The White Man’s Life.
It happened that my first home in
Manila was a temporary one, shared with a hundred
others, at the nipa barracks at the Exposition
grounds. Who of all those that were similarly
situated will forget the long row of mimosa-trees
that made a leafy archway over the cool street; or
the fruit merchants squatting beside the bunches of
bananas and the tiny oranges spread out upon the ground?
There was the pink pavilion where that enterprising
Chinaman, Ah Gong, conducted his indifferent restaurant.
After these many days I can still hear the clatter
of the plates, the jingle of the knives and forks,
placed on the tables by the Chinese waiters.
There was the crowd on the veranda waiting for the
second table, opening their correspondence as they
waited. And what an indescribable sensation was
imparted on receiving the first letter in a foreign
land!
The long, cool barrack-rooms were
swept by the fresh breezes. Here, in the bungalow,
the army cots had been arranged in rows and covered
by mosquito-bars suspended from the wires stretched
overhead. When tucked inside of the mosquito-bar,
one felt as though he were a part of a menagerie.
“Muchacho” was the first new word
you learned. It was advisable to call for a muchacho
often, even though you did not need his services,
in order to exploit your own experience and your superiority.
And here you were first cheated by the wily Chinese
peddlers although you had cut them down
to half their price when they unrolled
their packs of crepe pajamas, net-work underwear,
and other merchandise.
And all one Sunday afternoon you listened
to a lecture from the President of the Manila Board
of Health, who told of the diseases that the flesh
was heir to in the Philippines, and cheerfully assured
you that within a month or two your weight would be
reduced to the extent of twenty-five or fifty pounds.
And after dinner where you learned that
chiquos though they looked a good deal like
potatoes, were a kind of fruit while you
were strolling down the avenue beyond the markethouse,
you got a ducking from a sudden shower that ceased
quite as unceremoniously as it had begun. There
was excitement in the bungalow that night because
of its invasion by a hostile monkey. An impromptu
vigilance committee finally succeeded in ejecting the
unwelcome visitor, persuading him of the superior advantages
of “Barracks B.”
Together with a few dissenters, I
moved out next morning, finding better quarters in
the first floor of a Spanish house in Magallanes.
We made the best of an old ruin opposite, which we
considered picturesque, and which was occupied by
Filipino squatters, who conducted a hand laundry there.
Our first muchacho, Valentine, surprised us
by existing on the ten-cent dinners of the Chinese
chophouse on the corner. But he assured us that
it was a good place; that the greasy Chinaman, who
fried the sausages and boiled the rice back in the
tiny den, was a great favorite. At our own restaurant,
two Negro women made the best corn-fritters we had
ever tasted; a green parrot and a monkey squawked
and chattered on the balustrade; a Filipino boy played
marches on a cracked piano-forte.
And so we lived behind the heavily-barred
windows, watching the shifting throng the
staggering coolies, girls with trays of oranges upon
their heads, and men in curiously fashioned hats driving
around the city in the afternoon (for Valentine was
at his best in getting carromatas under false
pretenses) till the little family broke up. The
first to go returned after a day or two, almost in
tears with the alarming information that the mayor
of the town that he had been assigned to was a naked
savage; that what he supposed was pepper on the fried
eggs he had had for breakfast, had turned out to be
black ants and wouldn’t we please
pay his carromata fare, because he was completely
out of funds?
The carabao carts gradually removed
our baggage. Valentine was faithful to the last.
Most of us met each other later, and exchanged notes.
One had escaped the target practice of ladrones; one
had been lost among the mountains of Benguet; another
had been carried to Manila on a coasting steamer,
reaching the Civil hospital in time to fight against
the fevers that had wasted him; and poor Fitz died
of cholera in one of the most lonely villages among
the Negros hills.
“Won’t those infernal
bells stop ringing for a while and let a fellow go
to sleep?” said Howard as he got out of bed.
“Look at those creatures, will you?” pointing
to the fat mosquitoes at the top of the mosquito-bar.
“The vampires! How do you suppose they got
in, anyway?”
“It beats me,” said the
Duke. “It isn’t the mosquitoes or
the bells: that ball of fire that’s shining
through the window makes a perfect oven of the room.”
The merciless sun had risen over the
low roofs of the walled city, and the heat was radiating
from the white walls and the scorching streets.
The Duke was sitting on the edge of the low army cot
in his pajamas and his bedroom slippers, smoking a
native cigarette.
“It must be about ten o’clock,”
said Howard. “I wonder if the Chinaman
left any breakfast for us.”
“Probably. A couple of
cold fried eggs, or a clammy dish of oatmeal and condensed
milk. Shall we get up and go somewhere?”
“I can’t find any clothes,”
said Howard; “this place is turning into a regular
chaos, anyway.” It was indeed a chaos, lines
of clothes where the mosquitoes swarmed, papers and
books scattered about the floor, pajamas, duck suits,
towels on every chair, and muddy white shoes strewn
around. “Doesn’t the muchacho
ever clean things up?”
“That’s nothing,”
said the Duke; “wait till the Chinaman runs off
with all your washing. I can lend you a white
suit; and, say, tell the muchacho
to come in and blanco a few shoes.”
As there are no apartment-houses in
Manila, the young clerk on small salary will usually
live in a furnished room in the walled city. For
the first few months it is a rather dreary life.
The cool veranda and the steamer chair, after the
day’s work, is a luxury denied the young Americans
within the city walls. The list of amusements
that Manila offers is an unattractive one. There
is a baseball game between two companies of soldiers,
or between the Government employees representing different
departments. There is the cock-fight out at Santa
Ana, Sunday mornings and fiesta days; but this
is mostly patronized by natives, and is not especially
agreeable to Americans. The Country club reached
after a long drive out Malate way, past the Malate
fort that bears the marks of Dewey’s shells,
past the old church once occupied by soldiers, through
the rice-pads where the American troops first met
the Insurrecto firing line is little
more than a mere gambling-house. It is now visited
by those whose former resorts in the walled city have
been broken up by the constabulary.
The races of the Santa Mesa Jockey
dub are held on Sunday afternoons. It is a rather
dusty drive out to the track. A number of noisy
“road-houses” along the way, where drinking
is going on; the Paco cemetery, where the bleached
bones have been piled around the cross, these
are the sole diversions that the road affords.
The races are interesting only in the opportunity
they offer to observe the native types. Here
you will find the Filipino dandy in his polished boots,
his low-crowned derby hat, and baggy trousers.
He makes the boast that he has not walked fifty meters
on Manila’s streets in the past year. This
dainty little fellow always travels in a carriage.
He flicks the ashes off his cigarette with his long
finger-nail as he stands by while the gay-colored
jockeys are being weighed in. Up in the grandstand,
in a private box, a party of mestiza girls,
elaborately gowned, are sipping lemonade, or eating
sherbet and vanilla cakes, while one of the jockeys
leans admiringly upon the rail. The silver pesos
stacked up on the table in the center of the box are
given to a man in waiting to be wagered on the various
events. The finishes are seldom very close, the
Filipino ponies scampering around the turf like rats.
A native band, however, adds to the excitement which
the clamor at the booking office and the animated
chatter of duenas, caballeros, jockeys,
and senoritas in the galleries intensifies.
Manila, the City of churches, celebrates
its Sabbath in its own peculiar way. The Protestant
churches suffer in comparison with the grand church
of San Sebastian set up from the iron plates
made in Belgium and the churches of the
various religious orders. Magnificence and show
appeal most strongly to the Filipino. He is taught
to look down on the Protestant religion as plebeian;
the priests regard the Protestant with condescending
superciliousness. Until the transportation facilities
can be extended there will be no general coming together
of Americans even on Sunday morning, as the colony
from the United States is scattered far and wide throughout
the city.
As his salary increases, the young
Government employee looks around for better quarters.
These he secures by organizing a small club and renting
the upper floor of one of the large Spanish houses.
As the young men in Manila are especially congenial,
there is little difficulty in conducting such an enterprise.
The members of a lodging club thus formed will generally
reserve a table for their use at one of the adjacent
boarding-houses or hotels.
The fashionable world the
heads of departments, general army officers, and wealthy
merchants occupy grand residences in Ermita
or in San Miguel. These houses, set back in extensive
gardens, are approached by driveways banked luxuriously
with palms. A massive iron fence, mounted on
stone posts, gives to the residence a certain tone
of dignity as well as a suggestion of exclusiveness.
Those situated in Calle Real (Ermita) have
verandas, balconies, and summer-houses looking out
upon the sea.
The prosperous bachelor has his stable,
stable-boys, and Chinese cook. At eight o’clock
A. M. the China ponies will be harnessed ready to
drive him to the office, and at four o’clock
the carriage calls for him to take him home.
Most of the Americans thus situated seldom leave their
homes. There is, of course, the Army and Navy
club in the walled city, and the University club in
Ermita; but aside from an occasional visit to these
organizations, he is satisfied with a short turn on
the Luneta and the privacy of his own house.
The afternoon teas at the University
club, where you can see the sunset lighting up Corregidor
and glorifying the white battleships, the monthly
entertainments at the Oriente, and the governor’s
reception, are the social features of Manila life.
The ladies do considerable entertaining, wearing themselves
out in the performance of their social duties.
As a relaxation, an informal picnic party will sometimes
charter a small launch, and spend the day along the
picturesque banks of the Pasig. The customs of
Manila make an obligation of a frequent visit to the
Civil hospital, if it so happen that a friend is sick
there. It is a long ride along Calle Iris,
with its rows of bamboo-trees, past the merry-go-round,
Bilibid prison, and the railway station; but the patients
at the hospital appreciate these visits quite sufficiently
to compensate for any inconveniences that may have
been caused.
During the holiday season, certain
attractions are offered at the theaters. While
these are mostly given by cheap vaudeville companies
that have drifted over from Australia or the China
coast, when any deserving entertainment is announced
the “upper ten” turn out en masse.
During the memorable engagement of the Twenty-fourth
Infantry minstrels, the boxes at the Zorilla theater
were filled by all the pride and beauty of Manila.
Captains and lieutenants from Fort Santiago and Camp
Wallace, naval officers from the Cavite colony, matrons
and maidens from the civil and the military “sets,”
made a vivacious audience, while the Filipinos packed
in the surrounding galleries, applauded with enthusiasm
as the cake-walk and the Negro melody were introduced
into the Orient.
Where money circulates so freely and
is spent so recklessly as in Manila, where the “East
of Suez” moral standard is established, the
young fellows who have come out to the Far East, inspired
by Kipling’s poems and the spirit of the Orient,
are tempted constantly to live beyond their means.
It is a country “where there ain’t no Ten
Commandments, and a man can raise a thirst.”
Then the Sampoluc and Quiapo districts, where the
carriage-lamps are weaving back and forth among pavilions
softly lighted, where the tinkle of the samosen
is heard, and where O Taki San, immodest but bewitching,
stands behind the beadwork curtain, her kimono parted
at the knee, this is the world of the Far
East, the cup of Circe.
There was the pathetic case of the
young man who “went to pieces” in Manila
recently. He was a Harvard athlete, but was physically
unsound. As a result of an unfortunate blow received
upon the head a short time after his arrival in Manila,
he became despondent and morose. After undue
excitement he would fall into a dreamy trance.
At such times he would fancy that his mother had died,
and he would be convulsed with sorrow, breaking unexpectedly
into a rousing college song. He meditated suicide,
and was prevented several times from taking his own
life. On coming to Manila from the provinces,
he stoutly refused to be sent home, but lived at his
friends’ expense, trying to borrow money from
everybody that he met. Other young fellows overwhelmed
by debts have tried to break loose from the Islands,
but have been brought back from Japanese ports to be
placed in Bilibid. That is the saddest life of
all in Bilibid. Many a convict in
that prison, far away, has been a gentleman, and there
are mothers in America who wonder why their boys do
not come home.
Somebody once said that Manila life
was a perpetual farewell. The days of the arrival
and departure of the transports are the days that vary
the monotony. As the procession of big mail-wagons
rumbles down the Escolta to the post-office,
as the letters from America are opened, as the last
month’s newspapers and magazines appear in the
shop-windows, comes a moment of regret and lonesomeness.
But as the transport, with its tawny load of soldiers
and of joyful officers, pulls out, the dweller in
Manila, long ago resigned to fate, takes up the grind
again.
Sometimes, on Sunday morning, he will
take the customs-house launch out to one of the Manila-Hong
Kong boats, to see a friend off for the homeland and
“God’s country.” Leaning over
the taffrail, while the crowd below is celebrating
the departure by the opening of bottles, he will fancy
that he, too, is going till the warning
whistle sounds, and it is time to go ashore.
The best view of Manila, it is said, is that obtained
from the stern deck of an outgoing steamer, as the
red lighthouse and the pier fade gradually away.
But even after he has reached the “white man’s
country” some time he may “hear the East
a-calling,” and come back again.