I stumbled upon one curious character
in the Island of Mani. He became a sore annoyance
to me in the course of time. My first glimpse
of him was in a sort of public room in the town of
Lahaina. He occupied a chair at the opposite
side of the apartment, and sat eyeing our party with
interest for some minutes, and listening as critically
to what we were saying as if he fancied we were talking
to him and expecting him to reply. I thought
it very sociable in a stranger. Presently, in
the course of conversation, I made a statement bearing
upon the subject under discussion and I
made it with due modesty, for there was nothing extraordinary
about it, and it was only put forth in illustration
of a point at issue. I had barely finished when
this person spoke out with rapid utterance and feverish
anxiety:
“Oh, that was certainly remarkable,
after a fashion, but you ought to have seen my chimney you
ought to have seen my chimney, sir! Smoke!
I wish I may hang if Mr. Jones, you remember
that chimney you must remember that chimney!
No, no I recollect, now, you warn’t
living on this side of the island then. But
I am telling you nothing but the truth, and I wish
I may never draw another breath if that chimney didn’t
smoke so that the smoke actually got caked in it and
I had to dig it out with a pickaxe! You may
smile, gentlemen, but the High Sheriff’s got
a hunk of it which I dug out before his eyes, and
so it’s perfectly easy for you to go and examine
for yourselves.”
The interruption broke up the conversation,
which had already begun to lag, and we presently hired
some natives and an out-rigger canoe or two, and went
out to overlook a grand surf-bathing contest.
Two weeks after this, while talking
in a company, I looked up and detected this same man
boring through and through me with his intense eye,
and noted again his twitching muscles and his feverish
anxiety to speak. The moment I paused, he said:
“Beg your pardon, sir, beg your
pardon, but it can only be considered remarkable when
brought into strong outline by isolation. Sir,
contrasted with a circumstance which occurred in my
own experience, it instantly becomes commonplace.
No, not that for I will not speak so discourteously
of any experience in the career of a stranger and a
gentleman but I am obliged to say that you
could not, and you would not ever again refer to this
tree as a large one, if you could behold, as I have,
the great Yakmatack tree, in the island of Ounaska,
sea of Kamtchatka a tree, sir, not one
inch less than four hundred and fifteen feet in solid
diameter! and I wish I may die in a minute
if it isn’t so! Oh, you needn’t look
so questioning, gentlemen; here’s old Cap Saltmarsh
can say whether I know what I’m talking about
or not. I showed him the tree.”
Captain Saltmarsh “Come,
now, cat your anchor, lad you’re heaving
too taut. You promised to show me that stunner,
and I walked more than eleven mile with you through
the cussedest jungle I ever see, a hunting for it;
but the tree you showed me finally warn’t as
big around as a beer cask, and you know that your
own self, Markiss.”
“Hear the man talk! Of
course the tree was reduced that way, but didn’t
I explain it? Answer me, didn’t I?
Didn’t I say I wished you could have seen it
when I first saw it? When you got up on your
ear and called me names, and said I had brought you
eleven miles to look at a sapling, didn’t I
explain to you that all the whale-ships in the North
Seas had been wooding off of it for more than twenty-seven
years? And did you s’pose the tree could
last for-ever, con-found it? I don’t see
why you want to keep back things that way, and try
to injure a person that’s never done you any
harm.”
Somehow this man’s presence
made me uncomfortable, and I was glad when a native
arrived at that moment to say that Muckawow, the most
companionable and luxurious among the rude war-chiefs
of the Islands, desired us to come over and help him
enjoy a missionary whom he had found trespassing on
his grounds.
I think it was about ten days afterward
that, as I finished a statement I was making for the
instruction of a group of friends and acquaintances,
and which made no pretence of being extraordinary,
a familiar voice chimed instantly in on the heels
of my last word, and said:
“But, my dear sir, there was
nothing remarkable about that horse, or the circumstance
either nothing in the world! I mean
no sort of offence when I say it, sir, but you really
do not know anything whatever about speed. Bless
your heart, if you could only have seen my mare Margaretta;
there was a beast! there was lightning for
you! Trot! Trot is no name for it she
flew! How she could whirl a buggy along!
I started her out once, sir Colonel Bilgewater,
you recollect that animal perfectly well I
started her out about thirty or thirty-five yards ahead
of the awfullest storm I ever saw in my life, and
it chased us upwards of eighteen miles! It did,
by the everlasting hills! And I’m telling
you nothing but the unvarnished truth when I say that
not one single drop of rain fell on me not
a single drop, sir! And I swear to it!
But my dog was a-swimming behind the wagon all the
way!”
For a week or two I stayed mostly
within doors, for I seemed to meet this person everywhere,
and he had become utterly hateful to me. But
one evening I dropped in on Captain Perkins and his
friends, and we had a sociable time. About ten
o’clock I chanced to be talking about a merchant
friend of mine, and without really intending it, the
remark slipped out that he was a little mean and parsimonious
about paying his workmen. Instantly, through
the steam of a hot whiskey punch on the opposite side
of the room, a remembered voice shot and
for a moment I trembled on the imminent verge of profanity:
“Oh, my dear sir, really you
expose yourself when you parade that as a surprising
circumstance. Bless your heart and hide, you
are ignorant of the very A B C of meanness! ignorant
as the unborn babe! ignorant as unborn twins!
You don’t know anything about it! It is
pitiable to see you, sir, a well-spoken and prepossessing
stranger, making such an enormous pow-wow here about
a subject concerning which your ignorance is perfectly
humiliating! Look me in the eye, if you please;
look me in the eye. John James Godfrey was the
son of poor but honest parents in the State of Mississippi boyhood
friend of mine bosom comrade in later years.
Heaven rest his noble spirit, he is gone from us now.
John James Godfrey was hired by the Hayblossom Mining
Company in California to do some blasting for them the
“Incorporated Company of Mean Men,” the
boys used to call it.
“Well, one day he drilled a
hole about four feet deep and put in an awful blast
of powder, and was standing over it ramming it down
with an iron crowbar about nine foot long, when the
cussed thing struck a spark and fired the powder,
and scat! away John Godfrey whizzed like a skyrocket,
him and his crowbar! Well, sir, he kept on going
up in the air higher and higher, till he didn’t
look any bigger than a boy and he kept going
on up higher and higher, till he didn’t look
any bigger than a doll and he kept on going
up higher and higher, till he didn’t look any
bigger than a little small bee and then
he went out of sight! Presently he came in sight
again, looking like a little small bee and
he came along down further and further, till he looked
as big as a doll again and down further
and further, till he was as big as a boy again and
further and further, till he was a full-sized man
once more; and then him and his crowbar came a wh-izzing
down and lit right exactly in the same old tracks
and went to r-ramming down, and r-ramming down, and
r-ramming down again, just the same as if nothing
had happened! Now do you know, that poor cuss
warn’t gone only sixteen minutes, and yet that
Incorporated Company of Mean Men docked him
for the lost time!”
I said I had the headache, and so
excused myself and went home. And on my diary
I entered “another night spoiled” by this
offensive loafer. And a fervent curse was set
down with it to keep the item company. And the
very next day I packed up, out of all patience, and
left the Island.
Almost from the very beginning, I
regarded that man as a liar.
The line of points represents an interval
of years. At the end of which time the opinion
hazarded in that last sentence came to be gratifyingly
and remarkably endorsed, and by wholly disinterested
persons. The man Markiss was found one morning
hanging to a beam of his own bedroom (the doors and
windows securely fastened on the inside), dead; and
on his breast was pinned a paper in his own handwriting
begging his friends to suspect no innocent person
of having any thing to do with his death, for that
it was the work of his own hands entirely. Yet
the jury brought in the astounding verdict that deceased
came to his death “by the hands of some person
or persons unknown!” They explained that the
perfectly undeviating consistency of Markiss’s
character for thirty years towered aloft as colossal
and indestructible testimony, that whatever statement
he chose to make was entitled to instant and unquestioning
acceptance as a lie. And they furthermore stated
their belief that he was not dead, and instanced the
strong circumstantial evidence of his own word that
he was dead and beseeched the coroner to
delay the funeral as long as possible, which was done.
And so in the tropical climate of Lahaina the coffin
stood open for seven days, and then even the loyal
jury gave him up. But they sat on him again,
and changed their verdict to “suicide induced
by mental aberration” because, said
they, with penetration, “he said he was dead,
and he was dead; and would he have told the truth if
he had been in his right mind? No, sir.”