anything to her.
She had done nothing for him, nor he for her.
Between them was nothing. When she had died he
had felt nothing, and that was the tragedy. No
tears, no relief, nothing. She had carried him
in her womb, born him, suckled him; and he had always
felt he had been unwelcome. There had been no
hospitality in her body; just constraint. She
had had no welcome for the little guest of God; her
heart had been hard to him and he at her breasts.
Nothing common to them in life, and now joined through
the horrible significant gulf of death. She could
be with him always now, being dead. But where
a man’s mother should come to him smilingly,
with soft hands, with wisdom and comfort passing that
of life, she came with terrible empty eyes. He
could see her gaunt profile, her black brows.
She was like an engraving he had once seen of the
witch Saul had used at En-dor, to call up Samuel,
who was dead. She had the same awful majesty,
the same utter loneliness.
“You gave me nothing in life.
In death give me peace,” he would cry. But
she stayed until it suited her to go, as she would
have done in life. Her haunted, haunting eyes
...!
And there would come another ghost,
the ghost of the girl he had married and he a boy-fourteen
years ago. It was strange how he could remember
her-her red hair, her sullen mouth, her
suspicious eyes. Her shoulders drooped a little;
there was no grace to her stance. She complained
against something, but she did not accuse him.
He had married her, and she had married him, and she
had died. That was all there was to it. And
though she had sorrowed his younger days, yet he felt
very kindly to her. There she was, with her sullen
mouth, her drooping shoulders, complaining. “Life
is so short, and there was so little to it, and others
have so much,” she seemed to say. “I
had a right to have my man and a place in the country,
the like of other girls, but all I got was you.
And death at the end of a short year. Wasn’t
it hard, och, wasn’t it so!” And he had
to comfort her. “It was nobody’s fault,
Moyra. It just happened. We were awfully
young.” But her lips were still sullen,
her eyes suspicious as she went away. “A
short life and a bitter one. A hard thing surely!”
When she left him there was a sigh of relief.
Poor girl!
And the third ghost was hardly a presence,
but an absence, or a presence so intangible that it
was worse than an absence. Claire-Anne, who was
dead, whom he had-made dead, whom he had
taken it upon himself to set free. For a year
after he had left Marseilles she had seemed to be
always with him, closer in spirit, now she was dead,
than she had ever been in flesh and spirit when alive.
A part of him she seemed always to be. Always
there, in the quiet cabin, on the heeling decks, on
the solid shore. And the long thoughts of him
seemed to be conversation with her, on strange beautiful
things, on strange terrible things, on the common
commodity of life.... And then one day she left
him....
He was coming into Southampton Water
and waiting for the pilot’s cutter from the
Solent, one bright July morning. And all the Solent
was dotted with sails, the snowy sails of great yachts
and the cinnamon sails of small ones. Little
fishing-craft prowled near the shore. And afar
off, in fancy, he could see the troops of swans, and
the stalking herons. The pilot’s cutter
plowed toward him, her deep forefoot dividing the water
like a knife. Immense, vibrant beauty. And
he felt, as always, that Claire-Anne was by him, her
dark understanding presence, her clear Greek face,
her little smile.
“In a minute now we will come
into the wind and lower a boat, Claire-Anne.”
And a shock of surprise came over him. She was
not there. It was as though he had been talking
with his back turned to some one, and turning around
found they weren’t there. For an instant
he felt as if he had lost somebody overboard.
And then it came to him that water, earth, material
hazards were nothing to her any more. She had
gone somewhere for a moment. And he turned to
greet the pilot as he swung aboard.
“She will come back,”
he thought.... But she never came back. Once
or twice or maybe three times, a month, six months,
and ten months later, he felt her warm lover-like
presence near him. “Claire-Anne! Is
it you, Claire-Anne?” And she was gone again.
Something that had hovered, fluttered, kissed, and
flown away. Never again!
She had become to him in death much
more real than she had ever been in life. In
life she had been dynamic, a warm, multicolored, perfumed
cloud. In death she was static. All the tumult
of material things gone, he had a vision of her clear
as a line drawing. And he had come to depend
on her so much. In difficulty of thought he would
say: “Is this right, Claire-Anne?”
And her answer would come: “Yes, Shane!”
Or possibly when some matter of trade or conduct seemed
dubious, not quite-whatever it was, her
voice would come clear as a bell. “You
mustn’t, Shane. It isn’t right.
It isn’t like you to be small.” It
might have been conscience, but it sounded like Claire-Anne.
And oftentimes in problems, she would say: “I
don’t know, Shane. I don’t quite know.”
And he would say, “We must do our best, Claire-Anne.”
Well, she was gone. And he thought
to himself: What do we know of the destiny of
the dead? They, too, must have work, missions
to perform. The God he believed in-the
wise, firm, and kindly God-might have said:
“Claire-Anne, he’ll be all right now.
At any rate he’ll have to work out the rest
for himself. Leave that. I want you to-”
And she had gone.
That was one majestic explanation,
but at times it seemed to him that no matter what
happened in the world, or superworld, yet she must
be in touch with him. “Set me, as a seal
upon thy heart, as a seal upon thine arm,” cried
the prince’s daughter, “for love is strong
as death.” If she loved him she must love
him still.
It suddenly occurred to him that the
fault was not occult, but a matter of spiritual deterioration
in himself. To be in harmony with the lonely
dead there must be no dross about the mind. The
preoccupations of routine, the occasional dislikes
of some stupid ship’s officer, or boatswain,
the troubles about cargo-this, that, the
other pettinesses might cloud his eye as a mist clouds
a lens. There came to him the memory of a translation
from some Chinese poet he had heard somewhere, in
some connection:
How am I fallen from myself! For
a long time now
I have not seen the prince of Chang in
my dreams.
He decided he would clear and make
ready the quiet sweet place in his heart, the room
of ghosts, so that she might come and dwell there.
But induce the spiritual mood of the quiet October
evening much as he could, yet she never came again.
From his mind now there faded the
memory of her face, the memory of her hands, the memory
of her voice even. With every week, with every
month, with the year, she was gone. Like a lost
thought, or a lost bar of music, she was gone.
She had been there, but she was gone. The loss
was a terrible one. To lose one who was alive
was much. But to lose one who was dead was unbelievable,
horrible ... to lose the sun ... forever....
He decided he could go back to the
Prado of Marseilles, where first he had met her, where
she would of all places have kept a tryst with him.
There was no risk. The folk of the sea come and
go so easily, so invisibly, and French law bothers
itself little about the killing of a woman of evil
repute.... One of the risks of the trade, they
would say. Even had there been a risk he would
have gone. He went.
It was a dark night, a night of wind
with the waves lashing the shore. A night of
all nights to keep a tryst with a dead woman.
Immense privacy of darkness and howling winds and
lashing waves. With awe he went there, as a shaken
Catholic might enter a cathedral, dubious of the mystery
of the eucharist, expecting some silent word, some
invisible sign from the tabernacle.... He went
with bowed head....
She never came.
He concentrated until all faded away,
even the night, the wind, the insistent waters.
He might have been standing on a solitary rock in an
infinite dark sea, to which there was no shore.
Asking, pleading, willing for her.... But she
never came....
And it suddenly became inevitable
to him that she would not come; and slowly, as a man
comes slowly out of a drug into consciousness, he came
back into the world of lights and laughter and sodden
things. And turning on his heel without a look,
he went away....
He never called to her again....
He thought over her often enough, and she had never
been real, he decided. His mother and his wife
had been real. They were their own dimensions.
But she was something he had made in his head, as
an author may create a character. She was a hallucination.
And she had never been with him after death; that had
been a mirage in the hinterland of the mind.
And he asked: Who was she, anyway?
She was a woman who said she loved him, might even
have believed it. Women under stress believe so
many things. A little anger, a little passion,
a little melancholy, and things resolve themselves
into so many differences of color and line. And
what standard of truth is there? Suppose he were
to tell any man of the world of the occurrence, and
to ask who she was, what she was, and what he had
been to her. They would have said it was simple.
She was a harlot of Marseilles, and he was her amant
de coeur. But the beauty of it! he would
have objected. All the beauty was in yourself.
Or as they would have put it: All imagination!
What a snare it all was, and what
was truth? How much better off a man was if he
had never anything to do with them, and yet....
A world of men, there would be something
lacking! Friends he had in plenty, men would
help him, as a ship stands by another ship at sea.
Friends to talk to, of ships and sports, of ports and
politics; but when one left them, one was left by
one’s self. And all the subtleties of mind
came again like a cloud of wasps. To each man
his own problem of living. To each man to decide
his own escape from himself.
“And the Lord God said:
It is not good that the man should be alone-”
the Hebrew chronicler had imagined. No, it was
not good. It was terrible. After the day’s
work was done, after the pleasant evenings of friends,
then came the terror of the shadows. Unreal they
might be, but they hurt more than real things did.
Unless one sank into the undignified oblivion of drink,
there was no escape. Shadows came. Acuter
than the tick of a watch, they were there, the cold
mother with the haunting eyes, the dead wife with
the sullen mouth, visible as stars. And empty
as air was the space Claire-Anne should have occupied,
with her clear-cut beautiful features, her understanding
eyes. Three ghosts, and the ghost that was missing
was the most terrible ghost of all ... He could
not stand them any more.... He must not be alone....
Section 7
He could not marry a Christian of
the East, they were such an unspeakably treacherous
race. He could not marry a Jewess, for about
each one of the nation there seemed to be an awesome
destiny, a terrible doom or an ultimate majesty blinding
human eyes; a wall, so high that it was terrible....
He could not marry a Moslem woman, for that would mean
acceptance of Islam. And though Islam was very
fine, very clean, and Campbell believed in resignation,
and acknowledged there was no god but God, as the
crypticism was, yet the Scots-Irish honesty of him
would not accept Mohammed as the prophet of God.
It would be like putting Bonaparte above the Lord
Buddha. A faith is a very solemn thing and not
to be approached lightly. To accept a faith publicly,
the tongue in the cheek, was the sin of insincerity
and rank dishonesty, having committed which no man
should hold up his head. And moreover Moslem women
were queer things. For centuries they had been
held to be a little more beautiful than a flower,
a little less valuable, less personal than a fine
horse. Being told that for centuries, they had
come to believe it, and believing one’s self
to be particular leads one to become it. Moslem
women, no!
He had become familiar with the Druses
around Beirut. There was something in the hard
independent tribesmen that reminded him of the Ulster
Scot. Aloof, unafraid, inimical, independent,
with a strain of mysticism in them, they were somehow
like the glensmen of Antrim. Fairly friendly
with the Moslems, contemptuous of the Latin Christians,
impatient of dogma, they might have been the Orangemen
of Syria. Their émirs had a great dignity
and a great simplicity, like an old-time Highland
chief. They acknowledged God, but after that their
faith ran into esoteric subtleties of nature-worship,
which they kept to the initiates among themselves....
And the common run of them had strange legends, as
that in a mountain bowl of China lived tribe on tribe
of Druses, and that one day these of Syria and of
China would be reunited and conquer the world....
They were very dignified men, and muscular....
Their women had the light feet of gazelles ...
One only saw their sweet low foreheads, their cinnamon
hands.... They claimed they were Christians sometimes,
and other times they said they were Moslems, but the
truth no stranger knew.... A secret sect, like
the ancient Assassins, who had the Old Man of the
Mountain for their king.... With them dwelt beauty
and terror and the glamour of hidden things....
To Shane they were very kindly.
They recognized him for a mountain man born, and for
an honest man. They could not understand him,
as a Christian, seeing he took no part in Greek or
Latin politics. They decided he must have some
faith of his own.... He did them some kindness
of errands, and they were very hospitable to him....
In ’61, after the massacres,
when the tribesmen were preparing to retreat to the
mountain of the Druses, he returned to find Syria
occupied by the troops of Napoleon III and to hear
that his friend Hamadj Beg of Deir el Kour was dead
in the war.... He went to condole with the family....
Arif Bey, Hamadj’s brother, was preparing to
retreat toward Damascus....
“Arif Bey,” Campbell suddenly
said, “also this, I seek a wife.”
“Yes.” The grizzled
Druse scratched his head, and looked at him keenly.
“I am making Lebanon my home;
therefore I don’t want a wife of my country.
There is no people sib to me here but the Druse people....
Would a Druse woman marry me?”
“I-I see nothing against it.”
“Do you know a Druse woman who would have me?”
“Well, let me see,” Arif said. “There
is Hamadj’s daughter, Fenzile.”
“Is she young, Arif Bey?”
“Not so young, nineteen, but she is a mountain
woman and lasts.”
“Is she good-looking?”
“Yes, she is very good-looking.”
“Is she kindly?”
“Yes, yes, I think so.”
“Is she wild?”
“No, She is very docile.”
“You trust me a lot, Arif Bey.”
“Yes, we trust you much.”
“And I trust you, Arif Bey.... Will Fenzile
marry me?”
“Yes,” Arif Bey decided, “Fenzile
will marry you.”
Section 8
It seemed to him, at thirty-five,
that only now had he discovered the secret of living.
Not until now had his choice and destiny come together
to make this perfect equation of life. The work
he loved of the bark Queen Maeve, with her
beautiful sails like a racing yacht’s, her white
decks, her shining brass. The carrying of necessities
from Britain to Syria, the land he loved, next to
Ulster, his mother. And the carrying from Syria
into harsh plain Britain of cargoes of beauty like
those of Sheba’s queen, on camels that bare
spices, and very much gold and precious stones.
And the great ancient city where he lived; not even
Damascus, the pride of the world, exceeded it for beauty.
Forward of massed Lebanon, white with snow it lay,
a welter of red roots and green foliage-the
blue water, the garlanded acacias, the roses,
the sally branches. Beauty! Beauty!
The Arab shepherds in abbas of dark magenta, the black
Greek priests, the green of a pilgrim’s turban,
the veiled women smoking narghilés and daintly
sipping sherbet, pink and yellow and white. The
cry of the donkey-boy, and the cry of the cameleer,
and the cry of the muezzin from the mosque. The
quaint salutations as he passed along the staired
streets: Naharkum Sayeed!-May
your day be blessed. Naharaka abyad!-May
your day be white. Allah yahtikum el afiyeh!-God
give health to you. They were chanted like a refrain
of a song.
Beauty! Riot and slashing of
color. Yet there was line here and massive proportion.
The sparkling, magenta city had been the theater of
great marching hosts. The Phenicians had built
it: “the root of life, the nurse of cities,
the primitive queen of the world,” they had named
her. And gone the Phenicians, and came the slim
subtle Egyptians. And the massive burly Assyrians
came next: and now the memory of them was forgotten,
also their love and their hatred and their envy was
now perished. And then came the tramp of the
Roman legions, Agrippa’s men, and held the city
for centuries. Justinian had one of his law schools
there, until the earth quaked and the scholars dispersed.
And then the Saracens held it until Baldwin, brother
of Godfrey de Bouillon, clashed into it with mailed
crusaders; and Baldwin, overcome with the beauty of
the land, took him a paynim queen. And then came
the occult reign of the Druse. And then the Turk.
And St. George had killed the Dragon there, after
the old monk’s tale.
Shane Campbell was never weary of
looking at the inscriptions on the great cliffs at
the River of the Dog-the strange beauty
of that name! It was like the place-names of
native Ulster-Athbo, the Ford of
Cows, Sraidcuacha, the Cuckoo’s Lane-one
name sounded to the other like tuning-forks.
And the sweet strange harmony of it filled his heart,
so that he could understand the irresistible charm
of Lebanon-the high clear note like a bird’s
song. Here was the sun and the dreams of mighty
things, and the palpable proximity of God. Here
was beauty native, to be picked like a nugget, not
to be mined for in bitter hours of torment and distress.
High, clear, sustained, the note held.
Arose the moon and the great stars like spangles.
The slender acacias murmured. The pines
hush-hushed. The bronhaha of the
cafes was like a considered counterpoint. Everywhere
was harmony; beauty. And there would be no depression.
It would last. There would be no ghosts.
They were exorcised. For now there was Fenzile.
How understandable everything was! It must have
been under a moon like this, under these Syrian stars,
to the hush-hush-hush of the pine and the rustle
of willow branches, that Solomon the king sang his
love-song. And it must have been to one whose
body was white as Fenzile’s, to eyes as emerald,
to velvety lips, to slim hands with orange-tinted
finger nails that he sang. Surely the Shulamite
was not fairer than the Fenzile, daughter of Hamadj,
a Druse emir!
How beautiful are thy feet with shoes,
O prince’s daughter!
The joints of thy thighs are like jewels,
The work of the hands of a cunning workman.
Thy navel is like a round goblet,
Which wanteth not liquor:
Thy belly is like an heap of wheat set
about with lilies.
Thy two breasts are like two young roes
that are twins.
Thy neck is like a tower of ivory:
Thine eyes like the fishpools in Heshbon,
By the gate of Bath-rabbim:
Thy nose is as the tower of Lebanon which
looketh toward Damascus.
Thine head upon thee is like Carmel,
And the hair of thine head like purple;
The king is held in the galleries.
How fair and pleasant art thou,
O love, for delights!
This thy stature is like to a palm tree.
And thy breasts to clusters of grapes.
I said, I will go up to the palm tree.
I will take hold of the boughs thereof:
Now also thy breasts shall be as clusters
of the vine,
And the smell of thy nose like apples;
And the roof of thy mouth like the best
wine for my beloved,
That goeth down sweetly,
Causing the lips of those that are asleep
to speak....
Section 9
Where before he had made his mistake
with women was allowing them to become spiritually
important. His mother had been important; he had
suffered from the sense of her lack of heart to him.
His wife had been important; they hadn’t understood
life together, he made no attempt to.... They
were so young.... And Claire-Anne had become spiritually
important to him. So that when she was gone, it
was hell.
If he had treated his mother casually,
depending on his uncles, it would have been all right.
If he had discerned-and he had discerned,
though he knew not how to act-that his
wife and he would forever be inharmonious, it would
not have been a scar on his youth. If he had gone
for instance to Alan Donn and said, “Uncle Alan,
I’m afeared there’s a mistake been made.
And what are we going to do about this woman o’
Louth?” And Alan would have said: “I
ken’t well you were a damned young fool.
Ah, well, gang off aboard your boatie, and I’ll
see to her.” Alan would have ditched her
and her mother mercilessly, and there would have been
no scar on his youth....
And Claire-Anne, had he only taken
her as he should have taken her, as a light love,
easily gotten, to be taken easily, instead of tragedizing
until his fingers were scarlet.... God!...
Yes, where before he had made his mistakes with women
was allowing them to become spiritually important.
Well, he wouldn’t do that with
Fenzile. He knew better now. Keep the heart
free. Let there be beauty and graciousness and
kindliness, but keep the heart free, and ask for no
heart. All tragedies were internal, all the outward
deeds being only as sounds. Keep the heart free.
There were so many aspects to her.
She was like a bird about the house, gaily colored,
of bright song. He loved to see her move here
and there, with movements as of music. And she
was like a child at times, as she solemnly made sherbets-very
like a child she was, intense, simple. And she
was like a young relative; there was emptiness in the
house as she went, and when she came back it was like
a bird singing.
And she was so beautiful about the
place, with her eyes green of the sea, her dusky velvet
lips, her slim cinnamon hands, with the dramatic orange
tinting on the nails. Always was some new beauty
in her, a tilt of the head, a sudden gracious pose.
She was like some piece of warm statuary. From
any angle came beauty, shining as the sun.
And in the dusk when his arms were
about her, she was no longer child, relative, or statue.
She was woman, vibrant woman. Tensed muscles and
a little stifled moan. And an emotional sob,
maybe, or a tear glistening on her cheek. Relaxation,
and a strange, easy dignity. With her arms about
her white knees, her little head upraised, thoughts
seemed to be going and coming from her like bees in
and out of their straw skep. And often he was
tempted to ask her what she was thinking of. But
he stopped himself in time. Of course she was
thinking of nothing at all, barring possibly a new
sherbet to be made, or whether, if they sold Fatima,
the Abyssinian cook, who was becoming garrulous, would
Fatima have a good home. Trifles! What was
the use of asking her? And here was another possibility.
She might-anything was possible-be
in some deep subtle thought, into which, if he asked,
he might get enmeshed, or be trapped emotionally.
Better not ask. He wanted to know nothing of her
heart, and to keep his.
He loved her in a happy guarded way.
And she loved him. When he came back after a
voyage she looked at him with an amazed joy. “O
Zan! Zan, dear! Is it you? Is it really
you?” She would rush and hold him. What
amazing strength her little arms had! And she
would stand back and look at him again. “O
Zan! Zan!” And she would bury her perfumed
head in his shoulder to hide the glad tears.
“O Zan!”
“Do you know why I love you
so much, Zan dear?” she once said.
“Why, Fenzile?”
“Because you are so big, and
yet you are so gentle. And you wouldn’t
do a little thing, my Zan.”
“Don’t be foolish, Fenzile!”
“I am not foolish.”
Only once she asked him how he loved her.
“I wonder-how much do you love me,
my Zan?”
“Oh, lots, Fenzile. A terrible lot.”
And he smiled.
“As much as you do your ship?”
“Yes, as much as I do my ship.”
“That is a lot, Zan.... Zan, would you
miss me, if I should die?”
“I should miss you terribly.”
“If you died, I should die, too.”
Her voice quavered.
“Don’t be silly. Of course you wouldn’t.”
“Don’t you think I would?”
And she laughed with him one of her rare, rare laughs.
And that was the way it all should end, in pretty laughter.
Let there be none of this horrible emotionalism, this
undignified welter of thought and feeling. Kindness
of eyes, and pleasantness of body, but keep the heart
away. Let them be-how? There wasn’t
a word in English, or in Gaidhlig to express it; in
French there was-des amis, not des
amants. Let them be that. Let there be
no involution of thought and mind about it. Let
there be this time no mistake.... Where before
he had made his mistake with women was allowing them
to become spiritually important....
Section 10
Into this idyl of Beirut came now
the wrestler from Aleppo, Ahmet Ali, and the occurrence
irritated Campbell to a degree which he had not conceived
possible. There he passed the door with his dreamy
Syrian face, his red rose, his white burnoose, his
straggling followers. And Fenzile smiled her
quiet aloof smile.
There might be amusement in it, a
queer Eastern comedy of the mountebank who raised
his eyes to a Druse princess, and wife of a Frank ship’s
master. It might be amusing to Fenzile to see
this conqueror of men conquered by her presence, but
it wasn’t dignified. By God! it wasn’t
dignified.
But it wasn’t dignified to talk
about it. To show Fenzile that it mattered a
tinker’s curse to him. So he said nothing,
and the wrestler went by every day. It was becoming
intolerable. It seemed to amuse Fenzile, but
it didn’t amuse him.
And suddenly a chill smote him.
What did he know of these people of the East anyhow?
In six years one could learn their language perfectly,
know their customs, know themselves, but know only
as much as they wanted to be known. The outer
person, which is hallucination, one might know, but
what of the inner, which is reality? A strange
country, where the merchants spoke like princes and
the princes like cameleers, and the sakyeh,
the water-carrier, might quote some fancy of Hafiz,
as the water gurgled from the skin. The obedience,
the resignation in the women’s eyes might cover
intrigue, and what was behind the eyes of the men,
soft as women’s?
“Fenzile, you say you love me,
because I am kind. Don’t you love me because
I am strong?”
“Anyway, anyhow, dear Zan.”
“I am strong, you know. As strong as your
friend, Ahmet Ali.”
“Of course, dear Zan.”
But somehow her tone did not carry conviction.
If she understood there was nothing this wrestler
had he did not have better, it would have been all
right. All attributes in the world would have
been for her in him. But she thought the wrestler
was strong. Damn women! Couldn’t they
understand the difference between the muscles of a
hunting leopard and the bulk of a sea-cow? It
was silly, but it irritated him.
And then a thought came to him that
he felt degraded him, but of which he could not rid
himself, try as he would. What did he know of
Fenzile, barring that she was young and strong and
beautiful? Nothing. Of what was she thinking
in those dreamy eyes, green of the sea? And women
always admired strength in a man. And he was away
most of the time, half anyway. And the breath
of the East was intrigue.
“Oh, don’t be rotten,”
he told himself. But the occasional hot and searing
pain remained, and the little black cloud was in his
mind. When they were close in the soft gloom,
shoulder to shoulder, her eyes closed, her slim cinnamon
hands clenched, pain stabbed him like a knife.
And in the gay mornings, when she was arranging her
flowers in vases of Persian blue, it made him silent
as the grave. And in the evening when she was
doing her subtle Syrian broideries, it aroused in him
queer gusts of controlled fury.... Could it be
possible? A mountebank.... And the “Thousand
and One Nights” began with Shah Zamon’s
queen and her love for the blackamoor slave....
If the wrestler would only go away,
become tired of parading, and Fenzile would tire of
smiling.... And later on Campbell would laugh....
But the wrestler stayed, and many
times Campbell met him in the streets, and each time
was exaggerated, insulting courtesy from the Aleppo
man, as he drew aside to let the Frank pass.
There was hostility and contempt in his veiled eyes....
There nonchalance in his smelling of the rose ...
Campbell passed by frigidly, as if the man weren’t
there, and all the time his blood was boiling....
But what was one to do? One could not make a
scene before the riff-raff of Syria. And besides,
there was too much of a chance of a knife in the back....
Franks were cheap these days, and it would be blamed
on the war of the Druses....
Argue with himself as much as he could,
it was intolerable. It was silly, but it was
intolerable.... To think of another caressing
that perfumed hair, of another kissing the palm of
that slim hand, of another seeing those sleek, sweet
shoulders....
Was he jealous ...? No, irritated,
just, he told himself. Was he in love with her
himself? Of course not. She wasn’t
close enough to him for that.... Then why ...?
Oh, damn it! He didn’t
know why, but it was just intolerable....
Section 11
The bark was in the open roadstead,
cargo all ready, Levantine pilot on board. A
reaching breeze from the north and all favorable.
And when he would get home to Liverpool, he had a
design to spend a few weeks in Ulster.... The
roads would be glistening with frost there, and the
pleasant Ulster moon at the full.... The turf
would be nearly black, and bare as a board, and there
would be coursing of hares ... November mists,
and the trees red and brown.... Eh, hard Ulster,
pleasant Ulster!
He should have been happy, as he made
his way down the Beirut streets to go aboard, leaving
the land of his adoption for the land of his birth,
leaving pleasant Fenzile for the shrewd pleasantry
of his own folk.... A little while of Ulster
and he would be coming back again.... One’s
heart should lift the glory of the world, the bold
line of Ulster and the lavish color of Syria; the
sincere, dour folk of Ulster and the warmth of Fenzile....
He should have left so warmly. “In a little
while, dearest, I’ll be back and my heart will
speak to your twin green eyes.” “Yes,
Zan. I’ll be here.” But he had
left dourly. And Fenzile had watched him go with
quivering lip.... Oh, damn himself for his suspicions,
for his annoyance, and damn the fatuous Arab fool for
arousing them.... Christ, if only he had that
fellow on board ship. And suddenly he met him,
with his attendants and hangers-on. The wrestler
drew aside with his insolent smile. Campbell’s
temper broke loose.
“Listen, O certain person,”
he insulted the Aleppo man, “there is a street
in Beirut down which it does not please me to see you
go.”
“Will the foreign gentleman
tell me,” the wrestler’s voice drawled,
and he smelled his rose, “who will stop a Moslem
from going down a Moslem street?”
“By God, I would!” The
Syrians of Ahmet Ali’s escort gathered around,
smiling.
“The foreign gentleman forgets
that I am the wrestler from Aleppo.”
“Just so. I happen to be a bit of a wrestler
myself.”
“Some day perhaps the foreign
gentleman will condescend to try a fall with me.”
Syrians, Egyptians, Turks, were pouring
from all quarters. Six French soldiers, walking
gapingly along the bazaars, stopped wonderingly.
“Dites, les soldats,”
Shane called. “Vous ne voulez
pas voir quelque chose d’interessant?”
“Mais si, Monsieur!”
“Eh bien, je
vais lutter contre l’homme avec
la rose. C’est un lutteur arabe.
Voulez-vous-y assister?”
“Mais, pour bien sur, Monsieur.”
“All right, then, by God!”
Shane looked square at Ahmet Ali. “We’ll
wrestle right here and now.”
“But the stones, the street,”
Ahmet Ali looked surprised. “You might get
hurt.”
“We’ll wrestle here and now.”
“Oh, all right.”
The Arab lifted an expressive shoulder. Carefully
he removed the great white robe and handed it to an
attendant. To another he gave the rose.
Shane handed his coat and hat to a saturnine French
corporal. Ahmet Ali took his shirt off. Kicked
away his sandals. There was the dramatic appearance
of an immense bronze torso. The Syrians smiled.
The French soldiers looked judicially grave. Ahmet
Ali stood talking for an instant with one of his men,
a lean bilious-seeming Turk. The Turk was urging
something with eagerness. The wrestler’s
soft girl’s face had concentrated into a mask
of distaste. He was shaking his head. He
didn’t like something.
“How God-damned long are you going to keep me
here?”
Ahmet turned. There was a smile
on his face, as of amused, embarrassed toleration.
He was like a great athlete about to box with a small
boy. And the boy in earnest.
“Ready?” he asked.
“Any time,” Shane snapped.
“All right.”
Very easily he came forward over the
cobbled street. He was like some immense bronze
come suddenly to life and shambling. Like the
brazen servant Thomas Aquinas made under the influence
of particular stars. His great brown shoulders,
his barreled chest, his upper arms like a man’s
leg, his packed forearms, his neck like a bull’s,
his shaven head. All seemed superhuman, and then
came his shy embarrassed smile, his troubled eyes.
One felt he hated to do this....
He dropped suddenly, easily, into
his wrestler’s crouch. His shoulders swayed
lightly. He pawed like a bear.
Campbell stood easily, left foot forward,
like a boxer. His left arm shot out suddenly.
The heel of his hand stopped, jolted, Ahmet on the
chin. The Syrian shook his head. Pawed again.
Campbell slapped him on the forearms, jolted him again
on the chin, broke away easily to the right.
Ahmet’s brown forehead frowned. “Don’t
be childish,” he seemed to chide Campbell.
The crowd pressed. The French soldiers rapped
them back with the scabbard of their sidearms. En
arrière, les puants, en arrière! “Back,
sons of polecats, get back.” The scabbards
clacked like slapsticks.
Ahmet Ali stood up straighter.
He wanted to get away from that annoying hand on his
chin. His forearms moved faster now, like brown
pistons. There was a slight frown on his face.
He was becoming impatient. Shane broke again
to the right. Ahmet followed, his immense hands
poised. Campbell feinted for the chin again with
his left hand. The wrestler’s smile flickered.
His right arm went out in guard. Campbell shifted,
caught the brown wrist in his right hand, his left
hand shot forward to the chin again. He brought
forward all his forces to twisting that gigantic arm.
He held the Syrian locked. The right arm began
to give. If he could only shift his feet, get
some sort of leverage. But how in God’s
name, how? How could he get behind. With
an immense wrench of shoulders Ahmet got free.
He stood for an instant, nursing his numbed wrist.
He nodded and grinned. “That wasn’t
bad,” he seemed to say. The lean bilious
Turk on the edge of the crowd began talking viciously.
The saturnine French corporal turned and smacked him
terribly across the nose with the edge of the scabbard
of his bayonet. “Et-ta soeur!” He
had the air of a schoolmaster reproving a refractory
pupil. But his language was obscene and his blow
broke the man’s nose.... He vouchsafed
no further interest in the Turk, but turned to watch
the wrestling, twirling an oiled mustache....
The Syrian closed his mouth, breathed
heavily through his nostrils. His brow corrugated.
His eyes became pinpoints. He was a workman out
to do a job. He began to weave in, his brown
arms describing slow arabesques. The
crowd around became oppressively silent. They
breathed hissingly.
Shane feinted, dodged, broke away.
Doggedly Ahmet Ali followed. Faster than time,
Shane’s right hand shot out and gripped the wrestler’s
right wrist. His right foot hooked around the
Syrian’s right ankle. He pulled downward
with sudden, vicious effort. Ali crashed forward
on his face, a great brown hulk like an overturned
bronze statue. Shane stooped down for either
the half-Nelson and hammer-lock, or full Nelson....
An instant too long of hesitation. Light as a
lightweight acrobat Ahmet Ali had rolled aside, put
palm to ground, sprung to his feet. His face
was bloody, his right knee shook. With the back
of his hand he wiped the blood from his eyes.
There was a twitter from the Syrians. The wrestler
lumbered forward again.... A little quake of fear
came into Campbell’s being. There was an
impersonal doggedness about the wrestler from Aleppo’s
eyes, a sense of inevitability.... Shane’s
eyes shifted, right and left....
Then suddenly, the wrestler had him....
He felt a twirl to his shoulder, and
then he was pinioned by two immense brown arms.
They caught him above the elbows around the chest.
First they were like boys’ arms, light.
They became firm as calipers. They settled, snugged.
Then they tightened slowly, with immense certainty.
There was something about it like the rise of the tide.
A gigantic cable around his chest. At his shoulder-blades
the Syrian’s pectoral muscles pressed like shallow
knobs of steel. His arms began to hurt. His
breathing began to be hard with every output of breath.
The arms tightened.... All his vitality was flying
through his opened mouth.... He hit futilely
with his knuckles at the rope-like sinews of the brown
forearms.... His head throbbed like drums....
In an instant he would be like a bag bound midways
... his ribs giving like saplings in the wind ...
Lights danced....
Stupidly he looked down at the clasped
hands, and a sudden fury of fighting came on him....
Something terrible, sinister, cold. His free
hands caught the Syrian’s little finger, tugged,
pulled, bent, tore.... He wanted to shred it
from its hand.... Rip it like silk.... He
felt the great arms about him quiver, grow uncertain....
Tear, tear!...
With a little whine like a dog’s,
the wrestler let go.... He nursed the finger
for an instant like a hurt child.... Opening and
shutting the hand.... Looking worried....
Great waves of air came into Shane’s chest....
His knees were weak.... The Syrian walked around
an instant, thinking, worrying.... He was serious
now.... Suddenly he plunged....
But swifter than Ahmet’s plunge
was thought and memory.... Of a day at Nagasaki
... of a little brown smiling Japanese and a burly
square-head sailorman.... Of the Japanese’s
courteous explanation in smiling Pidgin.... With
luck and timing he could do it.... Fast, but not
too fast, and steady.... Handsomely, as the ship-word
was.... There!
The hands trained to whipping lanyards
caught Ahmet’s wrists as he plunged. Shane’s
right leg went outward, foot sunk home. Backward
he fell, leg taunt, hands pulling. Above him
Ahmet’s great bulk soared, hurtled grotesquely.
For an instant; a flash.... The squeals of startled
Syrians, the panic of feet.... Then a crash, an
immense crash....
A long shuddering, frightened eh
from the crowd.... A French soldier mumbling
... “’Cre nom de nom de nom de nom de
Jesus Chri!”
He staggered to his feet, put his
hand to his face.... It came away dripping....
His face was like the leeward deck of a flying yacht
... swimming.... A few feet away Syrians and
French soldiers were milling over ... something....
The corporal wrenched Shane’s arms into his coat.
Pushed his hat into his hands.
“Courez donc, lé citoyen....
Come on, get away.... Get....”
“Is he dead?”
“No, not dead.... But get
away.... He’ll never wrestle again.... Vite,
alors!”
He pushed him down the street.
“But -”
“Go on. We can take care
of ourselves....” He shoved him roughly
forward.... Shane staggered, walked, ran a little....
Behind him a few blocks away, an ominous hum.
He ran on.... Some one was shrieking....
“Ma hala ya ma hala Kobal
en Nosara.... How sweet, oh, how sweet, to
kill the Christians....” The crack of a
gun.... Tumult.... The long Moslem war-song....
Two rifles. “A nous, les Francais....
A nous, la Legion!”
A nausea, a great weakness, an utter
contempt for himself came over him in the boat pulling
him toward his ship ... God! He had fought
with and nearly killed-possibly killed-a
man for personal hatred! From irritation, and
in a public place! A spectacle for donkey-boys
and riff-raff of French towns.... He tottered
on the ship’s ladder.... The sailors caught
him. The mate ran up.
“Anything wrong, sir? You look like a ghost.”
“No, nothing. All aboard?
Everything ready? Is she a-drawing? Anchor
a-peak? All right. Get her up....”
Section 12
“Arif Bey, where is my wife?
I come back to Beirut. I find my house deserted.
My servants gone. Where is Fenzile? Is she
here?”
“No, son.”
“Is she dead?”
“No-no, son, I wish she were....”
“Then where is she gone? With whom?”
“Trebizond. Stamboul. Cairo.
I don’t know where.”
“With whom?”
“With-oh, don’t bother yourself,
son. Forget her.”
“With whom? I must know.”
“With-do you remember
that wrestler you crippled, the wrestler from Aleppo?”
“With Ahmet Ali! Impossible! I all
but killed him.”
“She went, though....”
“No, uncle, no. If he had been strong she
might, but,-”
The old Druse chief shook his head,
smiled in his beard, a little, bitter, wise smile.
“You were never sick with her, never poor.”
“No, never sick, never poor.”
“Well, he was sick and poor, so she went with
him.”
“Then she loved him all along.”
“No, son Zan, she loved you-until
you threw him. She might have been amused at
seeing him pass the house, laugh a little, be flattered....
Such a big fool, and she a little woman.... But
she would never have left you....”
“But she did.”
“Well ... after the fall, he
had no friends ... the Christians despised him, the
Moslems hated him.... There was no train to follow
him ... he went on crutches.... He passed her
door and looked, and looked.... What could she
do but come out.... It was her fault, after all....
And she was very tender-hearted....”
“Tender-hearted?”
“Didn’t you know?”
“No, I never knew.”
“She used to cry when the leaves
fell from the trees.... You didn’t know
your wife well?”
“No, sir, I did not.”
“Well, she is gone, Zan....
Where, one doesn’t know.... What will become
of her, one doesn’t know. Destiny is like
a blind camel. He doesn’t know against
what he stumbles. We do not see him come....
Only when the harm is done, do we say: We might
have listened for the tinkle of his bell....
Eh, one is young and does everything and sees nothing.
One is old and sees everything and does nothing.
There is no mystery ... only ignorance....”
“You say she was very tender-hearted,
my uncle. I didn’t know.... I thought
of her as something else....”
“Son Zan, you had better forget
her in another woman. Listen son, I will give
you Aziyed in marriage, my own daughter. She is
just as pretty and younger and not so foolish as Fenzile.”
“Oh, no, sir. No!”
“Well, I don’t blame you.”
“It isn’t that, Arif Bey.
It isn’t that. I’m very beholden to
you ... for your kindness ... and your patience....
I didn’t know.... And I thought I knew
everything nearly, and am so ignorant.... Why
until now I didn’t know even this-the
sun shone so brightly, and life was so pleasant, I
thought that was the way of life.... But I was
in love with Fenzile.... And that was what made
everything so wonderful ... in love with the wife
you gave me ... head over heels, sir ... just simply-head
over heels....”