SHOWING HOW I CAME TO PALMISTE ISLAND AND THE PLACE OF PAUL AND
VIRGINIA, AND FELL ASLEEP IN A GARDEN. A DISQUISITION ON THE FOLLY OF
SIGHT-SEEING.
“Some for the glories
of this world and some
Sigh for the Prophet’s
paradise to come.
Ah, take the cash and let
the credit go,
Nor heed the rumble of a distant
drum.”
There is something very wrong in the
Anglo-Saxon character. Hardly had the Africa
dropped anchor in Penang Straits when two of our fellow-passengers
were smitten with madness because they heard that
another steamer was even then starting for Singapur.
If they went by it they would gain several days.
Heaven knows why time should have been so precious
to them. The news sent them flying into their
cabins, and packing their trunks as though their salvation
depended upon it. Then they tumbled over the
side and were rowed away in a sampan, hot, but happy.
They were on a pleasure-trip, and they had gained perhaps
three days. That was their pleasure.
Do you recollect Besant’s description
of Palmiste Island in My Little Girl and
So They Were Married? Penang is Palmiste
Island. I found this out from the ship, looking
at the wooded hills that dominate the town, and at
the regiments of palm trees three miles away that marked
the coast of Wellesley Province. The air was soft
and heavy with laziness, and at the ship’s side
were boat-loads of much jewelled Madrassis even
those to whom Besant has alluded. A squall swept
across the water and blotted out the rows of low,
red-tiled houses that made up Penang, and the shadows
of night followed the storm.
I put my twelve-inch rule in my pocket
to measure all the world by, and nearly wept with
emotion when on landing at the jetty I fell against
a Sikh a beautiful bearded Sikh, with white
leggings and a rifle. As is cold water in a thirsty
land so is a face from the old country. My friend
had come from Jandiala in the Umritsar district.
Did I know Jandiala? Did I not? I began
to tell all the news I could recollect about crops
and armies and the movements of big men in the far,
far north while the Sikh beamed. He belonged
to the military police, and it was a good service,
but of course it was far from the old country.
There was no hard work, and the Chinamen gave but
little trouble. They had fights among themselves,
but “they do not care to give us any
impudence;” and the big man swaggered off with
the long roll and swing of a whole Pioneer regiment,
while I cheered myself with the thought that India the
India I pretend to hold in hatred was not
so far off, after all.
You know our ineradicable tendency
to damn everything in the mofussil. Calcutta
professes astonishment that Allahabad has a good dancing
floor; Allahabad wonders if it is true that Lahore
really has an ice-factory; and Lahore pretends to
believe that everybody in Peshawar sleeps armed.
Very much in the same way I was amused at seeing a
steam tramway in Rangoon, and after we had quitted
Moulmein fully expected to find the outskirts of civilisation.
Vanity and ignorance were severely shocked when they
confronted a long street of business a street
of two-storied houses, full of ticca-gharies,
shop signs, and above all jinrickshaws.
You in India have never seen a proper
’rickshaw. There are about two thousand
of them in Penang, and no two seem alike. They
are lacquered with bold figures of dragons and horses
and birds and butterflies: their shafts are of
black wood bound with white metal, and so strong that
the coolie sits upon them when he waits for his fare.
There is only one coolie, but he is strong, and he
runs just as well as six bell-men. He ties up
his pigtail, being a Cantonese, and
this is a disadvantage to sahibs who cannot speak
Tamil, Malay, or Cantonese. Otherwise he might
be steered like a camel.
The ’rickshaw men are
patient and long-suffering. The evil-visaged
person who drove my carriage lashed at them when they
came within whip range, and did his best to drive
over them as he headed for the Waterfalls, which are
five miles away from Penang Town. I expected that
the buildings should stop, choked out among the dense
growth of cocoanut. But they continued for many
streets, very like Park and Middleton streets in Calcutta,
where shuttered houses, which were half-bred between
an Indian bungalow and a Rangoon rabbit-hutch, fought
with the greenery and crotons as big as small trees.
Now and again there blazed the front of a Chinese
house, all open-work vermilion, lamp-black, and gold,
with six-foot Chinese lanterns over the doorways and
glimpses of quaintly cut shrubs in the well-kept gardens
beyond.
We struck into roads fringed with
native houses on piles, shadowed by the everlasting
cocoanut palms heavy with young nuts. The heat
was heavy with the smell of vegetation, and it was
not the smell of the earth after the rains. Some
bird-thing called out from the deeps of the foliage,
and there was a mutter of thunder in the hills which
we were approaching: but all the rest was very
still and the sweat ran down our faces
in drops.
“Now you’ve got to walk
up that hill,” said the driver, pointing to a
small barrier outside a well-kept botanical garden;
“all the carriages stop here.” One’s
limbs moved as though leaden, and the breath came
heavily, drawing in each time the vapour of a Turkish
bath. The soil was alive with wet and warmth,
and the unknown trees I was too sleepy to
read the labels that some offensively energetic man
has written were wet and warm too.
Up on the hillside the voice of the water was saying
something, but I was too sleepy to listen; and on the
top of the hill lay a fat cloud just like an eider-down
quilt tucking everything in safely.
“And in the afternoon
they came unto a land
In which it seemed always
afternoon.”
I sat down where I was, for I saw
that the upward path was very steep and was cut into
rude steps, and an exposition of sleep had come upon
me. I was at the mouth of a tiny gorge, exactly
where the lotus-eaters had sat down when they began
their song, for I recognised the Waterfall and the
air round my ears “breathing as one that has
a weary dream.”
I looked and beheld that I could not
give in words the genius of the place. “I
can’t play the flute, but I have a cousin who
plays the violin.” I knew a man who could.
Some people said he was not a nice man, and I might
run the risk of contaminating morals, but nothing mattered
in such a climate. See now, go to the very worst
of Zola’s novels and read there his description
of a conservatory. That was it. Several
months passed away, but there was neither chill nor
burning heat to mark the passage of time. Only,
with a sense of acute pain I felt that I must “do”
the Waterfall, and I climbed up the steps in the hillside,
though every boulder cried “sit down,”
until I found a small stream of water coursing down
the face of a rock, and a much bigger one down my own.
Then we went away to breakfast, the
stomach being always more worthy than any amount of
sentiment. A turn in the road hid the gardens
and stopped the noise of the waters, and that experience
was over for all time. Experiences are very like
cheroots. They generally begin badly, taste perfect
half way through, and at the butt-end are things to
be thrown away and never picked up again....
His name was John, and he had a pigtail
five feet long all real hair and no silk
braided, and he kept an hotel by the way and fed us
with a chicken, into whose innocent flesh onions and
strange vegetables had been forced. Till then
we had feared Chinamen, especially when they brought
food, but now we will eat anything at their hands.
The conclusion of the meal was a half-guinea pineapple
and a siesta. This is a beautiful thing which
we of India but I am of India no more do
not understand. You lie down and wait for time
to pass. You are not in the least wearied and
you would not go to sleep. You are filled with
a divine drowsiness quite different from
the heavy sodden slumber of a hot-weather Sunday,
or the businesslike repose of a Europe morning.
Now I begin to despise novelists who write about siestas
in cold climates. I know what the real thing
means.
I have been trying to buy a few things a
sarong, which is a putso which is a
dhoti; a pipe; and a “damned Malayan kris.”
The sarongs come chiefly from Germany, the
pipes from the pawn-shops, and there are no krises
except little toothpick things that could not penetrate
the hide of a Malay. In the native town, I found
a large army of Chinese more than I imagined
existed in China itself encamped in spacious
streets and houses, some of them sending block-tin
to Singapur, some driving fine carriages, others
making shoes, chairs, clothes, and every other thing
that a large town desires. They were the first
army corps on the march of the Mongol. The scouts
are at Calcutta, and a flying column at Rangoon.
Here begins the main body, some hundred thousand strong,
so they say. Was it not De Quincey that had a
horror of the Chinese of their inhumaneness
and their inscrutability? Certainly the people
in Penang are not nice; they are even terrible to behold.
They work hard, which in this climate is manifestly
wicked, and their eyes are just like the eyes of their
own pet dragons. Our Hindu gods are passable,
some of them even jolly witness our pot-bellied
Ganesh; but what can you do with a people who revel
in D. T. monsters and crown their roof-ridges with
flames of fire, or the waves of the sea? They
swarmed everywhere, and wherever three or four met,
there they eat things without name the
insides of ducks for choice. Our deck passengers,
I know, fared sumptuously on offal begged from the
steward and flavoured with insect-powder to keep the
ants off. This, again, is not natural, for a
man should eat like a man if he works like one.
I could quite understand after a couple of hours (this
has the true Globe-trotter twang to it) spent in Chinatown
why the lower-caste Anglo-Saxon hates the Celestial.
He frightened me, and so I could take no pleasure
in looking at his houses, at his wares, or at himself....
The smell of printer’s ink is
marvellously penetrating. It drew me up two pair
of stairs into an office where the exchanges lay about
in delightful disorder, and a little hand-press was
clacking out proofs just in the old sweet way.
Something like the Gazette of India showed
that the Straits Settlements even they had
a Government of their own, and I sighed for a dead
past as my eye caught the beautiful official phraseology
that never varies. How alike we English are!
Here is an extract from a report: “And
the Chinese form of decoration which formerly covered
the office has been wisely obliterated with whitewash.”
That was just what I came to inquire
about. What were they going to do with the Chinese
decoration all over Penang? Would they try to
wisely obliterate that?
The Straits Settlement Council which
lives at Singapur had just passed a Bill (Ordinance
they call it) putting down all Chinese secret societies
in the colony, which measure only awaited the Imperial
assent. A little business in Singapur connected
with some municipal measure for clearing away overhanging
verandahs created a storm, and for three days those
who were in the place say the town was entirely at
the mercy of the Chinese, who rose all together and
made life unpleasant for the authorities. This
incident forced the Government to take serious notice
of the secret societies who could so control the actions
of men, and the result has been a measure which it
will not be easy to enforce. A Chinaman must
have a secret society of some kind. He has been
bred up in a country where they were necessary to
his comfort, his protection, and the maintenance of
his scale of wages from time immemorial, and he will
carry them with him as he will carry his opium and
his coffin.
“Do you expect then that the
societies will collapse by proclamation?” I
asked the editor.
“No There will be a row.”
“What row? what sort of a row?”
“More troops, perhaps, and perhaps
some gunboats. You see, we shall have Sir Charles
Warren then as our Commander-in-Chief at Singapur.
Up till the present our military administration has
been subordinate to that of Hong-Kong; when that is
done away with and we have Sir Charles Warren, things
will be different. But there will be a row.
Neither you nor I nor any one else will be able to
put these things down. Every joss house will
be the head of a secret society. What can one
do? In the past the Government made some use
of them for the detection of crime. Now they
are too big and too important to be treated in that
way. You will know before long whether we have
been able to suppress them. There will be a row.”
Certainly the great grievance of Penang
is the Chinese question. She would not be human
did she not revile her Municipal Commissioners and
talk about the unsanitary condition of the island.
If nose and eyes and ears be any guide, she is far
cleaner even in her streets than many an Indian cantonment,
and her water-supply seems perfection. But I sat
in that little newspaper office and listened to stories
of municipal intrigue that might have suited Serampore
or Calcutta, only the names were a little different,
and in place of Ghose and Chuckerbutty one heard titles
such as Yih Tat, Lo Eng, and the like. The Englishman’s
aggressive altruism always leads him to build towns
for others, and incite aliens to serve on municipal
boards. Then he gets tired of his weakness and
starts papers to condemn himself. They had a Chinaman
on the Municipality last year. They have now
got rid of him, and the present body is constituted
of two officials and four non-officials. Therefore
they complain of the influence of officialdom.
Having thoroughly settled all the
differences of Penang to my own great satisfaction,
I removed myself to a Chinese theatre set in the open
road, and made of sticks and old gunny-bags. The
orchestra alone convinced me that there was something
radically wrong with the Chinese mind. Once,
long ago in Jummu, I heard the infernal clang of the
horns used by the Devil-dancers who had come from
far beyond Ladakh to do honour to the Prince that
day set upon his throne. That was about three
thousand miles to the north, but the character of the
music was unchanged. A thousand Chinamen stood
as close as possible to the horrid din and enjoyed
it. Once more, can anything be done to a people
without nerves as without digestion, and, if reports
speak truly, without morals? But it is not true
that they are born with full-sized pigtails.
The thing grows, and in its very earliest stages is
the prettiest head-dressing imaginable, being soft
brown, very fluffy, about three inches long, and dressed
as to the end with red silk. An infant pigtail
is just like the first tender sprout of a tulip bulb,
and would be lovable were not the Chinese baby so
very horrible of hue and shape. He isn’t
as pretty as the pig that Alice nursed in Wonderland,
and he lies quite still and never cries. This
is because he is afraid of being boiled and eaten.
I saw cold boiled babies on a plate being carried
through the heart of the town. They said it was
only sucking-pig, but I knew better. Dead sucking-pigs
don’t grin with their eyes open.
About this time the faces of the Chinese
frightened me more than ever, so I ran away to the
outskirts of the town and saw a windowless house that
carried the Square and Compass in gold and teakwood
above the door. I took heart at meeting these
familiar things again, and knowing that where they
were was good fellowship and much charity, in spite
of all the secret societies in the world. Penang
is to be congratulated on one of the prettiest little
lodges in the East.