It was half a day’s march from
those glittering snow-fields into the low country,
and when that was reached I found myself amongst quite
another people.
The land was no longer fat and flowery,
giving every kind of produce for the asking, but stony
for the most part, and, where we first came on vegetation,
overgrown by firs, with a pine which looked to me like
a species which went to make the coal measures in
my dear but distant planet. More than this I
cannot say, for there are no places in the world like
mess-room and quarter-deck for forgetting school learning.
Instead of the glorious wealth of parti-coloured vegetation
my eyes had been accustomed to lately, here they rested
on infertile stretches of marshland intersected by
moss-covered gravel shoots, looking as though they
had been pushed into the plains in front of extinct
glaciers coming down from the region behind us.
On the low hills away from the sea those sombre evergreen
forests with an undergrowth of moss and red lichens
were more variegated with light foliage, and indeed
the pines proved to be but a fringe to the Arctic
ice, giving way rapidly to more typical Martian vegetation
each mile we marched to the southward.
As for the inhabitants, they seemed, like my guide, rough,
uncouth fellows, but honest enough when you came to know them. An
introduction, however, was highly desirable. I chanced upon the first
native as he was gathering reindeer-moss. My companion was some little way
behind at the moment, and when the gentle aborigine saw the stranger he stared
hard for a moment, then, turning on his heels, with extraordinary swiftness
flung at me half a pound of hard flint stone. Had his aim been a little
more careful this humble narrative had never appeared on the Broadway
bookstalls. As it was, the pebble, missing my head by an inch or two,
splintered into a hundred fragments on a rock behind, and while I was debating
whether a revengeful rush at the slinger or a strategic advance to the rear were
more advisable, my guide called out to his countryman
“Ho! you base prowler in the
morasses; you eater of unclean vegetation, do you
not see this is a ghost I am conducting, a dweller
in the ice cliffs, a spirit ten thousand years old?
Put by your sling lest he wither you with a glance.”
And, very reasonably, surprised, the aborigine did
as he was bid and cautiously advanced to inspect me.
The news soon spread over the countryside
that my jewel-hunter was bringing a live “spook”
along with him, considerable curiosity mixed with
an awe all to my advantage characterising the people
we met thereafter. Yet the wonder was not so
great as might have been expected, for these people
were accustomed to meeting the tags of lost races,
and though they stared hard, their interest was chiefly
in hearing how, when, and where I had been found,
whether I bit or kicked, or had any other vices, and
if I possessed any commercial value.
My guide’s throat must have
ached with the repetition of the narrative, but as
he made the story redound greatly to his own glory,
he put up cheerfully with the hoarseness. In
this way, walking and talking alternately, we travelled
during daylight through a country which slowly lost
its rugged features and became more and more inhabited,
the hardy people living in scattered villages in contradiction
to the debased city-loving Hither folk.
About nightfall we came to a sea-fishers’
hamlet, where, after the old man had explained my
exalted nature and venerable antiquity, I was offered
shelter for the night.
My host was the headman, and I must
say his bearing towards the supernatural was most
unaffected. If it had been an Avenue hotel I
could not have found more handsome treatment than in
that reed-thatched hut. They made me wash and
rest, and then were all agog for my history; but that
I postponed, contenting myself with telling them I
had been lately in Seth, and had come thence to see
them via the ice valley to all of which
they listened with the simplicity of children.
Afterwards I turned on them, and openly marvelled
that so small a geographical distance as there was
between that land and this could make so vast a human
difference. “The truth, O dweller in blue
shadows of primordial ice, is,” said the most
intelligent of the Thither folk as we sat over fried
deer-steak in his hut that evening, “we who are
men, not Peri-zad, not overstayed fairies like
those you have been amongst, are newcomers here on
this shore. We came but a few generations ago
from where the gold curtains of the sun lie behind
the westward pine-trees, and as we came we drove,
year by year, those fays, those spent triflers, back
before us. All this land was theirs once, and
more and more towards our old home. You may
still see traces of harbours dug and cities built
thousands of years ago, when the Hither folk were
living men and women not their shadows.
The big water outside stops us for a space, but,”
he added, laughing gruffly and taking a draught of
a strong beer he had been heating by the fire, “King
Ar-hap has their pretty noses between his fingers;
he takes tribute and girls while he gets ready they
say he is nearly ready this summer, and if he is, it
will not be much of an excuse he will need to lick
up the last of those triflers, those pretences of
manhood.”
Then we fell to talking of Ar-hap,
his subjects and town, and I learned the tides had
swept me a long way to the northward of the proper
route between the capitals of the two races, that
day they carried me into the Dead-Men’s Ice,
as these entertainers of mine called the northern
snows. To get back to the place previously aimed
at, where the woodmen road came out on the seashore,
it was necessary to go either by boat, a roundabout
way through a maze of channels, “as tangled as
the grass roots in autumn”; or, secondly, by
a couple of days’ marching due southward across
the base of the great peninsula we were on, and so
strike blue water again at the long-sought-for harbour.
As I lay dozing and dreaming on a
pile of strange furs in the corner of the hut that
evening I made up my mind for the land journey tomorrow,
having had enough for the moment of nautical Martian
adventures; and this point settled, fell again to
wondering what made me follow so reckless a quest
in the way I was doing; asking myself again and again
what was gazelle-eyed Heru to me after all, and why
should it matter even as much as the value of a brass
waist-coat button whether Hath had her or Ar-hap?
What a fool I was to risk myself day by day in quaint
and dangerous adventures, wearing out good Government
shoe-leather in other men’s quarrels, all for
a silly slip of royal girlhood who, by this time,
was probably making herself comfortable and forgetting
both Hath and me in the arms of her rough new lord.
And from Heru my mind drifted back
dreamily to poor An, and Seth, the city of fallen
magnificence, where the spent masters of a strange
planet now lived on sufferance the ghosts
of their former selves. Where was An, where the
revellers on the morning so long ago it
seemed! when first that infernal rug of
mine translated a chance wish into a horrible reality
and shot me down here, a stranger and an outcast?
Where was the magic rug itself? Where my steak
and tomato supper? Who had eaten it? Who
was drawing my pay? If I could but find the rug
when I got back to Seth, gods! but I would try if it
would not return whence I had come, and as swiftly,
out of all these silly coils and adventuring.
So musing, presently the firelight
died down, and bulky forms of hide-wrapped woodmen
sleeping on the floor slowly disappeared in obscurity
like ranges of mountains disappearing in the darkness
of night. All those uncouth forms, and the throb
of the sea outside, presently faded upon my senses,
and I slept the heavy sleep of one whose wakefulness
gives way before an imperious physical demand.
All through the long hours of the night, while the
waves outside champed upon the gravels, and the woodmen
snored and grunted uneasily as they simultaneously
dreamt of the day’s hunting and digested its
proceeds, I slept; and then when dawn began to break
I passed from that heavy stupor into another and lighter
realm, wherein fancy again rose superior to bodily
fatigue, and events of the last few days passed in
procession through my mind.
I dreamt I was lunching at a fashionable
seaside resort with Polly at my side, and An kept
bringing us melons, which grew so monstrous every
time a knife was put into them that poor Polly screamed
aloud. I dreamt I was afloat on a raft, hotly
pursued by my tailor, whose bare and shiny head may
Providence be good to him! was garlanded
with roses, while in his fist was a bunch of unpaid
bills, the which he waved aloft, shouting to me to
stop. And thus we danced down an ink-black river
until he had chiveyed me into the vast hall of the
Admiralty, where a fearsome Secretary, whose golden
teeth rattled and dropped from his head with mingled
cold and anger, towered above me as he asked why I
was absent from my ship without leave. And I
was just mumbling out excuses while stooping to pick
up his golden dentistry, when some one stirring in
the hut aroused me. I started up on my elbow
and looked around. Where was I? For a minute
all was confused and dark. The heavy mound-like
forms of sleeping men, the dim outlines of their hunting
gear upon the walls, the pale sea beyond, half seen
through the open doorway, just turning livid in the
morning light; and then as my eyes grew more accustomed
to the obscurity, and my stupid senses returned, I
recognised the surroundings, and, with a sigh, remembered
yesterday’s adventures.
However, it would never do to mope;
so, rising silently and picking a way through human
lumber on the floor, I went out and down to the water’s
edge, where “shore-going” clothes, as we
sailors call them, were slipped off, and I plunged
into the sea for a swim.
It was a welcome dip, for I needed
the plunge physically and intellectually, but it came
to an abrupt conclusion. The Thither folk apparently
had never heard of this form of enjoyment; to them
water stood for drinking or drowning, nothing else,
and since one could not drink the sea, to be in it
meant, even for a ghost, to drown. Consequently,
when the word went round the just rousing villages
that “He-on-foot-from-afar” was adrift
in the waves, rescue parties were hurriedly organised,
a boat launched, and, in spite of all my kicking and
shouting (which they took to be evidence of my semi-moribund
condition), I was speedily hauled out by hairy and
powerful hands, pungent herbs burnt under my nose,
and my heels held high in the air in order that the
water might run out of me. It was only with the
greatest difficulty those rough but honest fellows
were eventually got to believe me saved.
The breakfast I made of grilled deer
flesh and a fish not unlike salmon, however, convinced
them of my recovery, and afterward we parted very
good friends; for there was something in the nature
of those rugged barbarians just coming into the dawn
of civilisation that won my liking far more than the
effete gentleness of others across the water.
When the time of parting came they
showed no curiosity as to my errand, but just gave
me some food in a fish-skin bag, thrust a heavy stone-headed
axe into my hand, “in case I had to talk to a
thief on the road,” and pointed out on the southern
horizon a forked mountain, under which, they said,
was the harbour and high-road to King Ar-hap’s
capital. Then they hugged me to their hairy chests
in turn, and let me go with a traveller’s blessing.
There I was again, all alone, none
but my thoughts for companions, and nothing but youth
to excuse the folly in thus venturing on a reckless
quest!
However, who can gainsay that same
youth? The very spice of danger made my steps
light and the way pleasant. For a mile or two
the track was plain enough, through an undulating
country gradually becoming more and more wooded with
vegetation, changing rapidly from Alpine to sub-tropical.
The air also grew warmer, and when the dividing ridge
was crossed and a thick forest entered, the snows
and dreadful region of Deadmen’s Ice already
seemed leagues and leagues away.
Probably a warm ocean current played
on one side of the peninsula, while a cold one swept
the other, but for scientific aspects of the question
I cared little in my joy at being anew in a soft climate,
amongst beautiful flowers and vivid life again.
Mile after mile slipped quickly by as I strode along,
whistling “Yankee Doodle” to myself and
revelling in the change. At one place I met a
rough-looking Martian woodcutter, who wanted to fight
until he found I also wanted to, when he turned very
civil and as talkative as a solitary liver often is
when his tongue gets started. He particularly
desired to know where I came from, and, as in the
case with so many other of his countrymen, took it
for granted, and with very little surprise, that I
was either a spirit or an inhabitant of another world.
With this idea in his mind he gave me a curious piece
of information, which, unfortunately, I was never
able to follow up.
“I don’t think you can
be a spirit,” he said, critically eyeing my
clothes, which were now getting ragged and dirty beyond
description. “They are finer-looking things
than you, and I doubt if their toes come through their
shoes like yours do. If you are a wanderer from
the stars, you are not like that other one we have
down yonder,” and he pointed to the southward.
“What!” I asked, pricking
my ears in amazement, “another wanderer from
the outside world! Does he come from the earth?” using
the word An had given me to signify my own planet.
“No, not from there; from the
one that burns blue in evening between sun and sea.
Men say he worked as a stoker or something of the
kind when he was at home, and got trifling with a
volcano tap, and was lapped in hot mud, and blown
out here. My brother saw him about a week ago.”
“Now what you say is down right
curious. I thought I had a monopoly of that
kind of business in this sphere of yours. I should
be tremendously interested to see him.”
“No you wouldn’t,”
briefly answered the woodman. “He is the
stupidest fool ever blown from one world to another more
stupid to look at than you are. He is a gaseous,
wavey thing, so glum you can’t get two words
a week out of him, and so unstable that you never know
when you are with him and when the breeze has drifted
him somewhere else.”
I could but laugh and insist, with
all respect to the woodcutter, such an individual
were worth the knowing however unstable his constitution;
at which the man shrugged his shoulders and changed
the conversation, as though the subject were too trivial
to be worth much consideration.
This individual gave me the pleasure
of his company until nearly sundown, and finding I
took an interest in things of the forest, pointed
out more curious plants and trees than I have space
to mention. Two of them, however, cling to my
memory very tenaciously. One was a very Circe
amongst plants, the horrible charm of which can never
be forgotten. We were going down a glade when
a most ravishing odour fell upon my nostrils.
It was heavenly sweet yet withal there lurked an
incredibly, unexpressibly tempting spice of wickedness
in it. The moment he caught that ambrosial invitation
in the air my woodman spit fiercely on the ground,
and taking a plug of wool from his pouch stuffed his
nostrils up. Then he beckoned me to come away.
But the odour was too ravishing, I was bound to see
whence it arose, and finding me deaf to all warnings,
the man reluctantly turned aside down the enticing
trail. We pushed about a hundred yards through
bushes until we came to a little arena full in sunshine
where there were neither birds nor butterflies, but
a death-like hush upon everything. Indeed, the
place seemed shunned in spite of the sodden loveliness
of that scent which monopolised and mounted to my
brain until I was beginning to be drunk with the sheer
pleasure of it. And there in the centre of the
space stood a plant not unlike a tree fern, about six
feet high, and crowned by one huge and lovely blossom.
It resembled a vast passion-flower of incredible splendour.
There were four petals, with points resting on the
ground, each six feet long, ivory-white inside, exquisitely
patterned with glittering silver veins. From the
base of these rose upright a gauzy veil of azure filaments
of the same length as the petals, wirelike, yet soft
as silk, and inside them again rested a chalice of
silver holding a tiny pool of limpid golden honey.
Circe, indeed! It was from that cup the scent
arose, and my throat grew dry with longing as I looked
at it; my eyes strained through the blue tendrils
towards that liquid nectar, and my giddy senses felt
they must drink or die! I glanced at the woodman
with a smile of drunken happiness, then turned tottering
legs towards the blossom. A stride up the smooth
causeway of white petals, a push through the azure
haze, and the wine of the wood enchantress would be
mine molten amber wine, hotter and more
golden than the sunshine; the fire of it was in my
veins, the recklessness of intoxication was on me,
life itself as nothing compared to a sip from that
chalice, my lips must taste or my soul would die,
and with trembling hand and strained face I began to
climb.
But the woodman pulled me back.
“Back, stranger!” he cried. “Those
who drink there never live again.”
“Blessed oblivion! If
I had a thousand lives the price were still too cheap,”
and once more I essayed to scramble up.
But the man was a big fellow, and
with nostrils plugged, and eyes averted from the deadly
glamour, he seized me by the collar and threw me back.
Three times I tried, three times he hurled me down,
far too faint and absorbed to heed the personal violence.
Then standing between us, “Look,” he
said, “look and learn.”
He had killed a small ape that morning,
meaning later on to take its fur for clothing, and
this he now unslung from his shoulder, and hitching
the handle of his axe into the loose skin at the back
of its neck, cautiously advanced to the witch plant,
and gently hoisted the monkey over the blue palings.
The moment its limp, dead feet touched the golden
pool a shudder passed through the plant, and a bird
somewhere far back in the forest cried out in horror.
Quick as thought, a spasm of life shot up the tendrils,
and like tongues of blue flame they closed round the
victim, lapping his miserable body in their embrace.
At the same time the petals began to rise, showing
as they did so hard, leathery, unlovely outer rinds,
and by the time the woodman was back at my side the
flower was closed.
Closer and closer wound the blue tendrils;
tighter and tighter closed the cruel petals with their
iron grip, until at last we heard the ape’s
bones crackling like dry firewood; then next his head
burst, his brains came oozing through the crevices,
while blood and entrails followed them through every
cranny, and the horrible mess with the overflow of
the chalice curled down the stem in a hundred steaming
rills, till at last the petals locked with an ugly
snap upon their ghastly meal, and I turned away from
the sight in dread and loathing.
That was plant Number One.
Plant Number Two was of milder disposition,
and won a hearty laugh for my friendly woodman.
In fact, being of a childlike nature, his success
as a professor of botany quite pleased him, and not
content with answering my questions, he set to work
to find new vegetable surprises, greatly enjoying
my wonder and the sense of importance it gave him.
In this way we came, later on in the
day, to a spot where herbage was somewhat scantier,
the grass coarse, and soil shallow. Here I espied
a tree of small size, apparently withered, but still
bearing a few parched leaves on its uppermost twigs.
“Now that,” quoth the
professor, “is a highly curious tree, and I
should like you to make a close acquaintance with it.
It grows from a seed in the course of a single springtime,
perishes in the summer; but a few specimens stand
throughout the winter, provided the situation is sheltered,
as this one has done. If you will kindly go down
and shake its stem I believe you will learn something
interesting.”
So, very willing to humour him, away
I went to the tree, which was perfect in every detail,
but apparently very dry, clasped it with both hands,
and, pulling myself together, gave it a mighty shake.
The result was instantaneous. The whole thing
was nothing but a skin of dust, whence all fibre and
sap had gone, and at my touch it dissolved into a
cloud of powder, a huge puff of white dust which descended
on me as though a couple of flour-bags had been inverted
over my head; and as I staggered out sneezing and
blinking, white as a miller from face to foot, the
Martian burst into a wild, joyous peal of laughter
that made the woods ring again. His merriment
was so sincere I had not the heart to be angry, and
soon laughed as loud as he did; though, for the future,
I took his botanical essays with a little more caution.