’He locked his fingers together
and tore them apart. Nothing could be more true:
he had indeed jumped into an everlasting deep hole.
He had tumbled from a height he could never scale
again. By that time the boat had gone driving
forward past the bows. It was too dark just then
for them to see each other, and, moreover, they were
blinded and half drowned with rain. He told me
it was like being swept by a flood through a cavern.
They turned their backs to the squall; the skipper,
it seems, got an oar over the stern to keep the boat
before it, and for two or three minutes the end of
the world had come through a deluge in a pitchy blackness.
The sea hissed “like twenty thousand kettles.”
That’s his simile, not mine. I fancy there
was not much wind after the first gust; and he himself
had admitted at the inquiry that the sea never got
up that night to any extent. He crouched down
in the bows and stole a furtive glance back.
He saw just one yellow gleam of the mast-head light
high up and blurred like a last star ready to dissolve.
“It terrified me to see it still there,”
he said. That’s what he said. What
terrified him was the thought that the drowning was
not over yet. No doubt he wanted to be done with
that abomination as quickly as possible. Nobody
in the boat made a sound. In the dark she seemed
to fly, but of course she could not have had much
way. Then the shower swept ahead, and the great,
distracting, hissing noise followed the rain into distance
and died out. There was nothing to be heard then
but the slight wash about the boat’s sides.
Somebody’s teeth were chattering violently.
A hand touched his back. A faint voice said,
“You there?” Another cried out shakily,
“She’s gone!” and they all stood
up together to look astern. They saw no lights.
All was black. A thin cold drizzle was driving
into their faces. The boat lurched slightly.
The teeth chattered faster, stopped, and began again
twice before the man could master his shiver sufficiently
to say, “Ju-ju-st in ti-ti-me. . . . Brrrr.”
He recognised the voice of the chief engineer saying
surlily, “I saw her go down. I happened
to turn my head.” The wind had dropped
almost completely.
’They watched in the dark with
their heads half turned to windward as if expecting
to hear cries. At first he was thankful the night
had covered up the scene before his eyes, and then
to know of it and yet to have seen and heard nothing
appeared somehow the culminating point of an awful
misfortune. “Strange, isn’t it?”
he murmured, interrupting himself in his disjointed
narrative.
’It did not seem so strange
to me. He must have had an unconscious conviction
that the reality could not be half as bad, not half
as anguishing, appalling, and vengeful as the created
terror of his imagination. I believe that, in
this first moment, his heart was wrung with all the
suffering, that his soul knew the accumulated savour
of all the fear, all the horror, all the despair of
eight hundred human beings pounced upon in the night
by a sudden and violent death, else why should he
have said, “It seemed to me that I must jump
out of that accursed boat and swim back to see half
a mile more any distance to
the very spot . . .”? Why this impulse?
Do you see the significance? Why back to the
very spot? Why not drown alongside if
he meant drowning? Why back to the very spot,
to see as if his imagination had to be soothed
by the assurance that all was over before death could
bring relief? I defy any one of you to offer
another explanation. It was one of those bizarre
and exciting glimpses through the fog. It was
an extraordinary disclosure. He let it out as
the most natural thing one could say. He fought
down that impulse and then he became conscious of
the silence. He mentioned this to me. A
silence of the sea, of the sky, merged into one indefinite
immensity still as death around these saved, palpitating
lives. “You might have heard a pin drop
in the boat,” he said with a queer contraction
of his lips, like a man trying to master his sensibilities
while relating some extremely moving fact. A silence!
God alone, who had willed him as he was, knows what
he made of it in his heart. “I didn’t
think any spot on earth could be so still,” he
said. “You couldn’t distinguish the
sea from the sky; there was nothing to see and nothing
to hear. Not a glimmer, not a shape, not a sound.
You could have believed that every bit of dry land
had gone to the bottom; that every man on earth but
I and these beggars in the boat had got drowned.”
He leaned over the table with his knuckles propped
amongst coffee-cups, liqueur-glasses, cigar-ends.
“I seemed to believe it. Everything was
gone and all was over . . .” he fetched
a deep sigh . . . “with me."’
Marlow sat up abruptly and flung away
his cheroot with force. It made a darting red
trail like a toy rocket fired through the drapery of
creepers. Nobody stirred.
‘Hey, what do you think of it?’
he cried with sudden animation. ’Wasn’t
he true to himself, wasn’t he? His saved
life was over for want of ground under his feet, for
want of sights for his eyes, for want of voices in
his ears. Annihilation hey! And
all the time it was only a clouded sky, a sea that
did not break, the air that did not stir. Only
a night; only a silence.
’It lasted for a while, and
then they were suddenly and unanimously moved to make
a noise over their escape. “I knew from
the first she would go.” “Not a minute
too soon.” “A narrow squeak, b’gosh!”
He said nothing, but the breeze that had dropped came
back, a gentle draught freshened steadily, and the
sea joined its murmuring voice to this talkative reaction
succeeding the dumb moments of awe. She was gone!
She was gone! Not a doubt of it. Nobody
could have helped. They repeated the same words
over and over again as though they couldn’t stop
themselves. Never doubted she would go.
The lights were gone. No mistake. The lights
were gone. Couldn’t expect anything else.
She had to go. . . . He noticed that they talked
as though they had left behind them nothing but an
empty ship. They concluded she would not have
been long when she once started. It seemed to
cause them some sort of satisfaction. They assured
each other that she couldn’t have been long about
it “Just shot down like a flat-iron.”
The chief engineer declared that the mast-head light
at the moment of sinking seemed to drop “like
a lighted match you throw down.” At this
the second laughed hysterically. “I am g-g-glad,
I am gla-a-a-d.” His teeth went on “like
an electric rattle,” said Jim, “and all
at once he began to cry. He wept and blubbered
like a child, catching his breath and sobbing ‘Oh
dear! oh dear! oh dear!’ He would be quiet for
a while and start suddenly, ’Oh, my poor arm!
oh, my poor a-a-a-arm!’ I felt I could knock
him down. Some of them sat in the stern-sheets.
I could just make out their shapes. Voices came
to me, mumble, mumble, grunt, grunt. All this
seemed very hard to bear. I was cold too.
And I could do nothing. I thought that if I moved
I would have to go over the side and . . .”
’His hand groped stealthily,
came in contact with a liqueur-glass, and was withdrawn
suddenly as if it had touched a red-hot coal.
I pushed the bottle slightly. “Won’t
you have some more?” I asked. He looked
at me angrily. “Don’t you think I
can tell you what there is to tell without screwing
myself up?” he asked. The squad of globe-trotters
had gone to bed. We were alone but for a vague
white form erect in the shadow, that, being looked
at, cringed forward, hesitated, backed away silently.
It was getting late, but I did not hurry my guest.
’In the midst of his forlorn
state he heard his companions begin to abuse some
one. “What kept you from jumping, you lunatic?”
said a scolding voice. The chief engineer left
the stern-sheets, and could be heard clambering forward
as if with hostile intentions against “the greatest
idiot that ever was.” The skipper shouted
with rasping effort offensive epithets from where
he sat at the oar. He lifted his head at that
uproar, and heard the name “George,” while
a hand in the dark struck him on the breast.
“What have you got to say for yourself, you
fool?” queried somebody, with a sort of virtuous
fury. “They were after me,” he said.
“They were abusing me abusing me .
. . by the name of George.”
’He paused to stare, tried to
smile, turned his eyes away and went on. “That
little second puts his head right under my nose, ’Why,
it’s that blasted mate!’ ‘What!’
howls the skipper from the other end of the boat.
‘No!’ shrieks the chief. And he too
stooped to look at my face.”
’The wind had left the boat
suddenly. The rain began to fall again, and the
soft, uninterrupted, a little mysterious sound with
which the sea receives a shower arose on all sides
in the night. “They were too taken aback
to say anything more at first,” he narrated steadily,
“and what could I have to say to them?”
He faltered for a moment, and made an effort to go
on. “They called me horrible names.”
His voice, sinking to a whisper, now and then would
leap up suddenly, hardened by the passion of scorn,
as though he had been talking of secret abominations.
“Never mind what they called me,” he said
grimly. “I could hear hate in their voices.
A good thing too. They could not forgive me for
being in that boat. They hated it. It made
them mad. . . .” He laughed short. . . .
“But it kept me from Look! I
was sitting with my arms crossed, on the gunwale!
. . .” He perched himself smartly on the
edge of the table and crossed his arms. . . .
“Like this see? One little tilt
backwards and I would have been gone after
the others. One little tilt the least
bit the least bit.” He frowned,
and tapping his forehead with the tip of his middle
finger, “It was there all the time,” he
said impressively. “All the time that
notion. And the rain cold, thick, cold
as melted snow colder on my
thin cotton clothes I’ll never be
so cold again in my life, I know. And the sky
was black too all black. Not a star,
not a light anywhere. Nothing outside that confounded
boat and those two yapping before me like a couple
of mean mongrels at a tree’d thief. Yap!
yap! ‘What you doing here? You’re
a fine sort! Too much of a bloomin’ gentleman
to put your hand to it. Come out of your trance,
did you? To sneak in? Did you?’ Yap!
yap! ‘You ain’t fit to live!’
Yap! yap! Two of them together trying to out-bark
each other. The other would bay from the stern
through the rain couldn’t see him couldn’t
make it out some of his filthy jargon.
Yap! yap! Bow-ow-ow-ow-ow! Yap! yap!
It was sweet to hear them; it kept me alive, I tell
you. It saved my life. At it they went,
as if trying to drive me overboard with the noise!
. . . ’I wonder you had pluck enough to
jump. You ain’t wanted here. If I had
known who it was, I would have tipped you over you
skunk! What have you done with the other?
Where did you get the pluck to jump you
coward? What’s to prevent us three from
firing you overboard?’ . . . They were out
of breath; the shower passed away upon the sea.
Then nothing. There was nothing round the boat,
not even a sound. Wanted to see me overboard,
did they? Upon my soul! I think they would
have had their wish if they had only kept quiet.
Fire me overboard! Would they? ‘Try,’
I said. ’I would for twopence.’
‘Too good for you,’ they screeched together.
It was so dark that it was only when one or the other
of them moved that I was quite sure of seeing him.
By heavens! I only wish they had tried.”
’I couldn’t help exclaiming,
“What an extraordinary affair!”
’"Not bad eh?”
he said, as if in some sort astounded. “They
pretended to think I had done away with that donkey-man
for some reason or other. Why should I?
And how the devil was I to know? Didn’t
I get somehow into that boat? into that boat I
. . .” The muscles round his lips contracted
into an unconscious grimace that tore through the mask
of his usual expression something violent,
short-lived and illuminating like a twist of lightning
that admits the eye for an instant into the secret
convolutions of a cloud. “I did. I
was plainly there with them wasn’t
I? Isn’t it awful a man should be driven
to do a thing like that and be responsible?
What did I know about their George they were howling
after? I remembered I had seen him curled up
on the deck. ‘Murdering coward!’
the chief kept on calling me. He didn’t
seem able to remember any other two words. I
didn’t care, only his noise began to worry me.
‘Shut up,’ I said. At that he collected
himself for a confounded screech. ’You killed
him! You killed him!’ ‘No,’
I shouted, ‘but I will kill you directly.’
I jumped up, and he fell backwards over a thwart with
an awful loud thump. I don’t know why.
Too dark. Tried to step back I suppose. I
stood still facing aft, and the wretched little second
began to whine, ’You ain’t going to hit
a chap with a broken arm and you call yourself
a gentleman, too.’ I heard a heavy tramp one two and
wheezy grunting. The other beast was coming at
me, clattering his oar over the stern. I saw
him moving, big, big as you see a man in
a mist, in a dream. ’Come on,’ I
cried. I would have tumbled him over like a bale
of shakings. He stopped, muttered to himself,
and went back. Perhaps he had heard the wind.
I didn’t. It was the last heavy gust we
had. He went back to his oar. I was sorry.
I would have tried to to . . .”
’He opened and closed his curved
fingers, and his hands had an eager and cruel flutter.
“Steady, steady,” I murmured.
’"Eh? What? I am not
excited,” he remonstrated, awfully hurt, and
with a convulsive jerk of his elbow knocked over the
cognac bottle. I started forward, scraping my
chair. He bounced off the table as if a mine had
been exploded behind his back, and half turned before
he alighted, crouching on his feet to show me a startled
pair of eyes and a face white about the nostrils.
A look of intense annoyance succeeded. “Awfully
sorry. How clumsy of me!” he mumbled, very
vexed, while the pungent odour of spilt alcohol enveloped
us suddenly with an atmosphere of a low drinking-bout
in the cool, pure darkness of the night. The
lights had been put out in the dining-hall; our candle
glimmered solitary in the long gallery, and the columns
had turned black from pediment to capital. On
the vivid stars the high corner of the Harbour Office
stood out distinct across the Esplanade, as though
the sombre pile had glided nearer to see and hear.
’He assumed an air of indifference.
’"I dare say I am less calm
now than I was then. I was ready for anything.
These were trifles. . . .”
’"You had a lively time of it in that boat,”
I remarked
’"I was ready,” he repeated.
“After the ship’s lights had gone, anything
might have happened in that boat anything
in the world and the world no wiser.
I felt this, and I was pleased. It was just dark
enough too. We were like men walled up quick
in a roomy grave. No concern with anything on
earth. Nobody to pass an opinion. Nothing
mattered.” For the third time during this
conversation he laughed harshly, but there was no
one about to suspect him of being only drunk.
“No fear, no law, no sounds, no eyes not
even our own, till till sunrise at least.”
’I was struck by the suggestive
truth of his words. There is something peculiar
in a small boat upon the wide sea. Over the lives
borne from under the shadow of death there seems to
fall the shadow of madness. When your ship fails
you, your whole world seems to fail you; the world
that made you, restrained you, took care of you.
It is as if the souls of men floating on an abyss
and in touch with immensity had been set free for
any excess of heroism, absurdity, or abomination.
Of course, as with belief, thought, love, hate, conviction,
or even the visual aspect of material things, there
are as many shipwrecks as there are men, and in this
one there was something abject which made the isolation
more complete there was a villainy of circumstances
that cut these men off more completely from the rest
of mankind, whose ideal of conduct had never undergone
the trial of a fiendish and appalling joke. They
were exasperated with him for being a half-hearted
shirker: he focussed on them his hatred of the
whole thing; he would have liked to take a signal
revenge for the abhorrent opportunity they had put
in his way. Trust a boat on the high seas to
bring out the Irrational that lurks at the bottom
of every thought, sentiment, sensation, emotion.
It was part of the burlesque meanness pervading that
particular disaster at sea that they did not come
to blows. It was all threats, all a terribly effective
feint, a sham from beginning to end, planned by the
tremendous disdain of the Dark Powers whose real terrors,
always on the verge of triumph, are perpetually foiled
by the steadfastness of men. I asked, after waiting
for a while, “Well, what happened?” A futile
question. I knew too much already to hope for
the grace of a single uplifting touch, for the favour
of hinted madness, of shadowed horror. “Nothing,”
he said. “I meant business, but they meant
noise only. Nothing happened.”
’And the rising sun found him
just as he had jumped up first in the bows of the
boat. What a persistence of readiness! He
had been holding the tiller in his hand, too, all
the night. They had dropped the rudder overboard
while attempting to ship it, and I suppose the tiller
got kicked forward somehow while they were rushing
up and down that boat trying to do all sorts of things
at once so as to get clear of the side. It was
a long heavy piece of hard wood, and apparently he
had been clutching it for six hours or so. If
you don’t call that being ready! Can you
imagine him, silent and on his feet half the night,
his face to the gusts of rain, staring at sombre forms
watchful of vague movements, straining his ears to
catch rare low murmurs in the stern-sheets! Firmness
of courage or effort of fear? What do you think?
And the endurance is undeniable too. Six hours
more or less on the defensive; six hours of alert
immobility while the boat drove slowly or floated
arrested, according to the caprice of the wind; while
the sea, calmed, slept at last; while the clouds passed
above his head; while the sky from an immensity lustreless
and black, diminished to a sombre and lustrous vault,
scintillated with a greater brilliance, faded to the
east, paled at the zenith; while the dark shapes blotting
the low stars astern got outlines, relief became shoulders,
heads, faces, features, confronted him
with dreary stares, had dishevelled hair, torn clothes,
blinked red eyelids at the white dawn. “They
looked as though they had been knocking about drunk
in gutters for a week,” he described graphically;
and then he muttered something about the sunrise being
of a kind that foretells a calm day. You know
that sailor habit of referring to the weather in every
connection. And on my side his few mumbled words
were enough to make me see the lower limb of the sun
clearing the line of the horizon, the tremble of a
vast ripple running over all the visible expanse of
the sea, as if the waters had shuddered, giving birth
to the globe of light, while the last puff of the breeze
would stir the air in a sigh of relief.
’"They sat in the stern shoulder
to shoulder, with the skipper in the middle, like
three dirty owls, and stared at me,” I heard
him say with an intention of hate that distilled a
corrosive virtue into the commonplace words like a
drop of powerful poison falling into a glass of water;
but my thoughts dwelt upon that sunrise. I could
imagine under the pellucid emptiness of the sky these
four men imprisoned in the solitude of the sea, the
lonely sun, regardless of the speck of life, ascending
the clear curve of the heaven as if to gaze ardently
from a greater height at his own splendour reflected
in the still ocean. “They called out to
me from aft,” said Jim, “as though we had
been chums together. I heard them. They
were begging me to be sensible and drop that ‘blooming
piece of wood.’ Why would I carry
on so? They hadn’t done me any harm had
they? There had been no harm. . . . No harm!”
’His face crimsoned as though
he could not get rid of the air in his lungs.
’"No harm!” he burst out.
“I leave it to you. You can understand.
Can’t you? You see it don’t
you? No harm! Good God! What more could
they have done? Oh yes, I know very well I
jumped. Certainly. I jumped! I told
you I jumped; but I tell you they were too much for
any man. It was their doing as plainly as if
they had reached up with a boat-hook and pulled me
over. Can’t you see it? You must see
it. Come. Speak straight out.”
’His uneasy eyes fastened upon
mine, questioned, begged, challenged, entreated.
For the life of me I couldn’t help murmuring,
“You’ve been tried.” “More
than is fair,” he caught up swiftly. “I
wasn’t given half a chance with a
gang like that. And now they were friendly oh,
so damnably friendly! Chums, shipmates.
All in the same boat. Make the best of it.
They hadn’t meant anything. They didn’t
care a hang for George. George had gone back
to his berth for something at the last moment and
got caught. The man was a manifest fool.
Very sad, of course. . . . Their eyes looked
at me; their lips moved; they wagged their heads at
the other end of the boat three of them;
they beckoned to me. Why not?
Hadn’t I jumped? I said nothing. There
are no words for the sort of things I wanted to say.
If I had opened my lips just then I would have simply
howled like an animal. I was asking myself when
I would wake up. They urged me aloud to come
aft and hear quietly what the skipper had to say.
We were sure to be picked up before the evening right
in the track of all the Canal traffic; there was smoke
to the north-west now.
’"It gave me an awful shock
to see this faint, faint blur, this low trail of brown
mist through which you could see the boundary of sea
and sky. I called out to them that I could hear
very well where I was. The skipper started swearing,
as hoarse as a crow. He wasn’t going to
talk at the top of his voice for my accommodation.
’Are you afraid they will hear you on shore?’
I asked. He glared as if he would have liked to
claw me to pieces. The chief engineer advised
him to humour me. He said I wasn’t right
in my head yet. The other rose astern, like a
thick pillar of flesh and talked talked.
. . .”
’Jim remained thoughtful.
“Well?” I said. “What did I
care what story they agreed to make up?” he
cried recklessly. “They could tell what
they jolly well liked. It was their business.
I knew the story. Nothing they could make people
believe could alter it for me. I let him talk,
argue talk, argue. He went on and on
and on. Suddenly I felt my legs give way under
me. I was sick, tired tired to death.
I let fall the tiller, turned my back on them, and
sat down on the foremost thwart. I had enough.
They called to me to know if I understood wasn’t
it true, every word of it? It was true, by God!
after their fashion. I did not turn my head.
I heard them palavering together. ’The silly
ass won’t say anything.’ ‘Oh,
he understands well enough.’ ’Let
him be; he will be all right.’ ‘What
can he do?’ What could I do? Weren’t
we all in the same boat? I tried to be deaf.
The smoke had disappeared to the northward. It
was a dead calm. They had a drink from the water-breaker,
and I drank too. Afterwards they made a great
business of spreading the boat-sail over the gunwales.
Would I keep a look-out? They crept under, out
of my sight, thank God! I felt weary, weary,
done up, as if I hadn’t had one hour’s
sleep since the day I was born. I couldn’t
see the water for the glitter of the sunshine.
From time to time one of them would creep out, stand
up to take a look all round, and get under again.
I could hear spells of snoring below the sail.
Some of them could sleep. One of them at least.
I couldn’t! All was light, light, and the
boat seemed to be falling through it. Now and
then I would feel quite surprised to find myself sitting
on a thwart. . . .”
’He began to walk with measured
steps to and fro before my chair, one hand in his
trousers-pocket, his head bent thoughtfully, and his
right arm at long intervals raised for a gesture that
seemed to put out of his way an invisible intruder.
’"I suppose you think I was
going mad,” he began in a changed tone.
“And well you may, if you remember I had lost
my cap. The sun crept all the way from east to
west over my bare head, but that day I could not come
to any harm, I suppose. The sun could not make
me mad. . . .” His right arm put aside
the idea of madness. . . . “Neither could
it kill me. . . .” Again his arm repulsed
a shadow. . . . “That rested with me.”
’"Did it?” I said, inexpressibly
amazed at this new turn, and I looked at him with
the same sort of feeling I might be fairly conceived
to experience had he, after spinning round on his
heel, presented an altogether new face.
’"I didn’t get brain fever,
I did not drop dead either,” he went on.
“I didn’t bother myself at all about the
sun over my head. I was thinking as coolly as
any man that ever sat thinking in the shade. That
greasy beast of a skipper poked his big cropped head
from under the canvas and screwed his fishy eyes up
at me. ‘Donnerwetter! you will die,’
he growled, and drew in like a turtle. I had
seen him. I had heard him. He didn’t
interrupt me. I was thinking just then that I
wouldn’t.”
’He tried to sound my thought
with an attentive glance dropped on me in passing.
“Do you mean to say you had been deliberating
with yourself whether you would die?” I asked
in as impenetrable a tone as I could command.
He nodded without stopping. “Yes, it had
come to that as I sat there alone,” he said.
He passed on a few steps to the imaginary end of his
beat, and when he flung round to come back both his
hands were thrust deep into his pockets. He stopped
short in front of my chair and looked down. “Don’t
you believe it?” he inquired with tense curiosity.
I was moved to make a solemn declaration of my readiness
to believe implicitly anything he thought fit to tell
me.’