There was nothing striking in the
appearance of Chun Ah Chun. He was rather undersized,
as Chinese go, and the Chinese narrow shoulders and
spareness of flesh were his. The average tourist,
casually glimpsing him on the streets of Honolulu,
would have concluded that he was a good-natured little
Chinese, probably the proprietor of a prosperous laundry
or tailorshop. In so far as good nature and prosperity
went, the judgment would be correct, though beneath
the mark; for Ah Chun was as good-natured as he was
prosperous, and of the latter no man knew a tithe
the tale. It was well known that he was enormously
wealthy, but in his case “enormous” was
merely the symbol for the unknown.
Ah Chun had shrewd little eyes, black
and beady and so very little that they were like gimlet-holes.
But they were wide apart, and they sheltered under
a forehead that was patently the forehead of a thinker.
For Ah Chun had his problems, and had had them all
his life. Not that he ever worried over them.
He was essentially a philosopher, and whether as
coolie, or multi-millionaire and master of many men,
his poise of soul was the same. He lived always
in the high equanimity of spiritual repose, undeterred
by good fortune, unruffled by ill fortune. All
things went well with him, whether they were blows
from the overseer in the cane field or a slump in
the price of sugar when he owned those cane fields
himself. Thus, from the steadfast rock of his
sure content he mastered problems such as are given
to few men to consider, much less to a Chinese peasant.
He was precisely that a
Chinese peasant, born to labour in the fields all
his days like a beast, but fated to escape from the
fields like the prince in a fairy tale. Ah Chun
did not remember his father, a small farmer in a district
not far from Canton; nor did he remember much of his
mother, who had died when he was six. But he
did remember his respected uncle, Ah Kow, for him
had he served as a slave from his sixth year to his
twenty-fourth. It was then that he escaped by
contracting himself as a coolie to labour for three
years on the sugar plantations of Hawaii for fifty
cents a day.
Ah Chun was observant. He perceived
little details that not one man in a thousand ever
noticed. Three years he worked in the field,
at the end of which time he knew more about cane-growing
than the overseers or even the superintendent, while
the superintendent would have been astounded at the
knowledge the weazened little coolie possessed of the
reduction processes in the mill. But Ah Chun
did not study only sugar processes. He studied
to find out how men came to be owners of sugar mills
and plantations. One judgment he achieved early,
namely, that men did not become rich from the labour
of their own hands. He knew, for he had laboured
for a score of years himself. The men who grew
rich did so from the labour of the hands of others.
That man was richest who had the greatest number of
his fellow creatures toiling for him.
So, when his term of contract was
up, Ah Chun invested his savings in a small importing
store, going into partnership with one, Ah Yung.
The firm ultimately became the great one of “Ah
Chun and Ah Yung,” which handled anything from
India silks and ginseng to guano islands and blackbird
brigs. In the meantime, Ah Chun hired out as
cook. He was a good cook, and in three years
he was the highest-paid chef in Honolulu. His
career was assured, and he was a fool to abandon it,
as Dantin, his employer, told him; but Ah Chun knew
his own mind best, and for knowing it was called a
triple-fool and given a present of fifty dollars over
and above the wages due him.
The firm of Ah Chun and Ah Yung was
prospering. There was no need for Ah Chun longer
to be a cook. There were boom times in Hawaii.
Sugar was being extensively planted, and labour was
needed. Ah Chun saw the chance, and went into
the labour-importing business. He brought thousands
of Cantonese coolies into Hawaii, and his wealth began
to grow. He made investments. His beady
black eyes saw bargains where other men saw bankruptcy.
He bought a fish-pond for a song, which later paid
five hundred per cent and was the opening wedge by
which he monopolized the fish market of Honolulu.
He did not talk for publication, nor figure in politics,
nor play at revolutions, but he forecast events more
clearly and farther ahead than did the men who engineered
them. In his mind’s eye he saw Honolulu
a modern, electric-lighted city at a time when it
straggled, unkempt and sand-tormented, over a barren
reef of uplifted coral rock. So he bought land.
He bought land from merchants who needed ready cash,
from impecunious natives, from riotous traders’
sons, from widows and orphans and the lepers deported
to Molokai; and, somehow, as the years went by, the
pieces of land he had bought proved to be needed for
warehouses, or coffee buildings, or hotels. He
leased, and rented, sold and bought, and resold again.
But there were other things as well.
He put his confidence and his money into Parkinson,
the renegade captain whom nobody would trust.
And Parkinson sailed away on mysterious voyages in
the little Vega. Parkinson was taken care
of until he died, and years afterward Honolulu was
astonished when the news leaked out that the Drake
and Acorn guano islands had been sold to the British
Phosphate Trust for three-quarters of a million.
Then there were the fat, lush days of King Kalakaua,
when Ah Chun paid three hundred thousand dollars for
the opium licence. If he paid a third of a million
for the drug monopoly, the investment was nevertheless
a good one, for the dividends bought him the Kalalau
Plantation, which, in turn, paid him thirty per cent
for seventeen years and was ultimately sold by him
for a million and a half.
It was under the Kamehamehas, long
before, that he had served his own country as Chinese
Consul a position that was not altogether
unlucrative; and it was under Kamehameha IV that he
changed his citizenship, becoming an Hawaiian subject
in order to marry Stella Allendale, herself a subject
of the brown-skinned king, though more of Anglo-Saxon
blood ran in her veins than of Polynesian. In
fact, the random breeds in her were so attenuated
that they were valued at eighths and sixteenths.
In the latter proportions was the blood of her great-grandmother,
Paahao the Princess Paahao, for she came
of the royal line. Stella Allendale’s great-grandfather
had been a Captain Blunt, an English adventurer who
took service under Kamehameha I and was made a tabu
chief himself. Her grandfather had been a New
Bedford whaling captain, while through her own father
had been introduced a remote blend of Italian and
Portuguese which had been grafted upon his own English
stock. Legally a Hawaiian, Ah Chun’s spouse
was more of any one of three other nationalities.
And into this conglomerate of the
races, Ah Chun introduced the Mongolian mixture.
Thus, his children by Mrs. Ah Chun were one thirty-second
Polynesian, one-sixteenth Italian, one sixteenth Portuguese,
one-half Chinese, and eleven thirty-seconds English
and American. It might well be that Ah Chun
would have refrained from matrimony could he have
foreseen the wonderful family that was to spring from
this union. It was wonderful in many ways.
First, there was its size. There were fifteen
sons and daughters, mostly daughters. The sons
had come first, three of them, and then had followed,
in unswerving sequence, a round dozen of girls.
The blend of the race was excellent. Not alone
fruitful did it prove, for the progeny, without exception,
was healthy and without blemish. But the most
amazing thing about the family was its beauty.
All the girls were beautiful delicately,
ethereally beautiful. Mamma Ah Chun’s
rotund lines seemed to modify papa Ah Chun’s
lean angles, so that the daughters were willowy without
being lathy, round-muscled without being chubby.
In every feature of every face were haunting reminiscences
of Asia, all manipulated over and disguised by Old
England, New England, and South of Europe. No
observer, without information, would have guessed,
the heavy Chinese strain in their veins; nor could
any observer, after being informed, fail to note immediately
the Chinese traces.
As beauties, the Ah Chun girls were
something new. Nothing like them had been seen
before. They resembled nothing so much as they
resembled one another, and yet each girl was sharply
individual. There was no mistaking one for another.
On the other hand, Maud, who was blue-eyed and yellow-haired,
would remind one instantly of Henrietta, an olive
brunette with large, languishing dark eyes and hair
that was blue-black. The hint of resemblance
that ran through them all, reconciling every differentiation,
was Ah Chun’s contribution. He had furnished
the groundwork upon which had been traced the blended
patterns of the races. He had furnished the slim-boned
Chinese frame, upon which had been builded the delicacies
and subtleties of Saxon, Latin, and Polynesian flesh.
Mrs. Ah Chun had ideas of her own
to which Ah Chun gave credence, though never permitting
them expression when they conflicted with his own
philosophic calm. She had been used all her life
to living in European fashion. Very well.
Ah Chun gave her a European mansion. Later,
as his sons and daughters grew able to advise, he
built a bungalow, a spacious, rambling affair, as
unpretentious as it was magnificent. Also, as
time went by, there arose a mountain house on Tantalus,
to which the family could flee when the “sick
wind” blew from the south. And at Waikiki
he built a beach residence on an extensive site so
well chosen that later on, when the United States
government condemned it for fortification purposes,
an immense sum accompanied the condemnation.
In all his houses were billiard and smoking rooms
and guest rooms galore, for Ah Chun’s wonderful
progeny was given to lavish entertainment. The
furnishing was extravagantly simple. Kings’
ransoms were expended without display thanks
to the educated tastes of the progeny.
Ah Chun had been liberal in the matter
of education. “Never mind expense,”
he had argued in the old days with Parkinson when that
slack mariner could see no reason for making the Vega
seaworthy; “you sail the schooner, I pay the
bills.” And so with his sons and daughters.
It had been for them to get the education and never
mind the expense. Harold, the eldest-born, had
gone to Harvard and Oxford; Albert and Charles had
gone through Yale in the same classes. And the
daughters, from the eldest down, had undergone their
preparation at Mills Seminary in California and passed
on to Vassar, Wellesley, or Bryn Mawr. Several,
having so desired, had had the finishing touches put
on in Europe. And from all the world Ah Chun’s
sons and daughters returned to him to suggest and
advise in the garnishment of the chaste magnificence
of his residences. Ah Chun himself preferred
the voluptuous glitter of Oriental display; but he
was a philosopher, and he clearly saw that his children’s
tastes were correct according to Western standards.
Of course, his children were not known
as the Ah Chun children. As he had evolved from
a coolie labourer to a multi-millionaire, so had his
name evolved. Mamma Ah Chun had spelled it A’Chun,
but her wiser offspring had elided the apostrophe
and spelled it Achun. Ah Chun did not object.
The spelling of his name interfered no whit with his
comfort nor his philosophic calm. Besides, he
was not proud. But when his children arose to
the height of a starched shirt, a stiff collar, and
a frock coat, they did interfere with his comfort
and calm. Ah Chun would have none of it.
He preferred the loose-flowing robes of China, and
neither could they cajole nor bully him into making
the change. They tried both courses, and in
the latter one failed especially disastrously.
They had not been to America for nothing. They
had learned the virtues of the boycott as employed
by organized labour, and he, their father, Chun Ah
Chun, they boycotted in his own house, Mamma Achun
aiding and abetting. But Ah Chun himself, while
unversed in Western culture, was thoroughly conversant
with Western labour conditions. An extensive
employer of labour himself, he knew how to cope with
its tactics. Promptly he imposed a lockout on
his rebellious progeny and erring spouse. He
discharged his scores of servants, locked up his stables,
closed his houses, and went to live in the Royal Hawaiian
Hotel, in which enterprise he happened to be the heaviest
stockholder. The family fluttered distractedly
on visits about with friends, while Ah Chun calmly
managed his many affairs, smoked his long pipe with
the tiny silver bowl, and pondered the problem of
his wonderful progeny.
This problem did not disturb his calm.
He knew in his philosopher’s soul that when
it was ripe he would solve it. In the meantime
he enforced the lesson that complacent as he might
be, he was nevertheless the absolute dictator of the
Achun destinies. The family held out for a week,
then returned, along with Ah Chun and the many servants,
to occupy the bungalow once more. And thereafter
no question was raised when Ah Chun elected to enter
his brilliant drawing-room in blue silk robe, wadded
slippers, and black silk skull-cap with red button
peak, or when he chose to draw at his slender-stemmed
silver-bowled pipe among the cigarette-and cigar-smoking
officers and civilians on the broad verandas or in
the smoking room.
Ah Chun occupied a unique position
in Honolulu. Though he did not appear in society,
he was eligible anywhere. Except among the Chinese
merchants of the city, he never went out; but he received,
and he always was the centre of his household and
the head of his table. Himself peasant, born
Chinese, he presided over an atmosphere of culture
and refinement second to none in all the islands.
Nor were there any in all the islands too proud to
cross his threshold and enjoy his hospitality.
First of all, the Achun bungalow was of irreproachable
tone. Next, Ah Chun was a power. And finally,
Ah Chun was a moral paragon and an honest business
man. Despite the fact that business morality
was higher than on the mainland, Ah Chun outshone
the business men of Honolulu in the scrupulous rigidity
of his honesty. It was a saying that his word
was as good as his bond. His signature was never
needed to bind him. He never broke his word.
Twenty years after Hotchkiss, of Hotchkiss, Morterson
Company, died, they found among mislaid papers a memorandum
of a loan of thirty thousand dollars to Ah Chun.
It had been incurred when Ah Chun was Privy Councillor
to Kamehameha II. In the bustle and confusion
of those heyday, money-making times, the affair had
slipped Ah Chun’s mind. There was no note,
no legal claim against him, but he settled in full
with the Hotchkiss’ Estate, voluntarily paying
a compound interest that dwarfed the principal.
Likewise, when he verbally guaranteed the disastrous
Kakiku Ditch Scheme, at a time when the least sanguine
did not dream a guarantee necessary “Signed
his cheque for two hundred thousand without a quiver,
gentlemen, without a quiver,” was the report
of the secretary of the defunct enterprise, who had
been sent on the forlorn hope of finding out Ah Chun’s
intentions. And on top of the many similar actions
that were true of his word, there was scarcely a man
of repute in the islands that at one time or another
had not experienced the helping financial hand of
Ah Chun.
So it was that Honolulu watched his
wonderful family grow up into a perplexing problem
and secretly sympathized with him, for it was beyond
any of them to imagine what he was going to do with
it. But Ah Chun saw the problem more clearly
than they. No one knew as he knew the extent
to which he was an alien in his family. His
own family did not guess it. He saw that there
was no place for him amongst this marvellous seed of
his loins, and he looked forward to his declining
years and knew that he would grow more and more alien.
He did not understand his children. Their conversation
was of things that did not interest him and about
which he knew nothing. The culture of the West
had passed him by. He was Asiatic to the last
fibre, which meant that he was heathen. Their
Christianity was to him so much nonsense. But
all this he would have ignored as extraneous and irrelevant,
could he have but understood the young people themselves.
When Maud, for instance, told him that the housekeeping
bills for the month were thirty thousand that
he understood, as he understood Albert’s request
for five thousand with which to buy the schooner yacht
Muriel and become a member of the Hawaiian
Yacht Club. But it was their remoter, complicated
desires and mental processes that obfuscated him.
He was not slow in learning that the mind of each
son and daughter was a secret labyrinth which he could
never hope to tread. Always he came upon the
wall that divides East from West. Their souls
were inaccessible to him, and by the same token he
knew that his soul was inaccessible to them.
Besides, as the years came upon him,
he found himself harking back more and more to his
own kind. The reeking smells of the Chinese quarter
were spicy to him. He sniffed them with satisfaction
as he passed along the street, for in his mind they
carried him back to the narrow tortuous alleys of
Canton swarming with life and movement. He regretted
that he had cut off his queue to please Stella Allendale
in the prenuptial days, and he seriously considered
the advisability of shaving his crown and growing
a new one. The dishes his highly paid chef concocted
for him failed to tickle his reminiscent palate in
the way that the weird messes did in the stuffy restaurant
down in the Chinese quarter. He enjoyed vastly
more a half-hour’s smoke and chat with two or
three Chinese chums, than to preside at the lavish
and elegant dinners for which his bungalow was famed,
where the pick of the Americans and Europeans sat at
the long table, men and women on equality, the women
with jewels that blazed in the subdued light against
white necks and arms, the men in evening dress, and
all chattering and laughing over topics and witticisms
that, while they were not exactly Greek to him, did
not interest him nor entertain.
But it was not merely his alienness
and his growing desire to return to his Chinese flesh-pots
that constituted the problem. There was also
his wealth. He had looked forward to a placid
old age. He had worked hard. His reward
should have been peace and repose. But he knew
that with his immense fortune peace and repose could
not possibly be his. Already there were signs
and omens. He had seen similar troubles before.
There was his old employer, Dantin, whose children
had wrested from him, by due process of law, the management
of his property, having the Court appoint guardians
to administer it for him. Ah Chun knew, and knew
thoroughly well, that had Dantin been a poor man,
it would have been found that he could quite rationally
manage his own affairs. And old Dantin had had
only three children and half a million, while he, Chun
Ah Chun, had fifteen children and no one but himself
knew how many millions.
“Our daughters are beautiful
women,” he said to his wife, one evening.
“There are many young men. The house is
always full of young men. My cigar bills are
very heavy. Why are there no marriages?”
Mamma Achun shrugged her shoulders and waited.
“Women are women and men are
men it is strange there are no marriages.
Perhaps the young men do not like our daughters.”
“Ah, they like them well enough,”
Mamma Chun answered; “but you see, they cannot
forget that you are your daughters’ father.”
“Yet you forgot who my father
was,” Ah Chun said gravely. “All
you asked was for me to cut off my queue.”
“The young men are more particular than I was,
I fancy.”
“What is the greatest thing
in the world?” Ah Chun demanded with abrupt
irrelevance.
Mamma Achun pondered for a moment, then replied:
“God.”
He nodded. “There are
gods and gods. Some are paper, some are wood,
some are bronze. I use a small one in the office
for a paper-weight. In the Bishop Museum are
many gods of coral rock and lava stone.”
“But there is only one God,”
she announced decisively, stiffening her ample frame
argumentatively.
Ah Chun noted the danger signal and sheered off.
“What is greater than God, then?”
he asked. “I will tell you. It is
money. In my time I have had dealings with Jews
and Christians, Mohammedans and Buddhists, and with
little black men from the Solomons and New Guinea
who carried their god about them, wrapped in oiled
paper. They possessed various gods, these men,
but they all worshipped money. There is that
Captain Higginson. He seems to like Henrietta.”
“He will never marry her,”
retorted Mamma Achun. “He will be an admiral
before he dies ”
“A rear-admiral,” Ah Chun interpolated.
“Yes, I know. That is the way they retire.”
“His family in the United States
is a high one. They would not like it if he
married . . . if he did not marry an American girl.”
Ah Chun knocked the ashes out of his
pipe, thoughtfully refilling the silver bowl with
a tiny pleget of tobacco. He lighted it and smoked
it out before he spoke.
“Henrietta is the oldest girl.
The day she marries I will give her three hundred
thousand dollars. That will fetch that Captain
Higginson and his high family along with him.
Let the word go out to him. I leave it to you.”
And Ah Chun sat and smoked on, and
in the curling smoke-wreaths he saw take shape the
face and figure of Toy Shuey Toy Shuey,
the maid of all work in his uncle’s house in
the Cantonese village, whose work was never done and
who received for a whole year’s work one dollar.
And he saw his youthful self arise in the curling
smoke, his youthful self who had toiled eighteen years
in his uncle’s field for little more. And
now he, Ah Chun, the peasant, dowered his daughter
with three hundred thousand years of such toil.
And she was but one daughter of a dozen. He
was not elated at the thought. It struck him
that it was a funny, whimsical world, and he chuckled
aloud and startled Mamma Achun from a revery which
he knew lay deep in the hidden crypts of her being
where he had never penetrated.
But Ah Chun’s word went forth,
as a whisper, and Captain Higginson forgot his rear-admiralship
and his high family and took to wife three hundred
thousand dollars and a refined and cultured girl who
was one thirty-second Polynesian, one-sixteenth Italian,
one-sixteenth Portuguese, eleven thirty-seconds English
and Yankee, and one-half Chinese.
Ah Chun’s munificence had its
effect. His daughters became suddenly eligible
and desirable. Clara was the next, but when the
Secretary of the Territory formally proposed for her,
Ah Chun informed him that he must wait his turn, that
Maud was the oldest and that she must be married first.
It was shrewd policy. The whole family was made
vitally interested in marrying off Maud, which it
did in three months, to Ned Humphreys, the United
States immigration commissioner. Both he and
Maud complained, for the dowry was only two hundred
thousand. Ah Chun explained that his initial
generosity had been to break the ice, and that after
that his daughters could not expect otherwise than
to go more cheaply.
Clara followed Maud, and thereafter,
for a space of two years; there was a continuous round
of weddings in the bungalow. In the meantime
Ah Chun had not been idle. Investment after
investment was called in. He sold out his interests
in a score of enterprises, and step by step, so as
not to cause a slump in the market, he disposed of
his large holdings in real estate. Toward the
last he did precipitate a slump and sold at sacrifice.
What caused this haste were the squalls he saw already
rising above the horizon. By the time Lucille
was married, echoes of bickerings and jealousies were
already rumbling in his ears. The air was thick
with schemes and counter-schemes to gain his favour
and to prejudice him against one or another or all
but one of his sons-in-law. All of which was
not conducive to the peace and repose he had planned
for his old age.
He hastened his efforts. For
a long time he had been in correspondence with the
chief banks in Shanghai and Macao. Every steamer
for several years had carried away drafts drawn in
favour of one, Chun Ah Chun, for deposit in those
Far Eastern banks. The drafts now became heavier.
His two youngest daughters were not yet married.
He did not wait, but dowered them with a hundred
thousand each, which sums lay in the Bank of Hawaii,
drawing interest and awaiting their wedding day.
Albert took over the business of the firm of Ah Chun
and Ah Yung, Harold, the eldest, having elected to
take a quarter of a million and go to England to live.
Charles, the youngest, took a hundred thousand, a legal
guardian, and a course in a Keeley institute.
To Mamma Achun was given the bungalow, the mountain
House on Tantalus, and a new seaside residence in place
of the one Ah Chun sold to the government. Also,
to Mamma Achun was given half a million in money well
invested.
Ah Chun was now ready to crack the
nut of the problem. One fine morning when the
family was at breakfast he had seen to it
that all his sons-in-law and their wives were present he
announced that he was returning to his ancestral soil.
In a neat little homily he explained that he had
made ample provision for his family, and he laid down
various maxims that he was sure, he said, would enable
them to dwell together in peace and harmony.
Also, he gave business advice to his sons-in-law,
preached the virtues of temperate living and safe
investments, and gave them the benefit of his encyclopedic
knowledge of industrial and business conditions in
Hawaii. Then he called for his carriage, and,
in the company of the weeping Mamma Achun, was driven
down to the Pacific Mail steamer, leaving behind him
a panic in the bungalow. Captain Higginson clamoured
wildly for an injunction. The daughters shed
copious tears. One of their husbands, an ex-Federal
judge, questioned Ah Chun’s sanity, and hastened
to the proper authorities to inquire into it.
He returned with the information that Ah Chun had
appeared before the commission the day before, demanded
an examination, and passed with flying colours.
There was nothing to be done, so they went down and
said good-bye to the little old man, who waved farewell
from the promenade deck as the big steamer poked her
nose seaward through the coral reef.
But the little old man was not bound
for Canton. He knew his own country too well,
and the squeeze of the Mandarins, to venture into it
with the tidy bulk of wealth that remained to him.
He went to Macao. Now Ah Chun had long exercised
the power of a king and he was as imperious as a king.
When he landed at Macao and went into the office of
the biggest European hotel to register, the clerk
closed the book on him. Chinese were not permitted.
Ah Chun called for the manager and was treated with
contumely. He drove away, but in two hours he
was back again. He called the clerk and manager
in, gave them a month’s salary, and discharged
them. He had made himself the owner of the hotel;
and in the finest suite he settled down during the
many months the gorgeous palace in the suburbs was
building for him. In the meantime, with the inevitable
ability that was his, he increased the earnings of
his big hotel from three per cent to thirty.
The troubles Ah Chun had flown began
early. There were sons-in-law that made bad
investments, others that played ducks and drakes with
the Achun dowries. Ah Chun being out of it,
they looked at Mamma Ah Chun and her half million,
and, looking, engendered not the best of feeling toward
one another. Lawyers waxed fat in the striving
to ascertain the construction of trust deeds.
Suits, cross-suits, and counter-suits cluttered the
Hawaiian courts. Nor did the police courts escape.
There were angry encounters in which harsh words
and harsher blows were struck. There were such
things as flower pots being thrown to add emphasis
to winged words. And suits for libel arose that
dragged their way through the courts and kept Honolulu
agog with excitement over the revelations of the witnesses.
In his palace, surrounded by all dear
delights of the Orient, Ah Chun smokes his placid
pipe and listens to the turmoil overseas. By
each mail steamer, in faultless English, typewritten
on an American machine, a letter goes from Macao to
Honolulu, in which, by admirable texts and precepts,
Ah Chun advises his family to live in unity and harmony.
As for himself, he is out of it all, and well content.
He has won to peace and repose. At times he
chuckles and rubs his hands, and his slant little
black eyes twinkle merrily at the thought of the funny
world. For out of all his living and philosophizing,
that remains to him the conviction that
it is a very funny world.