You ride in a German plantation and
see no bush, no soul stirring; only acres of empty
sward, miles of cocoa-nut alley: a desert of food.
In the eyes of the Samoan the place has the attraction
of a park for the holiday schoolboy, of a granary
for mice. We must add the yet more lively allurement
of a haunted house, for over these empty and silent
miles there broods the fear of the negrito cannibal.
For the Samoan besides, there is something barbaric,
unhandsome, and absurd in the idea of thus growing
food only to send it from the land and sell it.
A man at home who should turn all Yorkshire into
one wheatfield, and annually burn his harvest on the
altar of Mumbo-Jumbo, might impress ourselves not much
otherwise. And the firm which does these things
is quite extraneous, a wen that might be excised to-morrow
without loss but to itself; few natives drawing from
it so much as day’s wages; and the rest beholding
in it only the occupier of their acres. The
nearest villages have suffered most; they see over
the hedge the lands of their ancestors waving with
useless cocoa-palms; and the sales were often questionable,
and must still more often appear so to regretful natives,
spinning and improving yarns about the evening lamp.
At the worst, then, to help oneself from the plantation
will seem to a Samoan very like orchard-breaking to
the British schoolboy; at the best, it will be thought
a gallant Robin-Hoodish readjustment of a public wrong.
And there is more behind. Not
only is theft from the plantations regarded rather
as a lark and peccadillo, the idea of theft in itself
is not very clearly present to these communists; and
as to the punishment of crime in general, a great
gulf of opinion divides the natives from ourselves.
Indigenous punishments were short and sharp.
Death, deportation by the primitive method of setting
the criminal to sea in a canoe, fines, and in Samoa
itself the penalty of publicly biting a hot, ill-smelling
root, comparable to a rough forfeit in a children’s
game these are approved. The offender
is killed, or punished and forgiven. We, on
the other hand, harbour malice for a period of years:
continuous shame attaches to the criminal; even when
he is doing his best even when he is submitting
to the worst form of torture, regular work he
is to stand aside from life and from his family in
dreadful isolation. These ideas most Polynesians
have accepted in appearance, as they accept other
ideas of the whites; in practice, they reduce it to
a farce. I have heard the French resident in
the Marquesas in talk with the French gaoler of Tai-o-hae:
“Eh bien, où sont vos prisonnieres? Je
crois, mon commandant, qu’elles sont allees quelque
part faire une visite.” And the ladies
would be welcome. This is to take the most savage
of Polynesians; take some of the most civilised.
In Honolulu, convicts labour on the highways in piebald
clothing, gruesome and ridiculous; and it is a common
sight to see the family of such an one troop out,
about the dinner hour, wreathed with flowers and in
their holiday best, to picnic with their kinsman on
the public wayside. The application of these
outlandish penalties, in fact, transfers the sympathy
to the offender. Remember, besides, that the
clan system, and that imperfect idea of justice which
is its worst feature, are still lively in Samoa; that
it is held the duty of a judge to favour kinsmen,
of a king to protect his vassals; and the difficulty
of getting a plantation thief first caught, then convicted,
and last of all punished, will appear.
During the early ’eighties,
the Germans looked upon this system with growing irritation.
They might see their convict thrust in gaol by the
front door; they could never tell how soon he was enfranchised
by the back; and they need not be the least surprised
if they met him, a few days after, enjoying the delights
of a malanga. It was a banded conspiracy,
from the king and the vice-king downward, to evade
the law and deprive the Germans of their profits.
In 1883, accordingly, the consul, Dr. Stuebel, extorted
a convention on the subject, in terms of which Samoans
convicted of offences against German subjects were
to be confined in a private gaol belonging to the
German firm. To Dr. Stuebel it seemed simple
enough: the offenders were to be effectually punished,
the sufferers partially indemnified. To the Samoans,
the thing appeared no less simple, but quite different:
“Malietoa was selling Samoans to Misi Ueba.”
What else could be expected? Here was a private
corporation engaged in making money; to it was delegated,
upon a question of profit and loss, one of the functions
of the Samoan crown; and those who make anomalies
must look for comments. Public feeling ran unanimous
and high. Prisoners who escaped from the private
gaol were not recaptured or not returned and Malietoa
hastened to build a new prison of his own, whither
he conveyed, or pretended to convey, the fugitives.
In October 1885 a trenchant state paper issued from
the German consulate. Twenty prisoners, the
consul wrote, had now been at large for eight months
from Weber’s prison. It was pretended
they had since then completed their term of punishment
elsewhere. Dr. Stuebel did not seek to conceal
his incredulity; but he took ground beyond; he declared
the point irrelevant. The law was to be enforced.
The men were condemned to a certain period in Weber’s
prison; they had run away; they must now be brought
back and (whatever had become of them in the interval)
work out the sentence. Doubtless Dr. Stuebel’s
demands were substantially just; but doubtless also
they bore from the outside a great appearance of harshness;
and when the king submitted, the murmurs of the people
increased.
But Weber was not yet content.
The law had to be enforced; property, or at least
the property of the firm, must be respected.
And during an absence of the consul’s, he seems
to have drawn up with his own hand, and certainly
first showed to the king, in his own house, a new convention.
Weber here and Weber there. As an able man, he
was perhaps in the right to prepare and propose conventions.
As the head of a trading company, he seems far out
of his part to be communicating state papers to a
sovereign. The administration of justice was
the colour, and I am willing to believe the purpose,
of the new paper; but its effect was to depose the
existing government. A council of two Germans
and two Samoans were to be invested with the right
to make laws and impose taxes as might be “desirable
for the common interest of the Samoan government and
the German residents.” The provisions
of this council the king and vice-king were to sign
blindfold. And by a last hardship, the Germans,
who received all the benefit, reserved a right to
recede from the agreement on six months’ notice;
the Samoans, who suffered all the loss, were bound
by it in perpetuity. I can never believe that
my friend Dr. Stuebel had a hand in drafting these
proposals; I am only surprised he should have been
a party to enforcing them, perhaps the chief error
in these islands of a man who has made few.
And they were enforced with a rigour that seems injudicious.
The Samoans (according to their own account) were
denied a copy of the document; they were certainly
rated and threatened; their deliberation was treated
as contumacy; two German war-ships lay in port, and
it was hinted that these would shortly intervene.
Succeed in frightening a child, and
he takes refuge in duplicity. “Malietoa,”
one of the chiefs had written, “we know well
we are in bondage to the great governments.”
It was now thought one tyrant might be better than
three, and any one preferable to Germany. On
the 5th November 1885, accordingly, Laupepa, Tamasese,
and forty-eight high chiefs met in secret, and the
supremacy of Samoa was secretly offered to Great Britain
for the second time in history. Laupepa and Tamasese
still figured as king and vice-king in the eyes of
Dr. Stuebel; in their own, they had secretly abdicated,
were become private persons, and might do what they
pleased without binding or dishonouring their country.
On the morrow, accordingly, they did public humiliation
in the dust before the consulate, and five days later
signed the convention. The last was done, it
is claimed, upon an impulse. The humiliation,
which it appeared to the Samoans so great a thing
to offer, to the practical mind of Dr. Stuebel seemed
a trifle to receive; and the pressure was continued
and increased. Laupepa and Tamasese were both
heavy, well-meaning, inconclusive men. Laupepa,
educated for the ministry, still bears some marks
of it in character and appearance; Tamasese was in
private of an amorous and sentimental turn, but no
one would have guessed it from his solemn and dull
countenance. Impossible to conceive two less
dashing champions for a threatened race; and there
is no doubt they were reduced to the extremity of
muddlement and childish fear. It was drawing
towards night on the 10th, when this luckless pair
and a chief of the name of Tuiatafu, set out for the
German consulate, still minded to temporise.
As they went, they discussed their case with agitation.
They could see the lights of the German war-ships
as they walked an eloquent reminder.
And it was then that Tamasese proposed to sign the
convention. “It will give us peace for
the day,” said Laupepa, “and afterwards
Great Britain must decide.” “Better
fight Germany than that!” cried Tuiatafu, speaking
words of wisdom, and departed in anger. But the
two others proceeded on their fatal errand; signed
the convention, writing themselves king and vice-king,
as they now believed themselves to be no longer; and
with childish perfidy took part in a scene of “reconciliation”
at the German consulate.
Malietoa supposed himself betrayed
by Tamasese. Consul Churchward states with precision
that the document was sold by a scribe for thirty-six
dollars. Twelve days later at least, November
22nd, the text of the address to Great Britain came
into the hands of Dr. Stuebel. The Germans may
have been wrong before; they were now in the right
to be angry. They had been publicly, solemnly,
and elaborately fooled; the treaty and the reconciliation
were both fraudulent, with the broad, farcical fraudulency
of children and barbarians. This history is much
from the outside; it is the digested report of eye-witnesses;
it can be rarely corrected from state papers; and
as to what consuls felt and thought, or what instructions
they acted under, I must still be silent or proceed
by guess. It is my guess that Stuebel now decided
Malietoa Laupepa to be a man impossible to trust and
unworthy to be dealt with. And it is certain
that the business of his deposition was put in hand
at once. The position of Weber, with his knowledge
of things native, his prestige, and his enterprising
intellect, must have always made him influential with
the consul: at this juncture he was indispensable.
Here was the deed to be done; here the man of action.
“Mr. Weber rested not,” says Laupepa.
It was “like the old days of his own consulate,”
writes Churchward. His messengers filled the
isle; his house was thronged with chiefs and orators;
he sat close over his loom, delightedly weaving the
future. There was one thing requisite to the
intrigue, a native pretender; and the very
man, you would have said, stood waiting: Mataafa,
titular of Atua, descended from both the royal lines,
late joint king with Tamasese, fobbed off with nothing
in the time of the Lackawanna treaty, probably mortified
by the circumstance, a chief with a strong following,
and in character and capacity high above the native
average. Yet when Weber’s spiriting was
done, and the curtain rose on the set scene of the
coronation, Mataafa was absent, and Tamasese stood
in his place. Malietoa was to be deposed for
a piece of solemn and offensive trickery, and the
man selected to replace him was his sole partner and
accomplice in the act. For so strange a choice,
good ground must have existed; but it remains conjectural:
some supposing Mataafa scratched as too independent;
others that Tamasese had indeed betrayed Laupepa, and
his new advancement was the price of his treachery.
So these two chiefs began to change
places like the scales of a balance, one down, the
other up. Tamasese raised his flag (Jath,
1886) in Leulumoenga, chief place of his own province
of Aana, usurped the style of king, and began to collect
and arm a force. Weber, by the admission of
Stuebel, was in the market supplying him with weapons;
so were the Americans; so, but for our salutary British
law, would have been the British; for wherever there
is a sound of battle, there will the traders be gathered
together selling arms. A little longer, and we
find Tamasese visited and addressed as king and majesty
by a German commodore. Meanwhile, for the unhappy
Malietoa, the road led downward. He was refused
a bodyguard. He was turned out of Mulinuu, the
seat of his royalty, on a land claim of Weber’s,
fled across the Mulivai, and “had the coolness”
(German expression) to hoist his flag in Apia.
He was asked “in the most polite manner,”
says the same account “in the most
delicate manner in the world,” a reader of Marryat
might be tempted to amend the phrase, to
strike his flag in his own capital; and on his “refusal
to accede to this request,” Dr. Stuebel appeared
himself with ten men and an officer from the cruiser
Albatross; a sailor climbed into the tree and
brought down the flag of Samoa, which was carefully
folded, and sent, “in the most polite manner,”
to its owner. The consuls of England and the
States were there (the excellent gentlemen!) to protest.
Last, and yet more explicit, the German commodore
who visited the be-titled Tamasese, addressed the
king we may surely say the late king as
“the High Chief Malietoa.”
Had he no party, then? At that
time, it is probable, he might have called some five-sevenths
of Samoa to his standard. And yet he sat there,
helpless monarch, like a fowl trussed for roasting.
The blame lies with himself, because he was a helpless
creature; it lies also with England and the States.
Their agents on the spot preached peace (where there
was no peace, and no pretence of it) with eloquence
and iteration. Secretary Bayard seems to have
felt a call to join personally in the solemn farce,
and was at the expense of a telegram in which he assured
the sinking monarch it was “for the higher interests
of Samoa” he should do nothing. There
was no man better at doing that; the advice came straight
home, and was devoutly followed. And to be just
to the great Powers, something was done in Europe;
a conference was called, it was agreed to send commissioners
to Samoa, and the decks had to be hastily cleared
against their visit. Dr. Stuebel had attached
the municipality of Apia and hoisted the German war-flag
over Mulinuu; the American consul (in a sudden access
of good service) had flown the stars and stripes over
Samoan colours; on either side these steps were solemnly
retracted. The Germans expressly disowned Tamasese;
and the islands fell into a period of suspense, of
some twelve months’ duration, during which the
seat of the history was transferred to other countries
and escapes my purview. Here on the spot, I select
three incidents: the arrival on the scene of a
new actor, the visit of the Hawaiian embassy, and the
riot on the Emperor’s birthday. The rest
shall be silence; only it must be borne in view that
Tamasese all the while continued to strengthen himself
in Leulumoenga, and Laupepa sat inactive listening
to the song of consuls.
Captain Brandeis. The
new actor was Brandeis, a Bavarian captain of artillery,
of a romantic and adventurous character. He had
served with credit in war; but soon wearied of garrison
life, resigned his battery, came to the States, found
employment as a civil engineer, visited Cuba, took
a sub-contract on the Panama canal, caught the fever,
and came (for the sake of the sea voyage) to Australia.
He had that natural love for the tropics which lies
so often latent in persons of a northern birth; difficulty
and danger attracted him; and when he was picked out
for secret duty, to be the hand of Germany in Samoa,
there is no doubt but he accepted the post with exhilaration.
It is doubtful if a better choice could have been
made. He had courage, integrity, ideas of his
own, and loved the employment, the people, and the
place. Yet there was a fly in the ointment.
The double error of unnecessary stealth and of the
immixture of a trading company in political affairs,
has vitiated, and in the end defeated, much German
policy. And Brandeis was introduced to the islands
as a clerk, and sent down to Leulumoenga (where he
was soon drilling the troops and fortifying the position
of the rebel king) as an agent of the German firm.
What this mystification cost in the end I shall tell
in another place; and even in the beginning, it deceived
no one. Brandeis is a man of notable personal
appearance; he looks the part allotted him; and the
military clerk was soon the centre of observation
and rumour. Malietoa wrote and complained of
his presence to Becker, who had succeeded Dr. Stuebel
in the consulate. Becker replied, “I have
nothing to do with the gentleman Brandeis. Be
it well known that the gentleman Brandeis has no appointment
in a military character, but resides peaceably assisting
the government of Leulumoenga in their work, for Brandeis
is a quiet, sensible gentleman.” And then
he promised to send the vice-consul to “get
information of the captain’s doings”:
surely supererogation of deceit.
The Hawaiian Embassy.
The prime minister of the Hawaiian kingdom was, at
this period, an adventurer of the name of Gibson.
He claimed, on the strength of a romantic story,
to be the heir of a great English house. He
had played a part in a revolt in Java, had languished
in Dutch fetters, and had risen to be a trusted agent
of Brigham Young, the Utah president. It was
in this character of a Mormon emissary that he first
came to the islands of Hawaii, where he collected
a large sum of money for the Church of the Latter
Day Saints. At a given moment, he dropped his
saintship and appeared as a Christian and the owner
of a part of the island of Lanai. The steps
of the transformation are obscure; they seem, at least,
to have been ill-received at Salt Lake; and there is
evidence to the effect that he was followed to the
islands by Mormon assassins. His first attempt
on politics was made under the auspices of what is
called the missionary party, and the canvass conducted
largely (it is said with tears) on the platform at
prayer-meetings. It resulted in defeat.
Without any decency of delay he changed his colours,
abjured the errors of reform, and, with the support
of the Catholics, rose to the chief power. In
a very brief interval he had thus run through the gamut
of religions in the South Seas. It does not
appear that he was any more particular in politics,
but he was careful to consult the character and prejudices
of the late king, Kalakaua. That amiable, far
from unaccomplished, but too convivial sovereign,
had a continued use for money: Gibson was observant
to keep him well supplied. Kalakaua (one of
the most theoretical of men) was filled with visionary
schemes for the protection and development of the
Polynesian race: Gibson fell in step with him;
it is even thought he may have shared in his illusions.
The king and minister at least conceived between
them a scheme of island confederation the
most obvious fault of which was that it came too late and
armed and fitted out the cruiser Kaimiloa, nest-egg
of the future navy of Hawaii. Samoa, the most
important group still independent, and one immediately
threatened with aggression, was chosen for the scene
of action. The Hon. John E. Bush, a half-caste
Hawaiian, sailed (December 1887) for Apia as minister-plenipotentiary,
accompanied by a secretary of legation, Henry F. Poor;
and as soon as she was ready for sea, the war-ship
followed in support. The expedition was futile
in its course, almost tragic in result. The
Kaimiloa was from the first a scene of disaster
and dilapidation: the stores were sold; the crew
revolted; for a great part of a night she was in the
hands of mutineers, and the secretary lay bound upon
the deck. The mission, installing itself at
first with extravagance in Matautu, was helped at last
out of the island by the advances of a private citizen.
And they returned from dreams of Polynesian independence
to find their own city in the hands of a clique of
white shopkeepers, and the great Gibson once again
in gaol. Yet the farce had not been quite without
effect. It had encouraged the natives for the
moment, and it seems to have ruffled permanently the
temper of the Germans. So might a fly irritate
Cæsar.
The arrival of a mission from Hawaii
would scarce affect the composure of the courts of
Europe. But in the eyes of Polynesians the little
kingdom occupies a place apart. It is there
alone that men of their race enjoy most of the advantages
and all the pomp of independence; news of Hawaii and
descriptions of Honolulu are grateful topics in all
parts of the South Seas; and there is no better introduction
than a photograph in which the bearer shall be represented
in company with Kalakaua. Laupepa was, besides,
sunk to the point at which an unfortunate begins to
clutch at straws, and he received the mission with
delight. Letters were exchanged between him
and Kalakaua; a deed of confederation was signed,
17th February 1887, and the signature celebrated in
the new house of the Hawaiian embassy with some original
ceremonies. Malietoa Laupepa came, attended
by his ministry, several hundred chiefs, two guards,
and six policemen. Always decent, he withdrew
at an early hour; by those that remained, all decency
appears to have been forgotten; high chiefs were seen
to dance; and day found the house carpeted with slumbering
grandees, who must be roused, doctored with coffee,
and sent home. As a first chapter in the history
of Polynesian Confederation, it was hardly cheering,
and Laupepa remarked to one of the embassy, with equal
dignity and sense: “If you have come here
to teach my people to drink, I wish you had stayed
away.”
The Germans looked on from the first
with natural irritation that a power of the powerlessness
of Hawaii should thus profit by its undeniable footing
in the family of nations, and send embassies, and make
believe to have a navy, and bark and snap at the heels
of the great German Empire. But Becker could
not prevent the hunted Laupepa from taking refuge in
any hole that offered, and he could afford to smile
at the fantastic orgie in the embassy.
It was another matter when the Hawaiians approached
the intractable Mataafa, sitting still in his Atua
government like Achilles in his tent, helping neither
side, and (as the Germans suspected) keeping the eggs
warm for himself. When the Kaimiloa steamed
out of Apia on this visit, the German war-ship Adler
followed at her heels; and Mataafa was no sooner set
down with the embassy than he was summoned and ordered
on board by two German officers. The step is
one of those triumphs of temper which can only be
admired. Mataafa is entertaining the plenipotentiary
of a sovereign power in treaty with his own king, and
the captain of a German corvette orders him to quit
his guests.
But there was worse to come.
I gather that Tamasese was at the time in the sulks.
He had doubtless been promised prompt aid and a prompt
success; he had seen himself surreptitiously helped,
privately ordered about, and publicly disowned; and
he was still the king of nothing more than his own
province, and already the second in command of Captain
Brandeis. With the adhesion of some part of his
native cabinet, and behind the back of his white minister,
he found means to communicate with the Hawaiians.
A passage on the Kaimiloa, a pension, and a
home in Honolulu were the bribes proposed; and he
seems to have been tempted. A day was set for
a secret interview. Poor, the Hawaiian secretary,
and J. D. Strong, an American painter attached to
the embassy in the surprising quality of “Government
Artist,” landed with a Samoan boat’s-crew
in Aana; and while the secretary hid himself, according
to agreement, in the outlying home of an English settler,
the artist (ostensibly bent on photography) entered
the headquarters of the rebel king. It was a
great day in Leulumoenga; three hundred recruits had
come in, a feast was cooking; and the photographer,
in view of the native love of being photographed,
was made entirely welcome. But beneath the friendly
surface all were on the alert. The secret had
leaked out: Weber beheld his plans threatened
in the root; Brandeis trembled for the possession of
his slave and sovereign; and the German vice-consul,
Mr. Sonnenschein, had been sent or summoned to
the scene of danger.
It was after dark, prayers had been
said and the hymns sung through all the village, and
Strong and the German sat together on the mats in the
house of Tamasese, when the events began. Strong
speaks German freely, a fact which he had not disclosed,
and he was scarce more amused than embarrassed to
be able to follow all the evening the dissension and
the changing counsels of his neighbours. First
the king himself was missing, and there was a false
alarm that he had escaped and was already closeted
with Poor. Next came certain intelligence that
some of the ministry had run the blockade, and were
on their way to the house of the English settler.
Thereupon, in spite of some protests from Tamasese,
who tried to defend the independence of his cabinet,
Brandeis gathered a posse of warriors, marched out
of the village, brought back the fugitives, and clapped
them in the corrugated iron shanty which served as
gaol. Along with these he seems to have seized
Billy Coe, interpreter to the Hawaiians; and Poor,
seeing his conspiracy public, burst with his boat’s-crew
into the town, made his way to the house of the native
prime minister, and demanded Coe’s release.
Brandeis hastened to the spot, with Strong at his
heels; and the two principals being both incensed,
and Strong seriously alarmed for his friend’s
safety, there began among them a scene of great intemperance.
At one point, when Strong suddenly disclosed his
acquaintance with German, it attained a high style
of comedy; at another, when a pistol was most foolishly
drawn, it bordered on drama; and it may be said to
have ended in a mixed genus, when Poor was finally
packed into the corrugated iron gaol along with the
forfeited ministers. Meanwhile the captain of
his boat, Siteoni, of whom I shall have to tell again,
had cleverly withdrawn the boat’s-crew at an
early stage of the quarrel. Among the population
beyond Tamasese’s marches, he collected a body
of armed men, returned before dawn to Leulumoenga,
demolished the corrugated iron gaol, and liberated
the Hawaiian secretary and the rump of the rebel cabinet.
No opposition was shown; and doubtless the rescue
was connived at by Brandeis, who had gained his point.
Poor had the face to complain the next day to Becker;
but to compete with Becker in effrontery was labour
lost. “You have been repeatedly warned,
Mr. Poor, not to expose yourself among these savages,”
said he.
Not long after, the presence of the
Kaimiloa was made a casus belli by the
Germans; and the rough-and-tumble embassy withdrew,
on borrowed money, to find their own government in
hot water to the neck.
The Emperor’s Birthday.
It is possible, and it is alleged, that the Germans
entered into the conference with hope. But it
is certain they were resolved to remain prepared for
either fate. And I take the liberty of believing
that Laupepa was not forgiven his duplicity; that,
during this interval, he stood marked like a tree
for felling; and that his conduct was daily scrutinised
for further pretexts of offence. On the evening
of the Emperor’s birthday, March 22nd, 1887,
certain Germans were congregated in a public bar.
The season and the place considered, it is scarce
cynical to assume they had been drinking; nor, so much
being granted, can it be thought exorbitant to suppose
them possibly in fault for the squabble that took
place. A squabble, I say; but I am willing to
call it a riot. And this was the new fault of
Laupepa; this it is that was described by a German
commodore as “the trampling upon by Malietoa
of the German Emperor.” I pass the rhetoric
by to examine the point of liability. Four natives
were brought to trial for this horrid fact: not
before a native judge, but before the German magistrate
of the tripartite municipality of Apia. One
was acquitted, one condemned for theft, and two for
assault. On appeal, not to Malietoa, but to the
three consuls, the case was by a majority of two to
one returned to the magistrate and (as far as I can
learn) was then allowed to drop. Consul Becker
himself laid the chief blame on one of the policemen
of the municipality, a half-white of the name of
Scanlon. Him he sought to have discharged, but
was again baffled by his brother consuls. Where,
in all this, are we to find a corner of responsibility
for the king of Samoa? Scanlon, the alleged
author of the outrage, was a half-white; as Becker
was to learn to his cost, he claimed to be an American
subject; and he was not even in the king’s employment.
Apia, the scene of the outrage, was outside the king’s
jurisdiction by treaty; by the choice of Germany, he
was not so much as allowed to fly his flag there.
And the denial of justice (if justice were denied)
rested with the consuls of Britain and the States.
But when a dog is to be beaten, any
stick will serve. In the meanwhile, on the proposition
of Mr. Bayard, the Washington conference on Samoan
affairs was adjourned till autumn, so that “the
ministers of Germany and Great Britain might submit
the protocols to their respective Governments.”
“You propose that the conference is to adjourn
and not to be broken up?” asked Sir Lionel West.
“To adjourn for the reasons stated,”
replied Bayard. This was on July 26th; and, twenty-nine
days later, by Wednesday the 24th of August, Germany
had practically seized Samoa. For this flagrant
breach of faith one excuse is openly alleged; another
whispered. It is openly alleged that Bayard had
shown himself impracticable; it is whispered that
the Hawaiian embassy was an expression of American
intrigue, and that the Germans only did as they were
done by. The sufficiency of these excuses may
be left to the discretion of the reader. But,
however excused, the breach of faith was public and
express; it must have been deliberately predetermined
and it was resented in the States as a deliberate
insult.
By the middle of August 1887 there
were five sail of German war-ships in Apia bay:
the Bismarck, of 3000 tons displacement; the
Carola, the Sophie, and the Olga,
all considerable ships; and the beautiful Adler,
which lies there to this day, kanted on her beam, dismantled,
scarlet with rust, the day showing through her ribs.
They waited inactive, as a burglar waits till the
patrol goes by. And on the 23rd, when the mail
had left for Sydney, when the eyes of the world were
withdrawn, and Samoa plunged again for a period of
weeks into her original island-obscurity, Becker opened
his guns. The policy was too cunning to seem
dignified; it gave to conduct which would otherwise
have seemed bold and even brutally straightforward,
the appearance of a timid ambuscade; and helped to
shake men’s reliance on the word of Germany.
On the day named, an ultimatum reached Malietoa at
Afenga, whither he had retired months before to avoid
friction. A fine of one thousand dollars and
an ifo, or public humiliation, were demanded
for the affair of the Emperor’s birthday.
Twelve thousand dollars were to be “paid quickly”
for thefts from German plantations in the course of
the last four years. “It is my opinion
that there is nothing just or correct in Samoa while
you are at the head of the government,” concluded
Becker. “I shall be at Afenga in the morning
of to-morrow, Wednesday, at 11 A.M.” The
blow fell on Laupepa (in his own expression) “out
of the bush”; the dilatory fellow had seen things
hang over so long, he had perhaps begun to suppose
they might hang over for ever; and here was ruin at
the door. He rode at once to Apia, and summoned
his chiefs. The council lasted all night long.
Many voices were for defiance. But Laupepa had
grown inured to a policy of procrastination; and the
answer ultimately drawn only begged for delay till
Saturday, the 27th. So soon as it was signed,
the king took horse and fled in the early morning
to Afenga; the council hastily dispersed; and only
three chiefs, Selu, Seumanu, and Le Mamea, remained
by the government building, tremulously expectant
of the result.
By seven the letter was received.
By 7.30 Becker arrived in person, inquired for Laupepa,
was evasively answered, and declared war on the spot.
Before eight, the Germans (seven hundred men and six
guns) came ashore and seized and hoisted German colours
on the government building. The three chiefs
had made good haste to escape; but a considerable booty
was made of government papers, fire-arms, and some
seventeen thousand cartridges. Then followed
a scene which long rankled in the minds of the white
inhabitants, when the German marines raided the town
in search of Malietoa, burst into private houses,
and were accused (I am willing to believe on slender
grounds) of violence to private persons.
On the morrow, the 25th, one of the
German war-ships, which had been despatched to Leulumoenga
over night re-entered the bay, flying the Tamasese
colours at the fore. The new king was given a
royal salute of twenty-one guns, marched through the
town by the commodore and a German guard of honour,
and established on Mulinuu with two or three hundred
warriors. Becker announced his recognition to
the other consuls. These replied by proclaiming
Malietoa, and in the usual mealy-mouthed manner advised
Samoans to do nothing. On the 27th martial law
was declared; and on the 1st September the German
squadron dispersed about the group, bearing along
with them the proclamations of the new king.
Tamasese was now a great man, to have five iron war-ships
for his post-runners. But the moment was critical.
The revolution had to be explained, the chiefs persuaded
to assemble at a fono summoned for the 15th; and the
ships carried not only a store of printed documents,
but a squad of Tamasese orators upon their round.
Such was the German coup d’etat.
They had declared war with a squadron of five ships
upon a single man; that man, late king of the group,
was in hiding on the mountains; and their own nominee,
backed by German guns and bayonets, sat in his stead
in Mulinuu.
One of the first acts of Malietoa,
on fleeing to the bush, was to send for Mataafa twice:
“I am alone in the bush; if you do not come quickly
you will find me bound.” It is to be understood
the men were near kinsmen, and had (if they had nothing
else) a common jealousy. At the urgent cry,
Mataafa set forth from Falefa, and came to Mulinuu
to Tamasese. “What is this that you and
the German commodore have decided on doing?”
he inquired. “I am going to obey the German
consul,” replied Tamasese, “whose wish
it is that I should be the king and that all Samoa
should assemble here.” “Do not pursue
in wrath against Malietoa,” said Mataafa “but
try to bring about a compromise, and form a united
government.” “Very well,” said
Tamasese, “leave it to me, and I will try.”
From Mulinuu, Mataafa went on board the Bismarck,
and was graciously received. “Probably,”
said the commodore, “we shall bring about a
reconciliation of all Samoa through you”; and
then asked his visitor if he bore any affection to
Malietoa. “Yes,” said Mataafa.
“And to Tamasese?” “To him also;
and if you desire the weal of Samoa, you will allow
either him or me to bring about a reconciliation.”
“If it were my will,” said the commodore,
“I would do as you say. But I have no
will in the matter. I have instructions from
the Kaiser, and I cannot go back again from what I
have been sent to do.” “I thought
you would be commanded,” said Mataafa, “if
you brought about the weal of Samoa.” “I
will tell you,” said the commodore. “All
shall go quietly. But there is one thing that
must be done: Malietoa must be deposed.
I will do nothing to him beyond; he will only be kept
on board for a couple of months and be well treated,
just as we Germans did to the French chief [Napoleon
III.] some time ago, whom we kept a while and cared
for well.” Becker was no less explicit:
war, he told Sewall, should not cease till the Germans
had custody of Malietoa and Tamasese should be recognised.
Meantime, in the Malietoa provinces,
a profound impression was received. People trooped
to their fugitive sovereign in the bush. Many
natives in Apia brought their treasures, and stored
them in the houses of white friends. The Tamasese
orators were sometimes ill received. Over in
Savaii, they found the village of Satupaitea deserted,
save for a few lads at cricket. These they harangued,
and were rewarded with ironical applause; and the
proclamation, as soon as they had departed, was torn
down. For this offence the village was ultimately
burned by German sailors, in a very decent and orderly
style, on the 3rd September. This was the dinner-bell
of the fono on the 15th. The threat conveyed
in the terms of the summons “If any
government district does not quickly obey this direction,
I will make war on that government district” was
thus commented on and reinforced. And the meeting
was in consequence well attended by chiefs of all
parties. They found themselves unarmed among
the armed warriors of Tamasese and the marines of the
German squadron, and under the guns of five strong
ships. Brandeis rose; it was his first open
appearance, the German firm signing its revolutionary
work. His words were few and uncompromising:
“Great are my thanks that the chiefs and heads
of families of the whole of Samoa are assembled here
this day. It is strictly forbidden that any discussion
should take place as to whether it is good or not
that Tamasese is king of Samoa, whether at this fono
or at any future fono. I place for your signature
the following: ’We inform all the people
of Samoa of what follows: (1) The government
of Samoa has been assumed by King Tuiaana Tamasese.
(2) By order of the king, it was directed that a
fono should take place to-day, composed of the chiefs
and heads of families, and we have obeyed the summons.
We have signed our names under this, 15th September
1887.” Needs must under all these guns;
and the paper was signed, but not without open sullenness.
The bearing of Mataafa in particular was long remembered
against him by the Germans. “Do you not
see the king?” said the commodore reprovingly.
“His father was no king,” was the bold
answer. A bolder still has been printed, but
this is Mataafa’s own recollection of the passage.
On the next day, the chiefs were all ordered back
to shake hands with Tamasese. Again they obeyed;
but again their attitude was menacing, and some, it
is said, audibly murmured as they gave their hands.
It is time to follow the poor Sheet
of Paper (literal meaning of Laupepa), who
was now to be blown so broadly over the face of earth.
As soon as news reached him of the declaration of
war, he fled from Afenga to Tanungamanono, a hamlet
in the bush, about a mile and a half behind Apia,
where he lurked some days. On the 24th, Selu,
his secretary, despatched to the American consul an
anxious appeal, his majesty’s “cry and
prayer” in behalf of “this weak people.”
By August 30th, the Germans had word of his lurking-place,
surrounded the hamlet under cloud of night, and in
the early morning burst with a force of sailors on
the houses. The people fled on all sides, and
were fired upon. One boy was shot in the hand,
the first blood of the war. But the king was
nowhere to be found; he had wandered farther, over
the woody mountains, the backbone of the land, towards
Siumu and Safata. Here, in a safe place, he
built himself a town in the forest, where he received
a continual stream of visitors and messengers.
Day after day the German blue-jackets were employed
in the hopeless enterprise of beating the forests for
the fugitive; day after day they were suffered to
pass unhurt under the guns of ambushed Samoans; day
after day they returned, exhausted and disappointed,
to Apia. Seumanu Tafa, high chief of Apia, was
known to be in the forest with the king; his wife,
Fatuila, was seized, imprisoned in the German hospital,
and when it was thought her spirit was sufficiently
reduced, brought up for cross-examination. The
wise lady confined herself in answer to a single word.
“Is your husband near Apia?” “Yes.”
“Is he far from Apia?” “Yes.”
“Is he with the king?” “Yes.”
“Are he and the king in different places?”
“Yes.” Whereupon the witness was
discharged. About the 10th of September, Laupepa
was secretly in Apia at the American consulate with
two companions. The German pickets were close
set and visited by a strong patrol; and on his return,
his party was observed and hailed and fired on by
a sentry. They ran away on all fours in the
dark, and so doing plumped upon another sentry, whom
Laupepa grappled and flung in a ditch; for the Sheet
of Paper, although infirm of character, is, like most
Samoans, of an able body. The second sentry
(like the first) fired after his assailants at random
in the dark; and the two shots awoke the curiosity
of Apia. On the afternoon of the 16th, the day
of the hand-shakings, Suatele, a high chief, despatched
two boys across the island with a letter. They
were most of the night upon the road; it was near
three in the morning before the sentries in the camp
of Malietoa beheld their lantern drawing near out
of the wood; but the king was at once awakened.
The news was decisive and the letter peremptory;
if Malietoa did not give himself up before ten on the
morrow, he was told that great sorrows must befall
his country. I have not been able to draw Laupepa
as a hero; but he is a man of certain virtues, which
the Germans had now given him an occasion to display.
Without hesitation he sacrificed himself, penned
his touching farewell to Samoa, and making more expedition
than the messengers, passed early behind Apia to the
banks of the Vaisingano. As he passed, he detached
a messenger to Mataafa at the Catholic mission.
Mataafa followed by the same road, and the pair met
at the river-side and went and sat together in a house.
All present were in tears. “Do not let
us weep,” said the talking man, Lauati.
“We have no cause for shame. We do not
yield to Tamasese, but to the invincible strangers.”
The departing king bequeathed the care of his country
to Mataafa; and when the latter sought to console him
with the commodore’s promises, he shook his
head, and declared his assurance that he was going
to a life of exile, and perhaps to death. About
two o’clock the meeting broke up; Mataafa returned
to the Catholic mission by the back of the town; and
Malietoa proceeded by the beach road to the German
naval hospital, where he was received (as he owns,
with perfect civility) by Brandeis. About three,
Becker brought him forth again. As they went
to the wharf, the people wept and clung to their departing
monarch. A boat carried him on board the Bismarck,
and he vanished from his countrymen. Yet it
was long rumoured that he still lay in the harbour;
and so late as October 7th, a boy, who had been paddling
round the Carola, professed to have seen and
spoken with him. Here again the needless mystery
affected by the Germans bitterly disserved them.
The uncertainty which thus hung over Laupepa’s
fate, kept his name continually in men’s mouths.
The words of his farewell rang in their ears:
“To all Samoa: On account of my great love
to my country and my great affection to all Samoa,
this is the reason that I deliver up my body to the
German government. That government may do as
they wish to me. The reason of this is, because
I do not desire that the blood of Samoa shall be spilt
for me again. But I do not know what is my offence
which has caused their anger to me and to my country.”
And then, apostrophising the different provinces:
“Tuamasanga, farewell! Manono and family,
farewell! So, also, Salafai, Tutuila, Aana, and
Atua, farewell! If we do not again see one another
in this world, pray that we may be again together
above.” So the sheep departed with the
halo of a saint, and men thought of him as of some
King Arthur snatched into Avilion.
On board the Bismarck, the
commodore shook hands with him, told him he was to
be “taken away from all the chiefs with whom
he had been accustomed,” and had him taken to
the wardroom under guard. The next day he was
sent to sea in the Adler. There went with
him his brother Moli, one Meisake, and one Alualu,
half-caste German, to interpret. He was respectfully
used; he dined in the stern with the officers, but
the boys dined “near where the fire was.”
They come to a “newly-formed place” in
Australia, where the Albatross was lying, and
a British ship, which he knew to be a man-of-war “because
the officers were nicely dressed and wore épaulettes.”
Here he was transhipped, “in a boat with a screen,”
which he supposed was to conceal him from the British
ship; and on board the Albatross was sent below
and told he must stay there till they had sailed.
Later, however, he was allowed to come on deck, where
he found they had rigged a screen (perhaps an awning)
under which he walked, looking at “the newly-formed
settlement,” and admiring a big house “where
he was sure the governor lived.” From Australia,
they sailed some time, and reached an anchorage where
a consul-general came on board, and where Laupepa
was only allowed on deck at night. He could then
see the lights of a town with wharves; he supposes
Cape Town. Off the Cameroons they anchored or
lay-to, far at sea, and sent a boat ashore to see (he
supposes) that there was no British man-of-war.
It was the next morning before the boat returned,
when the Albatross stood in and came to anchor
near another German ship. Here Alualu came to
him on deck and told him this was the place.
“That is an astonishing thing,” said he.
“I thought I was to go to Germany, I do not
know what this means; I do not know what will be the
end of it; my heart is troubled.” Whereupon
Alualu burst into tears. A little after, Laupepa
was called below to the captain and the governor.
The last addressed him: “This is my own
place, a good place, a warm place. My house
is not yet finished, but when it is, you shall live
in one of my rooms until I can make a house for you.”
Then he was taken ashore and brought to a tall, iron
house. “This house is regulated,”
said the governor; “there is no fire allowed
to burn in it.” In one part of this house,
weapons of the government were hung up; there was
a passage, and on the other side of the passage, fifty
criminals were chained together, two and two, by the
ankles. The windows were out of reach; and there
was only one door, which was opened at six in the
morning and shut again at six at night. All day
he had his liberty, went to the Baptist Mission, and
walked about viewing the negroes, who were “like
the sand on the seashore” for number. At
six they were called into the house and shut in for
the night without beds or lights. “Although
they gave me no light,” said he, with a smile,
“I could see I was in a prison.”
Good food was given him: biscuits, “tea
made with warm water,” beef, etc.; all excellent.
Once, in their walks, they spied a breadfruit tree
bearing in the garden of an English merchant, ran
back to the prison to get a shilling, and came and
offered to purchase. “I am not going to
sell breadfruit to you people,” said the merchant;
“come and take what you like.” Here
Malietoa interrupted himself to say it was the only
tree bearing in the Cameroons. “The governor
had none, or he would have given it to me.”
On the passage from the Cameroons to Germany, he
had great delight to see the cliffs of England.
He saw “the rocks shining in the sun, and three
hours later was surprised to find them sunk in the
heavens.” He saw also wharves and immense
buildings; perhaps Dover and its castle. In Hamburg,
after breakfast, Mr. Weber, who had now finally “ceased
from troubling” Samoa, came on board, and carried
him ashore “suitably” in a steam launch
to “a large house of the government,”
where he stayed till noon. At noon Weber told
him he was going to “the place where ships are
anchored that go to Samoa,” and led him to “a
very magnificent house, with carriages inside and
a wonderful roof of glass”; to wit, the railway
station. They were benighted on the train, and
then went in “something with a house, drawn
by horses, which had windows and many decks”;
plainly an omnibus. Here (at Bremen or Bremerhaven,
I believe) they stayed some while in “a house
of five hundred rooms”; then were got on board
the Nürnberg (as they understood) for Samoa,
anchored in England on a Sunday, were joined en
route by the famous Dr. Knappe, passed through
“a narrow passage where they went very slow
and which was just like a river,” and beheld
with exhilarated curiosity that Red Sea of which they
had learned so much in their Bibles. At last,
“at the hour when the fires burn red,”
they came to a place where was a German man-of-war.
Laupepa was called, with one of the boys, on deck,
when he found a German officer awaiting him, and a
steam launch alongside, and was told he must now leave
his brother and go elsewhere. “I cannot
go like this,” he cried. “You must
let me see my brother and the other old men” a
term of courtesy. Knappe, who seems always to
have been good-natured, revised his orders, and consented
not only to an interview, but to allow Moli to
continue to accompany the king. So these two
were carried to the man-of-war, and sailed many a
day, still supposing themselves bound for Samoa; and
lo! she came to a country the like of which they had
never dreamed of, and cast anchor in the great lagoon
of Jaluit; and upon that narrow land the exiles were
set on shore. This was the part of his captivity
on which he looked back with the most bitterness.
It was the last, for one thing, and he was worn down
with the long suspense, and terror, and deception.
He could not bear the brackish water; and though
“the Germans were still good to him, and gave
him beef and biscuit and tea,” he suffered from
the lack of vegetable food.
Such is the narrative of this simple
exile. I have not sought to correct it by extraneous
testimony. It is not so much the facts that are
historical, as the man’s attitude. No one
could hear this tale as he originally told it in my
hearing I think none can read it as here
condensed and unadorned without admiring
the fairness and simplicity of the Samoan; and wondering
at the want of heart or want of humour in
so many successive civilised Germans, that they should
have continued to surround this infant with the secrecy
of state.