Off into the forest I went, feeling
a boyish elation to be so free nor taking heed or
count of the reckless adventure before me. The
Martian weather for the moment was lovely and the
many-coloured grass lush and soft under foot.
Mile after mile I went, heeding the distance lightly,
the air was so elastic. Now pressing forward
as the main interest of my errand took the upper hand,
and remembrance of poor Heru like a crushed white
flower in the red grip of those cruel ravishers came
upon me, and then pausing to sigh with pleasure or
stand agape forgetful even of her in
wonder of the unknown loveliness about me.
And well might I stare! Everything
in that forest was wonderful! There were plants
which turned from colour to colour with the varying
hours of the day. While others had a growth so
swift it was dangerous to sit in their neighbourhood
since the long, succulent tendrils clambering from
the parent stem would weave you into a helpless tangle
while you gazed, fascinated, upon them. There
were plants that climbed and walked; sighing plants
who called the winged things of the air to them with
a noise so like to a girl sobbing that again and again
I stopped in the tangled path to listen. There
were green bladder-mosses which swam about the surface
of the still pools like gigantic frog-broods.
There were on the ridges warrior trees burning in
the vindictiveness of a long forgotten cause a
blaze of crimson scimitar thorns from root to topmost
twig; and down again in the cool hollows were lady-bushes
making twilight of the green gloom with their cloudy
ivory blossoms and filling the shadows with such a
heavy scent that head and heart reeled with fatal
pleasure as one pushed aside their branches.
Every river-bed was full of mighty reeds, whose stems
clattered together when the wind blew like swords on
shields, and every now and then a bit of forest was
woven together with the ropey stems of giant creepers
till no man or beast could have passed save for the
paths which constant use had kept open through the
mazes.
All day long I wandered on through
those wonderful woodlands, and in fact loitered so
much over their infinite marvels that when sundown
came all too soon there was still undulating forest
everywhere, vistas of fairy glades on every hand,
peopled with incredible things and echoing with sounds
that excited the ears as much as other things fascinated
the eyes, but no sign of the sea or my fishing village
anywhere.
It did not matter; a little of the
Martian leisureliness was getting into my blood:
“If not today, why then tomorrow,” as An
would have said; and with this for comfort I selected
a warm, sandy hollow under the roots of a big tree,
made my brief arrangements for the night, ate some
honey cakes, and was soon sleeping blissfully.
I woke early next morning, after many
hours of interrupted dreams, and having nothing to
do till the white haze had lifted and made it possible
to start again, rested idly a time on my elbow and
watched the sunshine filter into the recesses.
Very pretty it was to see the thick
canopy overhead, by star-light so impenetrable, open
its chinks and fissures as the searching sun came
upon it; to see the pin-hole gaps shine like spangles
presently, the spaces broaden into lesser suns, and
even the thick leafage brighten and shine down on
me with a soft sea-green radiance. The sunward
sides of the tree-stems took a glow, and the dew that
ran dripping down their mossy sides trickled blood-red
to earth. Elsewhere the shadows were still black,
and strange things began to move in them things
we in our middle-aged world have never seen the likeness
of: beasts half birds, birds half creeping things,
and creeping things which it seemed to me passed through
lesser creations down to the basest life that crawls
without interruption or division.
It was not for me, a sailor, to know
much of such things, yet some I could not fail to
notice. On one grey branch overhead, jutting
from a tree-stem where a patch of velvet moss made
in the morning glint a fairy bed, a wonderful flower
unfolded. It was a splendid bud, ivory white,
cushioned in leaves, and secured to its place by naked
white roots that clipped the branch like fingers of
a lady’s hand. Even as I looked it opened,
a pale white star, and hung pensive and inviting on
its mossy cushion. From it came such a ravishing
odour that even I, at the further end of the great
scale of life, felt my pulses quicken and my eyes
brighten with cupidity. I was in the very act
of climbing the tree, but before I could move hand
or foot two things happened, whether you take my word
for them or no.
Firstly, up through a glade in the
underwood, attracted by the odour, came an ugly brown
bird with a capacious beak and shining claws.
He perched near by, and peeped and peered until he
made out the flower pining on her virgin stem, whereat
off he hopped to her branch and there, with a cynical
chuckle, strutted to and fro between her and the main
stem like an ill genius guarding a fairy princess.
Surely Heaven would not allow him
to tamper with so chaste a bud! My hand reached
for a stone to throw at him when happened the second
thing. There came a gentle pat upon the woodland
floor, and from a tree overhead dropped down another
living plant like to the one above yet not exactly
similar, a male, my instincts told me, in full solitary
blossom like her above, cinctured with leaves, and
supported by half a score of thick white roots that
worked, as I looked, like the limbs of a crab.
In a twinkling that parti-coloured gentleman vegetable
near me was off to the stem upon which grew his lady
love; running and scrambling, dragging the finery
of his tasselled petals behind, it was laughable to
watch his eagerness. He got a grip of the tree
and up he went, “hand over hand,” root
over root. I had just time to note others of
his species had dropped here and there upon the ground,
and were hurrying with frantic haste to the same destination
when he reached the fatal branch, and was straddling
victoriously down it, blind to all but love and longing.
That ill-omened bird who stood above the maiden-flower
let him come within a stalk’s length, so near
that the white splendour of his sleeping lady gleamed
within arms’ reach, then the great beak was
opened, the great claws made a clutch, the gallant’s
head was yanked from his neck, and as it went tumbling
down the maw of the feathered thing his white legs
fell spinning through space, and lay knotting themselves
in agony upon the ground for a minute or two before
they relaxed and became flaccid in the repose of death.
Another and another vegetable suitor made for that
fatal tryst, and as each came up the snap of the brown
bird’s beak was all their obsequies. At
last no more came, and then that Nemesis of claws
and quills walked over to the girl-flower, his stomach
feathers ruffled with repletion, the green blood of
her lovers dripping from his claws, and pulled her
golden heart out, tore her white limbs one from the
other, and swallowed her piecemeal before my very
eyes! Then up in wrath I jumped and yelled at
him till the woods echoed, but too late to stay his
sacrilege.
By this time the sun was bathing everything
in splendour, and turning away from the wonders about
me, I set off at best pace along the well-trodden
path which led without turning to the west coast village
where the canoes were.
It proved far closer than expected.
As a matter of fact the forest in this direction
grew right down to the water’s edge; the salt-loving
trees actually overhanging the waves one
of the pleasantest sights in nature and
thus I came right out on top of the hamlet before there
had been an indication of its presence. It occupied
two sides of a pretty little bay, the third side being
flat land given over to the cultivation of an enormous
species of gourd whose characteristic yellow flowers
and green, succulent leaves were discernible even at
this distance.
I branched off along the edge of the
surf and down a dainty little flowery path, noticing
meanwhile how the whole bay was filled by hundreds
of empty canoes, while scores of others were drawn
up on the strand, and then the first thing I chanced
upon was a group of people youthful, of
course, with the eternal Martian bloom and
in the splendid simplicity of almost complete nakedness.
My first idea was that they were bathing, and fixing
my eyes on the tree-tops with great propriety, I gave
a warning cough. At that sound instead of getting
to cover, or clothes, all started up and stood staring
for a time like a herd of startled cattle. It
was highly embarrassing; they were right in the path,
a round dozen of them, naked and so little ashamed
that when I edged away modestly they began to run
after me. And the farther they came forward
the more I retired, till we were playing a kind of
game of hide-and-seek round the tree-stems. In
the middle of it my heel caught in a root and down
I went very hard and very ignominiously, whereon those
laughing, light-hearted folk rushed in, and with smiles
and jests helped me to my feet.
“Was I the traveller who had come from Seth?”
“Yes.”
“Oh, then that was well.
They had heard such a traveller was on the road,
and had come a little way down the path, as far as
might be without fatigue, to meet him.”
“Would I eat with them?”
these amiable strangers asked, pushing their soft
warm fingers into mine and ringing me round with a
circle. “But firstly might they help me
out of my clothes? It was hot, and these things
were cumbersome.” As to the eating, I was
agreeable enough seeing how casual meals had been
with me lately, but my clothes, though Heaven knows
they were getting horribly ragged and travel-stained,
I clung to desperately.
My new friends shrugged their dimpled
shoulders and, arguments being tedious, at once squatted
round me in the dappled shade of a big tree and produced
their stores of never failing provisions. After
a pleasant little meal taken thus in the open and
with all the simplicity Martians delight in, we got
to talking about those yellow canoes which were bobbing
about on the blue waters of the bay.
“Would you like to see where
they are grown?” asked an individual basking
by my side.
“Grown!” I answered with
incredulity. “Built, you mean. Never
in my life did I hear of growing boats.”
“But then, sir,” observed
the girl as she sucked the honey out of the stalk
of an azure convolvulus flower and threw the remains
at a butterfly that sailed across the sunshine, “you
know so little! You have come from afar, from
some barbarous and barren district. Here we
undoubtedly grow our boats, and though we know the
Thither folk and such uncultivated races make their
craft by cumbrous methods of flat planks, yet we prefer
our own way, for one thing because it saves trouble,”
and as she murmured that all-sufficient reason the
gentle damsel nodded reflectively.
But one of her companions, more lively
for the moment, tickled her with a straw until she
roused, and then said, “Let us take the stranger
to the boat garden now. The current will drift
us round the bay, and we can come back when it turns.
If we wait we shall have to row in both directions,
or even walk,” and again planetary slothfulness
carried the day.
So down to the beach we strolled and
launched one of the golden-hued skiffs upon the pretty
dancing wavelets just where they ran, lipped with
jewelled spray, on the shore, and then only had I a
chance to scrutinise their material. I patted
that one we were upon inside and out. I noted
with a seaman’s admiration its lightness, elasticity,
and supreme sleekness, its marvellous buoyancy and
fairy-like “lines,” and after some minutes’
consideration it suddenly flashed across me that it
was all of gourd rind. And as if to supply confirmation,
the flat land we were approaching on the opposite
side of the bay was covered by the characteristic
verdure of these plants with a touch here and there
of splendid yellow blossoms, but all of gigantic proportions.
“Ay,” said a Martian damsel
lying on the bottom, and taking and kissing my hand
as she spoke, in the simple-hearted way of her people,
“I see you have guessed how we make our boats.
Is it the same in your distant country?”
“No, my girl, and what’s
more, I am a bit uneasy as to what the fellows on
the Carolina will say if they ever hear I went to sea
in a hollowed-out pumpkin, and with a young lady well,
dressed as you are for crew. Even
now I cannot imagine how you get your ships so trim
and shapely there is not a seam or a patch
anywhere, it looks as if you had run them into a mould.”
“That’s just what we have
done, sir, and now you will witness the moulds at
work, for here we are,” and the little skiff
was pulled ashore and the Martians and I jumped out
on the shelving beach, hauled our boat up high and
dry, and there right over us, like great green umbrellas,
spread the fronds of the outmost garden of this strangest
of all ship-building yards. Briefly, and not
to make this part of my story too long, those gilded
boys and girls took me ashore, and chattering like
finches in the evening, showed how they planted their
gourd seed, nourished the gigantic plants as they
grew with brackish water and the burnt ashes; then,
when they flowered, mated the male and female blossoms,
glorious funnels of golden hue big enough for one to
live in; and when the young fruit was of the bigness
of an ordinary bolster, how they slipped it into a
double mould of open reed-work something like the
two halves of a walnut-shell; and how, growing day
by day in this, it soon took every curve and line
they chose to give it, even the hanging keel below,
the strengthened bulwarks, and tall prow-piece.
It was so ingenious, yet simple; and I confess I
laughed over my first skiff “on the stalk,”
and fell to bantering the Martians, asking whether
it was a good season for navies, whether their Cunarders
were spreading nicely, if they could give me a pinch
of barge seed, or a yacht in bud to show to my friends
at home.
But those lazy people took the matter
seriously enough. They led me down green alleys
arched over with huge melon-like leaves; they led me
along innumerable byways, making me peep and peer through
the chequered sunlight at ocean-growing craft, that
had budded twelve months before, already filling their
moulds to the last inch of space. They told me
that when the growing process was sufficiently advanced,
they loosened the casing, and cutting a hole into
the interior of each giant fruit, scooped out all
its seed, thereby checking more advance, and throwing
into the rind strength that would otherwise have gone
to reproductiveness. They said each fruit made
two vessels, but the upper half was always best and
used for long salt-water journeys, the lower piece
being but for punting or fishing on their lakes.
They cut them in half while still green, scraped
out the light remaining pulp when dry, and dragged
them down with the minimum of trouble, light as feathers,
tenacious as steel plate, and already in the form and
fashion of dainty craft from five to twenty feet in
length, when the process was completed.
By the time we had explored this strangest
of ship-building yards, and I had seen last year’s
crop on the stocks being polished and fitted with
seats and gear, the sun was going down; and the Martian
twilight, owing to the comparative steepness of the
little planet’s sides, being brief, we strolled
back to the village, and there they gave me harbourage
for the night, ambrosial supper, and a deep draught
of the wine of Forgetfulness, under the gauzy spell
of which the real and unreal melted into the vistas
of rosy oblivion, and I slept.