Only the young have such moments.
I don’t mean the very young. No. The
very young have, properly speaking, no moments.
It is the privilege of early youth to live in advance
of its days in all the beautiful continuity of hope
which knows no pauses and no introspection.
One closes behind one the little gate
of mere boyishness and enters an enchanted
garden. Its very shades glow with promise.
Every turn of the path has its seduction. And
it isn’t because it is an undiscovered country.
One knows well enough that all mankind had streamed
that way. It is the charm of universal experience
from which one expects an uncommon or personal sensation a
bit of one’s own.
One goes on recognizing the landmarks
of the predecessors, excited, amused, taking the hard
luck and the good luck together the kicks
and the half-pence, as the saying is the
picturesque common lot that holds so many possibilities
for the deserving or perhaps for the lucky. Yes.
One goes on. And the time, too, goes on till
one perceives ahead a shadow-line warning one that
the region of early youth, too, must be left behind.
This is the period of life in which
such moments of which I have spoken are likely to
come. What moments? Why, the moments of boredom,
of weariness, of dissatisfaction. Rash moments.
I mean moments when the still young are inclined to
commit rash actions, such as getting married suddenly
or else throwing up a job for no reason.
This is not a marriage story.
It wasn’t so bad as that with me. My action,
rash as it was, had more the character of divorce almost
of desertion. For no reason on which a sensible
person could put a finger I threw up my job chucked
my berth left the ship of which the worst
that could be said was that she was a steamship and
therefore, perhaps, not entitled to that blind loyalty
which. . . . However, it’s no use trying
to put a gloss on what even at the time I myself half
suspected to be a caprice.
It was in an Eastern port. She
was an Eastern ship, inasmuch as then she belonged
to that port. She traded among dark islands on
a blue reef-scarred sea, with the Red Ensign over
the taffrail and at her masthead a house-flag, also
red, but with a green border and with a white crescent
in it. For an Arab owned her, and a Syed at that.
Hence the green border on the flag. He was the
head of a great House of Straits Arabs, but as loyal
a subject of the complex British Empire as you could
find east of the Suez Canal. World politics did
not trouble him at all, but he had a great occult
power amongst his own people.
It was all one to us who owned the
ship. He had to employ white men in the shipping
part of his business, and many of those he so employed
had never set eyes on him from the first to the last
day. I myself saw him but once, quite accidentally
on a wharf an old, dark little man blind
in one eye, in a snowy robe and yellow slippers.
He was having his hand severely kissed by a crowd
of Malay pilgrims to whom he had done some favour,
in the way of food and money. His alms-giving,
I have heard, was most extensive, covering almost
the whole Archipelago. For isn’t it said
that “The charitable man is the friend of Allah”?
Excellent (and picturesque) Arab owner,
about whom one needed not to trouble one’s head,
a most excellent Scottish ship for she was
that from the keep up excellent sea-boat,
easy to keep clean, most handy in every way, and if
it had not been for her internal propulsion, worthy
of any man’s love, I cherish to this day a profound
respect for her memory. As to the kind of trade
she was engaged in and the character of my shipmates,
I could not have been happier if I had had the life
and the men made to my order by a benevolent Enchanter.
And suddenly I left all this.
I left it in that, to us, inconsequential manner in
which a bird flies away from a comfortable branch.
It was as though all unknowing I had heard a whisper
or seen something. Well perhaps!
One day I was perfectly right and the next everything
was gone glamour, flavour, interest, contentment everything.
It was one of these moments, you know. The green
sickness of late youth descended on me and carried
me off. Carried me off that ship, I mean.
We were only four white men on board,
with a large crew of Kalashes and two Malay petty
officers. The Captain stared hard as if wondering
what ailed me. But he was a sailor, and he, too,
had been young at one time. Presently a smile
came to lurk under his thick iron-gray moustache, and
he observed that, of course, if I felt I must go he
couldn’t keep me by main force. And it
was arranged that I should be paid off the next morning.
As I was going out of his cabin he added suddenly,
in a peculiar wistful tone, that he hoped I would
find what I was so anxious to go and look for.
A soft, cryptic utterance which seemed to reach deeper
than any diamond-hard tool could have done. I
do believe he understood my case.
But the second engineer attacked me
differently. He was a sturdy young Scot, with
a smooth face and light eyes. His honest red countenance
emerged out of the engine-room companion and then the
whole robust man, with shirt sleeves turned up, wiping
slowly the massive fore-arms with a lump of cotton-waste.
And his light eyes expressed bitter distaste, as though
our friendship had turned to ashes. He said weightily:
“Oh! Aye! I’ve been thinking
it was about time for you to run away home and get
married to some silly girl.”
It was tacitly understood in the port
that John Nieven was a fierce misogynist; and the
absurd character of the sally convinced me that he
meant to be nasty very nasty had
meant to say the most crushing thing he could think
of. My laugh sounded deprecatory. Nobody
but a friend could be so angry as that. I became
a little crestfallen. Our chief engineer also
took a characteristic view of my action, but in a kindlier
spirit.
He was young, too, but very thin,
and with a mist of fluffy brown beard all round his
haggard face. All day long, at sea or in harbour,
he could be seen walking hastily up and down the after-deck,
wearing an intense, spiritually rapt expression, which
was caused by a perpetual consciousness of unpleasant
physical sensations in his internal economy.
For he was a confirmed dyspeptic. His view of
my case was very simple. He said it was nothing
but deranged liver. Of course! He suggested
I should stay for another trip and meantime dose myself
with a certain patent medicine in which his own belief
was absolute. “I’ll tell you what
I’ll do. I’ll buy you two bottles,
out of my own pocket. There. I can’t
say fairer than that, can I?”
I believe he would have perpetrated
the atrocity (or generosity) at the merest sign of
weakening on my part. By that time, however, I
was more discontented, disgusted, and dogged than
ever. The past eighteen months, so full of new
and varied experience, appeared a dreary, prosaic waste
of days. I felt how shall I express
it? that there was no truth to be got out
of them.
What truth? I should have been
hard put to it to explain. Probably, if pressed,
I would have burst into tears simply. I was young
enough for that.
Next day the Captain and I transacted
our business in the Harbour Office. It was a
lofty, big, cool, white room, where the screened light
of day glowed serenely. Everybody in it the
officials, the public were in white.
Only the heavy polished desks gleamed darkly in a central
avenue, and some papers lying on them were blue.
Enormous punkahs sent from on high a gentle draught
through that immaculate interior and upon our perspiring
heads.
The official behind the desk we approached
grinned amiably and kept it up till, in answer to
his perfunctory question, “Sign off and on again?”
my Captain answered, “No! Signing off for
good.” And then his grin vanished in sudden
solemnity. He did not look at me again till he
handed me my papers with a sorrowful expression, as
if they had been my passports for Hades.
While I was putting them away he murmured
some question to the Captain, and I heard the latter
answer good-humouredly:
“No. He leaves us to go home.”
“Oh!” the other exclaimed, nodding mournfully
over my sad condition.
I didn’t know him outside the
official building, but he leaned forward the desk
to shake hands with me, compassionately, as one would
with some poor devil going out to be hanged; and I
am afraid I performed my part ungraciously, in the
hardened manner of an impenitent criminal.
No homeward-bound mail-boat was due
for three or four days. Being now a man without
a ship, and having for a time broken my connection
with the sea become, in fact, a mere potential
passenger it would have been more appropriate
perhaps if I had gone to stay at an hotel. There
it was, too, within a stone’s throw of the Harbour
Office, low, but somehow palatial, displaying its
white, pillared pavilions surrounded by trim grass
plots. I would have felt a passenger indeed in
there! I gave it a hostile glance and directed
my steps toward the Officers’ Sailors’
Home.
I walked in the sunshine, disregarding
it, and in the shade of the big trees on the esplanade
without enjoying it. The heat of the tropical
East descended through the leafy boughs, enveloping
my thinly-clad body, clinging to my rebellious discontent,
as if to rob it of its freedom.
The Officers’ Home was a large
bungalow with a wide verandah and a curiously suburban-looking
little garden of bushes and a few trees between it
and the street. That institution partook somewhat
of the character of a residential club, but with a
slightly Governmental flavour about it, because it
was administered by the Harbour Office. Its manager
was officially styled Chief Steward. He was an
unhappy, wizened little man, who if put into a jockey’s
rig would have looked the part to perfection.
But it was obvious that at some time or other in his
life, in some capacity or other, he had been connected
with the sea. Possibly in the comprehensive capacity
of a failure.
I should have thought his employment
a very easy one, but he used to affirm for some reason
or other that his job would be the death of him some
day. It was rather mysterious. Perhaps everything
naturally was too much trouble for him. He certainly
seemed to hate having people in the house.
On entering it I thought he must be
feeling pleased. It was as still as a tomb.
I could see no one in the living rooms; and the verandah,
too, was empty, except for a man at the far end dozing
prone in a long chair. At the noise of my footsteps
he opened one horribly fish-like eye. He was
a stranger to me. I retreated from there, and
crossing the dining room a very bare apartment
with a motionless punkah hanging over the centre table I
knocked at a door labelled in black letters: “Chief
Steward.”
The answer to my knock being a vexed
and doleful plaint: “Oh, dear! Oh,
dear! What is it now?” I went in at once.
It was a strange room to find in the
tropics. Twilight and stuffiness reigned in there.
The fellow had hung enormously ample, dusty, cheap
lace curtains over his windows, which were shut.
Piles of cardboard boxes, such as milliners and dressmakers
use in Europe, cumbered the corners; and by some means
he had procured for himself the sort of furniture
that might have come out of a respectable parlour in
the East End of London a horsehair sofa,
arm-chairs of the same. I glimpsed grimy antimacassars
scattered over that horrid upholstery, which was awe-inspiring,
insomuch that one could not guess what mysterious
accident, need, or fancy had collected it there.
Its owner had taken off his tunic, and in white trousers
and a thin, short-sleeved singlet prowled behind the
chair-backs nursing his meagre elbows.
An exclamation of dismay escaped him
when he heard that I had come for a stay; but he could
not deny that there were plenty of vacant rooms.
“Very well. Can you give me the one I had
before?”
He emitted a faint moan from behind
a pile of cardboard boxes on the table, which might
have contained gloves or handkerchies or neckties.
I wonder what the fellow did keep in them? There
was a smell of decaying coral, or Oriental dust of
zoological speciments in that den of his. I could
only see the top of his head and his unhappy eyes levelled
at me over the barrier.
“It’s only for a couple
of days,” I said, intending to cheer him up.
“Perhaps you would like to pay
in advance?” he suggested eagerly.
“Certainly not!” I burst
out directly I could speak. “Never heard
of such a thing! This is the most infernal cheek.
. . .”
He had seized his head in both hands a
gesture of despair which checked my indignation.
“Oh, dear! Oh, dear!
Don’t fly out like this. I am asking everybody.”
“I don’t believe it,” I said bluntly.
“Well, I am going to. And
if you gentlemen all agreed to pay in advance I could
make Hamilton pay up, too. He’s always turning
up ashore dead broke, and even when he has some money
he won’t settle his bills. I don’t
know what to do with him. He swears at me and
tells me I can’t chuck a white man out into
the street here. So if you only would. . . .”
I was amazed. Incredulous, too.
I suspected the fellow of gratuitous impertinence.
I told him with marked emphasis that I would see him
and Hamilton hanged first, and requested him to conduct
me to my room with no more of his nonsense. He
produced then a key from somewhere and led the way
out of his lair, giving me a vicious sidelong look
in passing.
“Any one I know staying here?”
I asked him before he left my room.
He had recovered his usual pained
impatient tone, and said that Captain Giles was there,
back from a Solo Sea trip. Two other guests were
staying also. He paused. And, of course,
Hamilton, he added.
“Oh, yes! Hamilton,”
I said, and the miserable creature took himself off
with a final groan.
His impudence still rankled when I
came into the dining room at tiffin time. He
was there on duty overlooking the Chinamen servants.
The tiffin was laid on one end only of the long table,
and the punkah was stirring the hot air lazily mostly
above a barren waste of polished wood.
We were four around the cloth.
The dozing stranger from the chair was one. Both
his eyes were partly opened now, but they did not seem
to see anything. He was supine. The dignified
person next him, with short side whiskers and a carefully
scraped chin, was, of course, Hamilton. I have
never seen any one so full of dignity for the station
in life Providence had been pleased to place him in.
I had been told that he regarded me as a rank outsider.
He raised not only his eyes, but his eyebrows as well,
at the sound I made pulling back my chair.
Captain Giles was at the head of the
table. I exchanged a few words of greeting with
him and sat down on his left. Stout and pale,
with a great shiny dome of a bald forehead and prominent
brown eyes, he might have been anything but a seaman.
You would not have been surprised to learn that he
was an architect. To me (I know how absurd it
is) to me he looked like a churchwarden. He had
the appearance of a man from whom you would expect
sound advice, moral sentiments, with perhaps a platitude
or two thrown in on occasion, not from a desire to
dazzle, but from honest conviction.
Though very well known and appreciated
in the shipping world, he had no regular employment.
He did not want it. He had his own peculiar position.
He was an expert. An expert in how
shall I say it? in intricate navigation.
He was supposed to know more about remote and imperfectly
charted parts of the Archipelago than any man living.
His brain must have been a perfect warehouse of reefs,
positions, bearings, images of headlands, shapes of
obscure coasts, aspects of innumerable islands, desert
and otherwise. Any ship, for instance, bound on
a trip to Palawan or somewhere that way would have
Captain Giles on board, either in temporary command
or “to assist the master.” It was
said that he had a retaining fee from a wealthy firm
of Chinese steamship owners, in view of such services.
Besides, he was always ready to relieve any man who
wished to take a spell ashore for a time. No owner
was ever known to object to an arrangement of that
sort. For it seemed to be the established opinion
at the port that Captain Giles was as good as the
best, if not a little better. But in Hamilton’s
view he was an “outsider.” I believe
that for Hamilton the generalisation “outsider”
covered the whole lot of us; though I suppose that
he made some distinctions in his mind.
I didn’t try to make conversation
with Captain Giles, whom I had not seen more than
twice in my life. But, of course, he knew who
I was. After a while, inclining his big shiny
head my way, he addressed me first in his friendly
fashion. He presumed from seeing me there, he
said, that I had come ashore for a couple of days’
leave.
He was a low-voiced man. I spoke
a little louder, saying that: No I
had left the ship for good.
“A free man for a bit,” was his comment.
“I suppose I may call myself that since
eleven o’clock,” I said.
Hamilton had stopped eating at the
sound of our voices. He laid down his knife and
fork gently, got up, and muttering something about
“this infernal heat cutting one’s appetite,”
went out of the room. Almost immediately we heard
him leave the house down the verandah steps.
On this Captain Giles remarked easily
that the fellow had no doubt gone off to look after
my old job. The Chief Steward, who had been leaning
against the wall, brought his face of an unhappy goat
nearer to the table and addressed us dolefully.
His object was to unburden himself of his eternal
grievance against Hamilton. The man kept him in
hot water with the Harbour Office as to the state
of his accounts. He wished to goodness he would
get my job, though in truth what would it be?
Temporary relief at best.
I said: “You needn’t
worry. He won’t get my job. My successor
is on board already.”
He was surprised, and I believe his
face fell a little at the news. Captain Giles
gave a soft laugh. We got up and went out on the
verandah, leaving the supine stranger to be dealt
with by the Chinamen. The last thing I saw they
had put a plate with a slice of pine-apple on it before
him and stood back to watch what would happen.
But the experiment seemed a failure. He sat insensible.
It was imparted to me in a low voice
by Captain Giles that this was an officer of some
Rajah’s yacht which had come into our port to
be dry-docked. Must have been “seeing life”
last night, he added, wrinkling his nose in an intimate,
confidential way which pleased me vastly. For
Captain Giles had prestige. He was credited with
wonderful adventures and with some mysterious tragedy
in his life. And no man had a word to say against
him. He continued:
“I remember him first coming
ashore here some years ago. Seems only the other
day. He was a nice boy. Oh! these nice boys!”
I could not help laughing aloud.
He looked startled, then joined in the laugh.
“No! No! I didn’t mean that,”
he cried. “What I meant is that some of
them do go soft mighty quick out here.”
Jocularly I suggested the beastly
heat as the first cause. But Captain Giles disclosed
himself possessed of a deeper philosophy. Things
out East were made easy for white men. That was
all right. The difficulty was to go on keeping
white, and some of these nice boys did not know how.
He gave me a searching look, and in a benevolent, heavy-uncle
manner asked point blank:
“Why did you throw up your berth?”
I became angry all of a sudden; for
you can understand how exasperating such a question
was to a man who didn’t know. I said to
myself that I ought to shut up that moralist; and
to him aloud I said with challenging politeness:
“Why . . . ? Do you disapprove?”
He was too disconcerted to do more
than mutter confusedly: “I! . . . In
a general way. . .” and then gave me up.
But he retired in good order, under the cover of a
heavily humorous remark that he, too, was getting
soft, and that this was his time for taking his little
siesta when he was on shore. “Very
bad habit. Very bad habit.”
There was a simplicity in the man
which would have disarmed a touchiness even more youthful
than mine. So when next day at tiffin he bent
his head toward me and said that he had met my late
Captain last evening, adding in an undertone:
“He’s very sorry you left. He had
never had a mate that suited him so well,” I
answered him earnestly, without any affectation, that
I certainly hadn’t been so comfortable in any
ship or with any commander in all my sea-going days.
“Well then,” he murmured.
“Haven’t you heard, Captain Giles, that
I intend to go home?”
“Yes,” he said benevolently.
“I have heard that sort of thing so often before.”
“What of that?” I cried.
I thought he was the most dull, unimaginative man
I had ever met. I don’t know what more I
would have said, but the much-belated Hamilton came
in just then and took his usual seat. So I dropped
into a mumble.
“Anyhow, you shall see it done this time.”
Hamilton, beautifully shaved, gave
Captain Giles a curt nod, but didn’t even condescend
to raise his eyebrows at me; and when he spoke it was
only to tell the Chief Steward that the food on his
plate wasn’t fit to be set before a gentleman.
The individual addressed seemed much too unhappy to
groan. He cast his eyes up to the punkah and that
was all.
Captain Giles and I got up from the
table, and the stranger next to Hamilton followed
our example, manoeuvring himself to his feet with
difficulty. He, poor fellow, not because he was
hungry but I verily believe only to recover his self-respect,
had tried to put some of that unworthy food into his
mouth. But after dropping his fork twice and
generally making a failure of it, he had sat still
with an air of intense mortification combined with
a ghastly glazed stare. Both Giles and I had
avoided looking his way at table.
On the verandah he stopped short on
purpose to address to us anxiously a long remark which
I failed to understand completely. It sounded
like some horrible unknown language. But when
Captain Giles, after only an instant for reflection,
assured him with homely friendliness, “Aye, to
be sure. You are right there,” he appeared
very much gratified indeed, and went away (pretty
straight, too) to seek a distant long chair.
“What was he trying to say?” I asked with
disgust.
“I don’t know. Mustn’t
be down too much on a fellow. He’s feeling
pretty wretched, you may be sure; and to-morrow he’ll
feel worse yet.”
Judging by the man’s appearance
it seemed impossible. I wondered what sort of
complicated debauch had reduced him to that unspeakable
condition. Captain Giles’ benevolence was
spoiled by a curious air of complacency which I disliked.
I said with a little laugh:
“Well, he will have you to look
after him.” He made a deprecatory gesture,
sat down, and took up a paper. I did the same.
The papers were old and uninteresting, filled up mostly
with dreary stereotyped descriptions of Queen Victoria’s
first jubilee celebrations. Probably we should
have quickly fallen into a tropical afternoon doze
if it had not been for Hamilton’s voice raised
in the dining room. He was finishing his tiffin
there. The big double doors stood wide open permanently,
and he could not have had any idea how near to the
doorway our chairs were placed. He was heard
in a loud, supercilious tone answering some statement
ventured by the Chief Steward.
“I am not going to be rushed
into anything. They will be glad enough to get
a gentleman I imagine. There is no hurry.”
A loud whispering from the Steward
succeeded and then again Hamilton was heard with even
intenser scorn.
“What? That young ass who
fancies himself for having been chief mate with Kent
so long? . . . Preposterous.”
Giles and I looked at each other.
Kent being the name of my late commander, Captain
Giles’ whisper, “He’s talking of
you,” seemed to me sheer waste of breath.
The Chief Steward must have stuck to his point, whatever
it was, because Hamilton was heard again more supercilious
if possible, and also very emphatic:
“Rubbish, my good man!
One doesn’t compete with a rank outsider
like that. There’s plenty of time.”
Then there were pushing of chairs,
footsteps in the next room, and plaintive expostulations
from the Steward, who was pursuing Hamilton, even
out of doors through the main entrance.
“That’s a very insulting
sort of man,” remarked Captain Giles superfluously,
I thought. “Very insulting. You haven’t
offended him in some way, have you?”
“Never spoke to him in my life,”
I said grumpily. “Can’t imagine what
he means by competing. He has been trying for
my job after I left and didn’t get
it. But that isn’t exactly competition.”
Captain Giles balanced his big benevolent
head thoughtfully. “He didn’t get
it,” he repeated very slowly. “No,
not likely either, with Kent. Kent is no end
sorry you left him. He gives you the name of a
good seaman, too.”
I flung away the paper I was still
holding. I sat up, I slapped the table with my
open palm. I wanted to know why he would keep
harping on that, my absolutely private affair.
It was exasperating, really.
Captain Giles silenced me by the perfect
equanimity of his gaze. “Nothing to be
annoyed about,” he murmured reasonably, with
an evident desire to soothe the childish irritation
he had aroused. And he was really a man of an
appearance so inoffensive that I tried to explain
myself as much as I could. I told him that I did
not want to hear any more about what was past and
gone. It had been very nice while it lasted,
but now it was done with I preferred not to talk about
it or even think about it. I had made up my mind
to go home.
He listened to the whole tirade in
a particular lending-the-ear attitude, as if trying
to detect a false note in it somewhere; then straightened
himself up and appeared to ponder sagaciously over
the matter.
“Yes. You told me you meant
to go home. Anything in view there?”
Instead of telling him that it was
none of his business I said sullenly:
“Nothing that I know of.”
I had indeed considered that rather
blank side of the situation I had created for myself
by leaving suddenly my very satisfactory employment.
And I was not very pleased with it. I had it on
the tip of my tongue to say that common sense had
nothing to do with my action, and that therefore it
didn’t deserve the interest Captain Giles seemed
to be taking in it. But he was puffing at a short
wooden pipe now, and looked so guileless, dense, and
commonplace, that it seemed hardly worth while to
puzzle him either with truth or sarcasm.
He blew a cloud of smoke, then surprised
me by a very abrupt: “Paid your passage
money yet?”
Overcome by the shameless pertinacity
of a man to whom it was rather difficult to be rude,
I replied with exaggerated meekness that I had not
done so yet. I thought there would be plenty of
time to do that to-morrow.
And I was about to turn away, withdrawing
my privacy from his fatuous, objectless attempts to
test what sort of stuff it was made of, when he laid
down his pipe in an extremely significant manner, you
know, as if a critical moment had come, and leaned
sideways over the table between us.
“Oh! You haven’t
yet!” He dropped his voice mysteriously.
“Well, then I think you ought to know that there’s
something going on here.”
I had never in my life felt more detached
from all earthly goings on. Freed from the sea
for a time, I preserved the sailor’s consciousness
of complete independence from all land affairs.
How could they concern me? I gazed at Captain
Giles’ animation with scorn rather than with
curiosity.
To his obviously preparatory question
whether our Steward had spoken to me that day I said
he hadn’t. And what’s more he would
have had precious little encouragement if he had tried
to. I didn’t want the fellow to speak to
me at all.
Unrebuked by my petulance, Captain
Giles, with an air of immense sagacity, began to tell
me a minute tale about a Harbour Office peon.
It was absolutely pointless. A peon was seen walking
that morning on the verandah with a letter in his
hand. It was in an official envelope. As
the habit of these fellows is, he had shown it to the
first white man he came across. That man was
our friend in the arm-chair. He, as I knew, was
not in a state to interest himself in any sublunary
matters. He could only wave the peon away.
The peon then wandered on along the verandah and came
upon Captain Giles, who was there by an extraordinary
chance. . . .
At this point he stopped with a profound
look. The letter, he continued, was addressed
to the Chief Steward. Now what could Captain Ellis,
the Master Attendant, want to write to the Steward
for? The fellow went every morning, anyhow, to
the Harbour Office with his report, for orders or
what not. He hadn’t been back more than
an hour before there was an office peon chasing him
with a note. Now what was that for?
And he began to speculate. It
was not for this and it could not be for
that. As to that other thing it was unthinkable.
The fatuousness of all this made me
stare. If the man had not been somehow a sympathetic
personality I would have resented it like an insult.
As it was, I felt only sorry for him. Something
remarkably earnest in his gaze prevented me from laughing
in his face. Neither did I yawn at him.
I just stared.
His tone became a shade more mysterious.
Directly the fellow (meaning the Steward) got that
note he rushed for his hat and bolted out of the house.
But it wasn’t because the note called him to
the Harbour Office. He didn’t go there.
He was not absent long enough for that. He came
darting back in no time, flung his hat away, and raced
about the dining room moaning and slapping his forehead.
All these exciting facts and manifestations had been
observed by Captain Giles. He had, it seems,
been meditating upon them ever since.
I began to pity him profoundly.
And in a tone which I tried to make as little sarcastic
as possible I said that I was glad he had found something
to occupy his morning hours.
With his disarming simplicity he made
me observe, as if it were a matter of some consequence,
how strange it was that he should have spent the morning
indoors at all. He generally was out before tiffin,
visiting various offices, seeing his friends in the
harbour, and so on. He had felt out of sorts
somewhat on rising. Nothing much. Just enough
to make him feel lazy.
All this with a sustained, holding
stare which, in conjunction with the general inanity
of the discourse, conveyed the impression of mild,
dreary lunacy. And when he hitched his chair a
little and dropped his voice to the low note of mystery,
it flashed upon me that high professional reputation
was not necessarily a guarantee of sound mind.
It never occurred to me then that
I didn’t know in what soundness of mind exactly
consisted and what a delicate and, upon the whole,
unimportant matter it was. With some idea of not
hurting his feelings I blinked at him in an interested
manner. But when he proceeded to ask me mysteriously
whether I remembered what had passed just now between
that Steward of ours and “that man Hamilton,”
I only grunted sourly assent and turned away my head.
“Aye. But do you remember
every word?” he insisted tactfully.
“I don’t know. It’s
none of my business,” I snapped out, consigning,
moreover, the Steward and Hamilton aloud to eternal
perdition.
I meant to be very energetic and final,
but Captain Giles continued to gaze at me thoughtfully.
Nothing could stop him. He went on to point out
that my personality was involved in that conversation.
When I tried to preserve the semblance of unconcern
he became positively cruel. I heard what the
man had said? Yes? What did I think of it
then? he wanted to know.
Captain Giles’ appearance excluding
the suspicion of mere sly malice, I came to the conclusion
that he was simply the most tactless idiot on earth.
I almost despised myself for the weakness of attempting
to enlighten his common understanding. I started
to explain that I did not think anything whatever.
Hamilton was not worth a thought. What such an
offensive loafer . . . “Aye! that he is,”
interjected Captain Giles . . . thought or said was
below any decent man’s contempt, and I did not
propose to take the slightest notice of it.
This attitude seemed to me so simple
and obvious that I was really astonished at Giles
giving no sign of assent. Such perfect stupidity
was almost interesting.
“What would you like me to do?”
I asked, laughing. “I can’t start
a row with him because of the opinion he has formed
of me. Of course, I’ve heard of the contemptuous
way he alludes to me. But he doesn’t intrude
his contempt on my notice. He has never expressed
it in my hearing. For even just now he didn’t
know we could hear him. I should only make myself
ridiculous.”
That hopeless Giles went on puffing
at his pipe moodily. All at once his face cleared,
and he spoke.
“You missed my point.”
“Have I? I am very glad to hear it,”
I said.
With increasing animation he stated
again that I had missed his point. Entirely.
And in a tone of growing self-conscious complacency
he told me that few things escaped his attention,
and he was rather used to think them out, and generally
from his experience of life and men arrived at the
right conclusion.
This bit of self-praise, of course,
fitted excellently the laborious inanity of the whole
conversation. The whole thing strengthened in
me that obscure feeling of life being but a waste of
days, which, half-unconsciously, had driven me out
of a comfortable berth, away from men I liked, to
flee from the menace of emptiness . . . and to find
inanity at the first turn. Here was a man of recognized
character and achievement disclosed as an absurd and
dreary chatterer. And it was probably like this
everywhere from east to west, from the bottom
to the top of the social scale.
A great discouragement fell on me.
A spiritual drowsiness. Giles’ voice was
going on complacently; the very voice of the universal
hollow conceit. And I was no longer angry with
it. There was nothing original, nothing new,
startling, informing, to expect from the world; no
opportunities to find out something about oneself,
no wisdom to acquire, no fun to enjoy. Everything
was stupid and overrated, even as Captain Giles was.
So be it.
The name of Hamilton suddenly caught
my ear and roused me up.
“I thought we had done with
him,” I said, with the greatest possible distaste.
“Yes. But considering what
we happened to hear just now I think you ought to
do it.”
“Ought to do it?” I sat up bewildered.
“Do what?”
Captain Giles confronted me very much surprised.
“Why! Do what I have been
advising you to try. You go and ask the Steward
what was there in that letter from the Harbour Office.
Ask him straight out.”
I remained speechless for a time.
Here was something unexpected and original enough
to be altogether incomprehensible. I murmured,
astounded:
“But I thought it was Hamilton that you . .
.”
“Exactly. Don’t you
let him. You do what I tell you. You tackle
that Steward. You’ll make him jump, I bet,”
insisted Captain Giles, waving his smouldering pipe
impressively at me. Then he took three rapid puffs
at it.
His aspect of triumphant acuteness
was indescribable. Yet the man remained a strangely
sympathetic creature. Benevolence radiated from
him ridiculously, mildly, impressively. It was
irritating, too. But I pointed out coldly, as
one who deals with the incomprehensible, that I didn’t
see any reason to expose myself to a snub from the
fellow. He was a very unsatisfactory steward
and a miserable wretch besides, but I would just as
soon think of tweaking his nose.
“Tweaking his nose,” said
Captain Giles in a scandalized tone. “Much
use it would be to you.”
That remark was so irrelevant that
one could make no answer to it. But the sense
of the absurdity was beginning at last to exercise
its well-known fascination. I felt I must not
let the man talk to me any more. I got up, observing
curtly that he was too much for me that
I couldn’t make him out.
Before I had time to move away he
spoke again in a changed tone of obstinacy and puffing
nervously at his pipe.
“Well he’s
a no account cuss anyhow.
You just ask him. That’s all.”
That new manner impressed me or
rather made me pause. But sanity asserting its
sway at once I left the verandah after giving him a
mirthless smile. In a few strides I found myself
in the dining room, now cleared and empty. But
during that short time various thoughts occurred to
me, such as: that Giles had been making fun of
me, expecting some amusement at my expense; that I
probably looked silly and gullible; that I knew very
little of life. . . .
The door facing me across the dining
room flew open to my extreme surprise. It was
the door inscribed with the word “Steward”
and the man himself ran out of his stuffy, Philistinish
lair in his absurd, hunted-animal manner, making for
the garden door.
To this day I don’t know what
made me call after him. “I say! Wait
a minute.” Perhaps it was the sidelong
glance he gave me; or possibly I was yet under the
influence of Captain Giles’ mysterious earnestness.
Well, it was an impulse of some sort; an effect of
that force somewhere within our lives which shapes
them this way or that. For if these words had
not escaped from my lips (my will had nothing to do
with that) my existence would, to be sure, have been
still a seaman’s existence, but directed on
now to me utterly inconceivable lines.
No. My will had nothing to do
with it. Indeed, no sooner had I made that fateful
noise than I became extremely sorry for it. Had
the man stopped and faced me I would have had to retire
in disorder. For I had no notion to carry out
Captain Giles’ idiotic joke, either at my own
expense or at the expense of the Steward.
But here the old human instinct of
the chase came into play. He pretended to be
deaf, and I, without thinking a second about it, dashed
along my own side of the dining table and cut him off
at the very door.
“Why can’t you answer
when you are spoken to?” I asked roughly.
He leaned against the lintel of the
door. He looked extremely wretched. Human
nature is, I fear, not very nice right through.
There are ugly spots in it. I found myself growing
angry, and that, I believe, only because my quarry
looked so woe-begone. Miserable beggar!
I went for him without more ado.
“I understand there was an official communication
to the Home from the Harbour Office this morning.
Is that so?”
Instead of telling me to mind my own
business, as he might have done, he began to whine
with an undertone of impudence. He couldn’t
see me anywhere this morning. He couldn’t
be expected to run all over the town after me.
“Who wants you to?” I
cried. And then my eyes became opened to the
inwardness of things and speeches the triviality of
which had been so baffling and tiresome.
I told him I wanted to know what was
in that letter. My sternness of tone and behaviour
was only half assumed. Curiosity can be a very
fierce sentiment at times.
He took refuge in a silly, muttering
sulkiness. It was nothing to me, he mumbled.
I had told him I was going home. And since I was
going home he didn’t see why he should. . .
.
That was the line of his argument,
and it was irrelevant enough to be almost insulting.
Insulting to one’s intelligence, I mean.
In that twilight region between youth
and maturity, in which I had my being then, one is
peculiarly sensitive to that kind of insult. I
am afraid my behaviour to the Steward became very
rough indeed. But it wasn’t in him to face
out anything or anybody. Drug habit or solitary
tippling, perhaps. And when I forgot myself so
far as to swear at him he broke down and began to
shriek.
I don’t mean to say that he
made a great outcry. It was a cynical shrieking
confession, only faint piteously faint.
It wasn’t very coherent either, but sufficiently
so to strike me dumb at first. I turned my eyes
from him in righteous indignation, and perceived Captain
Giles in the verandah doorway surveying quietly the
scene, his own handiwork, if I may express it in that
way. His smouldering black pipe was very noticeable
in his big, paternal fist. So, too, was the glitter
of his heavy gold watch-chain across the breast of
his white tunic. He exhaled an atmosphere of
virtuous sagacity serene enough for any innocent soul
to fly to confidently. I flew to him.
“You would never believe it,”
I cried. “It was a notification that a
master is wanted for some ship. There’s
a command apparently going about and this fellow puts
the thing in his pocket.”
The Steward screamed out in accents
of loud despair: “You will be the death
of me!”
The mighty slap he gave his wretched
forehead was very loud, too. But when I turned
to look at him he was no longer there. He had
rushed away somewhere out of sight. This sudden
disappearance made me laugh.
This was the end of the incident for
me. Captain Giles, however, staring at the place
where the Steward had been, began to haul at his gorgeous
gold chain till at last the watch came up from the
deep pocket like solid truth from a well. Solemnly
he lowered it down again and only then said:
“Just three o’clock.
You will be in time if you don’t lose
any, that is.”
“In time for what?” I asked.
“Good Lord! For the Harbour Office.
This must be looked into.”
Strictly speaking, he was right.
But I’ve never had much taste for investigation,
for showing people up and all that no doubt ethically
meritorious kind of work. And my view of the episode
was purely ethical. If any one had to be the
death of the Steward I didn’t see why it shouldn’t
be Captain Giles himself, a man of age and standing,
and a permanent resident. Whereas, I in comparison,
felt myself a mere bird of passage in that port.
In fact, it might have been said that I had already
broken off my connection. I muttered that I didn’t
think it was nothing to me. . . .
“Nothing!” repeated Captain
Giles, giving some signs of quiet, deliberate indignation.
“Kent warned me you were a peculiar young fellow.
You will tell me next that a command is nothing to
you and after all the trouble I’ve
taken, too!”
“The trouble!” I murmured,
uncomprehending. What trouble? All I could
remember was being mystified and bored by his conversation
for a solid hour after tiffin. And he called
that taking a lot of trouble.
He was looking at me with a self-complacency
which would have been odious in any other man.
All at once, as if a page of a book had been turned
over disclosing a word which made plain all that had
gone before, I perceived that this matter had also
another than an ethical aspect.
And still I did not move. Captain
Giles lost his patience a little. With an angry
puff at his pipe he turned his back on my hesitation.
But it was not hesitation on my part.
I had been, if I may express myself so, put out of
gear mentally. But as soon as I had convinced
myself that this stale, unprofitable world of my discontent
contained such a thing as a command to be seized,
I recovered my powers of locomotion.
It’s a good step from the Officers’
Home to the Harbour Office; but with the magic word
“Command” in my head I found myself suddenly
on the quay as if transported there in the twinkling
of an eye, before a portal of dressed white stone
above a flight of shallow white steps.
All this seemed to glide toward me
swiftly. The whole great roadstead to the right
was just a mere flicker of blue, and the dim cool hall
swallowed me up out of the heat and glare of which
I had not been aware till the very moment I passed
in from it.
The broad inner staircase insinuated
itself under my feet somehow. Command is a strong
magic. The first human beings I perceived distinctly
since I had parted with the indignant back of Captain
Giles were the crew of the harbour steam-launch lounging
on the spacious landing about the curtained archway
of the shipping office.
It was there that my buoyancy abandoned
me. The atmosphere of officialdom would kill
anything that breathes the air of human endeavour,
would extinguish hope and fear alike in the supremacy
of paper and ink. I passed heavily under the
curtain which the Malay coxswain of the harbour launch
raised for me. There was nobody in the office
except the clerks, writing in two industrious rows.
But the head Shipping-Master hopped down from his
elevation and hurried along on the thick mats to meet
me in the broad central passage.
He had a Scottish name, but his complexion
was of a rich olive hue, his short beard was jet black,
and his eyes, also black, had a languishing expression.
He asked confidentially:
“You want to see Him?”
All lightness of spirit and body having
departed from me at the touch of officialdom, I looked
at the scribe without animation and asked in my turn
wearily:
“What do you think? Is it any use?”
“My goodness! He has asked for you twice
today.”
This emphatic He was the supreme authority,
the Marine Superintendent, the Harbour-Master a
very great person in the eyes of every single quill-driver
in the room. But that was nothing to the opinion
he had of his own greatness.
Captain Ellis looked upon himself
as a sort of divine (pagan) emanation, the deputy-Neptune
for the circumambient seas. If he did not actually
rule the waves, he pretended to rule the fate of the
mortals whose lives were cast upon the waters.
This uplifting illusion made him inquisitorial
and peremptory. And as his temperament was choleric
there were fellows who were actually afraid of him.
He was redoubtable, not in virtue of his office, but
because of his unwarrantable assumptions. I had
never had anything to do with him before.
I said: “Oh! He has
asked for me twice. Then perhaps I had better
go in.”
“You must! You must!”
The Shipping-Master led the way with
a mincing gait around the whole system of desks to
a tall and important-looking door, which he opened
with a deferential action of the arm.
He stepped right in (but without letting
go of the handle) and, after gazing reverently down
the room for a while, beckoned me in by a silent jerk
of the head. Then he slipped out at once and shut
the door after me most delicately.
Three lofty windows gave on the harbour.
There was nothing in them but the dark-blue sparkling
sea and the paler luminous blue of the sky. My
eye caught in the depths and distances of these blue
tones the white speck of some big ship just arrived
and about to anchor in the outer roadstead. A
ship from home after perhaps ninety days
at sea. There is something touching about a ship
coming in from sea and folding her white wings for
a rest.
The next thing I saw was the top-knot
of silver hair surmounting Captain Ellis’ smooth
red face, which would have been apoplectic if it hadn’t
had such a fresh appearance.
Our deputy-Neptune had no beard on
his chin, and there was no trident to be seen standing
in a corner anywhere, like an umbrella. But his
hand was holding a pen the official pen,
far mightier than the sword in making or marring the
fortune of simple toiling men. He was looking
over his shoulder at my advance.
When I had come well within range
he saluted me by a nerve-shattering: “Where
have you been all this time?”
As it was no concern of his I did
not take the slightest notice of the shot. I
said simply that I had heard there was a master needed
for some vessel, and being a sailing-ship man I thought
I would apply. . . .
He interrupted me. “Why!
Hang it! You are the right man for that job if
there had been twenty others after it. But no
fear of that. They are all afraid to catch hold.
That’s what’s the matter.”
He was very irritated. I said
innocently: “Are they, sir. I wonder
why?”
“Why!” he fumed.
“Afraid of the sails. Afraid of a white
crew. Too much trouble. Too much work.
Too long out here. Easy life and deck-chairs
more their mark. Here I sit with the Consul-General’s
cable before me, and the only man fit for the job
not to be found anywhere. I began to think you
were funking it, too. . . .”
“I haven’t been long getting
to the office,” I remarked calmly.
“You have a good name out here,
though,” he growled savagely without looking
at me.
“I am very glad to hear it from you, sir,”
I said.
“Yes. But you are not on
the spot when you are wanted. You know you weren’t.
That steward of yours wouldn’t dare to neglect
a message from this office. Where the devil did
you hide yourself for the best part of the day?”
I only smiled kindly down on him,
and he seemed to recollect himself, and asked me to
take a seat. He explained that the master of a
British ship having died in Bangkok the Consul-General
had cabled to him a request for a competent man to
be sent out to take command.
Apparently, in his mind, I was the
man from the first, though for the looks of the thing
the notification addressed to the Sailors’ Home
was general. An agreement had already been prepared.
He gave it to me to read, and when I handed it back
to him with the remark that I accepted its terms,
the deputy-Neptune signed it, stamped it with his own
exalted hand, folded it in four (it was a sheet of
blue foolscap) and presented it to me a
gift of extraordinary potency, for, as I put it in
my pocket, my head swam a little.
“This is your appointment to
the command,” he said with a certain gravity.
“An official appointment binding the owners to
conditions which you have accepted. Now when
will you be ready to go?”
I said I would be ready that very
day if necessary. He caught me at my word with
great alacrity. The steamer Melita was leaving
for Bangkok that evening about seven. He would
request her captain officially to give me a passage
and wait for me till ten o’clock.
Then he rose from his office chair,
and I got up, too. My head swam, there was no
doubt about it, and I felt a certain heaviness of limbs
as if they had grown bigger since I had sat down on
that chair. I made my bow.
A subtle change in Captain Ellis’
manner became perceptible as though he had laid aside
the trident of deputy-Neptune. In reality, it
was only his official pen that he had dropped on getting
up.