Hawaii is a queer place. Everything
socially is what I may call topsy-turvy. Not
but what things are correct. They are almost
too much so. But still things are sort of upside
down. The most ultra-exclusive set there is
the “Missionary Crowd.” It comes
with rather a shock to learn that in Hawaii the obscure
martyrdom-seeking missionary sits at the head of the
table of the moneyed aristocracy. But it is true.
The humble New Englanders who came out in the third
decade of the nineteenth century, came for the lofty
purpose of teaching the kanakas the true religion,
the worship of the one only genuine and undeniable
God. So well did they succeed in this, and also
in civilizing the kanaka, that by the second or third
generation he was practically extinct. This being
the fruit of the seed of the Gospel, the fruit of
the seed of the missionaries (the sons and the grandsons)
was the possession of the islands themselves, of
the land, the ports, the town sites, and the sugar
plantations: The missionary who came to give
the bread of life remained to gobble up the whole
heathen feast.
But that is not the Hawaiian queerness
I started out to tell. Only one cannot speak
of things Hawaiian without mentioning the missionaries.
There is Jack Kersdale, the man I wanted to tell about;
he came of missionary stock. That is, on his
grandmother’s side. His grandfather was
old Benjamin Kersdale, a Yankee trader, who got his
start for a million in the old days by selling cheap
whiskey and square-face gin. There’s another
queer thing. The old missionaries and old traders
were mortal enemies. You see, their interests
conflicted. But their children made it up by
intermarrying and dividing the island between them.
Life in Hawaii is a song. That’s
the way Stoddard put it in his “Hawaii Noi":
“Thy life is music Fate
the notes prolong!
Each isle a stanza, and the whole
a song.”
And he was right. Flesh is golden
there. The native women are sun-ripe Junos,
the native men bronzed Apollos. They sing,
and dance, and all are flower-bejewelled and flower-crowned.
And, outside the rigid “Missionary Crowd,”
the white men yield to the climate and the sun, and
no matter how busy they may be, are prone to dance
and sing and wear flowers behind their ears and in
their hair. Jack Kersdale was one of these fellows.
He was one of the busiest men I ever met. He
was a several-times millionaire. He was a sugar-king,
a coffee planter, a rubber pioneer, a cattle rancher,
and a promoter of three out of every four new enterprises
launched in the islands. He was a society man,
a club man, a yachtsman, a bachelor, and withal as
handsome a man as was ever doted upon by mammas with
marriageable daughters. Incidentally, he had
finished his education at Yale, and his head was crammed
fuller with vital statistics and scholarly information
concerning Hawaii Nei than any other islander I ever
encountered. He turned off an immense amount
of work, and he sang and danced and put flowers in
his hair as immensely as any of the idlers. He
had grit, and had fought two duels both,
political when he was no more than a raw
youth essaying his first adventures in politics.
In fact, he played a most creditable and courageous
part in the last revolution, when the native dynasty
was overthrown; and he could not have been over sixteen
at the time. I am pointing out that he was no
coward, in order that you may appreciate what happens
later on. I’ve seen him in the breaking
yard at the Haleakala Ranch, conquering a four-year-old
brute that for two years had defied the pick of Von
Tempsky’s cow-boys. And I must tell of
one other thing. It was down in Kona, or
up, rather, for the Kona people scorn to live at less
than a thousand feet elevation. We were all on
the lanai of Doctor Goodhue’s bungalow.
I was talking with Dottie Fairchild when it happened.
A big centipede it was seven inches, for
we measured it afterwards fell from the
rafters overhead squarely into her coiffure.
I confess, the hideousness of it paralysed me.
I couldn’t move. My mind refused to work.
There, within two feet of me, the ugly venomous devil
was writhing in her hair. It threatened at any
moment to fall down upon her exposed shoulders we
had just come out from dinner.
“What is it?” she asked,
starting to raise her hand to her head.
“Don’t!” I cried. “Don’t!”
“But what is it?” she
insisted, growing frightened by the fright she read
in my eyes and on my stammering lips.
My exclamation attracted Kersdale’s
attention. He glanced our way carelessly, but
in that glance took in everything. He came over
to us, but without haste.
“Please don’t move, Dottie,” he
said quietly.
He never hesitated, nor did he hurry and make a bungle
of it.
“Allow me,” he said.
And with one hand he caught her scarf
and drew it tightly around her shoulders so that the
centipede could not fall inside her bodice. With
the other hand the right he reached
into her hair, caught the repulsive abomination as
near as he was able by the nape of the neck, and held
it tightly between thumb and forefinger as he withdrew
it from her hair. It was as horrible and heroic
a sight as man could wish to see. It made my
flesh crawl. The centipede, seven inches of squirming
legs, writhed and twisted and dashed itself about
his hand, the body twining around the fingers and
the legs digging into the skin and scratching as the
beast endeavoured to free itself. It bit him
twice I saw it though he assured
the ladies that he was not harmed as he dropped it
upon the walk and stamped it into the gravel.
But I saw him in the surgery five minutes afterwards,
with Doctor Goodhue scarifying the wounds and injecting
permanganate of potash. The next morning Kersdale’s
arm was as big as a barrel, and it was three weeks
before the swelling went down.
All of which has nothing to do with
my story, but which I could not avoid giving in order
to show that Jack Kersdale was anything but a coward.
It was the cleanest exhibition of grit I have ever
seen. He never turned a hair. The smile
never left his lips. And he dived with thumb
and forefinger into Dottie Fairchild’s hair
as gaily as if it had been a box of salted almonds.
Yet that was the man I was destined to see stricken
with a fear a thousand times more hideous even than
the fear that was mine when I saw that writhing abomination
in Dottie Fairchild’s hair, dangling over her
eyes and the trap of her bodice.
I was interested in leprosy, and upon
that, as upon every other island subject, Kersdale
had encyclopedic knowledge. In fact, leprosy
was one of his hobbies. He was an ardent defender
of the settlement at Molokai, where all the island
lepers were segregated. There was much talk and
feeling among the natives, fanned by the demagogues,
concerning the cruelties of Molokai, where men and
women, not alone banished from friends and family,
were compelled to live in perpetual imprisonment until
they died. There were no reprieves, no commutations
of sentences. “Abandon hope” was
written over the portal of Molokai.
“I tell you they are happy there,”
Kersdale insisted. “And they are infinitely
better off than their friends and relatives outside
who have nothing the matter with them. The horrors
of Molokai are all poppycock. I can take you
through any hospital or any slum in any of the great
cities of the world and show you a thousand times worse
horrors. The living death! The creatures
that once were men! Bosh! You ought to
see those living deaths racing horses on the Fourth
of July. Some of them own boats. One has
a gasoline launch. They have nothing to do but
have a good time. Food, shelter, clothes, medical
attendance, everything, is theirs. They are
the wards of the Territory. They have a much
finer climate than Honolulu, and the scenery is magnificent.
I shouldn’t mind going down there myself for
the rest of my days. It is a lovely spot.”
So Kersdale on the joyous leper.
He was not afraid of leprosy. He said so himself,
and that there wasn’t one chance in a million
for him or any other white man to catch it, though
he confessed afterward that one of his school chums,
Alfred Starter, had contracted it, gone to Molokai,
and there died.
“You know, in the old days,”
Kersdale explained, “there was no certain test
for leprosy. Anything unusual or abnormal was
sufficient to send a fellow to Molokai. The
result was that dozens were sent there who were no
more lepers than you or I. But they don’t make
that mistake now. The Board of Health tests
are infallible. The funny thing is that when
the test was discovered they immediately went down
to Molokai and applied it, and they found a number
who were not lepers. These were immediately
deported. Happy to get away? They wailed
harder at leaving the settlement than when they left
Honolulu to go to it. Some refused to leave,
and really had to be forced out. One of them
even married a leper woman in the last stages and
then wrote pathetic letters to the Board of Health,
protesting against his expulsion on the ground that
no one was so well able as he to take care of his
poor old wife.”
“What is this infallible test?” I demanded.
“The bacteriological test.
There is no getting away from it. Doctor Hervey he’s
our expert, you know was the first man to
apply it here. He is a wizard. He knows
more about leprosy than any living man, and if a cure
is ever discovered, he’ll be that discoverer.
As for the test, it is very simple. They have
succeeded in isolating the bacillus leprae
and studying it. They know it now when they see
it. All they do is to snip a bit of skin from
the suspect and subject it to the bacteriological
test. A man without any visible symptoms may
be chock full of the leprosy bacilli.”
“Then you or I, for all we know,”
I suggested, “may be full of it now.”
Kersdale shrugged his shoulders and laughed.
“Who can say? It takes
seven years for it to incubate. If you have any
doubts go and see Doctor Hervey. He’ll
just snip out a piece of your skin and let you know
in a jiffy.”
Later on he introduced me to Dr. Hervey,
who loaded me down with Board of Health reports and
pamphlets on the subject, and took me out to Kalihi,
the Honolulu receiving station, where suspects were
examined and confirmed lepers were held for deportation
to Molokai. These déportations occurred
about once a month, when, the last good-byes said,
the lepers were marched on board the little steamer,
the Noeau, and carried down to the settlement.
One afternoon, writing letters at
the club, Jack Kersdale dropped in on me.
“Just the man I want to see,”
was his greeting. “I’ll show you
the saddest aspect of the whole situation the
lepers wailing as they depart for Molokai. The
Noeau will be taking them on board in a few
minutes. But let me warn you not to let your
feelings be harrowed. Real as their grief is,
they’d wail a whole sight harder a year hence
if the Board of Health tried to take them away from
Molokai. We’ve just time for a whiskey
and soda. I’ve a carriage outside.
It won’t take us five minutes to get down to
the wharf.”
To the wharf we drove. Some
forty sad wretches, amid their mats, blankets, and
luggage of various sorts, were squatting on the stringer
piece. The Noeau had just arrived and was making
fast to a lighter that lay between her and the wharf.
A Mr. McVeigh, the superintendent of the settlement,
was overseeing the embarkation, and to him I was introduced,
also to Dr. Georges, one of the Board of Health physicians
whom I had already met at Kalihi. The lepers
were a woebegone lot. The faces of the majority
were hideous too horrible for me to describe.
But here and there I noticed fairly good-looking
persons, with no apparent signs of the fell disease
upon them. One, I noticed, a little white girl,
not more than twelve, with blue eyes and golden hair.
One cheek, however, showed the leprous bloat.
On my remarking on the sadness of her alien situation
among the brown-skinned afflicted ones, Doctor Georges
replied:
“Oh, I don’t know.
It’s a happy day in her life. She comes
from Kauai. Her father is a brute. And
now that she has developed the disease she is going
to join her mother at the settlement. Her mother
was sent down three years ago a very bad
case.”
“You can’t always tell
from appearances,” Mr. McVeigh explained.
“That man there, that big chap, who looks the
pink of condition, with nothing the matter with him,
I happen to know has a perforating ulcer in his foot
and another in his shoulder-blade. Then there
are others there, see that girl’s
hand, the one who is smoking the cigarette. See
her twisted fingers. That’s the anæsthetic
form. It attacks the nerves. You could
cut her fingers off with a dull knife, or rub them
off on a nutmeg-grater, and she would not experience
the slightest sensation.”
“Yes, but that fine-looking
woman, there,” I persisted; “surely, surely,
there can’t be anything the matter with her.
She is too glorious and gorgeous altogether.”
“A sad case,” Mr. McVeigh
answered over his shoulder, already turning away to
walk down the wharf with Kersdale.
She was a beautiful woman, and she
was pure Polynesian. From my meagre knowledge
of the race and its types I could not but conclude
that she had descended from old chief stock.
She could not have been more than twenty-three or
four. Her lines and proportions were magnificent,
and she was just beginning to show the amplitude of
the women of her race.
“It was a blow to all of us,”
Dr. Georges volunteered. “She gave herself
up voluntarily, too. No one suspected.
But somehow she had contracted the disease.
It broke us all up, I assure you. We’ve
kept it out of the papers, though. Nobody but
us and her family knows what has become of her.
In fact, if you were to ask any man in Honolulu, he’d
tell you it was his impression that she was somewhere
in Europe. It was at her request that we’ve
been so quiet about it. Poor girl, she has a
lot of pride.”
“But who is she?” I asked.
“Certainly, from the way you talk about her,
she must be somebody.”
“Did you ever hear of Lucy Mokunui?” he
asked.
“Lucy Mokunui?” I repeated,
haunted by some familiar association. I shook
my head. “It seems to me I’ve heard
the name, but I’ve forgotten it.”
“Never heard of Lucy Mokunui!
The Hawaiian nightingale! I beg your pardon.
Of course you are a malahini, and could
not be expected to know. Well, Lucy Mokunui
was the best beloved of Honolulu of all
Hawaii, for that matter.”
“You say was,” I interrupted.
“And I mean it. She is
finished.” He shrugged his shoulders pityingly.
“A dozen haoles I beg your
pardon, white men have lost their hearts
to her at one time or another. And I’m
not counting in the ruck. The dozen I refer
to were haoles of position and prominence.”
“She could have married the
son of the Chief Justice if she’d wanted to.
You think she’s beautiful, eh? But you
should hear her sing. Finest native woman singer
in Hawaii Nei. Her throat is pure silver and
melted sunshine. We adored her. She toured
America first with the Royal Hawaiian Band.
After that she made two more trips on her own concert
work.”
“Oh!” I cried. “I
remember now. I heard her two years ago at the
Boston Symphony. So that is she. I recognize
her now.”
I was oppressed by a heavy sadness.
Life was a futile thing at best. A short two
years and this magnificent creature, at the summit
of her magnificent success, was one of the leper squad
awaiting deportation to Molokai. Henley’s
lines came into my mind:
“The poor old tramp explains
his poor old ulcers;
Life is, I think, a blunder and
a shame.”
I recoiled from my own future.
If this awful fate fell to Lucy Mokunui, what might
my lot not be? or anybody’s lot?
I was thoroughly aware that in life we are in the
midst of death but to be in the midst of
living death, to die and not be dead, to be one of
that draft of creatures that once were men, aye, and
women, like Lucy Mokunui, the epitome of all Polynesian
charms, an artist as well, and well beloved of men .
I am afraid I must have betrayed my perturbation,
for Doctor Georges hastened to assure me that they
were very happy down in the settlement.
It was all too inconceivably monstrous.
I could not bear to look at her. A short distance
away, behind a stretched rope guarded by a policeman,
were the lepers’ relatives and friends.
They were not allowed to come near. There were
no last embraces, no kisses of farewell. They
called back and forth to one another last
messages, last words of love, last reiterated instructions.
And those behind the rope looked with terrible intensity.
It was the last time they would behold the faces of
their loved ones, for they were the living dead, being
carted away in the funeral ship to the graveyard of
Molokai.
Doctor Georges gave the command, and
the unhappy wretches dragged themselves to their feet
and under their burdens of luggage began to stagger
across the lighter and aboard the steamer. It
was the funeral procession. At once the wailing
started from those behind the rope. It was blood-curdling;
it was heart-rending. I never heard such woe,
and I hope never to again. Kersdale and McVeigh
were still at the other end of the wharf, talking
earnestly politics, of course, for both
were head-over-heels in that particular game.
When Lucy Mokunui passed me, I stole a look at her.
She was beautiful. She was beautiful
by our standards, as well one of those
rare blossoms that occur but once in generations.
And she, of all women, was doomed to Molokai.
She straight on board, and aft on the open deck where
the lepers huddled by the rail, wailing now, to their
dear ones on shore.
The lines were cast off, and the Noeau
began to move away from the wharf. The wailing
increased. Such grief and despair! I was
just resolving that never again would I be a witness
to the sailing of the Noeau, when McVeigh and
Kersdale returned. The latter’s eyes were
sparkling, and his lips could not quite hide the smile
of delight that was his. Evidently the politics
they had talked had been satisfactory. The rope
had been flung aside, and the lamenting relatives now
crowded the stringer piece on either side of us.
“That’s her mother,”
Doctor Georges whispered, indicating an old woman
next to me, who was rocking back and forth and gazing
at the steamer rail out of tear-blinded eyes.
I noticed that Lucy Mokunui was also wailing.
She stopped abruptly and gazed at Kersdale. Then
she stretched forth her arms in that adorable, sensuous
way that Olga Nethersole has of embracing an audience.
And with arms outspread, she cried:
“Good-bye, Jack! Good-bye!”
He heard the cry, and looked.
Never was a man overtaken by more crushing fear.
He reeled on the stringer piece, his face went white
to the roots of his hair, and he seemed to shrink
and wither away inside his clothes. He threw
up his hands and groaned, “My God! My God!”
Then he controlled himself by a great effort.
“Good-bye, Lucy! Good-bye!” he called.
And he stood there on the wharf, waving
his hands to her till the Noeau was clear away
and the faces lining her after-rail were vague and
indistinct.
“I thought you knew,”
said McVeigh, who had been regarding him curiously.
“You, of all men, should have known. I
thought that was why you were here.”
“I know now,” Kersdale
answered with immense gravity. “Where’s
the carriage?”
He walked rapidly half-ran to
it. I had to half-run myself to keep up with
him.
“Drive to Doctor Hervey’s,”
he told the driver. “Drive as fast as you
can.”
He sank down in a seat, panting and
gasping. The pallor of his face had increased.
His lips were compressed and the sweat was standing
out on his forehead and upper lip. He seemed
in some horrible agony.
“For God’s sake, Martin,
make those horses go!” he broke out suddenly.
“Lay the whip into them! do you hear? lay
the whip into them!”
“They’ll break, sir,” the driver
remonstrated.
“Let them break,” Kersdale
answered. “I’ll pay your fine and
square you with the police. Put it to them.
That’s right. Faster! Faster!”
“And I never knew, I never knew,”
he muttered, sinking back in the seat and with trembling
hands wiping the sweat away.
The carriage was bouncing, swaying
and lurching around corners at such a wild pace as
to make conversation impossible. Besides, there
was nothing to say. But I could hear him muttering
over and over, “And I never knew. I never
knew.”