That woodman friend of mine proved
so engaging it was difficult to get away, and thus
when, dusk upon us, and my object still a long distance
off, he asked me to spend the night at his hut, I gladly
assented.
We soon reached the cabin where the
man lived by himself whilst working in the forest.
It was a picturesque little place on a tree-overhung
lagoon, thatched, wattled, and all about were piles
of a pleasant-scented bark, collected for the purpose
of tanning hides, and I could not but marvel that
such a familiar process should be practised identically
on two sides of the universal ether. But as a
matter of fact the similarity of many details of existence
here and there was the most striking of the things
I learned whilst in the red planet.
Within the hut stood a hearth in the
centre of the floor, whereon a comfortable blaze soon
sparkled, and upon the walls hung various implements,
hides, and a store of dried fruits of various novel
kinds. My host, when he had somewhat disdainfully
watched me wash in a rill of water close by, suggested
supper, and I agreed with heartiest good will.
“Nothing wonderful! Oh,
Mr. Blue-coat!” he said, prancing about as he
made his hospitable arrangements. “No fine
meat or scented wine to unlock, one by one, all the
doors of paradise, such as I have heard they have
in lands beyond the sea; but fare good enough for plain
men who eat but to live. So! reach me down yonder
bunch of yellow aru fruit, and don’t upset that
calabash, for all my funniest stories lurk at the
bottom of it.”
I did as he bid, and soon we were
squatting by the fire toasting arus on pointed sticks,
the doorway closed with a wattle hurdle, and the black
and gold firelight filling the hut with fantastic shadows.
Then when the banana-like fruit was ready, the man
fetched from a recess a loaf of bread savoured with
the dust of dried and pounded fish, put the foresaid
calabash of strong ale to warm, and down we sat to
supper with real woodman appetites. Seldom have
I enjoyed a meal so much, and when we had finished
the fruit and the wheat cake my guide snatched up the
great gourd of ale, and putting it to his lips called
out:
“Here’s to you, stranger;
here’s to your country; here’s to your
girl, if you have one, and death to your enemies!”
Then he drank deep and long, and, passed the stuff
to me.
“Here’s to you, bully
host, and the missus, and the children, if there are
any, and more power to your elbow!” the
which gratified him greatly, though probably he had
small idea of my meaning.
And right merry we were that evening.
The host was a jolly good fellow, and his ale, with
a pleasant savour of mint in it, was the heartiest
drink I ever set lips to. We talked and laughed
till the very jackals yapped in sympathy outside.
And when he had told a score of wonderful wood stories
as pungent of the life of these fairy forests as the
aromatic scent of his bark-heaps outside, as iridescent
with the colours of another world as the rainbow bubbles
riding down his starlit rill, I took a turn, and told
him of the commonplaces of my world so far away, whereat
he laughed gloriously again. The greater the
commonplace the larger his joy. The humblest story,
hardly calculated to impress a griffin between watches
on the main-deck, was a masterpiece of wit to that
gentle savage; and when I “took off” the
tricks and foibles of some of my superiors Heaven
forgive me for such treason! he listened
with the exquisite open-mouthed delight of one who
wanders in a brand-new world of mirth.
We drank and laughed over that strong
beer till the little owls outside raised their voice
in combined accord, and then the woodman, shaking
the last remnant of his sleepy wits together, and giving
a reproachful look at me for finally passing him the
gourd empty to the last drop, rose, threw a fur on
a pile of dead grass at one side of the hut, and bid
me sleep, “for his brain was giddy with the wonders
of the incredible and ludicrous sphere which I had
lately inhabited.”
Slowly the fire died away; slowly
the quivering gold and black arabesques
on the walls merged in a red haze as the sticks dropped
into tinder, and the great black outline of the hairy
monster who had thrown himself down by the embers
rose up the walls against that flush like the outline
of a range of hills against a sunset glow. I
listened drowsily for a space to his snoring and the
laughing answer of the brook outside, and then that
ambrosial sleep which is the gentle attendant of hardship
and danger touched my tired eyelids, and I, too, slept.
My friend was glum the next morning,
as they who stay over-long at the supper flagon are
apt to be. He had been at work an hour on his
bark-heaps when I came out into the open, and it was
only by a good deal of diplomacy and some material
help in sorting his faggots that he was got into a
better frame of mind. I could not, however, trust
his mood completely, and as I did not want to end
so jovial a friendship with a quarrel, I hurried through
our breakfast of dry bread, with hard-boiled lizard
eggs, and then settling my reckoning with one of the
brass buttons from my coat, which he immediately threaded,
with every evidence of extreme gratification, on a
string of trinkets hanging round his neck, asked him
the way to Ar-hap’s capital.
“Your way is easy, friend, as
long as you keep to the straight path and have yonder
two-humped mountain in front. To the left is
the sea, and behind the hill runs the canal and road
by which all traffic comes or goes to Ar-hap.
But above all things pass not to the hills right,
for no man goes there; there away the forests are
thick as night, and in their perpetual shadows are
the ruins of a Hither city, a haunted fairy town to
which some travellers have been, but whence none ever
returned alive.”
“By the great Jove, that sounds
promising! I would like to see that town if
my errand were not so urgent.”
But the old fellow shook his shaggy
head and turned a shade yellower. “It is
no place for decent folk,” he growled.
“I myself once passed within a mile of its outskirts
at dusk, and saw the unholy little people’s
lanterned processions starting for the shrine of Queen
Yang, who, tradition says, killed herself and a thousand
babies with her when we took this land.”
“My word, that was a holocaust!
Couldn’t I drop in there to lunch? It
would make a fine paper for an antiquarian society.”
Again the woodman frowned. “Do
as I bid you, son. You are too young and green
to go on ventures by yourself. Keep to the straight
road: shun the swamps and the fairy forest, else
will you never see Ar-hap.”
“And as I have very urgent and
very important business with him, comrade, no doubt
your advice is good. I will call on Princess
Yang some other day. And now goodbye!
Rougher but friendlier shelter than you have given
me no man could ask for. I am downright sorry
to part with you in this lonely land. If ever
we meet again ” but we never did!
The honest old churl clasped me into his hairy bosom
three times, stuffed my wallet with dry fruit and
bread, and once more repeating his directions, sent
me on my lonely way.
I confess I sighed while turning into
the forest, and looked back more than once at his
retreating form. The loneliness of my position,
the hopelessness of my venture, welled up in my heart
after that good comradeship, and when the hut was
out of sight I went forward down the green grass road,
chin on chest, for twenty minutes in the deepest dejection.
But, thank Heaven, I was born with a tough spirit,
and possess a mind which has learned in many fights
to give brave counsel to my spirit, and thus presently
I shook myself together, setting my face boldly to
the quest and the day’s work.
It was not so clear a morning as the
previous one, and a steamy wind on what at sea I should
have called the starboard bow, as I pressed forward
to the distant hill, had a curiously subduing effect
on my thoughts, and filled the forest glades with
a tremulous unreality like to nothing on our earth,
and distinctly embarrassing to a stranger in a strange
land. Small birds in that quaint atmospheric
haze looked like condors, butterflies like giant
fowl, and the simplest objects of the forest like
the imaginations of a disordered dream. Behind
that gauzy hallucination a fine white mist came up,
and the sun spread out flat and red in the sky, while
the pent-in heat became almost unendurable.
Still I plodded on, growling to myself
that in Christian latitudes all the evidences would
have been held to betoken a storm before night, whatever
they might do here, but for the most part lost in my
own gloomy speculations. That was the more pity
since, in thinking the walk over now, it seems to
me that I passed many marvels, saw many glorious vistas
in those nameless forests, many spreads of colour,
many incidents that, could I but remember them more
distinctly, would supply material for making my fortune
as a descriptive traveller. But what would you?
I have forgotten, and am too virtuous to draw on my
imagination, as it is sometimes said other travellers
have done when picturesque facts were deficient.
Yes, I have forgotten all about that day, save that
it was sultry hot, that I took off my coat and waistcoat
to be cooler, carrying them, like the tramp I was,
across my arm, and thus dishevelled passed some time
in the afternoon an encampment of forest folk, wherefrom
almost all the men were gone, and the women shy and
surly.
In no very social humour myself, I
walked round their woodland village, and on the outskirts,
by a brook, just as I was wishing there were some
one to eat my solitary lunch with, chanced upon a fellow
busily engaged in hammering stones into weapons upon
a flint anvil.
He was an ugly-looking individual
at best, yet I was hard up for company, so I put my
coat down, and, seating myself on a log opposite,
proceeded to open my wallet, and take out the frugal
stores the woodman had given me that morning.
The man was seated upon the ground
holding a stone anvil between his feet, while with
his hands he turned and chipped with great skill a
spear-head he was making out of flint. It was
about the only pastime he had, and his little yellow
eyes gleamed with a craftsman’s pleasure, his
shaggy round shoulders were bent over the task, the
chips flew in quick particles, and the wood echoed
musically as the artificer watched the thing under
his hands take form and fashion. Presently I
spoke, and the worker looked up, not too pleased at
being thus interrupted. But he was easy of propitiation,
and over a handful of dried raisins communicative.
How, I asked, knowing a craftsman’s
craft is often nearest to his heart, how was it such
things as that he chipped came to be thought of by
him and his? Whereon the woodman, having spit
out the raisin-stones and wiped his fingers on his
fur, said in substance that the first weapon was fashioned
when the earliest ape hurled the first stone in wrath.
“But, chum,” I said, taking
up his half-finished spear and touching the razor-fine
edge with admiring caution, “from hurling the
crude pebble to fashioning such as this is a long
stride. Who first edged and pointed the primitive
malice? What man with the soul of a thousand
unborn fighters in him notched and sharpened your natural
rock?”
Whereon the chipper grinned, and answered
that, when the woodmen had found stones that would
crack skulls, it came upon them presently that they
would crack nuts as well. And cracking nuts between
two stones one day a flint shattered, and there on
the grass was the golden secret of the edge the
thing that has made man what he is.
“Yet again, good fellow,”
I queried, “even this happy chance only gives
us a weapon, sharp, no doubt, and calculated to do
a hundred services for any ten the original pebble
could have done, but still unhandled, small in force,
imperfect now tell me, which of your amiable
ancestors first put a handle to the fashioned flint,
and how he thought of it?”
The workman had done his flake by
now, and wrapping it in a bit of skin, put it carefully
in his belt before turning to answer my question.
“Who made the first handle for
the first flint, you of the many questions? She
did she, the Mother,” he suddenly
cried, patting the earth with his brown hand, and
working himself up as he spoke, “made it in
her heart for us her first-born. See, here is
such as the first handled weapon that ever came out
of darkness,” and he snatched from the ground,
where it had lain hidden under his fox-skin cloak,
a heavy club. I saw in an instant how it was.
The club had been a sapling, and the sapling’s
roots had grown about and circled with a splendid grip
a lump of native flint. A woodman had pulled
the sapling, found the flint, and fashioned the two
in a moment of happy inspiration, the one to an axe-head
and the other to a handle, as they lay Nature-welded!
“This, I say, is the first the
first!” screamed the old fellow as though I
were contradicting him, thumping the ground with his
weapon, and working himself up to a fury as its black
magic entered his being. “This is the first:
with this I slew Hetter and Gur, and those who plundered
my hiding-places in the woods; with this I have killed
a score of others, bursting their heads, and cracking
their bones like dry sticks. With this with
this ” but here his rage rendered
him inarticulate; he stammered and stuttered for a
minute, and then as the killing fury settled on him
his yellow teeth shut with a sudden snap, while through
them his breath rattled like wind through dead pine
branches in December, the sinews sat up on his hands
as his fingers tightened upon the axe-heft like the
roots of the same pines from the ground when winter
rain has washed the soil from beneath them; his small
eyes gleamed like baleful planets; every hair upon
his shaggy back grew stiff and erect another
minute and my span were ended.
With a leap from where I sat I flew
at that hairy beast, and sinking my fists deep in
his throttle, shook him till his eyes blazed with
delirious fires. We waltzed across the short
greensward, and in and about the tree-trunks, shaking,
pulling, and hitting as we went, till at last I felt
the man’s vigour dying within him; a little more
shaking, a sudden twist, and he was lying on the ground
before me, senseless and civil! That is the
worst of some orators, I thought to myself, as I gloomily
gathered up the scattered fragments of my lunch; they
never know when they have said enough, and are too
apt to be carried away by their own arguments.
That inhospitable village was left
behind in full belief the mountain looming in the
south could be reached before nightfall, while the
road to its left would serve as a sure guide to food
and shelter for the evening. But, as it turned
out, the morning’s haze developed a strong mist
ere the afternoon was half gone, through which it was
impossible to see more than twenty yards. My
hill loomed gigantic for a time with a tantalising
appearance of being only a mile or two ahead, then
wavered, became visionary, and finally disappeared
as completely as though the forest mist had drunk
it up bodily.
There was still the road to guide
me, a fairly well-beaten track twining through the
glades; but even the best of highways are difficult
in fog, and this one was complicated by various side
paths, made probably by hunters or bark-cutters, and
without compass or guide marks it was necessary to
advance with extreme caution, or get helplessly mazed.
An hour’s steady tramping brought
me nowhere in particular, and stopping for a minute
to consider, I picked a few wild fruit, such as my
wood-cutter friend had eaten, from an overhanging bush,
and in so doing slipped, the soil having now become
damp, and in falling broke a branch off. The
incident was only important from what follows.
Picking myself up, perhaps a little shaken by the
jolt, I set off again upon what seemed the plain road,
and being by this time displeased by my surroundings,
determined to make a push for “civilization”
before the rapidly gathering darkness settled down.
Hands in pockets and collar up, I
marched forward at a good round pace for an hour,
constantly straining eyes for a sight of the hill and
ears for some indications of living beings in the
deathly hush of the shrouded woods, and at the end
of that time, feeling sure habitations must now be
near, arrived at what looked like a little open space,
somehow seeming rather familiar in its vague outlines.
Where had I seen such a place before?
Sauntering round the margin, a bush with a broken
branch suddenly attracted my attention a
broken bush with a long slide in the mud below it,
and the stamp of Navy boots in the soft turf!
I glared at those signs for a moment, then with an
exclamation of chagrin recognised them only too well it
was the bush whence I had picked the fruit, and the
mark of my fall. An hour’s hard walking
round some accursed woodland track had brought me exactly
back to the point I had started from I
was lost!
It really seemed to get twenty per
cent darker as I made that abominable discovery, and
the position dawned in all its uncomfortable intensity.
There was nothing for it but to start off again, this
time judging my direction only by a light breath of
air drifting the mist tangles before it; and therein
I made a great mistake, for the breeze had shifted
several points from the quarter whence it blew in the
morning.
Knowing nothing of this, I went forward
with as much lightheartedness as could be managed,
humming a song to myself, and carefully putting aside
thoughts of warmth and supper, while the dusk increased
and the great forest vegetation seemed to grow ranker
and closer at every step.
Another disconcerting thing was that
the ground sloped gradually downwards, not upwards
as it should have done, till it seemed the path lay
across the flats of a forest-covered plain, which did
not conform to my wish of striking a road on the foot-hills
of the mountain. However, I plodded on, drawing
some small comfort from the fact that as darkness
came the mist rose from the ground and appeared to
condense in a ghostly curtain twenty feet overhead,
where it hung between me and a clear night sky, presently
illumined by starlight with the strangest effect.
Tired, footsore, and dejected, I struggled
on a little further. Oh for a cab, I laughed
bitterly to myself. Oh for even the humble necessary
omnibus of civilisation. Oh for the humblest
tuck-shop where a mug of hot coffee and a snack could
be had by a homeless wanderer; and as I thought and
plodded savagely on, collar up, hands in pockets, through
the black tangles of that endless wood, suddenly the
sound of wailing children caught my ear!
It was the softest, saddest music
ever mortal listened to. It was as though scores
of babes in pain were dropping to sleep on their mothers’
breasts, and all hushing their sorrows with one accord
in a common melancholy chorus. I stood spell-bound
at that elfin wailing, the first sound to break the
deathly stillness of the road for an hour or more,
and my blood tingled as I listened to it. Nevertheless,
here was what I was looking for; where there were
weeping children there must be habitations, and shelter,
and splendid thought! supper.
Poor little babes! their crying was the deadliest,
sweetest thing in sorrows I ever listened to.
If it was cholic why, I knew a little of
medicine, and in gratitude for that prospective supper,
I had a soul big enough to cure a thousand; and if
they were in disgrace, and by some quaint Martian
fashion had suffered simultaneous punishment for baby
offences, I would plead for them.
In fact, I fairly set off at the run
towards the sobbing, in the black, wet, night air
ahead, and, tripping as I ran, looked down and saw
in the filtering starlight that the forest grass had
given place to an ancient roadway, paved with moss-grown
flag-stones, such as they still used in Seth.
Without stopping to think what that
might mean I hurried on, the wailing now right ahead,
a tremulous tumult of gentle grief rising and falling
on the night air like the sound of a sea after a storm;
and so, presently, in a minute or two, came upon a
ruined archway spanning the lonely road, held together
by great masses of black-fingered creepers, gaunt
and ghostly in the shadows, an extraordinary and unexpected
vision; and as I stopped with a jerk under that forbidding
gateway and glared at its tumbled masonry and great
portals hanging rotten at their hinges, suddenly the
truth flashed upon me. I had taken the forbidden
road after all. I was in the ancient, ghost-haunted
city of Queen Yang!