STRANGE COUNTRIES FOR TO SEE
Now, the very first book was called
“Infancy”; and, having finished it, I
closed it with a bang! I was just twelve.
’Tis thus the twelve-year-old is apt to close
most books. Within those pages-perhaps
some day to be opened to the kindly inquiring eye-lie
the records of a quiet life, stirred at intervals
by spasms of infantile intensity. There are more
days than one in a life that can be written of, and
when the clock strikes twelve the day is but half
over.
The clock struck twelve! We children
had been watching and waiting for it. The house
had been stripped bare; many cases of goods were awaiting
shipment around Cape Horn to California. California!
A land of fable! We knew well enough that our
father was there, and had been for two years or more;
and that we were at last to go to him, and dwell there
with the fabulous in a new home more or less fabulous,-yet
we felt that it must be altogether lovely. We
said good-bye to everybody,-getting friends
and fellow-citizens more or less mixed as the hour
of departure from our native city drew near.
We were very much hugged and very much kissed and
not a little cried over; and then at last, in a half,
dazed condition, we left Rochester, New York, for
New York city, on our way to San Francisco by the
Nicaragua route. This was away back in 1855, when
San Francisco, it may be said, was only six years
old.
It seemed a supreme condescension
on the part of our maternal grandfather that he, who
did not and could not for a moment countenance the
theatre, should voluntarily take us, one and all, to
see an alleged dramatic representation at Barnum’s
Museum-at that time one of the features
of New York city, and perhaps the most famous place
of amusement in the land. Four years later, when
I was sixteen, very far from home and under that good
gentleman’s watchful supervision, I asked leave
to witness a dramatic version of “Uncle Tom’s
Cabin,” enacted by a small company of strolling
players in a canvas tent. There were no blood-hounds
in the cast, and mighty little scenery, or anything
else alluring; but I was led to believe that I had
been trembling upon the verge of something direful,
and I was not allowed to go. What would that
pious man have said could he have seen me, a few years
later, strutting and fretting my hour upon the stage?
Well, we all saw “Damon and
Pythias” in Barnum’s “Lecture Room,”
with real scenery that split up the middle and slid
apart over a carpet of green baize. And ’twas
a real play, played by real players,-at
least they were once real players, but that was long
before. It may be their antiquated and failing
art rendered them harmless. And, then, those
beguiling words “Lecture Room” have such
a soothing sound! They seemed in those days to
hallow the whole function, which was, of course, the
wily wish of the great moral entertainer; and his great
moral entertainment was even as “the cups that
cheer but not inebriate.” It came near
it in our case, however. It was our first matinee
at the theatre, and, oh, the joy we took of it!
Years afterward did we children in our playroom, clad
in “the trailing garments of the night”
in lieu of togas, sink our identity for the moment
and out-rant Damon and his Pythias. Thrice happy
days so long ago in California!
There is no change like a sea change,
no matter who suffers it; and one’s first sea
voyage is a revelation. The mystery of it is usually
not unmixed with misery. Five and forty years
ago it was a very serious undertaking to uproot one’s
self, say good-bye to all that was nearest and dearest,
and go down beyond the horizon in an ill-smelling,
overcrowded, side-wheeled tub. Not a soul on the
dock that day but fully realized this. The dock
and the deck ran rivers of tears, it seemed to me;
and when, after the lingering agony of farewells had
reached the climax, and the shore-lines were cast
off, and the Star of the West swung out into the stream,
with great side-wheels fitfully revolving, a shriek
rent the air and froze my young blood. Some mother
parting from a son who was on board our vessel, no
longer able to restrain her emotion, was borne away,
frantically raving in the delirium of grief. I
have never forgotten that agonizing scene, or the
despairing wail that was enough to pierce the hardest
heart. I imagined my heart was about to break;
and when we put out to sea in a damp and dreary drizzle,
and the shore-line dissolved away, while on board
there was overcrowding, and confusion worse confounded
in evidence everywhere,-perhaps it did
break, that overwrought heart of mine and has been
a patched thing ever since.
We were a miserable lot that night,
pitched to and fro and rolled from side to side as
if we were so much baggage. And there was a special
horror in the darkness, as well as in the wind that
hissed through the rigging, and in the waves that
rushed past us, sheeted with foam that faded ghostlike
as we watched it,-faded ghostlike, leaving
the blackness of darkness to enfold us and swallow
us up.
Day after day for a dozen days we
ploughed that restless sea. There were days into
which the sun shone not; when everybody and everything
was sticky with salty distillations; when half the
passengers were sea-sick and the other half sick of
the sea. The decks were slimy, the cabins stuffy
and foul. The hours hung heavily, and the horizon
line closed in about us a gray wall of mist.
Then I used to bury myself in my books
and try to forget the world, now lost to sight, and,
as I sometimes feared, never to be found again.
I had brought my private library with me; it was complete
in two volumes. There was “Rollo Crossing
the Atlantic,” by dear old Jacob Abbot; and
this book of juvenile travel and adventure I read on
the spot, as it were,-read it carefully,
critically; flattering myself that I was a lad of
experience, capable of detecting any nautical error
which Jacob, one of the most prolific authors of his
day, might perchance have made. The other volume
was a pocket copy of “Robinson Crusoe,”
upon the fly-leaf of which was scrawled, in an untutored
hand, “Charley from Freddy,”-this
Freddy was my juvenile chum. I still have that
little treasure, with its inscription undimmed by
time.
Frequently I have thought that the
reading of this charming book may have been the predominating
influence in the development of my taste and temper;
for it was while I was absorbed in the exquisitely
pathetic story of Robinson Crusoe that the first island
I ever saw dawned upon my enchanted vision. We
had weathered Cape Sable and the Florida Keys.
No sky was ever more marvellously blue than the sea
beneath us. The density and the darkness that
prevail in Northern waters had gone out of it; the
sun gilded it, the moon silvered it, and the great
stars dropped their pearl-plummets into it in the
vain search for soundings.
Sea gardens were there,-floating
gardens adrift in the tropic gale; pale green gardens
of berry and leaf and long meandering vine, rocking
upon the waves that lapped the shores of the Antilles,
feeding the current of the warm Gulf Stream; and,
forsooth, some of them to find their way at last into
the mazes of that mysterious, mighty, menacing sargasso
sea. Strange sea-monsters, more beautiful than
monstrous, sported in the foam about our prow, and
at intervals dashed it with color like animated rainbows.
From wave to wave the flying fish skimmed like winged
arrows of silver. Sometimes a land-bird was blown
across the sky-the sea-birds we had always
with us,-and ever the air was spicy and
the breeze like a breath of balm.
One day a little cloud dawned upon
our horizon. It was at first pale and pearly,
then pink like the hollow of a sea-shell, then misty
blue,-a darker blue, a deep blue dissolving
into green, and the green outlining itself in emerald,
with many a shade of lighter or darker green fretting
its surface, throwing cliff and crest into high relief,
and hinting at misty and mysterious vales, as fair
as fathomless. It floated up like a cloud from
the nether world, and was at first without form and
void, even as its fellows were; but as we drew nearer-for
we were steaming toward it across a sea of sapphire,-it
brooded upon the face of the water, while the clouds
that had hung about it were scattered and wafted away.
Thus was an island born to us of sea
and sky,-an island whose peak was sky-kissed,
whose vales were overshadowed by festoons of vapor,
whose heights were tipped with sunshine, and along
whose shore the sea sang softly, and the creaming
breakers wreathed themselves, flashed like snow-drifts,
vanished and flashed again. The sea danced and
sparkled; the air quivered with vibrant light.
Along the border of that island the palm-trees towered
and reeled, and all its gardens breathed perfume such
as I had never known or dreamed of.
For a few hours only we basked in
its beauty, rejoiced in it, gloried in it; and then
we passed it by. Even as it had risen from the
sea it returned into its bosom and was seen no more.
Twilight stole in between us, and the night blotted
it out forever. Forever?
I wonder what island it was?
A pearl of the Antilles, surely; but its name and
fame, its history and mystery are lost to me.
Its memory lives and is as green as ever. No
wintry blasts visit it; even the rich dyes of autumn
do not discolor it. It is perennial in its rare
beauty, unfading, unforgotten, unforgettable; a thing
immutable, immemorial-I had almost said
immortal.
Whence it came and whither it has
gone I know not. It had its rising and its setting;
its day from dawn to dusk was perfect. Doubtless
there are those whose lives have been passed within
its tranquil shade: from generation to generation
it has known all that they have known of joy or sorrow.
All the world that they have knowledge of has been
compassed by the far blue rim of the horizon.
That sky-piercing peak was ever the centre of their
universe, and the wandering sea-bird has outflown their
thoughts.
All this came to me as a child, when
the first island “swam into my ken.”
It was a great discovery-a revelation.
Of it were born all the islands that have been so
much to me in later life. And even then I seemed
to comprehend the singular life that all islanders
are forced to live: the independence of that
life-for a man’s island is his fortress,
girded about with the fathomless moat of the sea; and
the dependence of it-for what is that island
but an atom dotting watery space and so easily cut
off from communication with the world at large?
Drought may visit the islander, and he may be starved;
the tornado may desolate his shore; fever and famine
and thirst may lie in wait for him; sickness and sorrow
and death abide with him. Thus is he dependent
in his independence.
And he is insecluded in his seclusion,
for he can not escape from the intruder. He should
have no wish that may not be satisfied, provided he
be native born; what can he wish for that is beyond
the knowledge he has gained from the objects within
his reach? The world is his, so far as he knows
it; yet if he have one wish that calls for aught beyond
his limited horizon he rests unsatisfied.
All that was lovely in that tropic
isle appealed to me and filled me with a great longing.
I wanted to sing with the Beloved Bard:
Oh, had we some bright little
isle of our own,
In the blue summer ocean,
far off and alone!
And yet even then I felt its unutterable
loneliness, as I have felt it a thousand times since;
the loneliness that starves the heart, tortures the
brain, and leaves the mind diseased; the loneliness
that is exemplified in the solitude of Alexander Selkirk.
Robinson Crusoe lived in very truth
for me the moment I saw and comprehended that summer
isle. He also is immortal. From that hour
we scoured the sea for islands: from dawn to
dark we were on the watch. The Caribbean Sea
is well stocked with them. We were threading our
way among them, and might any day hear the glad cry
of “Land ho!” But we heard it not until
the morning of the eleventh day out from New York.
The sea seemed more lonesome than ever when we lost
our, island; the monotony of our life was almost unbroken.
We began to feel as prisoners must feel whose time
is near out. Oh, how the hours lagged!-but
deliverance was at hand. At last we gave a glad
shout, for the land was ours again; we were to disembark
in the course of a few hours, and all was bustle and
confusion until we dropped anchor off the Mosquito
Shore.