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  • The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. I (of
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  • Title: Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. I (of 2)
  • Author: Herman Melville
  • Release Date: October 12, 2004 [EBook #13720]
  • Last updated: July 25, 2020
  • Language: English
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  • MARDI: AND A VOYAGE THITHER
  • BY HERMAN MELVILLE
  • IN TWO VOLUMES
  • VOL. I
  • 1864
  • DEDICATED TO My Brother, ALLAN MELVILLE.
  • PREFACE
  • Not long ago, having published two narratives of voyages in the Pacific,
  • which, in many quarters, were received with incredulity, the thought
  • occurred to me, of indeed writing a romance of Polynesian adventure, and
  • publishing it as such; to see whether, the fiction might not, possibly,
  • be received for a verity: in some degree the reverse of my previous
  • experience.
  • This thought was the germ of others, which have resulted in Mardi. New
  • York, January, 1849.
  • MARDI.
  • CONTENTS VOL. I
  • CHAPTER 1. Foot in Stirrup 2. A Calm 3. A King for a Comrade 4. A Chat
  • in the Clouds 5. Seats secured and Portmanteaus packed 6. Eight Bells 7.
  • A Pause 8. They push off, Velis et Bemis 9. The Watery World is all
  • before Them 10. They arrange their Canopies and Lounges, and try to make
  • Things comfortable 11. Jarl afflicted with the Lockjaw 12. More about
  • being in an open Boat 13. Of the Chondropterygii, and other uncouth
  • Hordes infesting the South Seas 14. Jarl's Misgivings 15. A Stitch in
  • time saves Nine 16. They are Becalmed 17. In high Spirits they push on
  • for the Terra Incognita 18. My Lord Shark and his Pages 19. Who goes
  • there? 20. Noises and Portents 21. Man ho! 22. What befel the Brigantine
  • at the Pearl Shell Islands 23. Sailing from the Island they pillage the
  • Cabin 24. Dedicated to the College of Physicians and Surgeons 25. Peril
  • a Peace-maker 26. Containing a Pennyweight of Philosophy 27. In which
  • the past History of the Parki is concluded 28. Suspicions laid, and
  • something about the Calmuc 29. What they lighted upon in further
  • searching the Craft, and the Resolution they came to 30. Hints for a
  • full length of Samoa 31. Rovings Alow and Aloft 32. Xiphius Platypterus
  • 33. Otard 34. How they steered on their Way 35. Ah, Annatoo! 36. The
  • Parki gives up the Ghost 37. Once more they take to the Chamois 38. The
  • Sea on Fire 39. They fall in with Strangers 40. Sire and Sons 41. A Fray
  • 42. Remorse 43. The Tent entered 44. Away! 45. Reminiscences 46. The
  • Chamois with a roving Commission 47. Yillah, Jarl, and Samoa 48.
  • Something under the Surface 49. Yillah 50. Yillah in Ardair 51. The
  • Dream begins to fade 52. World ho! 53. The Chamois Ashore 54. A
  • Gentleman from the Sun 55. Tiffin in a Temple 56. King Media a Host 57.
  • Taji takes Counsel with himself 58. Mardi by Night and Yillah by Day 59.
  • Their Morning Meal 60. Belshazzar on the Bench 61. An Incognito 62. Taji
  • retires from the World 63. Odo and its Lord 64. Yillah a Phantom 65.
  • Taji makes three Acquaintances 66. With a fair Wind at Sunrise they sail
  • 67. Little King Peepi 68. How Teeth were regarded in Valapee 69. The
  • Company discourse, and Braid-Beard rehearses a Legend 70. The Minstrel
  • leads of with a Paddle-Song; and a Message is received from Abroad 71.
  • They land upon the Island of Juam 72. A Book from the Chronicles of Mohi
  • 73. Something more of the Prince 74. Advancing deeper into the Vale,
  • they encounter Donjalolo 75. Time and Temples 76. A pleasant Place for a
  • Lounge 77. The House of the Afternoon 78. Babbalanja solus 79. The
  • Center of many Circumferences 80. Donjalolo in the Bosom of his Family
  • 81. Wherein Babbalanja relates the Adventure of one Karkeke in the Land
  • of Shades 82. How Donjalolo, sent Agents to the surrounding Isles; with
  • the Result 83. They visit the Tributary Islets 84. Taji sits down to
  • Dinner with five-and-twenty Kings, and a royal Time they have 85. After
  • Dinner 86. Of those Scamps the Plujii 87. Nora-Bamma 88. In a Calm,
  • Hautia's Heralds approach 89. Braid-Beard rehearses the Origin of the
  • Isle of Rogues 90. Rare Sport at Ohonoo 91. Of King Uhia and his
  • Subjects 92. The God Keevi and the Precipice of Mondo 93. Babbalanja
  • steps in between Mohi and Yoomy; and Yoomy relates a Legend 94. Of that
  • jolly old Lord, Borabolla; and that jolly Island of his, Mondoldo; and
  • of the Fish-ponds, and the Hereafters of Fish 95. That jolly old Lord
  • Borabolla laughs on both Sides of his Face 96. Samoa a Surgeon 97. Faith
  • and Knowledge 98. The Tale of a Traveler 99. "Marnee Ora, Ora Marnee."
  • 100. The Pursuer himself is pursued 101. The Iris 102. They depart from
  • Mondoldo 103. As they sail 104. Wherein Babbalanja broaches a diabolical
  • Theory, and in his own Person proves it
  • MARDI
  • CHAPTER I Foot In Stirrup
  • We are off! The courses and topsails are set: the coral-hung anchor
  • swings from the bow: and together, the three royals are given to the
  • breeze, that follows us out to sea like the baying of a hound. Out
  • spreads the canvas--alow, aloft-boom-stretched, on both sides, with many
  • a stun' sail; till like a hawk, with pinions poised, we shadow the sea
  • with our sails, and reelingly cleave the brine.
  • But whence, and whither wend ye, mariners?
  • We sail from Ravavai, an isle in the sea, not very far northward from
  • the tropic of Capricorn, nor very far westward from Pitcairn's island,
  • where the mutineers of the Bounty settled. At Ravavai I had stepped
  • ashore some few months previous; and now was embarked on a cruise for
  • the whale, whose brain enlightens the world.
  • And from Ravavai we sail for the Gallipagos, otherwise called the
  • Enchanted Islands, by reason of the many wild currents and eddies there
  • met.
  • Now, round about those isles, which Dampier once trod, where the Spanish
  • bucaniers once hived their gold moidores, the Cachalot, or sperm whale,
  • at certain seasons abounds.
  • But thither, from Ravavai, your craft may not fly, as flies the sea-gull, straight to her nest. For, owing to the prevalence of the trade
  • winds, ships bound to the northeast from the vicinity of Ravavai are
  • fain to take something of a circuit; a few thousand miles or so. First,
  • in pursuit of the variable winds, they make all haste to the south; and
  • there, at length picking up a stray breeze, they stand for the main:
  • then, making their easting, up helm, and away down the coast, toward the
  • Line.
  • This round-about way did the Arcturion take; and in all conscience a
  • weary one it was. Never before had the ocean appeared so monotonous;
  • thank fate, never since.
  • But bravo! in two weeks' time, an event. Out of the gray of the morning,
  • and right ahead, as we sailed along, a dark object rose out of the sea;
  • standing dimly before us, mists wreathing and curling aloft, and creamy
  • breakers frothing round its base.--We turned aside, and, at length, when
  • day dawned, passed Massafuero. With a glass, we spied two or three
  • hermit goats winding down to the sea, in a ravine; and presently, a
  • signal: a tattered flag upon a summit beyond. Well knowing, however,
  • that there was nobody on the island but two or three noose-fulls of
  • runaway convicts from Chili, our captain had no mind to comply with
  • their invitation to land. Though, haply, he may have erred in not
  • sending a boat off with his card.
  • A few days more and we "took the trades." Like favors snappishly
  • conferred, they came to us, as is often the case, in a very sharp
  • squall; the shock of which carried away one of our spars; also our fat
  • old cook off his legs; depositing him plump in the scuppers to leeward.
  • In good time making the desired longitude upon the equator, a few
  • leagues west of the Gallipagos, we spent several weeks chassezing across
  • the Line, to and fro, in unavailing search for our prey. For some of
  • their hunters believe, that whales, like the silver ore in Peru, run in
  • veins through the ocean. So, day after day, daily; and week after week,
  • weekly, we traversed the self-same longitudinal intersection of the
  • self-same Line; till we were almost ready to swear that we felt the ship
  • strike every time her keel crossed that imaginary locality.
  • At length, dead before the equatorial breeze, we threaded our way
  • straight along the very Line itself. Westward sailing; peering right,
  • and peering left, but seeing naught.
  • It was during this weary time, that I experienced the first symptoms of
  • that bitter impatience of our monotonous craft, which ultimately led to
  • the adventures herein recounted.
  • But hold you! Not a word against that rare old ship, nor its crew. The
  • sailors were good fellows all, the half, score of pagans we had shipped
  • at the islands included. Nevertheless, they were not precisely to my
  • mind. There was no soul a magnet to mine; none with whom to mingle
  • sympathies; save in deploring the calms with which we were now and then
  • overtaken; or in hailing the breeze when it came. Under other and
  • livelier auspices the tarry knaves might have developed qualities more
  • attractive. Had we sprung a leak, been "stove" by a whale, or been
  • blessed with some despot of a captain against whom to stir up some
  • spirited revolt, these shipmates of mine might have proved limber lads,
  • and men of mettle. But as it was, there was naught to strike fire from
  • their steel.
  • There were other things, also, tending to make my lot on ship-board very
  • hard to be borne. True, the skipper himself was a trump; stood upon no
  • quarter-deck dignity; and had a tongue for a sailor. Let me do him
  • justice, furthermore: he took a sort of fancy for me in particular; was
  • sociable, nay, loquacious, when I happened to stand at the helm. But
  • what of that? Could he talk sentiment or philosophy? Not a bit. His
  • library was eight inches by four: Bowditch, and Hamilton Moore.
  • And what to me, thus pining for some one who could page me a quotation
  • from Burton on Blue Devils; what to me, indeed, were flat repetitions of
  • long-drawn yarns, and the everlasting stanzas of Black-eyed Susan sung
  • by our full forecastle choir? Staler than stale ale.
  • Ay, ay, Arcturion! I say it in no malice, but thou wast exceedingly
  • dull. Not only at sailing: hard though it was, that I could have borne;
  • but in every other respect. The days went slowly round and round,
  • endless and uneventful as cycles in space. Time, and time-pieces; How
  • many centuries did my hammock tell, as pendulum-like it swung to the
  • ship's dull roll, and ticked the hours and ages. Sacred forever be the
  • Arcturion's fore-hatch--alas! sea-moss is over it now--and rusty forever
  • the bolts that held together that old sea hearth-stone, about which we
  • so often lounged. Nevertheless, ye lost and leaden hours, I will rail at
  • ye while life lasts.
  • Well: weeks, chronologically speaking, went by. Bill Marvel's stories
  • were told over and over again, till the beginning and end dovetailed
  • into each other, and were united for aye. Ned Ballad's songs were sung
  • till the echoes lurked in the very tops, and nested in the bunts of the
  • sails. My poor patience was clean gone.
  • But, at last after some time sailing due westward we quitted the Line in
  • high disgust; having seen there, no sign of a whale.
  • But whither now? To the broiling coast of Papua? That region of sun-strokes, typhoons, and bitter pulls after whales unattainable. Far
  • worse. We were going, it seemed, to illustrate the Whistonian theory
  • concerning the damned and the comets;--hurried from equinoctial heats to
  • arctic frosts. To be short, with the true fickleness of his tribe, our
  • skipper had abandoned all thought of the Cachalot. In desperation, he
  • was bent upon bobbing for the Right whale on the Nor'-West Coast and in
  • the Bay of Kamschatska.
  • To the uninitiated in the business of whaling, my feelings at this
  • juncture may perhaps be hard to understand. But this much let me say:
  • that Right whaling on the Nor'-West Coast, in chill and dismal fogs, the
  • sullen inert monsters rafting the sea all round like Hartz forest logs
  • on the Rhine, and submitting to the harpoon like half-stunned bullocks
  • to the knife; this horrid and indecent Right whaling, I say, compared to
  • a spirited hunt for the gentlemanly Cachalot in southern and more genial
  • seas, is as the butchery of white bears upon blank Greenland icebergs to
  • zebra hunting in Caffraria, where the lively quarry bounds before you
  • through leafy glades.
  • Now, this most unforeseen determination on the part of my captain to
  • measure the arctic circle was nothing more nor less than a tacit
  • contravention of the agreement between us. That agreement needs not to
  • be detailed. And having shipped but for a single cruise, I had embarked
  • aboard his craft as one might put foot in stirrup for a day's following
  • of the hounds. And here, Heaven help me, he was going to carry me off to
  • the Pole! And on such a vile errand too! For there was something
  • degrading in it. Your true whaleman glories in keeping his harpoon
  • unspotted by blood of aught but Cachalot. By my halidome, it touched the
  • knighthood of a tar. Sperm and spermaceti! It was unendurable.
  • "Captain," said I, touching my sombrero to him as I stood at the wheel
  • one day, "It's very hard to carry me off this way to purgatory. I
  • shipped to go elsewhere."
  • "Yes, and so did I," was his reply. "But it can't be helped. Sperm
  • whales are not to be had. We've been out now three years, and something
  • or other must be got; for the ship is hungry for oil, and her hold a
  • gulf to look into. But cheer up my boy; once in the Bay of Kamschatka,
  • and we'll be all afloat with what we want, though it be none of the
  • best."
  • Worse and worse! The oleaginous prospect extended into an immensity of
  • Macassar. "Sir," said I, "I did not ship for it; put me ashore
  • somewhere, I beseech." He stared, but no answer vouchsafed; and for a
  • moment I thought I had roused the domineering spirit of the sea-captain,
  • to the prejudice of the more kindly nature of the man.
  • But not so. Taking three turns on the deck, he placed his hand on the
  • wheel, and said, "Right or wrong, my lad, go with us you must. Putting
  • you ashore is now out of the question. I make no port till this ship is
  • full to the combings of her hatchways. However, you may leave her if you
  • can." And so saying he entered his cabin, like Julius Caesar into his
  • tent.
  • He may have meant little by it, but that last sentence rung in my ear
  • like a bravado. It savored of the turnkey's compliments to the prisoner
  • in Newgate, when he shoots to the bolt on him.
  • "Leave the ship if I can!" Leave the ship when neither sail nor shore
  • was in sight! Ay, my fine captain, stranger things have been done. For
  • on board that very craft, the old Arcturion, were four tall fellows,
  • whom two years previous our skipper himself had picked up in an open
  • boat, far from the farthest shoal. To be sure, they spun a long yarn
  • about being the only survivors of an Indiaman burnt down to the water's
  • edge. But who credited their tale? Like many others, they were keepers
  • of a secret: had doubtless contracted a disgust for some ugly craft
  • still afloat and hearty, and stolen away from her, off soundings. Among
  • seamen in the Pacific such adventures not seldom occur. Nor are they
  • accounted great wonders. They are but incidents, not events, in the
  • career of the brethren of the order of South Sea rovers. For what
  • matters it, though hundreds of miles from land, if a good whale-boat be
  • under foot, the Trades behind, and mild, warm seas before? And herein
  • lies the difference between the Atlantic and Pacific:--that once within
  • the Tropics, the bold sailor who has a mind to quit his ship round Cape
  • Horn, waits not for port. He regards that ocean as one mighty harbor.
  • Nevertheless, the enterprise hinted at was no light one; and I resolved
  • to weigh well the chances. It's worth noticing, this way we all have of
  • pondering for ourselves the enterprise, which, for others, we hold a
  • bagatelle.
  • My first thoughts were of the boat to be obtained, and the right or
  • wrong of abstracting it, under the circumstances. But to split no hairs
  • on this point, let me say, that were I placed in the same situation
  • again, I would repeat the thing I did then. The captain well knew that
  • he was going to detain me unlawfully: against our agreement; and it was
  • he himself who threw out the very hint, which I merely adopted, with
  • many thanks to him.
  • In some such willful mood as this, I went aloft one day, to stand my
  • allotted two hours at the mast-head. It was toward the close of a day,
  • serene and beautiful. There I stood, high upon the mast, and away, away,
  • illimitably rolled the ocean beneath. Where we then were was perhaps the
  • most unfrequented and least known portion of these seas. Westward,
  • however, lay numerous groups of islands, loosely laid down upon the
  • charts, and invested with all the charms of dream-land. But soon these
  • regions would be past; the mild equatorial breeze exchanged for cold,
  • fierce squalls, and all the horrors of northern voyaging.
  • I cast my eyes downward to the brown planks of the dull, plodding ship,
  • silent from stem to stern; then abroad.
  • In the distance what visions were spread! The entire western horizon
  • high piled with gold and crimson clouds; airy arches, domes, and
  • minarets; as if the yellow, Moorish sun were setting behind some vast
  • Alhambra. Vistas seemed leading to worlds beyond. To and fro, and all
  • over the towers of this Nineveh in the sky, flew troops of birds.
  • Watching them long, one crossed my sight, flew through a low arch, and
  • was lost to view. My spirit must have sailed in with it; for directly,
  • as in a trance, came upon me the cadence of mild billows laving a beach
  • of shells, the waving of boughs, and the voices of maidens, and the
  • lulled beatings of my own dissolved heart, all blended together.
  • Now, all this, to be plain, was but one of the many visions one has up
  • aloft. But coming upon me at this time, it wrought upon me so, that
  • thenceforth my desire to quit the Arcturion became little short of a
  • frenzy.
  • CHAPTER II A Calm
  • Next day there was a calm, which added not a little to my impatience of
  • the ship. And, furthermore, by certain nameless associations revived in
  • me my old impressions upon first witnessing as a landsman this
  • phenomenon of the sea. Those impressions may merit a page.
  • To a landsman a calm is no joke. It not only revolutionizes his abdomen,
  • but unsettles his mind; tempts him to recant his belief in the eternal
  • fitness of things; in short, almost makes an infidel of him.
  • At first he is taken by surprise, never having dreamt of a state of
  • existence where existence itself seems suspended. He shakes himself in
  • his coat, to see whether it be empty or no. He closes his eyes, to test
  • the reality of the glassy expanse. He fetches a deep breath, by way of
  • experiment, and for the sake of witnessing the effect. If a reader of
  • books, Priestley on Necessity occurs to him; and he believes in that old
  • Sir Anthony Absolute to the very last chapter. His faith in Malte Brun,
  • however, begins to fail; for the geography, which from boyhood he had
  • implicitly confided in, always assured him, that though expatiating all
  • over the globe, the sea was at least margined by land. That over against
  • America, for example, was Asia. But it is a calm, and he grows madly
  • skeptical.
  • To his alarmed fancy, parallels and meridians become emphatically what
  • they are merely designated as being: imaginary lines drawn round the
  • earth's surface.
  • The log assures him that he is in such a place; but the log is a liar;
  • for no place, nor any thing possessed of a local angularity, is to be
  • lighted upon in the watery waste.
  • At length horrible doubts overtake him as to the captain's competency to
  • navigate his ship. The ignoramus must have lost his way, and drifted
  • into the outer confines of creation, the region of the everlasting lull,
  • introductory to a positive vacuity.
  • Thoughts of eternity thicken. He begins to feel anxious concerning his
  • soul.
  • The stillness of the calm is awful. His voice begins to grow strange and
  • portentous. He feels it in him like something swallowed too big for the
  • esophagus. It keeps up a sort of involuntary interior humming in him,
  • like a live beetle. His cranium is a dome full of reverberations. The
  • hollows of his very bones are as whispering galleries. He is afraid to
  • speak loud, lest he be stunned; like the man in the bass drum.
  • But more than all else is the consciousness of his utter helplessness.
  • Succor or sympathy there is none. Penitence for embarking avails not.
  • The final satisfaction of despairing may not be his with a relish. Vain
  • the idea of idling out the calm. He may sleep if he can, or purposely
  • delude himself into a crazy fancy, that he is merely at leisure. All
  • this he may compass; but he may not lounge; for to lounge is to be idle;
  • to be idle implies an absence of any thing to do; whereas there is a
  • calm to be endured: enough to attend to, Heaven knows.
  • His physical organization, obviously intended for locomotion, becomes a
  • fixture; for where the calm leaves him, there he remains. Even his
  • undoubted vested rights, comprised in his glorious liberty of volition,
  • become as naught. For of what use? He wills to go: to get away from the
  • calm: as ashore he would avoid the plague. But he can not; and how
  • foolish to revolve expedients. It is more hopeless than a bad marriage
  • in a land where there is no Doctors' Commons. He has taken the ship to
  • wife, for better or for worse, for calm or for gale; and she is not to
  • be shuffled off. With yards akimbo, she says unto him scornfully, as
  • the old beldam said to the little dwarf:--"Help yourself"
  • And all this, and more than this, is a calm.
  • CHAPTER III A King For A Comrade
  • At the time I now write of, we must have been something more than sixty
  • degrees to the west of the Gallipagos. And having attained a desirable
  • longitude, we were standing northward for our arctic destination: around
  • us one wide sea.
  • But due west, though distant a thousand miles, stretched north and south
  • an almost endless Archipelago, here and there inhabited, but little
  • known; and mostly unfrequented, even by whalemen, who go almost every
  • where. Beginning at the southerly termination of this great chain, it
  • comprises the islands loosely known as Ellice's group; then, the
  • Kingsmill isles; then, the Radack and Mulgrave clusters. These islands
  • had been represented to me as mostly of coral formation, low and
  • fertile, and abounding in a variety of fruits. The language of the
  • people was said to be very similar to that or the Navigator's islands,
  • from which, their ancestors are supposed to have emigrated.
  • And thus much being said, all has been related that I then knew of the
  • islands in question. Enough, however, that they existed at all; and that
  • our path thereto lay over a pleasant sea, and before a reliable Trade-wind. The distance, though great, was merely an extension of water; so
  • much blankness to be sailed over; and in a craft, too, that properly
  • managed has been known to outlive great ships in a gale. For this much
  • is true of a whale-boat, the cunningest thing in its way ever fabricated
  • by man.
  • Upon one of the Kingsmill islands, then, I determined to plant my foot,
  • come what come would. And I was equally determined that one of the
  • ship's boats should float me thither. But I had no idea of being without
  • a companion. It would be a weary watch to keep all by myself, with
  • naught but the horizon in sight.
  • Now, among the crew was a fine old seaman, one Jarl; how old, no one
  • could tell, not even himself. Forecastle chronology is ever vague and
  • defective. "Man and boy," said honest Jarl, "I have lived ever since I
  • can remember." And truly, who may call to mind when he was not? To
  • ourselves, we all seem coeval with creation. Whence it comes, that it is
  • so hard to die, ere the world itself is departed.
  • Jarl hailed from the isle of Skye, one of the constellated Hebrides.
  • Hence, they often called him the Skyeman. And though he was far from
  • being piratical of soul, he was yet an old Norseman to behold. His hands
  • were brawny as the paws of a bear; his voice hoarse as a storm roaring
  • round the old peak of Mull; and his long yellow hair waved round his
  • head like a sunset. My life for it, Jarl, thy ancestors were Vikings,
  • who many a time sailed over the salt German sea and the Baltic; who
  • wedded their Brynhildas in Jutland; and are now quaffing mead in the
  • halls of Valhalla, and beating time with their cans to the hymns of the
  • Scalds. Ah! how the old Sagas run through me!
  • Yet Jarl, the descendant of heroes and kings, was a lone, friendless
  • mariner on the main, only true to his origin in the sea-life that he
  • led. But so it has been, and forever will be. What yeoman shall swear
  • that he is not descended from Alfred? what dunce, that he is not sprung
  • of old Homer? King Noah, God bless him! fathered us all. Then hold up
  • your heads, oh ye Helots, blood potential flows through your veins. All
  • of us have monarchs and sages for kinsmen; nay, angels and archangels
  • for cousins; since in antediluvian days, the sons of God did verily wed
  • with our mothers, the irresistible daughters of Eve. Thus all
  • generations are blended: and heaven and earth of one kin: the
  • hierarchies of seraphs in the uttermost skies; the thrones and
  • principalities in the zodiac; the shades that roam throughout space; the
  • nations and families, flocks and folds of the earth; one and all,
  • brothers in essence--oh, be we then brothers indeed! All things form but
  • one whole; the universe a Judea, and God Jehovah its head. Then no more
  • let us start with affright. In a theocracy, what is to fear? Let us
  • compose ourselves to death as fagged horsemen sleep in the saddle. Let
  • us welcome even ghosts when they rise. Away with our stares and
  • grimaces. The New Zealander's tattooing is not a prodigy; nor the
  • Chinaman's ways an enigma. No custom is strange; no creed is absurd; no
  • foe, but who will in the end prove a friend. In heaven, at last, our
  • good, old, white-haired father Adam will greet all alike, and sociality
  • forever prevail. Christian shall join hands between Gentile and Jew;
  • grim Dante forget his Infernos, and shake sides with fat Rabelais; and
  • monk Luther, over a flagon of old nectar, talk over old times with Pope
  • Leo. Then, shall we sit by the sages, who of yore gave laws to the Medes
  • and Persians in the sun; by the cavalry captains in Perseus, who cried,
  • "To horse!" when waked by their Last Trump sounding to the charge; by
  • the old hunters, who eternities ago, hunted the moose in Orion; by the
  • minstrels, who sang in the Milky Way when Jesus our Saviour was born.
  • Then shall we list to no shallow gossip of Magellans and Drakes; but
  • give ear to the voyagers who have circumnavigated the Ecliptic; who
  • rounded the Polar Star as Cape Horn. Then shall the Stagirite and Kant
  • be forgotten, and another folio than theirs be turned over for wisdom;
  • even the folio now spread with horoscopes as yet undeciphered, the
  • heaven of heavens on high.
  • Now, in old Jarl's lingo there was never an idiom. Your aboriginal tar
  • is too much of a cosmopolitan for that. Long companionship with seamen
  • of all tribes: Manilla-men, Anglo-Saxons, Cholos, Lascars, and Danes,
  • wear away in good time all mother-tongue stammerings. You sink your
  • clan; down goes your nation; you speak a world's language, jovially
  • jabbering in the Lingua-Franca of the forecastle.
  • True to his calling, the Skyeman was very illiterate; witless of
  • Salamanca, Heidelberg, or Brazen-Nose; in Delhi, had never turned over
  • the books of the Brahmins. For geography, in which sailors should be
  • adepts, since they are forever turning over and over the great globe of
  • globes, poor Jarl was deplorably lacking. According to his view of the
  • matter, this terraqueous world had been formed in the manner of a tart;
  • the land being a mere marginal crust, within which rolled the watery
  • world proper. Such seemed my good Viking's theory of cosmography. As for
  • other worlds, he weened not of them; yet full as much as Chrysostom.
  • Ah, Jarl! an honest, earnest Wight; so true and simple, that the secret
  • operations of thy soul were more inscrutable than the subtle workings of
  • Spinoza's.
  • Thus much be said of the Skyeman; for he was exceedingly taciturn, and
  • but seldom will speak for himself.
  • Now, higher sympathies apart, for Jarl I had a wonderful liking; for he
  • loved me; from the first had cleaved to me.
  • It is sometimes the case, that an old mariner like him will conceive a
  • very strong attachment for some young sailor, his shipmate; an
  • attachment so devoted, as to be wholly inexplicable, unless originating
  • in that heart-loneliness which overtakes most seamen as they grow aged;
  • impelling them to fasten upon some chance object of regard. But however
  • it was, my Viking, thy unbidden affection was the noblest homage ever
  • paid me. And frankly, I am more inclined to think well of myself, as in
  • some way deserving thy devotion, than from the rounded compliments of
  • more cultivated minds.
  • Now, at sea, and in the fellowship of sailors, all men appear as they
  • are. No school like a ship for studying human nature. The contact of one
  • man with another is too near and constant to favor deceit. You wear your
  • character as loosely as your flowing trowsers. Vain all endeavors to
  • assume qualities not yours; or to conceal those you possess. Incognitos,
  • however desirable, are out of the question. And thus aboard of all ships
  • in which I have sailed, I have invariably been known by a sort of
  • thawing-room title. Not,--let me hurry to say,--that I put hand in tar
  • bucket with a squeamish air, or ascended the rigging with a
  • Chesterfieldian mince. No, no, I was never better than my vocation; and
  • mine have been many. I showed as brown a chest, and as hard a hand, as
  • the tarriest tar of them all. And never did shipmate of mine upbraid me
  • with a genteel disinclination to duty, though it carried me to truck of
  • main-mast, or jib-boom-end, in the most wolfish blast that ever howled.
  • Whence then, this annoying appellation? for annoying it most assuredly
  • was. It was because of something in me that could not be hidden;
  • stealing out in an occasional polysyllable; an otherwise
  • incomprehensible deliberation in dining; remote, unguarded allusions to
  • Belles-Lettres affairs; and other trifles superfluous to mention.
  • But suffice it to say, that it had gone abroad among the Arcturion's
  • crew, that at some indefinite period of my career, I had been a "nob."
  • But Jarl seemed to go further. He must have taken me for one of the
  • House of Hanover in disguise; or, haply, for bonneted Charles Edward the
  • Pretender, who, like the Wandering Jew, may yet be a vagrant. At any
  • rate, his loyalty was extreme. Unsolicited, he was my laundress and
  • tailor; a most expert one, too; and when at meal-times my turn came
  • round to look out at the mast-head, or stand at the wheel, he catered
  • for me among the "kids" in the forecastle with unwearied assiduity.
  • Many's the good lump of "duff" for which I was indebted to my good
  • Viking's good care of me. And like Sesostris I was served by a monarch.
  • Yet in some degree the obligation was mutual. For be it known that, in
  • sea-parlance, we were _chummies._
  • Now this _chummying_ among sailors is like the brotherhood subsisting
  • between a brace of collegians (chums) rooming together. It is a Fidus-Achates-ship, a league of offense and defense, a copartnership of chests
  • and toilets, a bond of love and good feeling, and a mutual championship
  • of the absent one. True, my nautical reminiscenses remind me of sundry
  • lazy, ne'er-do-well, unprofitable, and abominable chummies; chummies,
  • who at meal times were last at the "kids," when their unfortunate
  • partners were high upon the spars; chummies, who affected awkwardness at
  • the needle, and conscientious scruples about dabbling in the suds; so
  • that chummy the simple was made to do all the work of the firm, while
  • chummy the cunning played the sleeping partner in his hammock. Out upon
  • such chummies!
  • But I appeal to thee, honest Jarl, if I was ever chummy the cunning.
  • Never mind if thou didst fabricate my tarpaulins; and with Samaritan
  • charity bind up the rents, and pour needle and thread into the frightful
  • gashes that agonized my hapless nether integuments, which thou calledst
  • "ducks;"--Didst thou not expressly declare, that all these things, and
  • more, thou wouldst do for me, despite my own quaint thimble, fashioned
  • from the ivory tusk of a whale? Nay; could I even wrest from thy willful
  • hands my very shirt, when once thou hadst it steaming in an unsavory
  • pickle in thy capacious vat, a decapitated cask? Full well thou knowest,
  • Jarl, that these things are true; and I am bound to say it, to disclaim
  • any lurking desire to reap advantage from thy great good nature.
  • Now my Viking for me, thought I, when I cast about for a comrade; and my
  • Viking alone.
  • CHAPTER IV A Chat In The Clouds
  • The Skyeman seemed so earnest and upright a seaman, that to tell the
  • plain truth, in spite of his love for me, I had many misgivings as to
  • his readiness to unite in an undertaking which apparently savored of a
  • moral dereliction. But all things considered, I deemed my own resolution
  • quite venial; and as for inducing another to join me, it seemed a
  • precaution so indispensable, as to outweigh all other considerations.
  • Therefore I resolved freely to open my heart to him; for that special
  • purpose paying him a visit, when, like some old albatross in the air, he
  • happened to be perched at the foremast-head, all by himself, on the
  • lookout for whales never seen.
  • Now this standing upon a bit of stick 100 feet aloft for hours at a
  • time, swiftly sailing over the sea, is very much like crossing the
  • Channel in a balloon. Manfred-like, you talk to the clouds: you have a
  • fellow feeling for the sun. And when Jarl and I got conversing up there,
  • smoking our dwarfish "dudeens," any sea-gull passing by might have taken
  • us for Messrs. Blanchard and Jeffries, socially puffing their after-dinner Bagdads, bound to Calais, via Heaven, from Dover. Honest Jarl, I
  • acquainted with all: my conversation with the captain, the hint implied
  • in his last words, my firm resolve to quit the ship in one of her boats,
  • and the facility with which I thought the thing could be done. Then I
  • threw out many inducements, in the shape of pleasant anticipations of
  • bearing right down before the wind upon the sunny isles under our lee.
  • He listened attentively; but so long remained silent that I almost
  • fancied there was something in Jarl which would prove too much for me
  • and my eloquence.
  • At last he very bluntly declared that the scheme was a crazy one; he had
  • never known of such a thing but thrice before; and in every case the
  • runaways had never afterwards been heard of. He entreated me to renounce
  • my determination, not be a boy, pause and reflect, stick to the ship,
  • and go home in her like a man. Verily, my Viking talked to me like my
  • uncle.
  • But to all this I turned a deaf ear; affirming that my mind was made up;
  • and that as he refused to accompany me, and I fancied no one else for a
  • comrade, I would go stark alone rather than not at all. Upon this,
  • seeing my resolution immovable, he bluntly swore that he would follow me
  • through thick and thin.
  • Thanks, Jarl! thou wert one of those devoted fellows who will wrestle
  • hard to convince one loved of error; but failing, forthwith change their
  • wrestling to a sympathetic hug.
  • But now his elderly prudence came into play. Casting his eye over the
  • boundless expanse below, he inquired how far off were the islands in
  • question.
  • "A thousand miles and no less."
  • "With a fair trade breeze, then, and a boat sail, that is a good twelve
  • days' passage, but calms and currents may make it a month, perhaps
  • more." So saying, he shook his old head, and his yellow hair streamed.
  • But trying my best to chase away these misgivings, he at last gave them
  • over. He assured me I might count upon him to his uttermost keel.
  • My Viking secured, I felt more at ease; and thoughtfully considered how
  • the enterprise might best be accomplished.
  • There was no time to be lost. Every hour was carrying us farther and
  • farther from the parallel most desirable for us to follow in our route
  • to the westward. So, with all possible dispatch, I matured my plans, and
  • communicated them to Jarl, who gave several old hints--having ulterior
  • probabilities in view--which were not neglected.
  • Strange to relate, it was not till my Viking, with a rueful face,
  • reminded me of the fact, that I bethought me of a circumstance somewhat
  • alarming at the first blush. We must push off without chart or quadrant;
  • though, as will shortly be seen, a compass was by no means out of the
  • question. The chart, to be sure, I did not so much lay to heart; but a
  • quadrant was more than desirable. Still, it was by no means
  • indispensable. For this reason. When we started, our latitude would be
  • exactly known; and whether, on our voyage westward, we drifted north or
  • south therefrom, we could not, by any possibility, get so far out of our
  • reckoning, as to fail in striking some one of a long chain of islands,
  • which, for many degrees, on both sides of the equator, stretched right
  • across our track.
  • For much the same reason, it mattered little, whether on our passage we
  • daily knew our longitude; for no known land lay between us and the place
  • we desired to reach. So what could be plainer than this: that if
  • westward we patiently held on our way, we must eventually achieve our
  • destination?
  • As for intervening shoals or reefs, if any there were, they intimidated
  • us not. In a boat that drew but a few inches of water, but an
  • indifferent look-out would preclude all danger on that score. At all
  • events, the thing seemed feasible enough, notwithstanding old Jarl's
  • superstitious reverence for nautical instruments, and the philosophical
  • objections which might have been urged by a pedantic disciple of
  • Mercator.
  • Very often, as the old maxim goes, the simplest things are the most
  • startling, and that, too, from their very simplicity. So cherish no
  • alarms, if thus we addressed the setting sun--"Be thou, old pilot, our
  • guide!"
  • CHAPTER V Seats Secured And Portmanteaus Packed
  • But thoughts of sextants and quadrants were the least of our cares.
  • Right from under the very arches of the eyebrows of thirty men--captain,
  • mates, and crew--a boat was to be abstracted; they knowing nothing of
  • the event, until all knowledge would prove unavailing.
  • Hark ye:
  • At sea, the boats of a South Sea-man (generally four in number, spare
  • ones omitted,) are suspended by tackles, hooked above, to curved timbers
  • called "davits," vertically fixed to the ship's sides.
  • Now, no fair one with golden locks is more assiduously waited upon, or
  • more delicately handled by her tire-women, than the slender whale-boat
  • by her crew. And out of its element, it seems fragile enough to justify
  • the utmost solicitude. For truly, like a fine lady, the fine whale-boat
  • is most delicate when idle, though little coy at a pinch.
  • Besides the "davits," the following supports are provided Two small
  • cranes are swung under the keel, on which the latter rests, preventing
  • the settling of the boat's middle, while hanging suspended by the bow
  • and stern. A broad, braided, hempen band, usually worked in a tasteful
  • pattern, is also passed round both gunwales; and secured to the ship's
  • bulwarks, firmly lashes the craft to its place. Being elevated above the
  • ship's rail, the boats are in plain sight from all parts of the deck.
  • Now, one of these boats was to be made way with. No facile matter,
  • truly. Harder than for any dashing young Janizary to run off with a
  • sultana from the Grand Turk's seraglio. Still, the thing could be done,
  • for, by Jove, it had been.
  • What say you to slyly loosing every thing by day; and when night comes,
  • cast off the band and swing in the cranes? But how lower the tackles,
  • even in the darkest night, without a creaking more fearful than the
  • death rattle? Easily avoided. Anoint the ropes, and they will travel
  • deftly through the subtle windings of the blocks.
  • But though I had heard of this plan being pursued, there was a degree of
  • risk in it, after all, which I was far from fancying. Another plan was
  • hit upon; still bolder; and hence more safe. What it was, in the right
  • place will be seen.
  • In selecting my craft for this good voyage, I would fain have traversed
  • the deck, and eyed the boats like a cornet choosing his steed from out a
  • goodly stud. But this was denied me. And the "bow boat" was, perforce,
  • singled out, as the most remote from the quarter-deck, that region of
  • sharp eyes and relentless purposes.
  • Then, our larder was to be thought of; also, an abundant supply of
  • water; concerning which last I determined to take good heed. There were
  • but two to be taken care of; but I resolved to lay in sufficient store
  • of both meat and drink for four; at the same time that the supplemental
  • twain thus provided for were but imaginary. And if it came to the last
  • dead pinch, of which we had no fear, however, I was food for no man but
  • Jarl.
  • Little time was lost in catering for our mess. Biscuit and salt beef
  • were our sole resource; and, thanks to the generosity of the Arcturion's
  • owners, our ship's company had a plentiful supply. Casks of both, with
  • heads knocked out, were at the service of all. In bags which we made for
  • the purpose, a sufficiency of the biscuit was readily stored away, and
  • secreted in a corner of easy access. The salt beef was more difficult to
  • obtain; but, little by little, we managed to smuggle out of the cask
  • enough to answer our purpose.
  • As for water, most luckily a day or two previous several "breakers" of
  • it had been hoisted from below for the present use of the ship's
  • company.
  • These "breakers" are casks, long and slender, but very strong. Of
  • various diameters, they are made on purpose to stow into spaces
  • intervening between the immense butts in a ship's hold.
  • The largest we could find was selected, first carefully examining it to
  • detect any leak. On some pretense or other, we then rolled them all over
  • to that side of the vessel where our boat was suspended, the selected
  • breaker being placed in their middle.
  • Our compendious wardrobes were snugly packed into bundles and laid aside
  • for the present. And at last, by due caution, we had every thing
  • arranged preliminary to the final start. Let me say, though, perhaps to
  • the credit of Jarl, that whenever the most strategy was necessary, he
  • seemed ill at ease, and for the most part left the matter to me. It was
  • well that he did; for as it was, by his untimely straight-forwardness,
  • he once or twice came near spoiling every thing. Indeed, on one occasion
  • he was so unseasonably blunt, that curiously enough, I had almost
  • suspected him of taking that odd sort of interest in one's welfare,
  • which leads a philanthropist, all other methods failing, to frustrate a
  • project deemed bad; by pretending clumsily to favor it. But no
  • inuendoes; Jarl was a Viking, frank as his fathers; though not so much
  • of a bucanier.
  • CHAPTER VI Eight Bells
  • The moon must be monstrous coy, or some things fall out opportunely, or
  • else almanacs are consulted by nocturnal adventurers; but so it is, that
  • when Cynthia shows a round and chubby disk, few daring deeds are done.
  • Though true it may be, that of moonlight nights, jewelers' caskets and
  • maidens' hearts have been burglariously broken into--and rifled, for
  • aught Copernicus can tell.
  • The gentle planet was in her final quarter, and upon her slender horn I
  • hung my hopes of withdrawing from the ship undetected.
  • Now, making a tranquil passage across the ocean, we kept at this time
  • what are called among whalemen "boatscrew-watches." That is, instead of
  • the sailors being divided at night into two bands, alternately on deck
  • every four hours, there were four watches, each composed of a boat's
  • crew, the "headsman" (always one of the mates) excepted. To the
  • officers, this plan gives uninterrupted repose--"all-night-in," as they
  • call it, and of course greatly lightens the duties of the crew.
  • The harpooneers head the boats' crews, and are responsible for the ship
  • during the continuance of their watches.
  • Now, my Viking being a stalwart seaman, pulled the midship oar of the
  • boat of which I was bowsman. Hence, we were in the same watch; to which,
  • also, three others belonged, including Mark, the harpooner. One of these
  • seamen, however, being an invalid, there were only two left for us to
  • manage.
  • Voyaging in these seas, you may glide along for weeks without starting
  • tack or sheet, hardly moving the helm a spoke, so mild and constant are
  • the Trades. At night, the watch seldom trouble themselves with keeping
  • much of a look-out; especially, as a strange sail is almost a prodigy in
  • these lonely waters. In some ships, for weeks in and weeks out, you are
  • puzzled to tell when your nightly turn on deck really comes round; so
  • little heed is given to the standing of watches, where in the license of
  • presumed safety, nearly every one nods without fear.
  • But remiss as you may be in the boats-crew-watch of a heedless whaleman,
  • the man who heads it is bound to maintain his post on the quarter-deck
  • until regularly relieved. Yet drowsiness being incidental to all
  • natures, even to Napoleon, beside his own sentry napping in the snowy
  • bivouac; so, often, in snowy moonlight, or ebon eclipse, dozed Mark, our
  • harpooneer. Lethe be his portion this blessed night, thought I, as
  • during the morning which preceded our enterprise, I eyed the man who
  • might possibly cross my plans.
  • But let me come closer to this part of my story. During what are called
  • at sea the "dog-watches" (between four o'clock and eight in the
  • evening), sailors are quite lively and frolicsome; their spirits even
  • flow far into the first of the long "night-watches;" but upon its
  • expiration at "eight bells" (midnight), silence begins to reign; if you
  • hear a voice it is no cherub's: all exclamations are oaths.
  • At eight bells, the mariners on deck, now relieved from their cares,
  • crawl out from their sleepy retreats in old monkey jackets, or coils of
  • rigging, and hie to their hammocks, almost without interrupting their
  • dreams: while the sluggards below lazily drag themselves up the ladder
  • to resume their slumbers in the open air.
  • For these reasons then, the moonless sea midnight was just the time to
  • escape. Hence, we suffered a whole day to pass unemployed; waiting for
  • the night, when the star board-quarter-boats'-watch, to which we
  • belonged, would be summoned on deck at the eventful eight of the bell.
  • But twenty-four hours soon glide away; and "Starboleens ahoy; eight
  • bells there below;" at last started me from a troubled doze.
  • I sprang from my hammock, and would have lighted my pipe. But the
  • forecastle lamp had gone out. An old sea-dog was talking about sharks in
  • his sleep. Jarl and our solitary watch-mate were groping their way into
  • their trowsers. And little was heard but the humming of the still sails
  • aloft; the dash of the waves against the bow; and the deep breathing of
  • the dreaming sailors around.
  • CHAPTER VII A Pause
  • Good old Arcturion! Maternal craft; that rocked me so often in thy heart
  • of oak, I grieve to tell how I deserted thee on the broad deep. So far
  • from home, with such a motley crew, so many islanders, whose heathen
  • babble echoing through thy Christian hull, must have grated harshly on
  • every carline.
  • Old ship! where sails thy lone ghost now? For of the stout Arcturion no
  • word was ever heard, from the dark hour we pushed from her fated planks.
  • In what time of tempest, to what seagull's scream, the drowning eddies
  • did their work, knows no mortal man. Sunk she silently, helplessly, into
  • the calm depths of that summer sea, assassinated by the ruthless blade
  • of the swordfish? Such things have been. Or was hers a better fate?
  • Stricken down while gallantly battling with the blast; her storm-sails
  • set; helm manned; and every sailor at his post; as sunk the Hornet, her
  • men at quarters, in some distant gale.
  • But surmises are idle. A very old craft, she may have foundered; or laid
  • her bones upon some treacherous reef; but as with many a far rover, her
  • fate is a mystery.
  • Pray Heaven, the spirit of that lost vessel roaming abroad through the
  • troubled mists of midnight gales--as old mariners believe of missing
  • ships--may never haunt my future path upon the waves. Peacefully may she
  • rest at the bottom of the sea; and sweetly sleep my shipmates in the
  • lowest watery zone, where prowling sharks come not, nor billows roll.
  • By quitting the Arcturion when we did, Jarl and I unconsciously eluded a
  • sailor's grave. We hear of providential deliverances. Was this one? But
  • life is sweet to all, death comes as hard. And for myself I am almost
  • tempted to hang my head, that I escaped the fate of my shipmates;
  • something like him who blushed to have escaped the fell carnage at
  • Thermopylae.
  • Though I can not repress a shudder when I think of that old ship's end,
  • it is impossible for me so much as to imagine, that our deserting her
  • could have been in any way instrumental in her loss. Nevertheless, I
  • would to heaven the Arcturion still floated; that it was given me once
  • more to tread her familiar decks.
  • CHAPTER VIII They Push Off, Velis Et Remis
  • And now to tell how, tempted by devil or good angel, and a thousand
  • miles from land, we embarked upon this western voyage.
  • It was midnight, mark you, when our watch began; and my turn at the helm
  • now coming on was of course to be avoided. On some plausible pretense, I
  • induced our solitary watchmate to assume it; thus leaving myself
  • untrammeled, and at the same time satisfactorily disposing of him. For
  • being a rather fat fellow, an enormous consumer of "duff," and with good
  • reason supposed to be the son of a farmer, I made no doubt, he would
  • pursue his old course and fall to nodding over the wheel. As for the
  • leader of the watch--our harpooner--he fell heir to the nest of old
  • jackets, under the lee of the mizzen-mast, left nice and warm by his
  • predecessor.
  • The night was even blacker than we had anticipated; there was no trace
  • of a moon; and the dark purple haze, sometimes encountered at night near
  • the Line, half shrouded the stars from view.
  • Waiting about twenty minutes after the last man of the previous watch
  • had gone below, I motioned to Jarl, and we slipped our shoes from our
  • feet. He then descended into the forecastle, and I sauntered aft toward
  • the quarter-deck. All was still. Thrice did I pass my hand full before
  • the face of the slumbering lubber at the helm, and right between him and
  • the light of the binnacle.
  • Mark, the harpooneer, was not so easily sounded. I feared to approach
  • him. He lay quietly, though; but asleep or awake, no more delay. Risks
  • must be run, when time presses. And our ears were a pointer's to catch a
  • sound.
  • To work we went, without hurry, but swiftly and silently. Our various
  • stores were dragged from their lurking-places, and placed in the boat,
  • which hung from the ship's lee side, the side depressed in the water, an
  • indispensable requisite to an attempt at escape. And though at sundown
  • the boat was to windward, yet, as we had foreseen, the vessel having
  • been tacked during the first watch, brought it to leeward.
  • Endeavoring to manhandle our clumsy breaker, and lift it into the boat,
  • we found, that by reason of the intervention of the shrouds, it could
  • not be done without, risking a jar; besides straining the craft in
  • lowering. An expedient, however, though at the eleventh hour, was hit
  • upon. Fastening a long rope to the breaker, which was perfectly tight,
  • we cautiously dropped it overboard; paying out enough line, to insure
  • its towing astern of the ship, so as not to strike against the copper.
  • The other end of the line we then secured to the boat's stern.
  • Fortunately, this was the last thing to be done; for the breaker, acting
  • as a clog to the vessel's way in the water, so affected her steering as
  • to fling her perceptibly into the wind. And by causing the helm to work,
  • this must soon rouse the lubber there stationed, if not already awake.
  • But our dropping overboard the breaker greatly aided us in this respect:
  • it diminished the ship's headway; which owing to the light breeze had
  • not been very great at any time during the night. Had it been so, all
  • hope of escaping without first arresting the vessel's progress, would
  • have been little short of madness. As it was, the sole daring of the
  • deed that night achieved, consisted in our lowering away while the ship
  • yet clove the brine, though but moderately.
  • All was now ready: the cranes swung in, the lashings adrift, and the
  • boat fairly suspended; when, seizing the ends of the tackle ropes, we
  • silently stepped into it, one at each end. The dead weight of the
  • breaker astern now dragged the craft horizontally through the air, so
  • that her tackle ropes strained hard. She quivered like a dolphin.
  • Nevertheless, had we not feared her loud splash upon striking the wave,
  • we might have quitted the ship almost as silently as the breath the
  • body. But this was out of the question, and our plans were laid
  • accordingly.
  • "All ready, Jarl?"
  • "Ready."
  • "A man overboard!" I shouted at the top of my compass; and like
  • lightning the cords slid through our blistering hands, and with a
  • tremendous shock the boat bounded on the sea's back. One mad sheer and
  • plunge, one terrible strain on the tackles as we sunk in the trough of
  • the waves, tugged upon by the towing breaker, and our knives severed the
  • tackle ropes--we hazarded not unhooking the blocks--our oars were out,
  • and the good boat headed round, with prow to leeward.
  • "Man overboard!" was now shouted from stem to stern. And directly we
  • heard the confused tramping and shouting of the sailors, as they rushed
  • from their dreams into the almost inscrutable darkness.
  • "Man overboard! Man overboard!" My heart smote me as the human cry of
  • horror came out of the black vaulted night.
  • "Down helm!" was soon heard from the chief mate. "Back the main-yard!
  • Quick to the boats! How's this? One down already? Well done! Hold on,
  • then, those other boats!"
  • Meanwhile several seamen were shouting as they strained at the braces.
  • "Cut! cut all! Lower away! lower away!" impatiently cried the sailors,
  • who already had leaped into the boats.
  • "Heave the ship to, and hold fast every thing," cried the captain,
  • apparently just springing to the deck. "One boat's enough. Steward; show
  • a light there from the mizzen-top. Boat ahoy!--Have you got that man?"
  • No reply. The voice came out of a cloud; the ship dimly showing like a
  • ghost. We had desisted from rowing, and hand over hand were now hauling
  • in upon the rope attached to the breaker, which we soon lifted into the
  • boat, instantly resuming our oars.
  • "Pull! pull, men! and save him!" again shouted the captain.
  • "Ay, ay, sir," answered Jarl instinctively, "pulling as hard as ever we
  • can, sir."
  • And pull we did, till nothing could be heard from the ship but a
  • confused tumult; and, ever and anon, the hoarse shout of the captain,
  • too distant to be understood.
  • We now set our sail to a light air; and right into the darkness, and
  • dead to leeward, we rowed and sailed till morning dawned.
  • CHAPTER IX The Watery World Is All Before Them
  • At sea in an open boat, and a thousand miles from land!
  • Shortly after the break of day, in the gray transparent light, a speck
  • to windward broke the even line of the horizon. It was the ship wending
  • her way north-eastward.
  • Had I not known the final indifference of sailors to such disasters as
  • that which the Arcturion's crew must have imputed to the night past (did
  • not the skipper suspect the truth) I would have regarded that little
  • speck with many compunctions of conscience. Nor, as it was, did I feel
  • in any very serene humor. For the consciousness of being deemed dead, is
  • next to the presumable unpleasantness of being so in reality. One feels
  • like his own ghost unlawfully tenanting a defunct carcass. Even Jarl's
  • glance seemed so queer, that I begged him to look another way.
  • Secure now from all efforts of the captain to recover those whom he most
  • probably supposed lost; and equally cut off from all hope of returning
  • to the ship even had we felt so inclined; the resolution that had thus
  • far nerved me, began to succumb in a measure to the awful loneliness of
  • the scene. Ere this, I had regarded the ocean as a slave, the steed that
  • bore me whither I listed, and whose vicious propensities, mighty though
  • they were, often proved harmless, when opposed to the genius of man. But
  • now, how changed! In our frail boat, I would fain have built an altar to
  • Neptune.
  • What a mere toy we were to the billows, that jeeringly shouldered us
  • from crest to crest, as from hand to hand lost souls may be tossed along
  • by the chain of shades which enfilade the route to Tartarus.
  • But drown or swim, here's overboard with care! Cheer up, Jarl! Ha! Ha!
  • how merrily, yet terribly, we sail! Up, up--slowly up--toiling up the
  • long, calm wave; then balanced on its summit a while, like a plank on a
  • rail; and down, we plunge headlong into the seething abyss, till
  • arrested, we glide upward again. And thus did we go. Now buried in
  • watery hollows--our sail idly flapping; then lifted aloft--canvas
  • bellying; and beholding the furthest horizon.
  • Had not our familiarity with the business of whaling divested our
  • craft's wild motions of its first novel horrors, we had been but a
  • rueful pair. But day-long pulls after whales, the ship left miles
  • astern; and entire dark nights passed moored to the monsters, killed too
  • late to be towed to the ship far to leeward:--all this, and much more,
  • accustoms one to strange things. Death, to be sure, has a mouth as black
  • as a wolf's, and to be thrust into his jaws is a serious thing. But true
  • it most certainly is--and I speak from no hearsay--that to sailors, as a
  • class, the grisly king seems not half so hideous as he appears to those
  • who have only regarded him on shore, and at a deferential distance. Like
  • many ugly mortals, his features grow less frightful upon acquaintance;
  • and met over often and sociably, the old adage holds true, about
  • familiarity breeding contempt. Thus too with soldiers. Of the quaking
  • recruit, three pitched battles make a grim grenadier; and he who shrank
  • from the muzzle of a cannon, is now ready to yield his mustache for a
  • sponge.
  • And truly, since death is the last enemy of all, valiant souls will
  • taunt him while they may. Yet rather, should the wise regard him as the
  • inflexible friend, who, even against our own wills, from life's evils
  • triumphantly relieves us.
  • And there is but little difference in the manner of dying. To die, is
  • all. And death has been gallantly encountered by those who never beheld
  • blood that was red, only its light azure seen through the veins. And to
  • yield the ghost proudly, and march out of your fortress with all the
  • honors of war, is not a thing of sinew and bone. Though in prison,
  • Geoffry Hudson, the dwarf, died more bravely than Goliah, the giant; and
  • the last end of a butterfly shames us all. Some women have lived nobler
  • lives, and died nobler deaths, than men. Threatened with the stake,
  • mitred Cranmer recanted; but through her fortitude, the lorn widow of
  • Edessa stayed the tide of Valens' persecutions. 'Tis no great valor to
  • perish sword in hand, and bravado on lip; cased all in panoply complete.
  • For even the alligator dies in his mail, and the swordfish never
  • surrenders. To expire, mild-eyed, in one's bed, transcends the death of
  • Epaminondas.
  • CHAPTER X They Arrange Their Canopies And Lounges, And Try To Make
  • Things Comfortable
  • Our little craft was soon in good order. From the spare rigging brought
  • along, we made shrouds to the mast, and converted the boat-hook into a
  • handy boom for the jib. Going large before the wind, we set this sail
  • wing-and-wing with the main-sail. The latter, in accordance with the
  • customary rig of whale-boats, was worked with a sprit and sheet. It
  • could be furled or set in an instant. The bags of bread we stowed away
  • in the covered space about the loggerhead, a useless appurtenance now,
  • and therefore removed. At night, Jarl used it for a pillow; saying, that
  • when the boat rolled it gave easy play to his head. The precious breaker
  • we lashed firmly amidships; thereby much improving our sailing.
  • Now, previous to leaving the ship, we had seen to it well, that our
  • craft was supplied with all those equipments, with which, by the
  • regulations of the fishery, a whale-boat is constantly provided: night
  • and day, afloat or suspended. Hanging along our gunwales inside, were
  • six harpoons, three lances, and a blubber-spade; all keen as razors, and
  • sheathed with leather. Besides these, we had three waifs, a couple of
  • two-gallon water-kegs, several bailers, the boat-hatchet for cutting the
  • whale-line, two auxiliary knives for the like purpose, and several minor
  • articles, also employed in hunting the leviathan. The line and line-tub,
  • however, were on ship-board.
  • And here it may be mentioned, that to prevent the strain upon the boat
  • when suspended to the ship's side, the heavy whale-line, over two
  • hundred fathoms in length, and something more than an inch in diameter,
  • when not in use is kept on ship-board, coiled away like an endless snake
  • in its tub. But this tub is always in readiness to be launched into the
  • boat. Now, having no use for the line belonging to our craft, we had
  • purposely left it behind.
  • But well had we marked that by far the most important item of a whale-boat's furniture was snugly secured in its place. This was the water-tight keg, at both ends firmly headed, containing a small compass,
  • tinder-box and flint, candles, and a score or two of biscuit. This keg
  • is an invariable precaution against what so frequently occurs in
  • pursuing the sperm whale--prolonged absence from the ship, losing sight
  • of her, or never seeing her more, till years after you reach home again.
  • In this same keg of ours seemed coopered up life and death, at least so
  • seemed it to honest Jarl. No sooner had we got clear from the Arcturion,
  • than dropping his oar for an instant, he clutched at it in the dark.
  • And when day at last came, we knocked out the head of the keg with the
  • little hammer and chisel, always attached to it for that purpose, and
  • removed the compass, that glistened to us like a human eye. Then filling
  • up the vacancy with biscuit, we again made all tight, driving down the
  • hoops till they would budge no more.
  • At first we were puzzled to fix our compass. But at last the Skyeman out
  • knife, and cutting a round hole in the after-most thwart, or seat of the
  • boat, there inserted the little brass case containing the needle.
  • Over the stern of the boat, with some old canvas which my Viking's
  • forethought had provided, we spread a rude sort of awning, or rather
  • counterpane. This, however, proved but little or no protection from the
  • glare of the sun; for the management of the main-sail forbade any
  • considerable elevation of the shelter. And when the breeze was fresh, we
  • were fain to strike it altogether; for the wind being from aft, and
  • getting underneath the canvas, almost lifted the light boat's stem into
  • the air, vexing the counterpane as if it were a petticoat turning a
  • gusty corner. But when a mere breath rippled the sea, and the sun was
  • fiery hot, it was most pleasant to lounge in this shady asylum. It was
  • like being transferred from the roast to cool in the cupboard. And Jarl,
  • much the toughest fowl of the two, out of an abundant kindness for his
  • comrade, during the day voluntarily remained exposed at the helm, almost
  • two hours to my one. No lady-like scruples had he, the old Viking, about
  • marring his complexion, which already was more than bronzed. Over the
  • ordinary tanning of the sailor, he seemed masked by a visor of
  • japanning, dotted all over with freckles, so intensely yellow, and
  • symmetrically circular, that they seemed scorched there by a burning
  • glass.
  • In the tragico-comico moods which at times overtook me, I used to look
  • upon the brown Skyeman with humorous complacency. If we fall in with
  • cannibals, thought I, then, ready-roasted Norseman that thou art, shall
  • I survive to mourn thee; at least, during the period I revolve upon the
  • spit.
  • But of such a fate, it needs hardly be said, we had no apprehension.
  • CHAPTER XI Jarl Afflicted With The Lockjaw
  • If ever again I launch whale-boat from sheer-plank of ship at sea, I
  • shall take good heed, that my comrade be a sprightly fellow, with a
  • rattle-box head. Be he never so silly, his very silliness, so long as he
  • be lively at it, shall be its own excuse.
  • Upon occasion, who likes not a lively loon, one of your giggling,
  • gamesome oafs, whose mouth is a grin? Are not such, well-ordered
  • dispensations of Providence? filling up vacuums, in intervals of social
  • stagnation relieving the tedium of existing? besides keeping up, here
  • and there, in very many quarters indeed, sundry people's good opinion of
  • themselves? What, if at times their speech is insipid as water after
  • wine? What, if to ungenial and irascible souls, their very "mug" is an
  • exasperation to behold, their clack an inducement to suicide? Let us not
  • be hard upon them for this; but let them live on for the good they may
  • do.
  • But Jarl, dear, dumb Jarl, thou wert none of these. Thou didst carry a
  • phiz like an excommunicated deacon's. And no matter what happened, it
  • was ever the same. Quietly, in thyself, thou didst revolve upon thine
  • own sober axis, like a wheel in a machine which forever goes round,
  • whether you look at it or no. Ay, Jarl! wast thou not forever intent
  • upon minding that which so many neglect--thine own especial business?
  • Wast thou not forever at it, too, with no likelihood of ever winding up
  • thy moody affairs, and striking a balance sheet?
  • But at times how wearisome to me these everlasting reveries in my one
  • solitary companion. I longed for something enlivening; a burst of words;
  • human vivacity of one kind or other. After in vain essaying to get
  • something of this sort out of Jarl, I tried it all by myself; playing
  • upon my body as upon an instrument; singing, halloing, and making empty
  • gestures, till my Viking stared hard; and I myself paused to consider
  • whether I had run crazy or no.
  • But how account for the Skyeman's gravity? Surely, it was based upon no
  • philosophic taciturnity; he was nothing of an idealist; an aerial
  • architect; a constructor of flying buttresses. It was inconceivable,
  • that his reveries were Manfred-like and exalted, reminiscent of
  • unutterable deeds, too mysterious even to be indicated by the remotest
  • of hints. Suppositions all out of the question.
  • His ruminations were a riddle. I asked him anxiously, whether, in any
  • part of the world, Savannah, Surat, or Archangel, he had ever a wife to
  • think of; or children, that he carried so lengthy a phiz. Nowhere
  • neither. Therefore, as by his own confession he had nothing to think of
  • but himself, and there was little but honesty in him (having which, by
  • the way, he may be thought full to the brim), what could I fall back
  • upon but my original theory: namely, that in repose, his intellects
  • stepped out, and left his body to itself.
  • CHAPTER XII More About Being In An Open Boat
  • On the third morning, at break of day, I sat at the steering oar, an
  • hour or two previous having relieved Jarl, now fast asleep. Somehow, and
  • suddenly, a sense of peril so intense, came over me, that it could
  • hardly have been aggravated by the completest solitude.
  • On a ship's deck, the mere feeling of elevation above the water, and the
  • reach of prospect you command, impart a degree of confidence which
  • disposes you to exult in your fancied security. But in an open boat,
  • brought down to the very plane of the sea, this feeling almost wholly
  • deserts you. Unless the waves, in their gambols, toss you and your chip
  • upon one of their lordly crests, your sphere of vision is little larger
  • than it would be at the bottom of a well. At best, your most extended
  • view in any one direction, at least, is in a high, slow-rolling sea;
  • when you descend into the dark, misty spaces, between long and uniform
  • swells. Then, for the moment, it is like looking up and down in a
  • twilight glade, interminable; where two dawns, one on each hand, seem
  • struggling through the semi-transparent tops of the fluid mountains.
  • But, lingering not long in those silent vales, from watery cliff to
  • cliff, a sea-chamois, sprang our solitary craft,--a goat among the Alps!
  • How undulated the horizon; like a vast serpent with ten thousand folds
  • coiled all round the globe; yet so nigh, apparently, that it seemed as
  • if one's hand might touch it.
  • What loneliness; when the sun rose, and spurred up the heavens, we
  • hailed him as a wayfarer in Sahara the sight of a distant horseman. Save
  • ourselves, the sun and the Chamois seemed all that was left of life in
  • the universe. We yearned toward its jocund disk, as in strange lands the
  • traveler joyfully greets a face from home, which there had passed
  • unheeded. And was not the sun a fellow-voyager? were we not both wending
  • westward? But how soon he daily overtook and passed us; hurrying to his
  • journey's end.
  • When a week had gone by, sailing steadily on, by day and by night, and
  • nothing in sight but this self-same sea, what wonder if disquieting
  • thoughts at last entered our hearts? If unknowingly we should pass the
  • spot where, according to our reckoning, our islands lay, upon what
  • shoreless sea would we launch? At times, these forebodings bewildered my
  • idea of the positions of the groups beyond. All became vague and
  • confused; so that westward of the Kingsmil isles and the Radack chain, I
  • fancied there could be naught but an endless sea.
  • CHAPTER XIII Of The Chondropterygii, And Other Uncouth Hordes Infesting
  • The South Seas
  • At intervals in our lonely voyage, there were sights which diversified
  • the scene; especially when the constellation Pisces was in the
  • ascendant.
  • It's famous botanizing, they say, in Arkansas' boundless prairies; I
  • commend the student of Ichthyology to an open boat, and the ocean moors
  • of the Pacific. As your craft glides along, what strange monsters float
  • by. Elsewhere, was never seen their like. And nowhere are they found in
  • the books of the naturalists.
  • Though America be discovered, the Cathays of the deep are unknown. And
  • whoso crosses the Pacific might have read lessons to Buffon. The sea-serpent is not a fable; and in the sea, that snake is but a garden worm.
  • There are more wonders than the wonders rejected, and more sights
  • unrevealed than you or I ever ever dreamt of. Moles and bats alone
  • should be skeptics; and the only true infidelity is for a live man to
  • vote himself dead. Be Sir Thomas Brown our ensample; who, while
  • exploding "Vulgar Errors," heartily hugged all the mysteries in the
  • Pentateuch.
  • But look! fathoms down in the sea; where ever saw you a phantom like
  • that? An enormous crescent with antlers like a reindeer, and a Delta of
  • mouths. Slowly it sinks, and is seen no more.
  • Doctor Faust saw the devil; but you have seen the "Devil Fish."
  • Look again! Here comes another. Jarl calls it a Bone Shark. Full as
  • large as a whale, it is spotted like a leopard; and tusk-like teeth
  • overlap its jaws like those of the walrus. To seamen, nothing strikes
  • more terror than the near vicinity of a creature like this. Great ships
  • steer out of its path. And well they may; since the good craft Essex,
  • and others, have been sunk by sea-monsters, as the alligator thrusts his
  • horny snout through a Carribean canoe.
  • Ever present to us, was the apprehension of some sudden disaster from
  • the extraordinary zoological specimens we almost hourly passed.
  • For the sharks, we saw them, not by units, nor by tens, nor by hundreds;
  • but by thousands and by myriads. Trust me, there are more sharks in the
  • sea than mortals on land.
  • And of these prolific fish there are full as many species as of dogs.
  • But by the German naturalists Muller and Henle, who, in christening the
  • sharks, have bestowed upon them the most heathenish names, they are
  • classed under one family; which family, according to Muller, king-at-arms, is an undoubted branch of the ancient and famous tribe of the
  • Chondropterygii.
  • To begin. There is the ordinary Brown Shark, or sea attorney, so called
  • by sailors; a grasping, rapacious varlet, that in spite of the hard
  • knocks received from it, often snapped viciously at our steering oar. At
  • times, these gentry swim in herds; especially about the remains of a
  • slaughtered whale. They are the vultures of the deep.
  • Then we often encountered the dandy Blue Shark, a long, taper and mighty
  • genteel looking fellow, with a slender waist, like a Bond-street beau,
  • and the whitest tiers of teeth imaginable. This dainty spark invariably
  • lounged by with a careless fin and an indolent tail. But he looked
  • infernally heartless.
  • How his cold-blooded, gentlemanly air, contrasted with the rude, savage
  • swagger of the Tiger Shark; a round, portly gourmand; with distended
  • mouth and collapsed conscience, swimming about seeking whom he might
  • devour. These gluttons are the scavengers of navies, following ships in
  • the South Seas, picking up odds and ends of garbage, and sometimes a
  • tit-bit, a stray sailor. No wonder, then, that sailors denounce them. In
  • substance, Jarl once assured me, that under any temporary misfortune, it
  • was one of his sweetest consolations to remember, that in his day, he
  • had murdered, not killed, shoals of Tiger Sharks.
  • Yet this is all wrong. As well hate a seraph, as a shark. Both were made
  • by the same hand. And that sharks are lovable, witness their domestic
  • endearments. No Fury so ferocious, as not to have some amiable side. In
  • the wild wilderness, a leopard-mother caresses her cub, as Hagar did
  • Ishmael; or a queen of France the dauphin. We know not what we do when
  • we hate. And I have the word of my gentlemanly friend Stanhope, for it;
  • that he who declared he loved a good hater was but a respectable sort of
  • Hottentot, at best. No very genteel epithet this, though coming from the
  • genteelest of men. But when the digger of dictionaries said that saying
  • of his, he was assuredly not much of a Christian. However, it is hard
  • for one given up to constitutional hypos like him; to be filled with the
  • milk and meekness of the gospels. Yet, with deference, I deny that my
  • old uncle Johnson really believed in the sentiment ascribed to him. Love
  • a hater, indeed! Who smacks his lips over gall? Now hate is a thankless
  • thing. So, let us only hate hatred; and once give love play, we will
  • fall in love with a unicorn. Ah! the easiest way is the best; and to
  • hate, a man must work hard. Love is a delight; but hate a torment. And
  • haters are thumbscrews, Scotch boots, and Spanish inquisitions to
  • themselves. In five words--would they were a Siamese diphthong--he who
  • hates is a fool.
  • For several days our Chamois was followed by two of these aforesaid
  • Tiger Sharks. A brace of confidential inseparables, jogging along in our
  • wake, side by side, like a couple of highwaymen, biding their time till
  • you come to the cross-roads. But giving it up at last, for a bootless
  • errand, they dropped farther and farther astern, until completely out of
  • sight. Much to the Skyeman's chagrin; who long stood in the stern, lance
  • poised for a dart.
  • But of all sharks, save me from the ghastly White Shark. For though we
  • should hate naught, yet some dislikes are spontaneous; and disliking is
  • not hating. And never yet could I bring myself to be loving, or even
  • sociable, with a White Shark. He is not the sort of creature to enlist
  • young affections.
  • This ghost of a fish is not often encountered, and shows plainer by
  • night than by day. Timon-like, he always swims by himself; gliding along
  • just under the surface, revealing a long, vague shape, of a milky hue;
  • with glimpses now and then of his bottomless white pit of teeth. No need
  • of a dentist hath he. Seen at night, stealing along like a spirit in the
  • water, with horrific serenity of aspect, the White Shark sent many a
  • thrill to us twain in the Chamois.
  • By day, and in the profoundest calms, oft were we startled by the
  • ponderous sigh of the grampus, as lazily rising to the surface, he
  • fetched a long breath after napping below.
  • And time and again we watched the darting albicore, the fish with the
  • chain-plate armor and golden scales; the Nimrod of the seas, to whom so
  • many flying fish fall a prey. Flying from their pursuers, many of them
  • flew into our boat. But invariably they died from the shock. No nursing
  • could restore them. One of their wings I removed, spreading it out to
  • dry under a weight. In two days' time the thin membrane, all over
  • tracings like those of a leaf, was transparent as isinglass, and tinted
  • with brilliant hues, like those of a changing silk.
  • Almost every day, we spied Black Fish; coal-black and glossy. They
  • seemed to swim by revolving round and round in the water, like a wheel;
  • their dorsal fins, every now and then shooting into view, like spokes.
  • Of a somewhat similar species, but smaller, and clipper-built about the
  • nose, were the Algerines; so called, probably, from their corsair
  • propensities; waylaying peaceful fish on the high seas, and plundering
  • them of body and soul at a gulp. Atrocious Turks! a crusade should be
  • preached against them.
  • Besides all these, we encountered Killers and Thrashers, by far the most
  • spirited and "spunky" of the finny tribes. Though little larger than a
  • porpoise, a band of them think nothing of assailing leviathan himself.
  • They bait the monster, as dogs a bull. The Killers seizing the Right
  • whale by his immense, sulky lower lip, and the Thrashers fastening on to
  • his back, and beating him with their sinewy tails. Often they come off
  • conquerors, worrying the enemy to death. Though, sooth to say, if
  • leviathan gets but one sweep al them with his terrible tail, they go
  • flying into the air, as if tossed from Taurus' horn.
  • This sight we beheld. Had old Wouvermans, who once painted a bull bait,
  • been along with us, a rare chance, that, for his pencil. And Gudin or
  • Isabey might have thrown the blue rolling sea into the picture. Lastly,
  • one of Claude's setting summer suns would have glorified the whole. Oh,
  • believe me, God's creatures fighting, fin for fin, a thousand miles from
  • land, and with the round horizon for an arena; is no ignoble subject for
  • a masterpiece.
  • Such are a few of the sights of the great South Sea. But there is no
  • telling all. The Pacific is populous as China.
  • CHAPTER XIV Jarl's Misgivings
  • About this time an event took place. My good Viking opened his mouth,
  • and spoke. The prodigy occurred, as, jacknife in hand, he was bending
  • over the midship oar; on the loom, or handle, of which he kept our
  • almanac; making a notch for every set sun. For some forty-eight hours
  • past, the wind had been light and variable. It was more than suspected
  • that a current was sweeping us northward.
  • Now, marking these things, Jarl threw out the thought, that the more
  • wind, and the less current, the better; and if a long calm came on, of
  • which there was some prospect, we had better take to our oars.
  • Take to our oars! as if we were crossing a ferry, and no ocean leagues
  • to traverse. The idea indirectly suggested all possible horrors. To be
  • rid of them forthwith, I proceeded to dole out our morning meal. For to
  • make away with such things, there is nothing better than bolting
  • something down on top of them; albeit, oft repeated, the plan is very
  • apt to beget dyspepsia; and the dyspepsia the blues.
  • But what of our store of provisions? So far as enough to eat was
  • concerned, we felt not the slightest apprehension; our supplies proving
  • more abundant than we had anticipated. But, curious to tell, we felt but
  • little inclination for food. It was water, bright water, cool, sparkling
  • water, alone, that we craved. And of this, also, our store at first
  • seemed ample. But as our voyage lengthened, and breezes blew faint, and
  • calms fell fast, the idea of being deprived of the precious fluid grew
  • into something little short of a mono-mania; especially with Jarl.
  • Every hour or two with the hammer and chisel belonging to the tinder box
  • keg, he tinkered away at the invaluable breaker; driving down the hoops,
  • till in his over solicitude, I thought he would burst them outright.
  • Now the breaker lay on its bilge, in the middle of the boat, where more
  • or less sea-water always collected. And ever and anon, dipping his
  • finger therein, my Viking was troubled with the thought, that this sea-water tasted less brackish than that alongside. Of course the breaker
  • must be leaking. So, he would turn it over, till its wet side came
  • uppermost; when it would quickly become dry as a bone. But now, with his
  • knife, he would gently probe the joints of the staves; shake his head;
  • look up; look down; taste of the water in the bottom of the boat; then
  • that of the sea; then lift one end of the breaker; going through with
  • every test of leakage he could dream of. Nor was he ever fully
  • satisfied, that the breaker was in all respects sound. But in reality it
  • was tight as the drum-heads that beat at Cerro-Gordo. Oh! Jarl, Jarl: to
  • me in the boat's quiet stern, steering and philosophizing at one time
  • and the same, thou and thy breaker were a study.
  • Besides the breaker, we had, full of water, the two boat-kegs,
  • previously alluded to. These were first used. We drank from them by
  • their leaden spouts; so many swallows three times in the day; having no
  • other means of measuring an allowance. But when we came to the breaker,
  • which had only a bung-hole, though a very large one, dog-like, it was so
  • many laps apiece; jealously counted by the observer. This plan, however,
  • was only good for a single day; the water then getting beyond the reach
  • of the tongue. We therefore daily poured from the breaker into one of
  • the kegs; and drank from its spout. But to obviate the absorption
  • inseparable from decanting, we at last hit upon something better,--my
  • comrade's shoe, which, deprived of its quarters, narrowed at the heel,
  • and diligently rinsed out in the sea, was converted into a handy but
  • rather limber ladle. This we kept suspended in the bung-hole of the
  • breaker, that it might never twice absorb the water.
  • Now pewter imparts flavor to ale; a Meerschaum bowl, the same to the
  • tobacco of Smyrna; and goggle green glasses are deemed indispensable to
  • the bibbing of Hock. What then shall be said of a leathern goblet for
  • water? Try it, ye mariners who list.
  • One morning, taking his wonted draught, Jarl fished up in his ladle a
  • deceased insect; something like a Daddy-long-legs, only more corpulent.
  • Its fate? A sea-toss? Believe it not; with all those precious drops
  • clinging to its lengthy legs. It was held over the ladle till the last
  • globule dribbled; and even then, being moist, honest Jarl was but loth
  • to drop it overboard.
  • For our larder, we could not endure the salt beef; it was raw as a live
  • Abyssinian steak, and salt as Cracow. Besides, the Feegee simile would
  • not have held good with respect to it. It was far from being "tender as
  • a dead man." The biscuit only could we eat; not to be wondered at; for
  • even on shipboard, seamen in the tropics are but sparing feeders.
  • And here let not, a suggestion be omitted, most valuable to any future
  • castaway or sailaway as the case may be. Eat not your biscuit dry; but
  • dip it in the sea: which makes it more bulky and palatable. During meal
  • times it was soak and sip with Jarl and me: one on each side of the
  • Chamois dipping our biscuit in the brine. This plan obviated finger-glasses at the conclusion of our repast. Upon the whole, dwelling upon
  • the water is not so bad after all. The Chinese are no fools. In the
  • operation of making your toilet, how handy to float in your ewer!
  • CHAPTER XV A Stitch In Time Saves Nine
  • Like most silent earnest sort of people, my good Viking was a pattern of
  • industry. When in the boats after whales, I have known him carry along a
  • roll of sinnate to stitch into a hat. And the boats lying motionless for
  • half an hour or so, waiting the rising of the chase, his fingers would
  • be plying at their task, like an old lady knitting. Like an experienced
  • old-wife too, his digits had become so expert and conscientious, that
  • his eyes left them alone; deeming optic supervision unnecessary. And on
  • this trip of ours, when not otherwise engaged, he was quite as busy with
  • his fingers as ever: unraveling old Cape Horn hose, for yarn wherewith
  • to darn our woolen frocks; with great patches from the skirts of a
  • condemned reefing jacket, panneling the seats of our "ducks;" in short,
  • veneering our broken garments with all manner of choice old broadcloths.
  • With the true forethought of an old tar, he had brought along with him
  • nearly the whole contents of his chest. His precious "Ditty Bag,"
  • containing his sewing utensils, had been carefully packed away in the
  • bottom of one of his bundles; of which he had as many as an old maid on
  • her travels. In truth, an old salt is very much of an old maid, though,
  • strictly speaking, far from deserving that misdeemed appellative. Better
  • be an old maid, a woman with herself for a husband, than the wife of a
  • fool; and Solomon more than hints that all men are fools; and every wise
  • man knows himself to be one. When playing the sempstress, Jarl's
  • favorite perch was the triangular little platform in the bow; which
  • being the driest and most elevated part of the boat, was best adapted to
  • his purpose. Here for hours and hours together the honest old tailor
  • would sit darning and sewing away, heedless of the wide ocean around;
  • while forever, his slouched Guayaquil hat kept bobbing up and down
  • against the horizon before us.
  • It was a most solemn avocation with him. Silently he nodded like the
  • still statue in the opera of Don Juan. Indeed he never spoke, unless to
  • give pithy utterance to the wisdom of keeping one's wardrobe in repair.
  • But herein my Viking at times waxed oracular. And many's the hour we
  • glided along, myself deeply pondering in the stem, hand upon helm; while
  • crosslegged at the other end of the boat Jarl laid down patch upon
  • patch, and at long intervals precept upon precept; here several saws,
  • and there innumerable stitches.
  • CHAPTER XVI They Are Becalmed
  • On the eighth day there was a calm.
  • It came on by night: so that waking at daybreak, and folding my arms
  • over the gunwale, I looked out upon a scene very hard to describe. The
  • sun was still beneath the horizon; perhaps not yet out of sight from the
  • plains of Paraguay. But the dawn was too strong for the stars; which,
  • one by one, had gone out, like waning lamps after a ball.
  • Now, as the face of a mirror is a blank, only borrowing character from
  • what it reflects; so in a calm in the Tropics, a colorless sky overhead,
  • the ocean, upon its surface, hardly presents a sign of existence. The
  • deep blue is gone; and the glassy element lies tranced; almost viewless
  • as the air.
  • But that morning, the two gray firmaments of sky and water seemed
  • collapsed into a vague ellipsis. And alike, the Chamois seemed drifting
  • in the atmosphere as in the sea. Every thing was fused into the calm:
  • sky, air, water, and all. Not a fish was to be seen. The silence was
  • that of a vacuum. No vitality lurked in the air. And this inert blending
  • and brooding of all things seemed gray chaos in conception.
  • This calm lasted four days and four nights; during which, but a few
  • cat's-paws of wind varied the scene. They were faint as the breath of
  • one dying.
  • At times the heat was intense. The heavens, at midday, glowing like an
  • ignited coal mine. Our skin curled up like lint; our vision became dim;
  • the brain dizzy.
  • To our consternation, the water in the breaker became lukewarm,
  • brackish, and slightly putrescent; notwithstanding we kept our spare
  • clothing piled upon the breaker, to shield it from the sun. At last,
  • Jarl enlarged the vent, carefully keeping it exposed. To this
  • precaution, doubtless, we owed more than we then thought. It was now
  • deemed wise to reduce our allowance of water to the smallest modicum
  • consistent with the present preservation of life; strangling all desire
  • for more.
  • Nor was this all. The upper planking of the boat began to warp; here and
  • there, cracking and splintering. But though we kept it moistened with
  • brine, one of the plank-ends started from its place; and the sharp,
  • sudden sound, breaking the scorching silence, caused us both to spring
  • to our feet. Instantly the sea burst in; but we made shift to secure the
  • rebellious plank with a cord, not having a nail; we then bailed out the
  • boat, nearly half full of water.
  • On the second day of the calm, we unshipped the mast, to prevent its
  • being pitched out by the occasional rolling of the vast smooth swells
  • now overtaking us. Leagues and leagues away, after its fierce raging,
  • some tempest must have been sending to us its last dying waves. For as a
  • pebble dropped into a pond ruffles it to its marge; so, on all sides, a
  • sea-gale operates as if an asteroid had fallen into the brine; making
  • ringed mountain billows, interminably expanding, instead of ripples.
  • The great September waves breaking at the base of the Neversink
  • Highlands, far in advance of the swiftest pilot-boat, carry tidings. And
  • full often, they know the last secret of many a stout ship, never heard
  • of from the day she left port. Every wave in my eyes seems a soul.
  • As there was no steering to be done, Jarl and I sheltered ourselves as
  • well as we could under the awning. And for the first two days, one at a
  • time, and every three or four hours, we dropped overboard for a bath,
  • clinging to the gun-wale; a sharp look-out being kept for prowling
  • sharks. A foot or two below the surface, the water felt cool and
  • refreshing.
  • On the third day a change came over us. We relinquished bathing, the
  • exertion taxing us too much. Sullenly we laid ourselves down; turned our
  • backs to each other; and were impatient of the slightest casual touch of
  • our persons. What sort of expression my own countenance wore, I know
  • not; but I hated to look at Jarl's. When I did it was a glare, not a
  • glance. I became more taciturn than he. I can not tell what it was that
  • came over me, but I wished I was alone. I felt that so long as the calm
  • lasted, we were without help; that neither could assist the other; and
  • above all, that for one, the water would hold out longer than for two. I
  • felt no remorse, not the slightest, for these thoughts. It was instinct.
  • Like a desperado giving up the ghost, I desired to gasp by myself.
  • From being cast away with a brother, good God deliver me!
  • The four days passed. And on the morning of the fifth, thanks be to
  • Heaven, there came a breeze. Dancingly, mincingly it came, just rippling
  • the sea, until it struck our sails, previously set at the very first
  • token of its advance. At length it slightly freshened; and our poor
  • Chamois seemed raised from the dead.
  • Beyond expression delightful! Once more we heard the low humming of the
  • sea under our bow, as our boat, like a bird, went singing on its way.
  • How changed the scene! Overhead, a sweet blue haze, distilling sunlight
  • in drops. And flung abroad over the visible creation was the sun-spangled, azure, rustling robe of the ocean, ermined with wave crests;
  • all else, infinitely blue. Such a cadence of musical sounds! Waves
  • chasing each other, and sporting and frothing in frolicsome foam:
  • painted fish rippling past; and anon the noise of wings as sea-fowls
  • flew by.
  • Oh, Ocean, when thou choosest to smile, more beautiful thou art than
  • flowery mead or plain!
  • CHAPTER XVII In High Spirits, They Push On For The Terra Incognita
  • There were now fourteen notches on the loom of the Skyeman's oar:--So
  • many days since we had pushed from the fore-chains of the Arcturion. But
  • as yet, no floating bough, no tern, noddy, nor reef-bird, to denote our
  • proximity to land. In that long calm, whither might not the currents
  • have swept us?
  • Where we were precisely, we knew not; but according to our reckoning,
  • the loose estimation of the knots run every hour, we must have sailed
  • due west but little more than one hundred and fifty leagues; for the
  • most part having encountered but light winds, and frequent intermitting
  • calms, besides that prolonged one described. But spite of past calms and
  • currents, land there must be to the westward. Sun, compass, stout
  • hearts, and steady breezes, pointed our prow thereto. So courage! my
  • Viking, and never say drown!
  • At this time, our hearts were much lightened by discovering that our
  • water was improving in taste. It seemed to have been undergoing anew
  • that sort of fermentation, or working, occasionally incident to ship
  • water shortly after being taken on board. Sometimes, for a period, it is
  • more or less offensive to taste and smell; again, however, becoming
  • comparatively limpid.
  • But as our water improved, we grew more and more miserly of so priceless
  • a treasure.
  • And here it may be well to make mention of another little circumstance,
  • however unsentimental. Thorough-paced tar that he was, my Viking was an
  • inordinate consumer of the Indian weed. From the Arcturion, he had
  • brought along with him a small half-keg, at bottom impacted with a
  • solitary layer of sable Negrohead, fossil-marked, like the primary
  • stratum of the geologists. It was the last tier of his abundant supply
  • for the long whaling voyage upon which he had embarked upwards of three
  • years previous. Now during the calm, and for some days after, poor
  • Jarl's accustomed quid was no longer agreeable company. To pun: he
  • eschewed his chew. I asked him wherefore. He replied that it puckered up
  • his mouth, above all provoked thirst, and had somehow grown every way
  • distasteful. I was sorry; for the absence of his before ever present wad
  • impaired what little fullness there was left in his cheek; though, sooth
  • to say, I no longer called upon him as of yore to shift over the
  • enormous morsel to starboard or larboard, and so trim our craft.
  • The calm gone by, once again my sea-tailor plied needle and thread; or
  • turning laundress, hung our raiment to dry on oars peaked obliquely in
  • the thole-pins. All of which tattered pennons, the wind being astern,
  • helped us gayly on our way; as jolly poor devils, with rags flying in
  • the breeze, sail blithely through life; and are merry although they are
  • poor!
  • CHAPTER XVIII My Lord Shark And His Pages
  • There is a fish in the sea that evermore, like a surly lord, only goes
  • abroad attended by his suite. It is the Shovel-nosed Shark. A clumsy
  • lethargic monster, unshapely as his name, and the last species of his
  • kind, one would think, to be so bravely waited upon, as he is. His suite
  • is composed of those dainty little creatures called Pilot fish by
  • sailors. But by night his retinue is frequently increased by the
  • presence of several small luminous fish, running in advance, and
  • flourishing their flambeaux like link-boys lighting the monster's way.
  • Pity there were no ray-fish in rear, page-like, to carry his caudal
  • train.
  • Now the relation subsisting between the Pilot fish above mentioned and
  • their huge ungainly lord, seems one of the most inscrutable things in
  • nature. At any rate, it poses poor me to comprehend. That a monster so
  • ferocious, should suffer five or six little sparks, hardly fourteen
  • inches long, to gambol about his grim hull with the utmost impunity, is
  • of itself something strange. But when it is considered, that by a
  • reciprocal understanding, the Pilot fish seem to act as scouts to the
  • shark, warning him of danger, and apprising him of the vicinity of prey;
  • and moreover, in case of his being killed, evincing their anguish by
  • certain agitations, otherwise inexplicable; the whole thing becomes a
  • mystery unfathomable. Truly marvels abound. It needs no dead man to be
  • raised, to convince us of some things. Even my Viking marveled full as
  • much at those Pilot fish as he would have marveled at the Pentecost.
  • But perhaps a little incident, occurring about this period, will best
  • illustrate the matter in hand.
  • We were gliding along, hardly three knots an hour, when my comrade, who
  • had been dozing over the gunwale, suddenly started to his feet, and
  • pointed out an immense Shovel-nosed Shark, less than a boat's length
  • distant, and about half a fathom beneath the surface. A lance was at
  • once snatched from its place; and true to his calling, Jarl was about to
  • dart it at the fish, when, interested by the sight of its radiant little
  • scouts, I begged him to desist.
  • One of them was right under the shark, nibbling at his ventral fin;
  • another above, hovering about his dorsal appurtenance; one on each
  • flank; and a frisking fifth pranking about his nose, seemingly having
  • something to say of a confidential nature. They were of a bright, steel-blue color, alternated with jet black stripes; with glistening bellies
  • of a silver-white. Clinging to the back of the shark, were four or five
  • Remoras, or sucking-fish; snaky parasites, impossible to remove from
  • whatever they adhere to, without destroying their lives. The Remora has
  • little power in swimming; hence its sole locomotion is on the backs of
  • larger fish. Leech-like, it sticketh closer than a false brother in
  • prosperity; closer than a beggar to the benevolent; closer than Webster
  • to the Constitution. But it feeds upon what it clings to; its feelers
  • having a direct communication with the esophagus.
  • The shark swam sluggishly; creating no sign of a ripple, but ever and,
  • anon shaking his Medusa locks, writhing and curling with horrible life.
  • Now and then, the nimble Pilot fish darted from his side--this way and
  • that--mostly toward our boat; but previous to taking a fresh start ever
  • returning to their liege lord to report progress.
  • A thought struck me. Baiting a rope's end with a morsel of our almost
  • useless salt beef, I suffered it to trail in the sea. Instantly the
  • foremost scout swam toward it; hesitated; paused; but at last advancing,
  • briskly snuffed at the line, and taking one finical little nibble,
  • retreated toward the shark. Another moment, and the great Tamerlane
  • himself turned heavily about; pointing his black, cannon-like nose
  • directly toward our broadside. Meanwhile, the little Pilot fish darted
  • hither and thither; keeping up a mighty fidgeting, like men of small
  • minds in a state of nervous agitation.
  • Presently, Tamerlane swam nearer and nearer, all the while lazily eyeing
  • the Chamois, as a wild boar a kid. Suddenly making a rush for it, in the
  • foam he made away with the bait. But the next instant, the uplifted
  • lance sped at his skull; and thrashing his requiem with his sinewy tail,
  • he sunk slowly, through his own blood, out of sight. Down with him swam
  • the terrified Pilot fish; but soon after, three of them were observed
  • close to the boat, gliding along at a uniform pace; one an each side,
  • and one in advance; even as they had attended their lord. Doubtless, one
  • was under our keel.
  • "A good omen," said Jarl; "no harm will befall us so long as they stay."
  • But however that might be, follow us they did, for many days after:
  • until an event occurred, which necessitated their withdrawal.
  • CHAPTER XIX Who Goes There?
  • Jarl's oar showed sixteen notches on the loom, when one evening, as the
  • expanded sun touched the horizon's rim, a ship's uppermost spars were
  • observed, traced like a spider's web against its crimson disk. It looked
  • like a far-off craft on fire.
  • In bright weather at sea, a sail, invisible in the full flood of noon,
  • becomes perceptible toward sunset. It is the reverse in the morning. In
  • sight at gray dawn, the distant vessel, though in reality approaching,
  • recedes from view, as the sun rises higher and higher. This holds true,
  • till its vicinity makes it readily fall within the ordinary scope of
  • vision. And thus, too, here and there, with other distant things: the
  • more light you throw on them, the more you obscure. Some revelations
  • show best in a twilight.
  • The sight of the stranger not a little surprised us. But brightening up,
  • as if the encounter were welcome, Jarl looked happy and expectant. He
  • quickly changed his demeanor, however, upon perceiving that I was bent
  • upon shunning a meeting.
  • Instantly our sails were struck; and calling upon Jarl, who was somewhat
  • backward to obey, I shipped the oars; and, both rowing, we stood away
  • obliquely from our former course.
  • I divined that the vessel was a whaler; and hence, that by help of the
  • glass, with which her look-outs must be momentarily sweeping the
  • horizon, they might possibly have descried us; especially, as we were
  • due east from the ship; a direction, which at sunset is the one most
  • favorable for perceiving a far-off object at sea. Furthermore, our
  • canvas was snow-white and conspicuous. To be sure, we could not be
  • certain what kind of a vessel it was; but whatever it might be, I, for
  • one, had no mind to risk an encounter; for it was quite plain, that if
  • the stranger came within hailing distance, there would be no resource
  • but to link our fortunes with hers; whereas I desired to pursue none but
  • the Chamois'. As for the Skyeman, he kept looking wistfully over his
  • shoulder; doubtless, praying Heaven, that we might not escape what I
  • sought to avoid.
  • Now, upon a closer scrutiny, being pretty well convinced that the
  • stranger, after all, was steering a nearly westerly course--right away
  • from us--we reset our sail; and as night fell, my Viking's entreaties,
  • seconded by my own curiosity, induced me to resume our original course;
  • and so follow after the vessel, with a view of obtaining a nearer
  • glimpse, without danger of detection. So, boldly we steered for the
  • sail.
  • But not gaining much upon her, spite of the lightness of the breeze (a
  • circumstance in our favor: the chase being a ship, and we but a boat),
  • at my comrade's instigation, we added oars to sails, readily guiding our
  • way by the former, though the helm was left to itself.
  • As we came nearer, it was plain that the vessel was no whaler; but a
  • small, two-masted craft; in short, a brigantine. Her sails were in a
  • state of unaccountable disarray, only the foresail, mainsail, and jib
  • being set. The first was much tattered; and the jib was hoisted but half
  • way up the stay, where it idly flapped, the breeze coming from over the
  • taffrail. She continually yawed in her course; now almost presenting her
  • broadside, then showing her stern.
  • Striking our sails once more, we lay on our oars, and watched her in the
  • starlight. Still she swung from side to side, and still sailed on.
  • Not a little terrified at the sight, superstitious Jarl more than
  • insinuated that the craft must be a gold-huntress, haunted. But I told
  • him, that if such were the case, we must board her, come gold or
  • goblins. In reality, however, I began to think that she must have been
  • abandoned by her crew; or else, that from sickness, those on board were
  • incapable of managing her.
  • After a long and anxious reconnoiter, we came still nearer, using our
  • oars, but very reluctantly on Jarl's part; who, while rowing, kept his
  • eyes over his shoulder, as if about to beach the little Chamois on the
  • back of a whale as of yore. Indeed, he seemed full as impatient to quit
  • the vicinity of the vessel, as before he had been anxiously courting it.
  • Now, as the silent brigantine again swung round her broadside, I hailed
  • her loudly. No return. Again. But all was silent. With a few vigorous
  • strokes, we closed with her, giving yet another unanswered hail; when,
  • laying the Chamois right alongside, I clutched at the main-chains.
  • Instantly we felt her dragging us along. Securing our craft by its
  • painter, I sprang over the rail, followed by Jarl, who had snatched his
  • harpoon, his favorite arms. Long used with that weapon to overcome the
  • monsters of the deep, he doubted not it would prove equally serviceable
  • in any other encounter.
  • The deck was a complete litter. Tossed about were pearl oyster shells,
  • husks of cocoa-nuts, empty casks, and cases. The deserted tiller was
  • lashed; which accounted for the vessel's yawing. But we could not
  • conceive, how going large before the wind; the craft could, for any
  • considerable time, at least, have guided herself without the help of a
  • hand. Still, the breeze was light and steady.
  • Now, seeing the helm thus lashed, I could not but distrust the silence
  • that prevailed. It conjured up the idea of miscreants concealed below,
  • and meditating treachery; unscrupulous mutineers--Lascars, or Manilla-men; who, having murdered the Europeans of the crew, might not be
  • willing to let strangers depart unmolested. Or yet worse, the entire
  • ship's company might have been swept away by a fever, its infection
  • still lurking in the poisoned hull. And though the first conceit, as the
  • last, was a mere surmise, it was nevertheless deemed prudent to secure
  • the hatches, which for the present we accordingly barred down with the
  • oars of our boat. This done, we went about the deck in search of water.
  • And finding some in a clumsy cask, drank long and freely, and to our
  • thirsty souls' content.
  • The wind now freshening, and the rent sails like to blow from the yards,
  • we brought the brigantine to the wind, and brailed up the canvas. This
  • left us at liberty to examine the craft, though, unfortunately, the
  • night was growing hazy.
  • All this while our boat was still towing alongside; and I was about to
  • drop it astern, when Jarl, ever cautious, declared it safer where it
  • was; since, if there were people on board, they would most likely be
  • down in the cabin, from the dead-lights of which, mischief might be done
  • to the Chamois.
  • It was then, that my comrade observed, that the brigantine had no boats,
  • a circumstance most unusual in any sort of a vessel at sea. But marking
  • this, I was exceedingly gratified. It seemed to indicate, as I had
  • opined, that from some cause or other, she must have been abandoned of
  • her crew. And in a good measure this dispelled my fears of foul play,
  • and the apprehension of contagion. Encouraged by these reflections, I
  • now resolved to descend, and explore the cabin, though sorely against
  • Jarl's counsel. To be sure, as he earnestly said, this step might have
  • been deferred till daylight; but it seemed too wearisome to wait. So
  • bethinking me of our tinder-box and candles, I sent him into the boat
  • for them. Presently, two candles were lit; one of which the Skyeman tied
  • up and down the barbed end of his harpoon; so that upon going below, the
  • keen steel might not be far off, should the light be blown out by a
  • dastard.
  • Unfastening the cabin scuttle, we stepped downward into the smallest and
  • murkiest den in the world. The altar-like transom, surmounted by the
  • closed dead-lights in the stem, together with the dim little sky-light
  • overhead, and the somber aspect of every thing around, gave the place
  • the air of some subterranean oratory, say a Prayer Room of Peter the
  • Hermit. But coils of rigging, bolts of canvas, articles of clothing, and
  • disorderly heaps of rubbish, harmonized not with this impression. Two
  • doors, one on each side, led into wee little state-rooms, the berths of
  • which also were littered. Among other things, was a large box, sheathed
  • with iron and stoutly clamped, containing a keg partly filled with
  • powder, the half of an old cutlass, a pouch of bullets, and a case for a
  • sextant--a brass plate on the lid, with the maker's name. London. The
  • broken blade of the cutlass was very rusty and stained; and the iron
  • hilt bent in. It looked so tragical that I thrust it out of sight.
  • Removing a small trap-door, opening into the space beneath, called the
  • "run," we lighted upon sundry cutlasses and muskets, lying together at
  • sixes and sevens, as if pitched down in a hurry.
  • Casting round a hasty glance, and satisfying ourselves, that through the
  • bulkhead of the cabin, there was no passage to the forward part of the
  • hold, we caught up the muskets and cutlasses, the powder keg and the
  • pouch of bullets, and bundling them on deck, prepared to visit the other
  • end of the vessel. Previous to so doing, however, I loaded a musket, and
  • belted a cutlass to my side. But my Viking preferred his harpoon.
  • In the forecastle reigned similar confusion. But there was a snug little
  • lair, cleared away in one corner, and furnished with a grass mat and
  • bolster, like those used among the Islanders of these seas. This little
  • lair looked to us as if some leopard had crouched there. And as it
  • turned out, we were not far from right. Forming one side of this
  • retreat, was a sailor's chest, stoutly secured by a lock, and monstrous
  • heavy withal. Regardless of Jarl's entreaties, I managed to burst the
  • lid; thereby revealing a motley assemblage of millinery, and outlandish
  • knick-knacks of all sorts; together with sundry rude Calico
  • contrivances, which though of unaccountable cut, nevertheless possessed
  • a certain petticoatish air, and latitude of skirt, betokening them the
  • habiliments of some feminine creature; most probably of the human
  • species.
  • In this strong box, also, was a canvas bag, jingling with rusty old
  • bell-buttons, gangrened copper bolts, and sheathing nails; damp,
  • greenish Carolus dollars (true coin all), besides divers iron screws,
  • and battered, chisels, and belaying-pins. Sounded on the chest lid, the
  • dollars rang clear as convent bells. These were put aside by Jarl the
  • sight of substantial dollars doing away, for the nonce, with his
  • superstitious Misgivings. True to his kingship, he loved true coin;
  • though abroad on the sea, and no land but dollarless dominions ground,
  • all this silver was worthless as charcoal or diamonds. Nearly one and
  • the same thing, say the chemists; but tell that to the marines, say the
  • illiterate Jews and the jewelers. Go, buy a house, or a ship, if you
  • can, with your charcoal! Yea, all the woods in Canada charred down to
  • cinders would not be worth the one famed Brazilian diamond, though no
  • bigger than the egg of a carrier pigeon. Ah! but these chemists are
  • liars, and Sir Humphrey Davy a cheat. Many's the poor devil they've
  • deluded into the charcoal business, who otherwise might have made his
  • fortune with a mattock.
  • Groping again into the chest, we brought to light a queer little hair
  • trunk, very bald and rickety. At every corner was a mighty clamp, the
  • weight of which had no doubt debilitated the box. It was jealously
  • secured with a padlock, almost as big as itself; so that it was almost a
  • question, which was meant to be security to the other. Prying at it
  • hard, we at length effected an entrance; but saw no golden moidores, no
  • ruddy doubloons; nothing under heaven but three pewter mugs, such as are
  • used in a ship's cabin, several brass screws, and brass plates, which
  • must have belonged to a quadrant; together with a famous lot of glass
  • beads, and brass rings; while, pasted on the inside of the cover, was a
  • little colored print, representing the harlots, the shameless hussies,
  • having a fine time with the Prodigal Son.
  • It should have been mentioned ere now, that while we were busy in the
  • forecastle, we were several times startled by strange sounds aloft. And
  • just after, crashing into the little hair trunk, down came a great top-block, right through the scuttle, narrowly missing my Viking's crown; a
  • much stronger article, by the way, than your goldsmiths turn out in
  • these days. This startled us much; particularly Jarl, as one might
  • suppose; but accustomed to the strange creakings and wheezings of the
  • masts and yards of old vessels at sea, and having many a time dodged
  • stray blocks accidentally falling from aloft, I thought little more of
  • the matter; though my comrade seemed to think the noises somewhat
  • different from any thing of that kind he had even heard before.
  • After a little more turning over of the rubbish in the forecastle, and
  • much marveling thereat, we ascended to the deck; where we found every
  • thing so silent, that, as we moved toward the taffrail, the Skyeman
  • unconsciously addressed me in a whisper.
  • CHAPTER XX Noises And Portents
  • I longed for day. For however now inclined to believe that the
  • brigantine was untenanted, I desired the light of the sun to place that
  • fact beyond a misgiving.
  • Now, having observed, previous to boarding the vessel, that she lay
  • rather low in the water, I thought proper to sound the well. But there
  • being no line-and-sinker at hand, I sent Jarl to hunt them up in the
  • arm-chest on the quarter-deck, where doubtless they must be kept.
  • Meanwhile I searched for the "breaks," or pump-handles, which, as it
  • turned out, could not have been very recently used; for they were found
  • lashed up and down to the main-mast.
  • Suddenly Jarl came running toward me, whispering that all doubt was
  • dispelled;--there were spirits on board, to a dead certainty. He had
  • overheard a supernatural sneeze. But by this time I was all but
  • convinced, that we were alone in the brigantine. Since, if otherwise, I
  • could assign no earthly reason for the crew's hiding away from a couple
  • of sailors, whom, were they so minded, they might easily have mastered.
  • And furthermore, this alleged disturbance of the atmosphere aloft by a
  • sneeze, Jarl averred to have taken place in the main-top; directly
  • underneath which I was all this time standing, and had heard nothing. So
  • complimenting my good Viking upon the exceeding delicacy of his
  • auriculars, I bade him trouble himself no more with his piratical ghosts
  • and goblins, which existed nowhere but in his own imagination.
  • Not finding the line-and-sinker, with the spare end of a bowline we
  • rigged a substitute; and sounding the well, found nothing to excite our
  • alarm. Under certain circumstances, however, this sounding a ship's well
  • is a nervous sort of business enough. 'Tis like feeling your own pulse
  • in the last stage of a fever.
  • At the Skyeman's suggestion, we now proceeded to throw round the
  • brigantine's head on the other tack. For until daylight we desired to
  • alter the vessel's position as little as possible, fearful of coming
  • unawares upon reefs.
  • And here be it said, that for all his superstitious misgivings about the
  • brigantine; his imputing to her something equivalent to a purely
  • phantom-like nature, honest Jarl was nevertheless exceedingly downright
  • and practical in all hints and proceedings concerning her. Wherein, he
  • resembled my Right Reverend friend, Bishop Berkeley--truly, one of your
  • lords spiritual--who, metaphysically speaking, holding all objects to be
  • mere optical delusions, was, notwith-standing, extremely matter-of-fact
  • in all matters touching matter itself. Besides being pervious to the
  • points of pins, and possessing a palate capable of appreciating plum-puddings:--which sentence reads off like a pattering of hailstones.
  • Now, while we were employed bracing round the yards, whispering Jarl
  • must needs pester me again with his confounded suspicions of goblins on
  • board. He swore by the main-mast, that when the fore-yard swung round,
  • he had heard a half-stifled groan from that quarter; as if one of his
  • bugbears had been getting its aerial legs jammed. I laughed:--hinting
  • that goblins were incorporeal. Whereupon he besought me to ascend the
  • fore-rigging and test the matter for myself But here my mature judgment
  • got the better of my first crude opinion. I civilly declined. For
  • assuredly, there was still a possibility, that the fore-top might be
  • tenanted, and that too by living miscreants; and a pretty hap would be
  • mine, if, with hands full of rigging, and legs dangling in air, while
  • surmounting the oblique futtock-shrouds, some unseen arm should all at
  • once tumble me overboard. Therefore I held my peace; while Jarl went on
  • to declare, that with regard to the character of the brigantine, his
  • mind was now pretty fully made up;--she was an arrant impostor, a shade
  • of a ship, full of sailors' ghosts, and before we knew where we were,
  • would dissolve in a supernatural squall, and leave us twain in the
  • water. In short, Jarl, the descendant of the superstitious old Norsemen,
  • was full of old Norse conceits, and all manner of Valhalla marvels
  • concerning the land of goblins and goblets. No wonder then, that with
  • this catastrophe in prospect, he again entreated me to quit the ill-starred craft, carrying off nothing from her ghostly hull. But I
  • refused.
  • One can not relate every thing at once. While in the cabin, we came
  • across a "barge" of biscuit, and finding its contents of a quality much
  • superior to our own, we had filled our pockets and occasionally regaled
  • ourselves in the intervals of rummaging. Now this sea cake-basket we had
  • brought on deck. And for the first time since bidding adieu to the
  • Arcturion having fully quenched our thirst, our appetite returned with a
  • rush; and having nothing better to do till day dawned, we planted the
  • bread-barge in the middle of the quarter-deck; and crossing our legs
  • before it, laid close seige thereto, like the Grand Turk and his Vizier
  • Mustapha sitting down before Vienna.
  • Our castle, the Bread-Barge was of the common sort; an oblong oaken box,
  • much battered and bruised, and like the Elgin Marbles, all over
  • inscriptions and carving:--foul anchors, skewered hearts, almanacs,
  • Burton-blocks, love verses, links of cable, Kings of Clubs; and divers
  • mystic diagrams in chalk, drawn by old Finnish mariners; in casting
  • horoscopes and prophecies. Your old tars are all Daniels. There was a
  • round hole in one side, through which, in getting at the bread, invited
  • guests thrust their hands.
  • And mighty was the thrusting of hands that night; also, many and earnest
  • the glances of Mustapha at every sudden creaking of the spars or
  • rigging. Like Belshazzar, my royal Viking ate with great fear and
  • trembling; ever and anon pausing to watch the wild shadows flitting
  • along the bulwarks.
  • CHAPTER XXI Man Ho!
  • Slowly, fitfully, broke the morning in the East, showing the desolate
  • brig forging heavily through the water, which sluggishly thumped under
  • her bows. While leaping from sea to sea, our faithful Chamois, like a
  • faithful dog, still gamboled alongside, confined to the main-chains by
  • its painter. At times, it would long lag behind; then, pushed by a wave
  • like lightning dash forward; till bridled by its leash, it again fell in
  • rear.
  • As the gray light came on, anxiously we scrutinized the features of the
  • craft, as one by one they became more plainly revealed. Every thing
  • seemed stranger now, than when partially visible in the dingy night. The
  • stanchions, or posts of the bulwarks, were of rough stakes, still
  • incased in the bark. The unpainted sides were of a dark-colored,
  • heathenish looking wood. The tiller was a wry-necked, elbowed bough,
  • thrusting itself through the deck, as if the tree itself was fast rooted
  • in the hold. The binnacle, containing the compass, was defended at the
  • sides by yellow matting. The rigging--shrouds, halyards and all--was of
  • "Kaiar," or cocoa-nut fibres; and here and there the sails were patched
  • with plaited rushes.
  • But this was not all. Whoso will pry, must needs light upon matters for
  • suspicion. Glancing over the side, in the wake of every scupper-hole, we
  • beheld a faded, crimson stain, which Jarl averred to be blood. Though
  • now he betrayed not the slightest trepidation; for what he saw pertained
  • not to ghosts; and all his fears hitherto had been of the super-natural.
  • Indeed, plucking up a heart, with the dawn of the day my Viking looked
  • bold as a lion; and soon, with the instinct of an old seaman cast his
  • eyes up aloft.
  • Directly, he touched my arm,--"Look: what stirs in the main-top?"
  • Sure enough, something alive was there.
  • Fingering our arms, we watched it; till as the day came on, a crouching
  • stranger was beheld.
  • Presenting my piece, I hailed him to descend or be shot. There was
  • silence for a space, when the black barrel of a musket was thrust forth,
  • leveled at my head. Instantly, Jarl's harpoon was presented at a dart;--two to one;--and my hail was repeated. But no reply.
  • "Who are you?"
  • "Samoa," at length said a clear, firm voice.
  • "Come down from the rigging. We are friends."
  • Another pause; when, rising to his feet, the stranger slowly descended,
  • holding on by one hand to the rigging, for but one did he have; his
  • musket partly slung from his back, and partly griped under the stump of
  • his mutilated arm.
  • He alighted about six paces from where we stood; and balancing his
  • weapon, eyed us bravely as the Cid.
  • He was a tall, dark Islander, a very devil to behold, theatrically
  • arrayed in kilt and turban; the kilt of a gay calico print, the turban
  • of a red China silk. His neck was jingling with strings of beads.
  • "Who else is on board?" I asked; while Jarl, thus far covering the
  • stranger with his weapon, now dropped it to the deck.
  • "Look there:--Annatoo!" was his reply in broken English, pointing aloft
  • to the fore-top. And lo! a woman, also an Islander; and barring her
  • skirts, dressed very much like Samoa, was beheld descending.
  • "Any more?"
  • "No more."
  • "Who are _you_ then; and what craft is this?"
  • "Ah, ah--you are no ghost;--but are you my friend?" he cried, advancing
  • nearer as he spoke; while the woman having gained the deck, also
  • approached, eagerly glancing.
  • We said we were friends; that we meant no harm; but desired to know what
  • craft this was; and what disaster had befallen her; for that something
  • untoward had occurred, we were certain.
  • Whereto, Samoa made answer, that it was true that something dreadful had
  • happened; and that he would gladly tell us all, and tell us the truth.
  • And about it he went.
  • Now, this story of his was related in the mixed phraseology of a
  • Polynesian sailor. With a few random reflections, in substance, it will
  • be found in the six following chapters.
  • CHAPTER XXII What Befel The Brigantine At The Pearl Shell Islands
  • The vessel was the Parki, of Lahina, a village and harbor on the coast
  • of Mowee, one of the Hawaian isles, where she had been miserably cobbled
  • together with planks of native wood, and fragments of a wreck, there
  • drifted ashore.
  • Her appellative had been bestowed in honor of a high chief, the tallest
  • and goodliest looking gentleman in all the Sandwich Islands. With a
  • mixed European and native crew, about thirty in number (but only four
  • whites in all, captain included), the Parki, some four months previous,
  • had sailed from her port on a voyage southward, in quest of pearls, and
  • pearl oyster shells, sea-slugs, and other matters of that sort.
  • Samoa, a native of the Navigator Islands, had long followed the sea, and
  • was well versed in the business of oyster diving and its submarine
  • mysteries. The native Lahineese on board were immediately subordinate to
  • him; the captain having bargained with Samoa for their services as
  • divers.
  • The woman, Annatoo, was a native of a far-off, anonymous island to the
  • westward: whence, when quite young, she had been carried by the
  • commander of a ship, touching there on a passage from Macao to
  • Valparaiso. At Valparaiso her protector put her ashore; most probably,
  • as I afterward had reason to think, for a nuisance.
  • By chance it came to pass that when Annatoo's first virgin bloom had
  • departed, leaving nothing but a lusty frame and a lustier soul, Samoa,
  • the Navigator, had fallen desperately in love with her. And thinking the
  • lady to his mind, being brave like himself, and doubtless well adapted
  • to the vicissitudes of matrimony at sea, he meditated suicide--I would
  • have said, wedlock--and the twain became one. And some time after, in
  • capacity of wife, Annatoo the dame, accompanied in the brigantine, Samoa
  • her lord. Now, as Antony flew to the refuse embraces of Caesar, so Samoa
  • solaced himself in the arms of this discarded fair one. And the sequel
  • was the same. For not harder the life Cleopatra led my fine frank
  • friend, poor Mark, than Queen Annatoo did lead this captive of her bow
  • and her spear. But all in good time.
  • They left their port; and crossing the Tropic and the Line, fell in with
  • a cluster of islands, where the shells they sought were found in round
  • numbers. And here--not at all strange to tell besides the natives, they
  • encountered a couple of Cholos, or half-breed Spaniards, from the Main;
  • one half Spanish, the other half quartered between the wild Indian and
  • the devil; a race, that from Baldivia to Panama are notorious for their
  • unscrupulous villainy.
  • Now, the half-breeds having long since deserted a ship at these islands,
  • had risen to high authority among the natives. This hearing, the Parki's
  • captain was much gratified; he, poor ignorant, never before having
  • fallen in with any of their treacherous race. And, no doubt, he imagined
  • that their influence over the Islanders would tend to his advantage. At
  • all events, he made presents to the Cholos; who, in turn, provided him
  • with additional divers from among the natives. Very kindly, also, they
  • pointed out the best places for seeking the oysters. In a word, they
  • were exceedingly friendly; often coming off to the brigantine, and
  • sociably dining with the captain in the cabin; placing the salt between
  • them and him.
  • All things went on very pleasantly until, one morning, the half-breeds
  • prevailed upon the captain to go with them, in his whale-boat, to a
  • shoal on the thither side of the island, some distance from the spot
  • where lay the brigantine. They so managed it, moreover, that none but
  • the Lahineese under Samoa, in whom the captain much confided, were left
  • in custody of the Parki; the three white men going along to row; for
  • there happened to be little or no wind for a sail.
  • Now, the fated brig lay anchored within a deep, smooth, circular lagoon,
  • margined on all sides but one by the most beautiful groves. On that
  • side, was the outlet to the sea; perhaps a cable's length or more from
  • where the brigantine had been moored. An hour or two after the party
  • were gone, and when the boat was completely out of sight, the natives in
  • shoals were perceived coming off from the shore; some in canoes, and
  • some swimming. The former brought bread fruit and bananas,
  • ostentatiously piled up in their proas; the latter dragged after them
  • long strings of cocoanuts; for all of which, on nearing the vessel, they
  • clamorously demanded knives and hatchets in barter.
  • From their actions, suspecting some treachery, Samoa stood in the
  • gangway, and warned them off; saying that no barter could take place
  • until the captain's return. But presently one of the savages stealthily
  • climbed up from the water, and nimbly springing from the bob-stays to
  • the bow-sprit, darted a javelin full at the foremast, where it vibrated.
  • The signal of blood! With terrible outcries, the rest, pulling forth
  • their weapons, hitherto concealed in the canoes, or under the floating
  • cocoanuts, leaped into the low chains of the brigantine; sprang over the
  • bulwarks; and, with clubs and spears, attacked the aghast crew with the
  • utmost ferocity.
  • After one faint rally, the Lahineese scrambled for the rigging; but to a
  • man were overtaken and slain.
  • At the first alarm, Annatoo, however, had escaped to the fore-top-gallant-yard, higher than which she could not climb, and whither the
  • savages durst not venture. For though after their nuts these Polynesians
  • will climb palm trees like squirrels; yet, at the first blush, they
  • decline a ship's mast like Kennebec farmers.
  • Upon the first token of an onslaught, Samoa, having rushed toward the
  • cabin scuttle for arms, was there fallen upon by two young savages. But
  • after a desperate momentary fray, in which his arm was mangled, he made
  • shift to spring below, instantly securing overhead the slide of the
  • scuttle. In the cabin, while yet the uproar of butchery prevailed, he
  • quietly bound up his arm; then laying on the transom the captain's three
  • loaded muskets, undauntedly awaited an assault.
  • The object of the natives, it seems, was to wreck the brigantine upon
  • the sharp coral beach of the lagoon. And with this intent, one of their
  • number had plunged into the water, and cut the cable, which was of hemp.
  • But the tide ebbing, cast the Parki's head seaward--toward the outlet;
  • and the savages, perceiving this, clumsily boarded the fore-tack, and
  • hauled aft the sheet; thus setting, after a fashion, the fore-sail,
  • previously loosed to dry.
  • Meanwhile, a gray-headed old chief stood calmly at the tiller,
  • endeavoring to steer the vessel shoreward. But not managing the helm
  • aright, the brigantine, now gliding apace through the water, only made
  • more way toward the outlet. Seeing which, the ringleaders, six or eight
  • in number, ran to help the old graybeard at the helm. But it was a black
  • hour for them. Of a sudden, while they were handling the tiller, three
  • muskets were rapidly discharged upon them from the cabin skylight. Two
  • of the savages dropped dead. The old steersman, clutching wildly at the
  • helm, fell over it, mortally wounded; and in a wild panic at seeing
  • their leaders thus unaccountably slain, the rest of the natives leaped
  • overboard and made for the shore.
  • Hearing the slashing, Samoa flew on deck; and beholding the foresail
  • set, and the brigantine heading right out to sea, he cried out to
  • Annatoo, still aloft, to descend to the topsail-yard, and loose the
  • canvas there. His command was obeyed. Annatoo deserved a gold medal for
  • what she did that day. Hastening down the rigging, after loosing the
  • topsail, she strained away at the sheets; in which operation she was
  • assisted by Samoa, who snatched an instant from the helm.
  • The foresail and fore-topsail were now tolerably well set; and as the
  • craft drew seaward, the breeze freshened. And well that it did; for,
  • recovered from their alarm, the savages were now in hot pursuit; some in
  • canoes, and some swimming as before. But soon the main-topsail was given
  • to the breeze, which still freshening, came from over the quarter. And
  • with this brave show of canvas, the Parki made gallantly for the outlet;
  • and loud shouted Samoa as she shot by the reef, and parted the long
  • swells without. Against these, the savages could not swim. And at that
  • turn of the tide, paddling a canoe therein was almost equally difficult.
  • But the fugitives were not yet safe. In full chase now came in sight the
  • whale-boat manned by the Cholos, and four or five Islanders. Whereat,
  • making no doubt, that all the whites who left the vessel that morning
  • had been massacred through the treachery of the half-breeds; and that
  • the capture of the brigantine had been premeditated; Samoa now saw no
  • other resource than to point his craft dead away from the land.
  • Now on came the devils buckling to their oars. Meantime Annatoo was
  • still busy aloft, loosing the smaller sails--t'gallants and royals,
  • which she managed partially to set.
  • The strong breeze from astern now filling the ill-set sails, they
  • bellied, and rocked in the air, like balloons, while, from the novel
  • strain upon it, every spar quivered and sprung. And thus, like a
  • frightened gull fleeing from sea-hawks, the little Parki swooped along,
  • and bravely breasted the brine.
  • His shattered arm in a hempen sling, Samoa stood at the helm, the
  • muskets reloaded, and planted full before him on the binnacle. For a
  • time, so badly did the brigantine steer, by reason of her ill-adjusted
  • sails, made still more unmanageable by the strength of the breeze,--that
  • it was doubtful, after all, notwithstanding her start, whether the
  • fugitives would not yet fall a prey to their hunters. The craft wildly
  • yawed, and the boat drew nearer and nearer. Maddened by the sight, and
  • perhaps thinking more of revenge for the past, than of security for the
  • future, Samoa, yielding the helm to Annatoo, rested his muskets on the
  • bulwarks, and taking long, sure aim, discharged them, one by one at the
  • advancing foe.
  • The three reports were answered by loud jeers from the savages, who
  • brandished their spears, and made gestures of derision; while with might
  • and main the Cholos tugged at their oars.
  • The boat still gaining on the brigantine, the muskets were again
  • reloaded. And as the next shot sped, there was a pause; when, like
  • lightning, the headmost Cholo bounded upwards from his seat, and oar in
  • hand, fell into the sea. A fierce yell; and one of the natives springing
  • into the water, caught the sinking body by its long hair; and the dead
  • and the living were dragged into the boat. Taking heart from this fatal
  • shot, Samoa fired yet again; but not with the like sure result; merely
  • grazing the remaining half-breed, who, crouching behind his comrades,
  • besought them to turn the boat round, and make for the shore. Alarmed at
  • the fate of his brother, and seemingly distrustful of the impartiality
  • of Samoa's fire, the pusillanimous villain refused to expose a limb
  • above the gunwale.
  • Fain now would the pursuers have made good their escape; but an accident
  • forbade. In the careening of the boat, when the stricken Cholo sprung
  • overboard, two of their oars had slid into the water; and together with
  • that death-griped by the half-breed, were now floating off; occasionally
  • lost to view, as they sunk in the trough of the sea. Two of the
  • Islanders swam to recover them; but frightened by the whirring of a shot
  • over their heads, as they unavoidably struck out towards the Parki, they
  • turned quickly about; just in time to see one of their comrades smite
  • his body with his hand, as he received a bullet from Samoa.
  • Enough: darting past the ill-fated boat, they swam rapidly for land,
  • followed by the rest; who plunged overboard, leaving in the boat the
  • surviving Cholo--who it seems could not swim--the wounded savage, and
  • the dead man.
  • "Load away now, and take thy revenge, my fine fellow," said Samoa to
  • himself. But not yet. Seeing all at his mercy, and having none, he
  • quickly laid his fore-topsail to the mast; "hove to" the brigantine; and
  • opened fire anew upon the boat; every swell of the sea heaving it nearer
  • and nearer. Vain all efforts to escape. The wounded man paddled wildly
  • with his hands the dead one rolled from side to side; and the Cholo,
  • seizing the solitary oar, in his frenzied heedlessness, spun the boat
  • round and round; while all the while shot followed shot, Samoa firing as
  • fast as Annatoo could load. At length both Cholo and savage fell dead
  • upon their comrades, canting the boat over sideways, till well nigh
  • awash; in which manner she drifted off.
  • CHAPTER XXIII Sailing From The Island They Pillage The Cabin
  • There was a small carronade on the forecastle, unshipped from its
  • carriage, and lashed down to ringbolts on the deck. This Samoa now
  • loaded; and with an ax knocking off the round knob upon the breech,
  • rammed it home in the tube. When, running the cannon out at one of the
  • ports, and studying well his aim, he let fly, sunk the boat, and buried
  • his dead.
  • It was now late in the afternoon; and for the present bent upon avoiding
  • land, and gaining the shoreless sea, never mind where, Samoa again
  • forced round his craft before the wind, leaving the island astern. The
  • decks were still cumbered with the bodies of the Lahineese, which heel
  • to point and crosswise, had, log-like, been piled up on the main-hatch.
  • These, one by one, were committed to the sea; after which, the decks
  • were washed down.
  • At sunrise next morning, finding themselves out of sight of land, with
  • little or no wind, they stopped their headway, and lashed the tiller
  • alee, the better to enable them to overhaul the brigantine; especially
  • the recesses of the cabin. For there, were stores of goods adapted for
  • barter among the Islanders; also several bags of dollars.
  • Now, nothing can exceed the cupidity of the Polynesian, when, through
  • partial commerce with the whites, his eyes are opened to his nakedness,
  • and he perceives that in some things they are richer than himself.
  • The poor skipper's wardrobe was first explored; his chests of clothes
  • being capsized, and their contents strown about the cabin floor.
  • Then took place the costuming. Samoa and Annatoo trying on coats and
  • pantaloons, shirts and drawers, and admiring themselves in the little
  • mirror panneled in the bulk-head. Then, were broken open boxes and
  • bales; rolls of printed cotton were inspected, and vastly admired;
  • insomuch, that the trumpery found in the captain's chests was
  • disdainfully doffed: and donned were loose folds of calico, more
  • congénial to their tastes.
  • As case after case was opened and overturned, slippery grew the cabin
  • deck with torrents of glass beads; and heavy the necks of Samoa and
  • Annatoo with goodly bunches thereof.
  • Among other things, came to light brass jewelry,--Rag Fair gewgaws and
  • baubles a plenty, more admired than all; Annatoo, bedecking herself
  • like, a tragedy queen: one blaze of brass. Much mourned the married
  • dame, that thus arrayed, there was none to admire but Samoa her husband;
  • but he was all the while admiring himself, and not her.
  • And here must needs be related, what has hitherto remained unsaid. Very
  • often this husband and wife were no Darby and Joan. Their married life
  • was one long campaign, whereof the truces were only by night. They
  • billed and they cooed on their arms, rising fresh in the morning to
  • battle, and often Samoa got more than a hen-pecking. To be short,
  • Annatoo was a Tartar, a regular Calmuc, and Samoa--Heaven help him--her
  • husband.
  • Yet awhile, joined together by a sense of common danger, and long
  • engrossed in turning over their tinsel acquisitions without present
  • thought of proprietorship, the pair refrained from all squabbles. But
  • soon burst the storm. Having given every bale and every case a good
  • shaking, Annatoo, making an estimate of the whole, very coolly proceeded
  • to set apart for herself whatever she fancied. To this, Samoa objected;
  • to which objection Annatoo objected; and then they went at it.
  • The lady vowed that the things were no more Samoa's than hers; nay, not
  • so much; and that whatever she wanted, that same would she have. And
  • furthermore, by way of codicil, she declared that she was slave to
  • nobody.
  • Now, Samoa, sad to tell, stood in no little awe of his bellicose spouse.
  • What, though a hero in other respects; what, though he had slain his
  • savages, and gallantly carried his craft from their clutches:--Like the
  • valiant captains Marlborough and Belisarius, he was a poltroon to his
  • wife. And Annatoo was worse than either Sarah or Antonina.
  • However, like every thing partaking of the nature of a scratch, most
  • conjugal squabbles are quickly healed; for if they healed not, they
  • would never anew break out: which is the beauty of the thing. So at
  • length they made up but the treaty stipulations of Annatoo told much
  • against the interests of Samoa. Nevertheless, ostensibly, it was agreed
  • upon, that they should strictly go halves; the lady, however, laying
  • special claim to certain valuables, more particularly fancied. But as a
  • set-off to this, she generously renounced all claims upon the spare
  • rigging; all claims upon the fore-mast and mainmast; and all claims upon
  • the captain's arms and ammunition. Of the latter, by the way, Dame
  • Antonina stood in no need. Her voice was a park of artillery; her talons
  • a charge of bayonets.
  • CHAPTER XXIV Dedicated To The College Of Physicians And Surgeons
  • By this time Samoa's wounded arm was in such a state, that amputation
  • became necessary. Among savages, severe personal injuries are, for the
  • most part, accounted but trifles. When a European would be taking to his
  • couch in despair, the savage would disdain to recline.
  • More yet. In Polynesia, every man is his own barber and surgeon, cutting
  • off his beard or arm, as occasion demands. No unusual thing, for the
  • warriors of Varvoo to saw off their own limbs, desperately wounded in
  • battle. But owing to the clumsiness of the instrument employed--a
  • flinty, serrated shell--the operation has been known to last several
  • days. Nor will they suffer any friend to help them; maintaining, that a
  • matter so nearly concerning a warrior is far better attended to by
  • himself. Hence it may be said, that they amputate themselves at their
  • leisure, and hang up their tools when tired. But, though thus beholden
  • to no one for aught connected with the practice of surgery, they never
  • cut off their own heads, that ever I heard; a species of amputation to
  • which, metaphorically speaking, many would-be independent sort of people
  • in civilized lands are addicted.
  • Samoa's operation was very summary. A fire was kindled in the little
  • caboose, or cook-house, and so made as to produce much smoke. He then
  • placed his arm upon one of the windlass bitts (a short upright timber,
  • breast-high), and seizing the blunt cook's ax would have struck the
  • blow; but for some reason distrusting the precision of his aim, Annatoo
  • was assigned to the task. Three strokes, and the limb, from just above
  • the elbow, was no longer Samoa's; and he saw his own bones; which many a
  • centenarian can not say. The very clumsiness of the operation was safety
  • to the subject. The weight and bluntness of the instrument both deadened
  • the pain and lessened the hemorrhage. The wound was then scorched, and
  • held over the smoke of the fire, till all signs of blood vanished. From
  • that day forward it healed, and troubled Samoa but little.
  • But shall the sequel be told? How that, superstitiously averse to
  • burying in the sea the dead limb of a body yet living; since in that
  • case Samoa held, that he must very soon drown and follow it; and how,
  • that equally dreading to keep the thing near him, he at last hung it
  • aloft from the topmast-stay; where yet it was suspended, bandaged over
  • and over in cerements. The hand that must have locked many others in
  • friendly clasp, or smote a foe, was no food, thought Samoa, for fowls of
  • the air nor fishes of the sea.
  • Now, which was Samoa? The dead arm swinging high as Haman? Or the living
  • trunk below? Was the arm severed from the body, or the body from the
  • arm? The residual part of Samoa was alive, and therefore we say it was
  • he. But which of the writhing sections of a ten times severed worm, is
  • the worm proper?
  • For myself, I ever regarded Samoa as but a large fragment of a man, not
  • a man complete. For was he not an entire limb out of pocket? And the
  • action at Teneriffe over, great Nelson himself--physiologically
  • speaking--was but three-quarters of a man. And the smoke of Waterloo
  • blown by, what was Anglesea but the like? After Saratoga, what Arnold?
  • To say nothing of Mutius Scaevola minus a hand, General Knox a thumb,
  • and Hannibal an eye; and that old Roman grenadier, Dentatus, nothing
  • more than a bruised and battered trunk, a knotty sort of hemlock of a
  • warrior, hard to hack and hew into chips, though much marred in symmetry
  • by battle-ax blows. Ah! but these warriors, like anvils, will stand a
  • deal of hard hammering. Especially in the old knight-errant times. For
  • at the battle of Brevieux in Flanders, my glorious old gossiping
  • ancestor, Froissart, informs me, that ten good knights, being suddenly
  • unhorsed, fell stiff and powerless to the plain, fatally encumbered by
  • their armor. Whereupon, the rascally burglarious peasants, their foes,
  • fell to picking their visors; as burglars, locks; or oystermen, oysters;
  • to get at their lives. But all to no purpose. And at last they were fain
  • to ask aid of a blacksmith; and not till then, were the inmates of the
  • armor dispatched. Now it was deemed very hard, that the mysterious
  • state-prisoner of France should be riveted in an iron mask; but these
  • knight-errants did voluntarily prison themselves in their own iron
  • Bastiles; and thus helpless were murdered there-in. Days of chivalry
  • these, when gallant chevaliers died chivalric deaths!
  • And this was the epic age, over whose departure my late eloquent and
  • prophetic friend and correspondent, Edmund Burke, so movingly mourned.
  • Yes, they were glorious times. But no sensible man, given to quiet
  • domestic delights, would exchange his warm fireside and muffins, for a
  • heroic bivouac, in a wild beechen wood, of a raw gusty morning in
  • Normandy; every knight blowing his steel-gloved fingers, and vainly
  • striving to cook his cold coffee in his helmet.
  • CHAPTER XXV Peril A Peace-Maker
  • A few days passed: the brigantine drifting hither and thither, and
  • nothing in sight but the sea, when forth again on its stillness rung
  • Annatoo's domestic alarum. The truce was up. Most egregiously had the
  • lady infringed it; appropriating to herself various objects previously
  • disclaimed in favor of Samoa. Besides, forever on the prowl, she was
  • perpetually going up and down; with untiring energy, exploring every
  • nook and cranny; carrying off her spoils and diligently secreting them.
  • Having little idea of feminine adaptations, she pilfered whatever came
  • handy:--iron hooks, dollars, bolts, hatchets, and stopping not at balls
  • of marline and sheets of copper. All this, poor Samoa would have borne
  • with what patience he might, rather than again renew the war, were it
  • not, that the audacious dame charged him with peculations upon her own
  • private stores; though of any such thing he was innocent as the
  • bowsprit.
  • This insulting impeachment got the better of the poor islander's
  • philosophy. He keenly resented it. And the consequence was, that seeing
  • all domineering useless, Annatoo flew off at a tangent; declaring that,
  • for the future, Samoa might stay by himself; she would have nothing more
  • to do with him. Save when unavoidable in managing the brigantine, she
  • would not even speak to him, that she wouldn't, the monster! She then
  • boldly demanded the forecastle--in the brig's case, by far the
  • pleasantest end of the ship--for her own independent suite of
  • apartments. As for hapless Belisarius, he might do what he pleased in
  • his dark little den of a cabin.
  • Concerning the division of the spoils, the termagant succeeded in
  • carrying the day; also, to her quarters, bale after bale of goods,
  • together with numerous odds and ends, sundry and divers. Moreover, she
  • laid in a fine stock of edibles, so as, in all respects possible, to
  • live independent of her spouse.
  • Unlovely Annatoo! Unfortunate Samoa! Thus did the pair make a divorce of
  • it; the lady going upon a separate maintenance,--and Belisarius resuming
  • his bachelor loneliness. In the captain's state room, all cold and
  • comfortless, he slept; his lady whilome retiring to her forecastle
  • boudoir; beguiling the hours in saying her pater-nosters, and tossing
  • over and assorting her ill-gotten trinkets and finery; like Madame De
  • Maintenon dedicating her last days and nights to continence and
  • calicoes.
  • But think you this was the quiet end of their conjugal quarrels? Ah, no!
  • No end to those feuds, till one or t'other gives up the ghost.
  • Now, exiled from the nuptial couch, Belisarius bore the hardship without
  • a murmur. And hero that he was, who knows that he felt not like a
  • soldier on a furlough? But as for Antonina, she could neither get along
  • with Belisarius, nor without him. She made advances. But of what sort?
  • Why, breaking into the cabin and purloining sundry goods therefrom; in
  • artful hopes of breeding a final reconciliation out of the temporary
  • outburst that might ensue.
  • Then followed a sad scene of altercation; interrupted at last by a
  • sudden loud roaring of the sea. Rushing to the deck, they beheld
  • themselves sweeping head-foremost toward a shoal making out from a
  • cluster of low islands, hitherto, by banks of clouds, shrouded from
  • view.
  • The helm was instantly shifted; and the yards braced about. But for
  • several hours, owing to the freshness of the breeze, the set of the
  • currents, and the irregularity and extent of the shoal, it seemed
  • doubtful whether they would escape a catastrophe. But Samoa's
  • seamanship, united to Annatoo's industry, at last prevailed; and the
  • brigantine was saved.
  • Of the land where they came so near being wrecked, they knew nothing;
  • and for that reason, they at once steered away. For after the fatal
  • events which had overtaken the Parki at the Pearl Shell islands, so
  • fearful were they of encountering any Islanders, that from the first
  • they had resolved to keep open sea, shunning every appearance of land;
  • relying upon being eventually picked up by some passing sail.
  • Doubtless this resolution proved their salvation. For to the navigator
  • in these seas, no risk so great, as in approaching the isles; which
  • mostly are so guarded by outpost reefs, and far out from their margins
  • environed by perils, that the green flowery field within, lies like a
  • rose among thorns; and hard to be reached as the heart of proud maiden.
  • Though once attained, all three--red rose, bright shore, and soft heart--are full of love, bloom, and all manner of delights. The Pearl Shell
  • islands excepted.
  • Besides, in those generally tranquil waters, Samoa's little craft,
  • though hundreds of miles from land, was very readily managed by himself
  • and Annatoo. So small was the Parki, that one hand could brace the main-yard; and a very easy thing it was, even to hoist the small top-sails;
  • for after their first clumsy attempt to perform that operation by hand,
  • they invariably led the halyards to the windlass, and so managed it,
  • with the utmost facility.
  • CHAPTER XXVI Containing A Pennyweight Of Philosophy
  • Still many days passed and the Parki yet floated. The little flying-fish
  • got used to her familiar, loitering hull; and like swallows building
  • their nests in quiet old trees, they spawned in the great green
  • barnacles that clung to her sides.
  • The calmer the sea, the more the barnacles grow. In the tropical
  • Pacific, but a few weeks suffice thus to encase your craft in shell
  • armor. Vast bunches adhere to the very cutwater, and if not stricken
  • off, much impede the ship's sailing. And, at intervals, this clearing
  • away of barnacles was one of Annatoo's occupations. For be it known,
  • that, like most termagants, the dame was tidy at times, though
  • capriciously; loving cleanliness by fits and starts. Wherefore, these
  • barnacles oftentimes troubled her; and with a long pole she would go
  • about, brushing them aside. It beguiled the weary hours, if nothing
  • more; and then she would return to her beads and her trinkets; telling
  • them all over again; murmuring forth her devotions, and marking whether
  • Samoa had been pilfering from her store.
  • Now, the escape from the shoal did much once again to heal the
  • differences of the good lady and her spouse. And keeping house, as they
  • did, all alone by themselves, in that lonely craft, a marvel it is, that
  • they should ever have quarreled. And then to divorce, and yet dwell in
  • the same tenement, was only aggravating the evil. So Belisarius and
  • Antonina again came together. But now, grown wise by experience, they
  • neither loved over-keenly, nor hated; but took things as they were;
  • found themselves joined, without hope of a sundering, and did what they
  • could to make a match of the mate. Annatoo concluded that Samoa was not
  • wholly to be enslaved; and Samoa thought best to wink at Annatoo's
  • foibles, and let her purloin when she pleased.
  • But as in many cases, all this philosophy about wedlock is not proof
  • against the perpetual contact of the parties concerned; and as it is far
  • better to revive the old days of courtship, when men's mouths are honey-combs: and, to make them still sweeter, the ladies the bees which there
  • store their sweets; when fathomless raptures glimmer far down in the
  • lover's fond eye; and best of all, when visits are alternated by
  • absence: so, like my dignified lord duke and his duchess, Samoa and
  • Annatoo, man and wife, dwelling in the same house, still kept up their
  • separate quarters. Marlborough visiting Sarah; and Sarah, Marlborough,
  • whenever the humor suggested.
  • CHAPTER XXVII In Which The Past History Op The Parki Is Concluded
  • Still days, days, days sped by; and steering now this way, now that, to
  • avoid the green treacherous shores, which frequently rose into view, the
  • Parki went to and fro in the sea; till at last, it seemed hard to tell,
  • in what watery world she floated. Well knowing the risks they ran, Samoa
  • desponded. But blessed be ignorance. For in the day of his despondency,
  • the lively old lass his wife bade him be of stout heart, cheer up, and
  • steer away manfully for the setting sun; following which, they must
  • inevitably arrive at her own dear native island, where all their cares
  • would be over. So squaring their yards, away they glided; far sloping
  • down the liquid sphere.
  • Upon the afternoon of the day we caught sight of them in our boat, they
  • had sighted a cluster of low islands, which put them in no small panic,
  • because of their resemblance to those where the massacre had taken
  • place. Whereas, they must have been full five hundred leagues from that
  • fearful vicinity. However, they altered their course to avoid it; and a
  • little before sunset, dropping the islands astern, resumed their
  • previous track. But very soon after, they espied our little sea-goat,
  • bounding over the billows from afar.
  • This they took for a canoe giving chase to them. It renewed and
  • augmented their alarm.
  • And when at last they perceived that the strange object was a boat,
  • their fears, instead of being allayed, only so much the more increased.
  • For their wild superstitions led them to conclude, that a white man's
  • craft coming upon them so suddenly, upon the open sea, and by night,
  • could be naught but a phantom. Furthermore, marking two of us in the
  • Chamois, they fancied us the ghosts of the Cholos. A conceit which
  • effectually damped Samoa's courage, like my Viking's, only proof against
  • things tangible. So seeing us bent upon boarding the brigantine; after a
  • hurried over-turning of their chattels, with a view of carrying the most
  • valuable aloft for safe keeping, they secreted what they could; and
  • together made for the fore-top; the man with a musket, the woman with a
  • bag of beads. Their endeavoring to secure these treasures against
  • ghostly appropriation originated in no real fear, that otherwise they
  • would be stolen: it was simply incidental to the vacant panic into which
  • they were thrown. No reproach this, to Belisarius' heart of game; for
  • the most intrepid Feegee warrior, he who has slain his hecatombs, will
  • not go ten yards in the dark alone, for fear of ghosts.
  • Their purpose was to remain in the top until daylight; by which time,
  • they counted upon the withdrawal of their visitants; who, sure enough,
  • at last sprang on board, thus verifying their worst apprehensions.
  • They watched us long and earnestly. But curious to tell, in that very
  • strait of theirs, perched together in that airy top, their domestic
  • differences again broke forth; most probably, from their being suddenly
  • forced into such very close contact.
  • However that might be, taking advantage of our descent into the cabin,
  • Samoa, in desperation fled from his wife, and one-armed as he was,
  • sailor-like, shifted himself over by the fore and aft-stays to the main-top, his musket being slung to his back. And thus divided, though but a
  • few yards intervened, the pair were as much asunder as if at the
  • opposite Poles.
  • During the live-long night they were both in great perplexity as to the
  • extraordinary goblins on board. Such inquisitive, meddlesome spirits,
  • had never before been encountered. So cool and systematic; sagaciously
  • stopping the vessel's headway the better to rummage;--the very plan they
  • themselves had adopted. But what most surprised them, was our striking a
  • light, a thing of which no true ghost would be guilty. Then, our eating
  • and drinking on the quarter-deck including the deliberate investment of
  • Vienna; and many other actions equally strange, almost led Samoa to
  • fancy that we were no shades, after all, but a couple of men from the
  • moon.
  • Yet they had dimly caught sight of the frocks and trowsers we wore,
  • similar to those which the captain of the Parki had bestowed upon the
  • two Cholos, and in which those villains had been killed. This, with the
  • presence of the whale boat, united to chase away the conceit of our
  • lunar origin. But these considerations renewed their first superstitious
  • impressions of our being the ghosts of the murderous half-breeds.
  • Nevertheless, while during the latter part of the night we were
  • reclining beneath him, munching our biscuit, Samoa eyeing us intently,
  • was half a mind to open fire upon us by way of testing our corporeality.
  • But most luckily, he concluded to defer so doing till sunlight; if by
  • that time we should not have evaporated.
  • For dame Annatoo, almost from our first boarding the brigantine,
  • something in our manner had bred in her a lurking doubt as to the
  • genuineness of our atmospheric organization; and abandoned to her
  • speculations when Samoa fled from her side, her incredulity waxed
  • stronger and stronger. Whence we came she knew not; enough, that we
  • seemed bent upon pillaging her own precious purloinings. Alas! thought
  • she, my buttons, my nails, my tappa, my dollars, my beads, and my boxes!
  • Wrought up to desperation by these dismal forebodings, she at length
  • shook the ropes leading from her own perch to Samoa's; adopting this
  • method of arousing his attention to the heinousness of what was in all
  • probability going on in the cabin, a prelude most probably to the
  • invasion of her own end of the vessel. Had she dared raise her voice, no
  • doubt she would have suggested the expediency of shooting us so soon as
  • we emerged from the cabin. But failing to shake Samoa into an
  • understanding of her views on the subject, her malice proved futile.
  • When her worst fears were confirmed, however, and we actually descended
  • into the forecastle; there ensued such a reckless shaking of the ropes,
  • that Samoa was fain to hold on hard, for fear of being tossed out of the
  • rigging. And it was this violent rocking that caused the loud creaking
  • of the yards, so often heard by us while below in Annatoo's apartment.
  • And the fore-top being just over the open forecastle scuttle, the dame
  • could look right down upon us; hence our proceedings were plainly
  • revealed by the lights that we carried. Upon our breaking open her
  • strong-box, her indignation almost completely overmastered her fears.
  • Unhooking a top-block, down it came into the forecastle, charitably
  • commissioned with the demolition of Jarl's cocoa-nut, then more exposed
  • to the view of an aerial observer than my own. But of it turned out, no
  • harm was done to our porcelain.
  • At last, morning dawned; when ensued Jarl's discovery as the occupant of
  • the main-top; which event, with what followed, has been duly recounted.
  • And such, in substance, was the first, second, third and fourth acts of
  • the Parki drama. The fifth and last, including several scenes, now
  • follows.
  • CHAPTER XXVIII Suspicions Laid, And Something About The Calmuc
  • Though abounding in details full of the savor of reality, Samoa's
  • narrative did not at first appear altogether satisfactory. Not that it
  • was so strange; for stranger recitals I had heard.
  • But one reason, perhaps, was that I had anticipated a narrative quite
  • different; something agreeing with my previous surmises.
  • Not a little puzzling, also, was his account of having seen islands the
  • day preceding; though, upon reflection, that might have been the case,
  • and yet, from his immediately altering the Parki's course, the Chamois,
  • unknowingly might have sailed by their vicinity. Still, those islands
  • could form no part of the chain we were seeking. They must have been
  • some region hitherto undiscovered.
  • But seems it likely, thought I, that one, who, according to his own
  • account, has conducted himself so heroically in rescuing the brigantine,
  • should be the victim of such childish terror at the mere glimpse of a
  • couple of sailors in an open boat, so well supplied, too, with arms, as
  • he was, to resist their capturing his craft, if such proved their
  • intention? On the contrary, would it not have been more natural, in his
  • dreary situation, to have hailed our approach with the utmost delight?
  • But then again, we were taken for phantoms, not flesh and blood. Upon
  • the whole, I regarded the narrator of these things somewhat
  • distrustfully. But he met my gaze like a man. While Annatoo, standing
  • by, looked so expressively the Amazonian character imputed to her, that
  • my doubts began to waver. And recalling all the little incidents of
  • their story, so hard to be conjured up on the spur of a presumed
  • necessity to lie; nay, so hard to be conjured up at all; my suspicions
  • at last gave way. And I could no longer harbor any misgivings.
  • For, to be downright, what object could Samoa have, in fabricating such
  • a narrative of horrors--those of the massacre, I mean--unless to conceal
  • some tragedy, still more atrocious, in which he himself had been
  • criminally concerned? A supposition, which, for obvious reasons, seemed
  • out of the question. True, instances were known to me of half-civilized
  • beings, like Samoa, forming part of the crews of ships in these seas,
  • rising suddenly upon their white ship-mates, and murdering them, for the
  • sake of wrecking the ship on the shore of some island near by, and
  • plundering her hull, when stranded.
  • But had this been purposed with regard to the Parki, where the rest of
  • the mutineers? There was no end to my conjectures; the more I indulged
  • in them, the more they multiplied. So, unwilling to torment myself, when
  • nothing could be learned, but what Samoa related, and stuck to like a
  • hero; I gave over conjecturing at all; striving hard to repose full
  • faith in the Islander.
  • Jarl, however, was skeptical to the last; and never could be brought
  • completely to credit the tale. He stoutly maintained that the hobgoblins
  • must have had something or other to do with the Parki.
  • My own curiosity satisfied with respect to the brigantine, Samoa himself
  • turned inquisitor. He desired to know who we were; and whence we came in
  • our marvelous boat. But on these heads I thought best to withhold from
  • him the truth; among other things, fancying that if disclosed, it would
  • lessen his deference for us, as men superior to himself. I therefore
  • spoke vaguely of our adventures, and assumed the decided air of a
  • master; which I perceived was not lost upon the rude Islander. As for
  • Jarl, and what he might reveal, I embraced the first opportunity to
  • impress upon him the importance of never divulging our flight from the
  • Arcturion; nor in any way to commit himself on that head: injunctions
  • which he faithfully promised to observe.
  • If not wholly displeased with the fine form of Samoa, despite his savage
  • lineaments, and mutilated member, I was much less conciliated by the
  • person of Annatoo; who, being sinewy of limb, and neither young, comely,
  • nor amiable, was exceedingly distasteful in my eyes. Besides, she was a
  • tigress. Yet how avoid admiring those Penthesilian qualities which so
  • signally had aided Samoa, in wresting the Parki from its treacherous
  • captors. Nevertheless, it was indispensable that she should at once be
  • brought under prudent subjection; and made to know, once for all, that
  • though conjugally a rebel, she must be nautically submissive. For to
  • keep the sea with a Calmuc on board, seemed next to impossible. In most
  • military marines, they are prohibited by law; no officer may take his
  • Pandora and her bandbox off soundings.
  • By the way, this self-same appellative, Pandora, has been bestowed upon
  • vessels. There was a British ship by that name, dispatched in quest of
  • the mutineers of the Bounty. But any old tar might have prophesied her
  • fate. Bound home she was wrecked on a reef off New South Wales. Pandora,
  • indeed! A pretty name for a ship: fairly smiting Fate in the face. But
  • in this matter of christening ships of war, Christian nations are but
  • too apt to be dare-devils. Witness the following: British names all--The
  • Conqueror, the Defiance, the Revenge, the Spitfire, the Dreadnaught, the
  • Thunderer, and the Tremendous; not omitting the Etna, which, in the
  • Roads of Corfu, was struck by lightning, coming nigh being consumed by
  • fire from above. But almost potent as Moses' rod, Franklin's proved her
  • salvation.
  • With the above catalogue, compare we the Frenchman's; quite
  • characteristic of the aspirations of Monsieur:--The Destiny, the
  • Glorious, the Magnanimous, the Magnificent, the Conqueror, the
  • Triumphant, the Indomitable, the Intrepid, the Mont-Blanc. Lastly, the
  • Dons; who have ransacked the theology of the religion of peace for fine
  • names for their fighting ships; stopping not at designating one of their
  • three-deckers, The Most Holy Trinity. But though, at Trafalgar, the
  • Santissima Trinidada thundered like Sinai, her thunders were silenced by
  • the victorious cannonade of the Victory.
  • And without being blown into splinters by artillery, how many of these
  • Redoubtables and Invincibles have succumbed to the waves, and like
  • braggarts gone down before hurricanes, with their bravadoes broad on
  • their bows.
  • Much better the American names (barring Scorpions, Hornets, and Wasps;)
  • Ohio, Virginia, Carolina, Vermont. And if ever these Yankees fight great
  • sea engagements--which Heaven forefend!--how glorious, poetically
  • speaking, to range up the whole federated fleet, and pour forth a
  • broadside from Florida to Maine. Ay, ay, very glorious indeed! yet in
  • that proud crowing of cannon, how shall the shade of peace-loving Penn
  • be astounded, to see the mightiest murderer of them all, the great
  • Pennsylvania, a very namesake of his. Truly, the Pennsylvania's guns
  • should be the wooden ones, called by men-of-war's-men, Quakers.
  • But all this is an episode, made up of digressions. Time to tack ship,
  • and return.
  • Now, in its proper place, I omitted to mention, that shortly after
  • descending from the rigging, and while Samoa was rehearsing his
  • adventures, dame Annatoo had stolen below into the forecastle, intent
  • upon her chattels. And finding them all in mighty disarray, she returned
  • to the deck prodigiously, excited, and glancing angrily toward Jarl and
  • me, showered a whole torrent of objurgations into both ears of Samoa.
  • This contempt of my presence surprised me at first; but perhaps women
  • are less apt to be impressed by a pretentious demeanor, than men.
  • Now, to use a fighting phrase, there is nothing like boarding an enemy
  • in the smoke. And therefore, upon this first token of Annatoo's
  • termagant qualities, I gave her to understand--craving her pardon--that
  • neither the vessel nor aught therein was hers; but that every thing
  • belonged to the owners in Lahina. I added, that at all hazards, a stop
  • must be put to her pilferings. Rude language for feminine ears; but how
  • to be avoided? Here was an infatuated woman, who, according to Samoa's
  • account, had been repeatedly detected in the act of essaying to draw out
  • the screw-bolts which held together the planks. Tell me; was she not
  • worse than the Load-Stone Rock, sailing by which a stout ship fell to
  • pieces?
  • During this scene, Samoa said little. Perhaps he was secretly pleased
  • that his matrimonial authority was reinforced by myself and my Viking,
  • whose views of the proper position of wives at sea, so fully
  • corresponded with his own; however difficult to practice, those purely
  • theoretical ideas of his had hitherto proved.
  • Once more turning to Annatoo, now looking any thing but amiable, I
  • observed, that all her clamors would be useless; and that if it came to
  • the worst, the Parki had a hull that would hold her.
  • In the end she went off in a fit of the sulks; sitting down on the
  • windlass and glaring; her arms akimbo, and swaying from side to side;
  • while ever and anon she gave utterance to a dismal chant. It sounded
  • like an invocation to the Cholos to rise and dispatch us.
  • CHAPTER XXIX What They Lighted Upon In Further Searching The Craft, And
  • The Resolution They Came To
  • Descending into the cabin with Samoa, I bade him hunt up the
  • brigantine's log, the captain's writing-desk, and nautical instruments;
  • in a word, aught that could throw light on the previous history of the
  • craft, or aid in navigating her homeward.
  • But nearly every thing of the kind had disappeared: log, quadrant, and
  • ship's papers. Nothing was left but the sextant-case, which Jarl and I
  • had lighted upon in the state-room.
  • Upon this, vague though they were, my suspicions returned; and I closely
  • questioned the Islander concerning the disappearance of these important
  • articles. In reply, he gave me to understand, that the nautical
  • instruments had been clandestinely carried down into the forecastle by
  • Annatoo; and by that indefatigable and inquisitive dame they had been
  • summarily taken apart for scientific inspection. It was impossible to
  • restore them; for many of the fixtures were lost, including the colored
  • glasses, sights, and little mirrors; and many parts still recoverable,
  • were so battered and broken as to be entirely useless. For several days
  • afterward, we now and then came across bits of the quadrant or sextant;
  • but it was only to mourn over their fate.
  • However, though sextant and quadrant were both unattainable, I did not
  • so quickly renounce all hope of discovering a chronometer, which, if in
  • good order, though at present not ticking, might still be made in some
  • degree serviceable. But no such instrument was to be seen. No: nor to be
  • heard of; Samoa himself professing utter ignorance.
  • Annatoo, I threatened and coaxed; describing the chronometer--a live,
  • round creature like a toad, that made a strange noise, which I imitated;
  • but she knew nothing about it. Whether she had lighted upon it unbeknown
  • to Samoa, and dissected it as usual, there was now no way to determine.
  • Indeed, upon this one point, she maintained an air of such inflexible
  • stupidity, that if she were really fibbing, her dead-wall countenance
  • superseded the necessity for verbal deceit.
  • It may be, however, that in this particular she was wronged; for, as
  • with many small vessels, the Parki might never have possessed the
  • instrument in question. All thought, therefore, of feeling our way, as
  • we should penetrate farther and farther into the watery wilderness, was
  • necessarily abandoned.
  • The log book had also formed a portion of Annatoo's pilferings. It seems
  • she had taken it into her studio to ponder over. But after amusing
  • herself by again and again counting over the leaves, and wondering how
  • so many distinct surfaces could be compacted together in so small a
  • compass, she had very suddenly conceived an aversion to literature, and
  • dropped the book overboard as worthless. Doubtless, it met the fate of
  • many other ponderous tomes; sinking quickly and profoundly. What Camden
  • or Stowe hereafter will dive for it?
  • One evening Samoa brought me a quarto half-sheet of yellowish, ribbed
  • paper, much soiled and tarry, which he had discovered in a dark hole of
  • the forecastle. It had plainly formed part of the lost log; but all the
  • writing thereon, at present decipherable, conveyed no information upon
  • the subject then nearest my heart.
  • But one could not but be struck by a tragical occurrence, which the page
  • very briefly recounted; as well, as by a noteworthy pictorial
  • illustration of the event in the margin of the text. Save the cut, there
  • was no further allusion to the matter than the following:--"This day,
  • being calm, Tooboi, one of the Lahina men, went overboard for a bath,
  • and was eaten up by a shark. Immediately sent forward for his bag."
  • Now, this last sentence was susceptible of two meanings. It is truth,
  • that immediately upon the decease of a friendless sailor at sea, his
  • shipmates oftentimes seize upon his effects, and divide them; though the
  • dead man's clothes are seldom worn till a subsequent voyage. This
  • proceeding seems heartless. But sailors reason thus: Better we, than the
  • captain. For by law, either scribbled or unscribbled, the effects of a
  • mariner, dying on shipboard, should be held in trust by that officer.
  • But as sailors are mostly foundlings and castaways, and carry all their
  • kith and kin in their arms and their legs, there hardly ever appears any
  • heir-at-law to claim their estate; seldom worth inheriting, like
  • Esterhazy's. Wherefore, the withdrawal of a dead man's "kit" from the
  • forecastle to the cabin, is often held tantamount to its virtual
  • appropriation by the captain. At any rate, in small ships on long
  • voyages, such things have been done.
  • Thus much being said, then, the sentence above quoted from the Parki's
  • log, may be deemed somewhat ambiguous. At the time it struck me as
  • singular; for the poor diver's grass bag could not have contained much
  • of any thing valuable unless, peradventure, he had concealed therein
  • some Cleopatra pearls, feloniously abstracted from the shells brought up
  • from the sea.
  • Aside of the paragraph, copied above, was a pen-and-ink sketch of the
  • casualty, most cruelly executed; the poor fellow's legs being
  • represented half way in the process of deglutition; his arms firmly
  • grasping the monster's teeth, as if heroically bent upon making as tough
  • a morsel of himself as possible.
  • But no doubt the honest captain sketched this cenotaph to the departed
  • in all sincerity of heart; perhaps, during the melancholy leisure which
  • followed the catastrophe. Half obliterated were several stains upon the
  • page; seemingly, lingering traces of a salt tear or two.
  • From this unwonted embellishment of the text, I was led to infer, that
  • the designer, at one time or other, must have been engaged in the
  • vocation of whaling. For, in India ink, the logs of certain whalemen are
  • decorated by somewhat similar illustrations.
  • When whales are seen, but not captured, the fact is denoted by an
  • outline figure representing the creature's flukes, the broad, curving
  • lobes of his tail. But in those cases where the monster is both chased
  • and killed, this outline is filled up jet black; one for every whale
  • slain; presenting striking objects in turning over the log; and so
  • facilitating reference. Hence, it is quite imposing to behold, all in a
  • row, three or four, sometime five or six, of these drawings; showing
  • that so many monsters that day jetted their last spout. And the chief
  • mate, whose duty it is to keep the ship's record, generally prides
  • himself upon the beauty, and flushy likeness to life, of his flukes;
  • though, sooth to say, many of these artists are no Landseers.
  • After vainly searching the cabin for those articles we most needed, we
  • proceeded to explore the hold, into which as yet we had not penetrated.
  • Here, we found a considerable quantity of pearl shells; cocoanuts; an
  • abundance of fresh water in casks; spare sails and rigging; and some
  • fifty barrels or more of salt beef and biscuit. Unromantic as these last
  • mentioned objects were, I lingered over them long, and in a revery.
  • Branded upon each barrel head was the name of a place in America, with
  • which I was very familiar. It is from America chiefly, that ship's
  • stores are originally procured for the few vessels sailing out of the
  • Hawaiian Islands.
  • Having now acquainted myself with all things respecting the Parki, which
  • could in any way be learned, I repaired to the quarter-deck, and
  • summoning round me Samoa, Annatoo, and Jarl, gravely addressed them.
  • I said, that nothing would give me greater satisfaction than forthwith
  • to return to the scene of the massacre, and chastise its surviving
  • authors. But as there were only four of us in all; and the place of
  • those islands was wholly unknown to me; and even if known, would be
  • altogether out of our reach, since we possessed no instruments of
  • navigation; it was quite plain that all thought of returning thither was
  • entirely useless. The last mentioned reason, also, prevented our
  • voyaging to the Hawaiian group, where the vessel belonged; though that
  • would have been the most advisable step, resulting, as it would, if
  • successful, in restoring the ill-fated craft to her owners.
  • But all things considered, it seemed best, I added, cautiously to hold
  • on our way to the westward. It was our easiest course; for we would ever
  • have the wind from astern; and though we could not so much as hope to
  • arrive at any one spot previously designated, there was still a positive
  • certainty, if we floated long enough, of falling in with islands whereat
  • to refresh ourselves; and whence, if we thought fit, we might afterward
  • embark for more agreeable climes. I then reminded them of the fact, that
  • so long as we kept the sea, there was always some prospect of
  • encountering a friendly sail; in which event, our solicitude would be
  • over.
  • All this I said in the mild, firm tone of a superior; being anxious, at
  • once to assume the unquestioned supremacy. For, otherwise, Jarl and I
  • might better quit the vessel forthwith, than remain on board subject to
  • the outlandish caprices of Annatoo, who through Samoa would then have
  • the sway. But I was sure of my Viking; and if Samoa proved docile, had
  • no fear of his dame.
  • And therefore during my address, I steadfastly eyed him; thereby
  • learning enough to persuade me, that though he deferred to me at
  • present, he was, notwithstanding, a man who, without precisely
  • meditating mischief, could upon occasion act an ugly part. But of his
  • courage, and savage honor, such as it was, I had little doubt. Then,
  • wild buffalo that he was, tamed down in the yoke matrimonial, I could
  • not but fancy, that if upon no other account, our society must please
  • him, as rendering less afflictive the tyranny of his spouse.
  • For a hen-pecked husband, by the way, Samoa was a most terrible fellow
  • to behold. And though, after all, I liked him; it was as you fancy a
  • fiery steed with mane disheveled, as young Alexander fancied Bucephalus;
  • which wild horse, when he patted, he preferred holding by the bridle.
  • But more of Samoa anon.
  • Our course determined, and the command of the vessel tacitly yielded up
  • to myself, the next thing done was to put every thing in order. The
  • tattered sails were replaced by others, dragged up from the sail-room
  • below; in several places, new running-rigging was rove; blocks
  • restrapped; and the slackened stays and shrouds set taught. For all of
  • which, we were mostly indebted to my Viking's unwearied and skillful
  • marling-spike, which he swayed like a scepter.
  • The little Parki's toilet being thus thoroughly made for the first time
  • since the massacre, we gave her new raiment to the breeze, and daintily
  • squaring her yards, she gracefully glided away; honest old Jarl at the
  • helm, watchfully guiding her path, like some devoted old foster-father.
  • As I stood by his side like a captain, or walked up and down on the
  • quarter-deck, I felt no little importance upon thus assuming for the
  • first time in my life, the command of a vessel at sea. The novel
  • circumstances of the case only augmented this feeling; the wild and
  • remote seas where we were; the character of my crew, and the
  • consideration, that to all purposes, I was owner, as well as commander
  • of the craft I sailed.
  • CHAPTER XXX Hints For A Full Length Of Samoa
  • My original intention to touch at the Kingsmill Chain, or the countries
  • adjacent, was greatly strengthened by thus encountering Samoa; and the
  • more I had to do with my Belisarius, the more I was pleased with him.
  • Nor could I avoid congratulating myself, upon having fallen in with a
  • hero, who in various ways, could not fail of proving exceedingly useful.
  • Like any man of mark, Samoa best speaks for himself; but we may as well
  • convey some idea of his person. Though manly enough, nay, an obelisk in
  • stature, the savage was far from being sentimentally prepossessing. Be
  • not alarmed; but he wore his knife in the lobe of his dexter ear, which,
  • by constant elongation almost drooped upon his shoulder. A mode of
  • sheathing it exceedingly handy, and far less brigandish than the
  • Highlander's dagger concealed in his leggins.
  • But it was the mother of Samoa, who at a still earlier day had punctured
  • him through and through in still another direction. The middle cartilage
  • of his nose was slightly pendent, peaked, and Gothic, and perforated
  • with a hole; in which, like a Newfoundland dog carrying a cane, Samoa
  • sported a trinket: a well polished nail.
  • In other respects he was equally a coxcomb. In his style of tattooing,
  • for instance, which seemed rather incomplete; his marks embracing but a
  • vertical half of his person, from crown to sole; the other side being
  • free from the slightest stain. Thus clapped together, as it were, he
  • looked like a union of the unmatched moieties of two distinct beings;
  • and your fancy was lost in conjecturing, where roamed the absent ones.
  • When he turned round upon you suddenly, you thought you saw some one
  • else, not him whom you had been regarding before.
  • But there was one feature in Samoa beyond the reach of the innovations
  • of art:--his eye; which in civilized man or savage, ever shines in the
  • head, just as it shone at birth. Truly, our eyes are miraculous things.
  • But alas, that in so many instances, these divine organs should be mere
  • lenses inserted into the socket, as glasses in spectacle rims.
  • But my Islander had a soul in his eye; looking out upon you there, like
  • somebody in him. What an eye, to be sure! At times, brilliantly
  • changeful as opal; in anger, glowing like steel at white heat.
  • Belisarius, be it remembered, had but very recently lost an arm. But you
  • would have thought he had been born without it; so Lord Nelson-like and
  • cavalierly did he sport the honorable stump.
  • But no more of Samoa; only this: that his name had been given him by a
  • sea-captain; to whom it had been suggested by the native designation of
  • the islands to which he belonged; the Saviian or Samoan group, otherwise
  • known as the Navigator Islands. The island of Upolua, one of that
  • cluster, claiming the special honor of his birth, as Corsica does
  • Napoleon's, we shall occasionally hereafter speak of Samoa as the
  • Upoluan; by which title he most loved to be called.
  • It is ever ungallant to pass over a lady. But what shall be said of
  • Annatoo? As I live, I can make no pleasing portrait of the dame; for as
  • in most ugly subjects, flattering would but make the matter worse.
  • Furthermore, unalleviated ugliness should ever go unpainted, as
  • something unnecessary to duplicate. But the only ugliness is that of the
  • heart, seen through the face. And though beauty be obvious, the only
  • loveliness is invisible.
  • CHAPTER XXXI Rovings Alow And Aloft
  • Every one knows what a fascination there is in wandering up and down in
  • a deserted old tenement in some warm, dreamy country; where the vacant
  • halls seem echoing of silence, and the doors creak open like the
  • footsteps of strangers; and into every window the old garden trees
  • thrust their dark boughs, like the arms of night-burglars; and ever and
  • anon the nails start from the wainscot; while behind it the mice rattle
  • like dice. Up and down in such old specter houses one loves to wander;
  • and so much the more, if the place be haunted by some marvelous story.
  • And during the drowsy stillness of the tropical sea-day, very much such
  • a fancy had I, for prying about our little brigantine, whose tragic hull
  • was haunted by the memory of the massacre, of which it still bore
  • innumerable traces.
  • And so far as the indulgence of quiet strolling and reverie was
  • concerned, it was well nigh the same as if I were all by myself. For
  • Samoa, for a time, was rather reserved, being occupied with thoughts of
  • his own. And Annatoo seldom troubled me with her presence. She was taken
  • up with her calicoes and jewelry; which I had permitted her to retain,
  • to keep her in good humor if possible. And as for My royal old Viking,
  • he was one of those individuals who seldom speak, unless personally
  • addressed.
  • Besides, all that by day was necessary to navigating the Parki was,
  • that--somebody should stand at the helm; the craft being so small, and
  • the grating, whereon the steersman stood, so elevated, that he commanded
  • a view far beyond the bowsprit; thus keeping Argus eyes on the sea, as
  • he steered us along. In all other respects we left the brigantine to the
  • guardianship of the gentle winds.
  • My own turn at the helm--for though commander, I felt constrained to do
  • duty with the rest--came but once in the twenty-four hours. And not only
  • did Jarl and Samoa, officiate as helmsmen, but also Dame Annatoo, who
  • had become quite expert at the business. Though Jarl always maintained
  • that there was a slight drawback upon her usefulness in this vocation.
  • Too much taken up by her lovely image partially reflected in the glass
  • of the binnacle before her, Annatoo now and then neglected her duty, and
  • led us some devious dances. Nor was she, I ween, the first woman that
  • ever led men into zigzags.
  • For the reasons above stated, I had many spare hours to myself. At
  • times, I mounted aloft, and lounging in the slings of the topsail yard--one of the many snug nooks in a ship's rigging--I gazed broad off upon
  • the blue boundless sea, and wondered what they were doing in that
  • unknown land, toward which we were fated to be borne. Or feeling less
  • meditative, I roved about hither and thither; slipping over, by the
  • stays, from one mast to the other; climbing up to the truck; or lounging
  • out to the ends of the yards; exploring wherever there was a foothold.
  • It was like climbing about in some mighty old oak, and resting in the
  • crotches.
  • To a sailor, a ship's ropes are a study. And to me, every rope-yarn of
  • the Parki's was invested with interest. The outlandish fashion of her
  • shrouds, the collars of her stays, the stirrups, seizings, Flemish-horses, gaskets,--all the wilderness of her rigging, bore unequivocal
  • traces of her origin.
  • But, perhaps, my pleasantest hours were those which I spent, stretched
  • out on a pile of old sails, in the fore-top; lazily dozing to the
  • craft's light roll.
  • Frequently, I descended to the cabin: for the fiftieth time, exploring
  • the lockers and state-rooms for some new object of curiosity. And often,
  • with a glimmering light, I went into the midnight hold, as into old
  • vaults and catacombs; and creeping between damp ranges of casks,
  • penetrated into its farthest recesses.
  • Sometimes, in these under-ground burrowings, I lighted upon sundry out-of-the-way hiding places of Annatoo's; where were snugly secreted divers
  • articles, with which she had been smitten. In truth, no small portion of
  • the hull seemed a mine of stolen goods, stolen out of its own bowels. I
  • found a jaunty shore-cap of the captain's, hidden away in the hollow
  • heart of a coil of rigging; covered over in a manner most touchingly
  • natural, with a heap of old ropes; and near by, in a breaker, discovered
  • several entire pieces of calico, heroically tied together with cords
  • almost strong enough to sustain the mainmast.
  • Near the stray light, which, when the hatch was removed, gleamed down
  • into this part of the hold, was a huge ground-tier butt, headless as
  • Charles the First. And herein was a mat nicely spread for repose; a
  • discovery which accounted for what had often proved an enigma. Not
  • seldom Annatoo had been among the missing; and though, from stem to
  • stern, loudly invoked to come forth and relieve the poignant distress of
  • her anxious friends, the dame remained perdu; silent and invisible as a
  • spirit. But in her own good time, she would mysteriously emerge; or be
  • suddenly espied lounging quietly in the forecastle, as if she had been
  • there from all eternity.
  • Useless to inquire, "Where hast thou been, sweet Annatoo?" For no sweet
  • rejoinder would she give.
  • But now the problem was solved. Here, in this silent cask in the hold,
  • Annatoo was wont to coil herself away, like a garter-snake under a
  • stone.
  • Whether-she-thus stood sentry over her goods secreted round about:
  • whether she here performed penance like a nun in her cell; or was moved
  • to this unaccountable freak by the powers of the air; no one could tell.
  • Can you?
  • Verily, her ways were as the ways of the inscrutable penguins in
  • building their inscrutable nests, which baffle all science, and make a
  • fool of a sage.
  • Marvelous Annatoo! who shall expound thee?
  • CHAPTER XXXII Xiphius Platypterus
  • About this time, the loneliness of our voyage was relieved by an event
  • worth relating.
  • Ever since leaving the Pearl Shell Islands, the Parki had been followed
  • by shoals of small fish, pleasantly enlivening the sea, and socially
  • swimming by her side. But in vain did Jarl and I search among their
  • ranks for the little, steel-blue Pilot fish, so long outriders of the
  • Chamois. But perhaps since the Chamois was now high and dry on the
  • Parki's deck, our bright little avant-couriers were lurking out of
  • sight, far down in the brine; racing along close to the keel.
  • But it is not with the Pilot fish that we now have to do.
  • One morning our attention was attracted to a mighty commotion in the
  • water. The shoals of fish were darting hither and thither, and leaping
  • into the air in the utmost affright. Samoa declared, that their deadly
  • foe the Sword fish must be after them.
  • And here let me say, that, since of all the bullies, and braggarts, and
  • bravoes, and free-booters, and Hectors, and fish-at-arms, and knight-errants, and moss-troopers, and assassins, and foot-pads, and gallant
  • soldiers, and immortal heroes that swim the seas, the Indian Sword fish
  • is by far the most remarkable, I propose to dedicate this chapter to a
  • special description of the warrior. In doing which, I but follow the
  • example of all chroniclers and historians, my Peloponnesian friend
  • Thucydides and others, who are ever mindful of devoting much space to
  • accounts of eminent destroyers; for the purpose, no doubt, of holding
  • them up as ensamples to the world.
  • Now, the fish here treated of is a very different creature from the
  • Sword fish frequenting the Northern Atlantic; being much larger every
  • way, and a more dashing varlet to boot. Furthermore, he is denominated
  • the Indian Sword fish, in contradistinction from his namesake above
  • mentioned. But by seamen in the Pacific, he is more commonly known as
  • the Bill fish; while for those who love science and hard names, be it
  • known, that among the erudite naturalists he goeth by the outlandish
  • appellation of "_Xiphius Platypterus_."
  • But I waive for my hero all these his cognomens, and substitute a much
  • better one of my own: namely, the Chevalier. And a Chevalier he is, by
  • good right and title. A true gentleman of Black Prince Edward's bright
  • day, when all gentlemen were known by their swords; whereas, in times
  • present, the Sword fish excepted, they are mostly known by their high
  • polished boots and rattans.
  • A right valiant and jaunty Chevalier is our hero; going about with his
  • long Toledo perpetually drawn. Rely upon it, he will fight you to the
  • hilt, for his bony blade has never a scabbard. He himself sprang from it
  • at birth; yea, at the very moment he leaped into the Battle of Life; as
  • we mortals ourselves spring all naked and scabbardless into the world.
  • Yet, rather, are we scabbards to our souls. And the drawn soul of genius
  • is more glittering than the drawn cimeter of Saladin. But how many let
  • their steel sleep, till it eat up the scabbard itself, and both corrode
  • to rust-chips. Saw you ever the hillocks of old Spanish anchors, and
  • anchor-stocks of ancient galleons, at the bottom of Callao Bay? The
  • world is full of old Tower armories, and dilapidated Venetian arsenals,
  • and rusty old rapiers. But true warriors polish their good blades by the
  • bright beams of the morning; and gird them on to their brave sirloins;
  • and watch for rust spots as for foes; and by many stout thrusts and
  • stoccadoes keep their metal lustrous and keen, as the spears of the
  • Northern Lights charging over Greenland.
  • Fire from the flint is our Chevalier enraged. He takes umbrage at the
  • cut of some ship's keel crossing his road; and straightway runs a tilt
  • at it; with one mad lounge thrusting his Andrea Ferrara clean through
  • and through; not seldom breaking it short off at the haft, like a bravo
  • leaving his poignard in the vitals of his foe.
  • In the case of the English ship Foxhound, the blade penetrated through
  • the most solid part of her hull, the bow; going completely through the
  • copper plates and timbers, and showing for several inches in the hold.
  • On the return of the ship to London, it was carefully sawn out; and,
  • imbedded in the original wood, like a fossil, is still preserved. But
  • this was a comparatively harmless onslaught of the valiant Chevalier.
  • With the Rousseau, of Nantucket, it fared worse. She was almost mortally
  • stabbed; her assailant withdrawing his blade. And it was only by keeping
  • the pumps clanging, that she managed to swim into a Tahitian harbor,
  • "heave down," and have her wound dressed by a ship-surgeon with tar and
  • oakum. This ship I met with at sea, shortly after the disaster.
  • At what armory our Chevalier equips himself after one of his spiteful
  • tilting-matches, it would not be easy to say. But very hard for him, if
  • ever after he goes about in the lists, swordless and disarmed, at the
  • mercy of any caitiff shark he may meet.
  • Now, seeing that our fellow-voyagers, the little fish along-side, were
  • sorely tormented and thinned out by the incursions of a pertinacious
  • Chevalier, bent upon making a hearty breakfast out of them, I determined
  • to interfere in their behalf, and capture the enemy.
  • With shark-hook and line I succeeded, and brought my brave gentleman to
  • the deck. He made an emphatic landing; lashing the planks with his
  • sinewy tail; while a yard and a half in advance of his eyes, reached
  • forth his terrible blade.
  • As victor, I was entitled to the arms of the vanquished; so, quickly
  • dispatching him, and sawing off his Toledo, I bore it away for a trophy.
  • It was three-sided, slightly concave on each, like a bayonet; and some
  • three inches through at the base, it tapered from thence to a point.
  • And though tempered not in Tagus or Guadalquiver, it yet revealed upon
  • its surface that wavy grain and watery fleckiness peculiar to tried
  • blades of Spain. It was an aromatic sword; like the ancient caliph's,
  • giving out a peculiar musky odor by friction. But far different from
  • steel of Tagus or Damascus, it was inflexible as Crocket's rifle tube;
  • no doubt, as deadly.
  • Long hung that rapier over the head of my hammock. Was it not storied as
  • the good trenchant blade of brave Bayard, that other chevalier? The
  • knight's may have slain its scores, or fifties; but the weapon I
  • preserved had, doubtless, run through and riddled its thousands.
  • CHAPTER XXXIII Otard
  • And here is another little incident.
  • One afternoon while all by myself curiously penetrating into the hold, I
  • most unexpectedly obtained proof, that the ill-fated captain of the
  • Parki had been a man of sound judgment and most excellent taste. In
  • brief, I lighted upon an aromatic cask of prime old Otard.
  • Now, I mean not to speak lightly of any thing immediately connected with
  • the unfortunate captain. Nor, on the other hand, would I resemble the
  • inconsolable mourner, who among other tokens of affliction, bound in
  • funereal crape his deceased friend's copy of Joe Miller. Is there not a
  • fitness in things?
  • But let that pass. I found the Otard, and drank there-of; finding it,
  • moreover, most pleasant to the palate, and right cheering to the soul.
  • My next impulse was to share my prize with my shipmates. But here a
  • judicious reflection obtruded. From the sea-monarchs, his ancestors, my
  • Viking had inherited one of their cardinal virtues, a detestation and
  • abhorrence of all vinous and spirituous beverages; insomuch, that he
  • never could see any, but he instantly quaffed it out of sight. To be
  • short, like Alexander the Great and other royalties, Jarl was prone to
  • overmuch bibing. And though at sea more sober than a Fifth Monarchy
  • Elder, it was only because he was then removed from temptation. But
  • having thus divulged my Viking's weak; side, I earnestly entreat, that
  • it may not disparage him in any charitable man's estimation. Only think,
  • how many more there are like him to say nothing further of Alexander the
  • Great--especially among his own class; and consider, I beseech, that the
  • most capacious-souled fellows, for that very reason, are the most apt to
  • be too liberal in their libations; since, being so large-hearted, they
  • hold so much more good cheer than others.
  • For Samoa, from his utter silence hitherto as to aught inebriating on
  • board, I concluded, that, along with his other secrets, the departed
  • captain had very wisely kept his Otard to himself.
  • Nor did I doubt, but that the Upoluan, like all Polynesians, much loved
  • getting high of head; and in that state, would be more intractable than
  • a Black Forest boar. And concerning Annatoo, I shuddered to think, how
  • that Otard might inflame her into a Fury more fierce than the foremost
  • of those that pursued Orestes.
  • In good time, then, bethinking me of the peril of publishing my
  • discovery;--bethinking me of the quiet, lazy, ever-present perils of the
  • voyage, of all circumstances, the very worst under which to introduce an
  • intoxicating beverage to my companions, I resolved to withhold it from
  • them altogether.
  • So impressed was I with all this, that for a moment, I was almost
  • tempted to roll over the cask on its bilge, remove the stopper, and
  • suffer its contents to mix with the foul water at the bottom of the
  • hold.
  • But no, no: What: dilute the brine with the double distilled soul of the
  • precious grape? Haft himself would have haunted me!
  • Then again, it might come into play medicinally; and Paracelsus himself
  • stands sponsor for every cup drunk for the good of the abdomen. So at
  • last, I determined to let it remain where it was: visiting it
  • occasionally, by myself, for inspection.
  • But by way of advice to all ship-masters, let me say, that if your Otard
  • magazine be exposed to view--then, in the evil hour of wreck, stave in
  • your spirit-casks, ere rigging the life-boat.
  • CHAPTER XXXIV How They Steered On Their Way
  • When we quitted the Chamois for the brigantine, we must have been at
  • least two hundred leagues to the westward of the spot, where we had
  • abandoned the Arcturion. Though how far we might then have been, North
  • or South of the Equator, I could not with any certainty divine.
  • But that we were not removed any considerable distance from the Line,
  • seemed obvious. For in the starriest night no sign of the extreme Polar
  • constellations was visible; though often we scanned the northern and
  • southern horizon in search of them. So far as regards the aspect of the
  • skies near the ocean's rim, the difference of several degrees in one's
  • latitude at sea, is readily perceived by a person long accustomed to
  • surveying the heavens.
  • If correct in my supposition, concerning our longitude at the time here
  • alluded to, and allowing for what little progress we had been making in
  • the Parki, there now remained some one hundred leagues to sail, ere the
  • country we sought would be found. But for obvious reasons, how long
  • precisely we might continue to float out of sight of land, it was
  • impossible to say. Calms, light breezes, and currents made every thing
  • uncertain. Nor had we any method of estimating our due westward
  • progress, except by what is called Dead Reckoning,--the computation of
  • the knots run hourly; allowances' being made for the supposed deviations
  • from our course, by reason of the ocean streams; which at times in this
  • quarter of the Pacific run with very great velocity.
  • Now, in many respects we could not but feel safer aboard the Parki than
  • in the Chamois. The sense of danger is less vivid, the greater the
  • number of lives involved. He who is ready to despair in solitary peril,
  • plucks up a heart in the presence of another. In a plurality of comrades
  • is much countenance and consolation.
  • Still, in the brigantine there were many sources of uneasiness and
  • anxiety unknown to me in the whale-boat. True, we had now between us and
  • the deep, five hundred good planks to one lath in our buoyant little
  • chip. But the Parki required more care and attention; especially by
  • night, when a vigilant look-out was indispensable. With impunity, in our
  • whale-boat, we might have run close to shoal or reef; whereas, similar
  • carelessness or temerity now, might prove fatal to all concerned.
  • Though in the joyous sunlight, sailing through the sparkling sea, I was
  • little troubled with serious misgivings; in the hours of darkness it was
  • quite another thing. And the apprehensions, nay terrors I felt, were
  • much augmented by the remissness of both Jarl and Samoa, in keeping
  • their night-watches. Several times I was seized with a deadly panic, and
  • earnestly scanned the murky horizon, when rising from slumber I found
  • the steersman, in whose hands for the time being were life and death,
  • sleeping upright against the tiller, as much of a fixture there, as the
  • open-mouthed dragon rudely carved on our prow.
  • Were it not, that on board of other vessels, I myself had many a time
  • dozed at the helm, spite of all struggles, I would have been almost at a
  • loss to account for this heedlessness in my comrades. But it seemed as
  • if the mere sense of our situation, should have been sufficient to
  • prevent the like conduct in all on board our craft.
  • Samoa's aspect, sleeping at the tiller, was almost appalling. His large
  • opal eyes were half open; and turned toward the light of the binnacle,
  • gleamed between the lids like bars of flame. And added to all, was his
  • giant stature and savage lineaments.
  • It was in vain, that I remonstrated, begged, or threatened: the
  • occasional drowsiness of my fellow-voyagers proved incurable. To no
  • purpose, I reminded my Viking that sleeping in the night-watch in a
  • craft like ours, was far different from similar heedlessness on board
  • the Arcturion. For there, our place upon the ocean was always known, and
  • our distance from land; so that when by night the seamen were permitted
  • to be drowsy, it was mostly, because the captain well knew that strict
  • watchfulness could be dispensed with.
  • Though in all else, the Skyeman proved a most faithful ally, in this one
  • thing he was either perversely obtuse, or infatuated. Or, perhaps,
  • finding himself once more in a double-decked craft, which rocked him as
  • of yore, he was lulled into a deceitful security.
  • For Samoa, his drowsiness was the drowsiness of one beat on sleep, come
  • dreams or death. He seemed insensible to the peril we ran. Often I sent
  • the sleepy savage below, sad, steered myself till morning. At last I
  • made a point of slumbering much by day, the better to stand watch by
  • night; though I made Samoa and Jarl regularly go through with their
  • allotted four hours each.
  • It has been mentioned, that Annatoo took her turn at the helm; but it
  • was only by day. And in justice to the lady, I must affirm, that upon
  • the whole she acquitted herself well. For notwithstanding the syren face
  • in the binnacle, which dimly allured her glances, Annatoo after all was
  • tolerably heedful of her steering. Indeed she took much pride therein;
  • always ready for her turn; with marvelous exactitude calculating the
  • approaching hour, as it came on in regular rotation. Her time-piece was
  • ours, the sun. By night it must have been her guardian star; for
  • frequently she gazed up at a particular section of the heavens, like one
  • regarding the dial in a tower.
  • By some odd reasoning or other, she had cajoled herself into the notion,
  • that whoever steered the brigantine, for that period was captain.
  • Wherefore, she gave herself mighty airs at the tiller; with extravagant
  • gestures issuing unintelligible orders about trimming the sails, or
  • pitching overboard something to see how fast we were going. All this
  • much diverted my Viking, who several times was delivered of a laugh; a
  • loud and healthy one to boot: a phenomenon worthy the chronicling.
  • And thus much for Annatoo, preliminary to what is further to be said.
  • Seeing the drowsiness of Jarl and Samoa, which so often kept me from my
  • hammock at night, forcing me to repose by day, when I far preferred
  • being broad awake, I decided to let Annatoo take her turn at the night
  • watches; which several times she had solicited me to do; railing at the
  • sleepiness of her spouse; though abstaining from all reflections upon
  • Jarl, toward whom she had of late grown exceedingly friendly.
  • Now the Calmuc stood her first night watch to admiration; if any thing,
  • was altogether too wakeful. The mere steering of the craft employed not
  • sufficiently her active mind. Ever and anon she must needs rush from the
  • tiller to take a parenthetical pull at the fore-brace, the end of which
  • led down to the bulwarks near by; then refreshing herself with a draught
  • or two of water and a biscuit, she would continue to steer away, full of
  • the importance of her office. At any unusual flapping of the sails, a
  • violent stamping on deck announced the fact to the startled crew.
  • Finding her thus indefatigable, I readily induced her to stand two
  • watches to Jarl's and Samoa's one; and when she was at the helm, I
  • permitted myself to doze on a pile of old sails, spread every evening on
  • the quarter-deck.
  • It was the Skyeman, who often admonished me to "heave the ship to" every
  • night, thus stopping her headway till morning; a plan which, under other
  • circumstances, might have perhaps warranted the slumbers of all. But as
  • it was, such a course would have been highly imprudent. For while making
  • no onward progress through the water, the rapid currents we encountered
  • would continually be drifting us eastward; since, contrary to our
  • previous experience, they seemed latterly to have reversed their flow, a
  • phenomenon by no means unusual in the vicinity of the Line in the
  • Pacific. And this it was that so prolonged our passage to the westward.
  • Even in a moderate breeze, I sometimes fancied, that the impulse of the
  • wind little more than counteracted the glide of the currents; so that
  • with much show of sailing, we were in reality almost a fixture on the
  • sea.
  • The equatorial currents of the South Seas may be regarded as among the
  • most mysterious of the mysteries of the deep. Whence they come, whither
  • go, who knows? Tell us, what hidden law regulates their flow. Regardless
  • of the theory which ascribes to them a nearly uniform course from east
  • to west, induced by the eastwardly winds of the Line, and the collateral
  • action of the Polar streams; these currents are forever shifting. Nor
  • can the period of their revolutions be at all relied upon or predicted.
  • But however difficult it may be to assign a specific cause for the ocean
  • streams, in any part of the world, one of the wholesome effects thereby
  • produced would seem obvious enough. And though the circumstance here
  • alluded to is perhaps known to every body, it may be questioned, whether
  • it is generally invested with the importance it deserves. Reference is
  • here made to the constant commingling and purification of the sea-water
  • by reason of the currents.
  • For, that the ocean, according to the popular theory, possesses a
  • special purifying agent in its salts, is somewhat to be doubted. Nor can
  • it be explicitly denied, that those very salts might corrupt it, were it
  • not for the brisk circulation of its particles consequent upon the flow
  • of the streams. It is well known to seamen, that a bucket of sea-water,
  • left standing in a tropical climate, very soon becomes highly offensive;
  • which is not the case with rainwater.
  • But I build no theories. And by way of obstructing the one, which might
  • possibly be evolved from the statement above, let me add, that the
  • offensiveness of sea-water left standing, may arise in no small degree
  • from the presence of decomposed animal matter.
  • CHAPTER XXXV Ah, Annatoo!
  • In order to a complete revelation, I must needs once again discourse of
  • Annatoo and her pilferings; and to what those pilferings led. In the
  • simplicity of my soul, I fancied that the dame, so much flattered as she
  • needs must have been, by the confidence I began to repose in her, would
  • now mend her ways, and abstain from her larcenies. But not so. She was
  • possessed by some scores of devils, perpetually her to mischief on their
  • own separate behoof, and not less for many of her pranks were of no
  • earthly advantage to her, present or prospective.
  • One day the log-reel was missing. Summon Annatoo. She came; but knew
  • nothing about it. Jarl spent a whole morning in contriving a substitute;
  • and a few days after, pop, we came upon the lost: article hidden away in
  • the main-top.
  • Another time, discovering the little vessel to "gripe" hard in steering,
  • as if some one under water were jerking her backward, we instituted a
  • diligent examination, to see what was the matter. When lo; what should
  • we find but a rope, cunningly attached to one of the chain-plates under
  • the starboard main-channel. It towed heavily in the water. Upon dragging
  • it up--much as you would the cord of a ponderous bucket far down in a
  • well--a stout wooden box was discovered at the end; which opened,
  • disclosed sundry knives, hatchets, and ax-heads.
  • Called to the stand, the Upoluan deposed, that thrice he had rescued
  • that identical box from Annatoo's all-appropriating clutches.
  • Now, here were four human beings shut up in this little oaken craft,
  • and, for the time being, their interests the same. What sane mortal,
  • then, would forever be committing thefts, without rhyme or reason. It
  • was like stealing silver from one pocket and decanting it into the
  • other. And what might it not lead to in the end?
  • Why, ere long, in good sooth, it led to the abstraction of the compass
  • from the binnacle; so that we were fain to substitute for it, the one
  • brought along in the Chamois.
  • It was Jarl that first published this last and alarming theft. Annatoo
  • being at the helm at dawn, he had gone to relieve her; and looking to
  • see how we headed, was horror-struck at the emptiness of the binnacle.
  • I started to my feet; sought out the woman, and ferociously demanded the
  • compass. But her face was a blank; every word a denial.
  • Further lenity was madness. I summoned Samoa, told him what had
  • happened, and affirmed that there was no safety for us except in the
  • nightly incarceration of his spouse. To this he privily assented; and
  • that very evening, when Annatoo descended into the forecastle, we barred
  • over her the scuttle-slide. Long she clamored, but unavailingly. And
  • every night this was repeated; the dame saying her vespers most
  • energetically.
  • It has somewhere been hinted, that Annatoo occasionally cast sheep's
  • eyes at Jarl. So I was not a little surprised when her manner toward him
  • decidedly changed. Pulling at the ropes with us, she would give him sly
  • pinches, and then look another way, innocent as a lamb. Then again, she
  • would refuse to handle the same piece of rigging with him; with wry
  • faces, rinsed out the wooden can at the water cask, if it so chanced
  • that my Viking had previously been drinking therefrom. At other times,
  • when the honest Skyeman came up from below, she would set up a shout of
  • derision, and loll out her tongue; accompanying all this by certain
  • indecorous and exceedingly unladylike gestures, significant of the
  • profound contempt in which she held him.
  • Yet, never did Jarl heed her ill-breeding; but patiently overlooked and
  • forgave it. Inquiring the reason of the dame's singular conduct, I
  • learned, that with eye averted, she had very lately crept close to my
  • Viking, and met with no tender reception.
  • Doubtless, Jarl, who was much of a philosopher, innocently imagined that
  • ere long the lady would forgive and forget him. But what knows a
  • philosopher about women?
  • Ere long, so outrageous became Annatoo's detestation of him, that the
  • honest old tar could stand it no longer, and like most good-natured men
  • when once fairly roused, he was swept through and through with a
  • terrible typhoon of passion. He proposed, that forthwith the woman
  • should be sacked and committed to the deep; he could stand it no longer.
  • Murder is catching. At first I almost jumped at the proposition; but as
  • quickly rejected it. Ah! Annatoo: Woman unendurable: deliver me, ye
  • gods, from being shut up in a ship with such a hornet again.
  • But are we yet through with her? Not yet. Hitherto she had continued to
  • perform the duties of the office assigned her since the commencement of
  • the voyage: namely, those of the culinary department. From this she was
  • now deposed. Her skewer was broken. My Viking solemnly averring, that he
  • would eat nothing more of her concocting, for fear of being poisoned.
  • For myself, I almost believed, that there was malice enough in the minx
  • to give us our henbane broth.
  • But what said Samoa to all this? Passing over the matter of the cookery,
  • will it be credited, that living right among us as he did, he was yet
  • blind to the premeditated though unachieved peccadilloes of his spouse?
  • Yet so it was. And thus blind was Belisarius himself, concerning the
  • intrigues of Antonina.
  • Witness that noble dame's affair with the youth Theodosius; when her
  • deluded lord charged upon the scandal-mongers with the very horns she
  • had bestowed upon him.
  • Upon one occasion, seized with a sudden desire to palliate Annatoo's
  • thievings, Samoa proudly intimated, that the lady was the most virtuous
  • of her sex.
  • But alas, poor Annatoo, why say more? And bethinking me of the hard fate
  • that so soon overtook thee, I almost repent what has already and too
  • faithfully been portrayed.
  • CHAPTER XXXVI The Parki Gives Up The Ghost
  • A long calm in the boat, and now, God help us, another in the
  • brigantine. It was airless and profound.
  • In that hot calm, we lay fixed and frozen in like Parry at the Pole. The
  • sun played upon the glassy sea like the sun upon the glaciers.
  • At the end of two days we lifted up our eyes and beheld a low, creeping,
  • hungry cloud expanding like an army, wing and wing, along the eastern
  • horizon. Instantly Jarl bode me take heed.
  • Here be it said, that though for weeks and weeks reign over the
  • equatorial latitudes of the Pacific, the mildest and sunniest of days;
  • that nevertheless, when storms do come, they come in their strength:
  • spending in a few, brief blasts their concentrated rage. They come like
  • the Mamelukes: they charge, and away.
  • It wanted full an hour to sunset; but the sun was well nigh obscured. It
  • seemed toiling among bleak Scythian steeps in the hazy background. Above
  • the storm-cloud flitted ominous patches of scud, rapidly advancing and
  • receding: Attila's skirmishers, thrown forward in the van of his Huns.
  • Beneath, a fitful shadow slid along the surface. As we gazed, the cloud
  • came nearer; accelerating its approach.
  • With all haste we proceeded to furl the sails, which, owing to the calm,
  • had been hanging loose in the brails. And by help of a spare boom, used
  • on the forecastle-deck sit a sweep or great oar, we endeavored to cast
  • the brigantine's head toward the foe.
  • The storm seemed about to overtake us; but we felt no breeze. The
  • noiseless cloud stole on; its advancing shadow lowering over a distinct
  • and prominent milk-white crest upon the surface of the ocean. But now
  • this line of surging foam came rolling down upon us like a white charge
  • of cavalry: mad Hotspur and plumed Murat at its head; pouring right
  • forward in a continuous frothy cascade, which curled over, and fell upon
  • the glassy sea before it.
  • Still, no breath of air. But of a sudden, like a blow from a man's hand,
  • and before our canvas could be secured, the stunned craft, giving one
  • lurch to port, was stricken down on her beam-ends; the roaring tide
  • dashed high up against her windward side, and drops of brine fell upon
  • the deck, heavy as drops of gore.
  • It was all a din and a mist; a crashing of spars and of ropes; a
  • horrible blending of sights and of sounds; as for an instant we seemed
  • in the hot heart of the gale; our cordage, like harp-strings, shrieking
  • above the fury of the blast. The masts rose, and swayed, and dipped
  • their trucks in the sea. And like unto some stricken buffalo brought low
  • to the plain, the brigantine's black hull, shaggy with sea-weed, lay
  • panting on its flank in the foam.
  • Frantically we clung to the uppermost bulwarks. And now, loud above the
  • roar of the sea, was suddenly heard a sharp, splintering sound, as of a
  • Norway woodman felling a pine in the forest. It was brave Jarl, who
  • foremost of all had snatched from its rack against the mainmast, the ax,
  • always there kept.
  • "Cut the lanyards to windward!" he cried; and again buried his ax into
  • the mast. He was quickly obeyed. And upon cutting the third lanyard of
  • the five, he shouted for us to pause. Dropping his ax, he climbed up to
  • windward. As he clutched the rail, the wounded mast snapped in twain
  • with a report like a cannon. A slight smoke was perceptible where it
  • broke. The remaining lanyards parted. From the violent strain upon them,
  • the two shrouds flew madly into the air, and one of the great blocks at
  • their ends, striking Annatoo upon the forehead, she let go her hold upon
  • a stanchion, and sliding across the aslant deck, was swallowed up in the
  • whirlpool under our lea. Samoa shrieked. But there was no time to mourn;
  • no hand could reach to save.
  • By the connecting stays, the mainmast carried over with it the foremast;
  • when we instantly righted, and for the time were saved; my own royal
  • Viking our saviour.
  • The first fury of the gale was gone. But far to leeward was seen the
  • even, white line of its onset, pawing the ocean into foam. All round us,
  • the sea boiled like ten thousand caldrons; and through eddy, wave, and
  • surge, our almost water-logged craft waded heavily; every dead clash
  • ringing hollow against her hull, like blows upon a coffin.
  • We floated a wreck. With every pitch we lifted our dangling jib-boom
  • into the air; and beating against the side, were the shattered fragments
  • of the masts. From these we made all haste to be free, by cutting the
  • rigging that held them.
  • Soon, the worst of the gale was blown over. But the sea ran high. Yet
  • the rack and scud of the tempest, its mad, tearing foam, was subdued
  • into immense, long-extended, and long-rolling billows; the white cream
  • on their crests like snow on the Andes. Ever and anon we hung poised on
  • their brows; when the furrowed ocean all round looked like a panorama
  • from Chimborazo.
  • A few hours more, and the surges went down. There was a moderate sea, a
  • steady breeze, and a clear, starry sky. Such was the storm that came
  • after our calm.
  • CHAPTER XXXVII Once More They Take To The Chamois
  • Try the pumps. We dropped the sinker, and found the Parki bleeding at
  • every pore. Up from her well, the water, spring-like, came bubbling,
  • pure and limpid as the water of Saratoga. Her time had come. But by
  • keeping two hands at the pumps, we had no doubt she would float till
  • daylight; previous to which we liked not to abandon her.
  • The interval was employed in clanging at the pump-breaks, and preparing
  • the Chamois for our reception. So soon as the sea permitted, we lowered
  • it over the side; and letting it float under the stern, stowed it with
  • water and provisions, together with various other things, including
  • muskets and cutlasses.
  • Shortly after daylight, a violent jostling and thumping under foot
  • showed that the water, gaining rapidly in the, hold, spite of all
  • pumping, had floated the lighter casks up-ward to the deck, against
  • which they were striking.
  • Now, owing to the number of empty butts in the hold, there would have
  • been, perhaps, but small danger of the vessel's sinking outright--all
  • awash as her decks would soon be--were it not, that many of her timbers
  • were of a native wood, which, like the Teak of India, is specifically
  • heavier than water. This, with the pearl shells on board, counteracted
  • the buoyancy of the casks.
  • At last, the sun--long waited for--arose; the Parki meantime sinking
  • lower and lower.
  • All things being in readiness, we proceeded to embark from the wreck, as
  • from a wharf.
  • But not without some show of love for our poor brigantine.
  • To a seaman, a ship is no piece of mechanism merely; but a creature of
  • thoughts and fancies, instinct with life. Standing at her vibrating
  • helm, you feel her beating pulse. I have loved ships, as I have loved
  • men.
  • To abandon the poor Parki was like leaving to its fate something that
  • could feel. It was meet that she should die decently and bravely.
  • All this thought the Skyeman. Samoa and I were in the boat, calling upon
  • him to enter quickly, lest the vessel should sink, and carry us down in
  • the eddies; for already she had gone round twice. But cutting adrift the
  • last fragments of her broken shrouds, and putting her decks in order,
  • Jarl buried his ax in the splintered stump of the mainmast, and not till
  • then did he join us.
  • We slowly cheered, and sailed away.
  • Not ten minutes after, the hull rolled convulsively in the sea; went
  • round once more; lifted its sharp prow as a man with arms pointed for a
  • dive; gave a long seething plunge; and went down.
  • Many of her old planks were twice wrecked; once strown upon ocean's
  • beach; now dropped into its lowermost vaults, with the bones of drowned
  • ships and drowned men.
  • Once more afloat in our shell! But not with the intrepid spirit that
  • shoved off with us from the deck of the Arcturion. A bold deed done from
  • impulse, for the time carries few or no misgivings along with it. But
  • forced upon you, its terrors stare you in the face. So now. I had pushed
  • from the Arcturion with a stout heart; but quitting the sinking Parki,
  • my heart sunk with her.
  • With a fair wind, we held on our way westward, hoping to see land before
  • many days.
  • CHAPTER XXXVIII The Sea On Fire
  • The night following our abandonment of the Parki, was made memorable by
  • a remarkable spectacle.
  • Slumbering in the bottom of the boat, Jarl and I were suddenly awakened
  • by Samoa. Starting, we beheld the ocean of a pallid white color,
  • corruscating all over with tiny golden sparkles. But the pervading hue
  • of the water cast a cadaverous gleam upon the boat, so that we looked to
  • each other like ghosts. For many rods astern our wake was revealed in a
  • line of rushing illuminated foam; while here and there beneath the
  • surface, the tracks of sharks were denoted by vivid, greenish trails,
  • crossing and recrossing each other in every direction. Farther away, and
  • distributed in clusters, floated on the sea, like constellations in the
  • heavens, innumerable Medusae, a species of small, round, refulgent fish,
  • only to be met with in the South Seas and the Indian Ocean.
  • Suddenly, as we gazed, there shot high into the air a bushy jet of
  • flashes, accompanied by the unmistakable deep breathing sound of a sperm
  • whale. Soon, the sea all round us spouted in fountains of fire; and vast
  • forms, emitting a glare from their flanks, and ever and anon raising
  • their heads above water, and shaking off the sparkles, showed where an
  • immense shoal of Cachalots had risen from below to sport in these
  • phosphorescent billows.
  • The vapor jetted forth was far more radiant than any portion of the sea;
  • ascribable perhaps to the originally luminous fluid contracting still
  • more brilliancy from its passage through the spouting canal of the
  • whales.
  • We were in great fear, lest without any vicious intention the Leviathans
  • might destroy us, by coming into close contact with our boat. We would
  • have shunned them; but they were all round and round us. Nevertheless we
  • were safe; for as we parted the pallid brine, the peculiar irradiation
  • which shot from about our keel seemed to deter them. Apparently
  • discovering us of a sudden, many of them plunged headlong down into the
  • water, tossing their fiery tails high into the air, and leaving the sea
  • still more sparkling from the violent surging of their descent.
  • Their general course seemed the same as our own; to the westward. To
  • remove from them, we at last out oars, and pulled toward the north. So
  • doing, we were steadily pursued by a solitary whale, that must have
  • taken our Chamois for a kindred fish. Spite of all our efforts, he drew
  • nearer and nearer; at length rubbing his fiery flank against the
  • Chamois' gunwale, here and there leaving long strips of the glossy
  • transparent substance which thin as gossamer invests the body of the
  • Cachalot.
  • In terror at a sight so new, Samoa shrank. But Jarl and I, more used to
  • the intimate companionship of the whales, pushed the boat away from it
  • with our oars: a thing often done in the fishery.
  • The close vicinity of the whale revived in the so long astute Skyeman
  • all the enthusiasm of his daring vocation. However quiet by nature, a
  • thorough-bred whaleman betrays no little excitement in sight of his
  • game. And it required some persuasion to prevent Jarl from darting his
  • harpoon: insanity under present circumstances; and of course without
  • object. But "Oh! for a dart," cried my Viking. And "Where's now our old
  • ship?" he added reminiscently.
  • But to my great joy the monster at last departed; rejoining the shoal,
  • whose lofty spoutings of flame were still visible upon the distant line
  • of the horizon; showing there, like the fitful starts of the Aurora
  • Borealis.
  • The sea retained its luminosity for about three hours; at the expiration
  • of half that period beginning to fade; and excepting occasional faint
  • illuminations consequent upon the rapid darting of fish under water, the
  • phenomenon at last wholly disappeared.
  • Heretofore, I had beheld several exhibitions of marine phosphorescence,
  • both in the Atlantic and Pacific. But nothing in comparison with what
  • was seen that night. In the Atlantic, there is very seldom any portion
  • of the ocean luminous, except the crests of the waves; and these mostly
  • appear so during wet, murky weather. Whereas, in the Pacific, all
  • instances of the sort, previously corning under my notice, had been
  • marked by patches of greenish light, unattended with any pallidness of
  • sea. Save twice on the coast of Peru, where I was summoned from my
  • hammock to the alarming midnight cry of "All hands ahoy! tack ship!" And
  • rushing on deck, beheld the sea white as a shroud; for which reason it
  • was feared we were on soundings.
  • Now, sailors love marvels, and love to repeat them. And from many an old
  • shipmate I have heard various sage opinings, concerning the phenomenon
  • in question. Dismissing, as destitute of sound philosophic probability,
  • the extravagant notion of one of my nautical friends--no less a
  • philosopher than my Viking himself--namely: that the phosphoresence of
  • the sea is caused by a commotion among the mermaids, whose golden locks,
  • all torn and disheveled, do irradiate the waters at such times; I
  • proceed to record more reliable theories.
  • Faraday might, perhaps, impute the phenomenon to a peculiarly electrical
  • condition of the atmosphere; and to that solely. But herein, my
  • scientific friend would be stoutly contradicted by many intelligent
  • seamen, who, in part, impute it to the presence of large quantities of
  • putrescent animal matter; with which the sea is well known to abound.
  • And it would seem not unreasonable to suppose, that it is by this means
  • that the fluid itself becomes charged with the luminous principle. Draw
  • a bucket of water from the phosphorescent ocean, and it still retains
  • traces of fire; but, standing awhile, this soon subsides. Now pour it
  • along the deck, and it is a stream of flame; caused by its renewed
  • agitation. Empty the bucket, and for a space sparkles cling to it
  • tenaciously; and every stave seems ignited.
  • But after all, this seeming ignition of the sea can not be wholly
  • produced by dead matter therein. There are many living fish,
  • phosphorescent; and, under certain conditions, by a rapid throwing off
  • of luminous particles must largely contribute to the result. Not to
  • particularize this circumstance as true of divers species of sharks,
  • cuttle-fish, and many others of the larger varieties of the finny
  • tribes; the myriads of microscopic mollusca, well known to swarm off
  • soundings, might alone be deemed almost sufficient to kindle a fire in
  • the brine.
  • But these are only surmises; likely, but uncertain.
  • After science comes sentiment.
  • A French naturalist maintains, that the nocturnal radiance of the fire-fly is purposely intended as an attraction to the opposite sex; that the
  • artful insect illuminates its body for a beacon to love. Thus: perched
  • upon the edge of a leaf, and waiting the approach of her Leander, who
  • comes buffeting with his wings the aroma of the flowers, some insect
  • Hero may show a torch to her gossamer gallant.
  • But alas, thrice alas, for the poor little fire-fish of the sea, whose
  • radiance but reveals them to their foes, and lights the way to their
  • destruction.
  • CHAPTER XXXIX They Fall In With Strangers
  • After quitting the Parki, we had much calm weather, varied by light
  • breezes. And sailing smoothly over a sea, so recently one sheet of foam,
  • I could not avoid bethinking me, how fortunate it was, that the gale had
  • overtaken us in the brigantine, and not in the Chamois. For deservedly
  • high as the whale-shallop ranks as a sea boat; still, in a severe storm,
  • the larger your craft the greater your sense of security. Wherefore, the
  • thousand reckless souls tenanting a line-of-battle ship scoff at the
  • most awful hurricanes; though, in reality, they may be less safe in
  • their wooden-walled Troy, than those who contend with the gale in a
  • clipper.
  • But not only did I congratulate myself upon salvation from the past, but
  • upon the prospect for the future. For storms happening so seldom in
  • these seas, one just blown over is almost a sure guarantee of very many
  • weeks' calm weather to come.
  • Now sun followed sun; and no land. And at length it almost seemed as if
  • we must have sailed past the remotest presumable westerly limit of the
  • chain of islands we sought; a lurking suspicion which I sedulously kept
  • to myself However, I could not but nourish a latent faith that all would
  • yet be well.
  • On the ninth day my forebodings were over. In the gray of the dawn,
  • perched upon the peak of our sail, a noddy was seen fast asleep. This
  • freak was true to the nature of that curious fowl, whose name is
  • significant of its drowsiness. Its plumage was snow-white, its bill and
  • legs blood-red; the latter looking like little pantalettes. In a sly
  • attempt at catching the bird, Samoa captured three tail-feathers; the
  • alarmed creature flying away with a scream, and leaving its quills in
  • his hand.
  • Sailing on, we gradually broke in upon immense low-sailing flights of
  • other aquatic fowls, mostly of those species which are seldom found far
  • from land: terns, frigate-birds, mollymeaux, reef-pigeons, boobies,
  • gulls, and the like. They darkened the air; their wings making overhead
  • an incessant rustling like the simultaneous turning over of ten thousand
  • leaves. The smaller sort skimmed the sea like pebbles sent skipping from
  • the shore. Over these, flew myriads of birds of broader wing. While high
  • above all, soared in air the daring "Diver," or sea-kite, the power of
  • whose vision is truly wonderful. It perceives the little flying-fish in
  • the water, at a height which can not be less than four hundred feet.
  • Spirally wheeling and screaming as it goes, the sea-kite, bill foremost,
  • darts downward, swoops into the water, and for a moment altogether
  • disappearing, emerges at last; its prey firmly trussed in its claws. But
  • bearing it aloft, the bold bandit is quickly assailed by other birds of
  • prey, that strive to wrest from him his booty. And snatched from his
  • talons, you see the fish falling through the air, till again caught up
  • in the very act of descent, by the fleetest of its pursuers.
  • Leaving these sights astern, we presently picked up the slimy husk of a
  • cocoanut, all over green barnacles. And shortly after, passed two or
  • three limbs of trees, and the solitary trunk of a palm; which, upon
  • sailing nearer, seemed but very recently started on its endless voyage.
  • As noon came on; the dark purple land-haze, which had been dimly
  • descried resting upon the western horizon, was very nearly obscured.
  • Nevertheless, behind that dim drapery we doubted not bright boughs were
  • waving.
  • We were now in high spirits. Samoa between times humming to himself some
  • heathenish ditty, and Jarl ten times more intent on his silence than
  • ever; yet his eye full of expectation and gazing broad off from our bow.
  • Of a sudden, shading his face with his hand, he gazed fixedly for an
  • instant, and then springing to his feet, uttered the long-drawn sound--"Sail ho!"
  • Just tipping the furthest edge of the sky was a little speck, dancing
  • into view every time we rose upon the swells. It looked like one of many
  • birds; for half intercepting our view, fell showers of plumage: a flight
  • of milk-white noddies flying downward to the sea.
  • But soon the birds are seen no more. Yet there remains the speck;
  • plainly a sail; but too small for a ship. Was it a boat after a whale?
  • The vessel to which it belonged far astern, and shrouded by the haze? So
  • it seemed.
  • Quietly, however, we waited the stranger's nearer approach; confident,
  • that for some time he would not be able to perceive us, owing to our
  • being in what mariners denominate the "sun-glade," or that part of the
  • ocean upon which the sun's rays flash with peculiar intensity.
  • As the sail drew nigh, its failing to glisten white led us to doubt
  • whether it was indeed a whale-boat. Presently, it showed yellow; and
  • Samoa declared, that it must be the sail of some island craft. True. The
  • stranger proving a large double-canoe, like those used by the
  • Polynesians in making passages between distant islands.
  • The Upoluan was now clamorous for a meeting, to which Jarl was averse.
  • Deliberating a moment, I directed the muskets to be loaded; then setting
  • the sail the wind on our quarter--we headed away for the canoe, now
  • sailing at right angles with our previous course.
  • Here it must be mentioned, that from the various gay cloths and other
  • things provided for barter by the captain of the Parki, I had very
  • strikingly improved my costume; making it free, flowing, and eastern. I
  • looked like an Emir. Nor had my Viking neglected to follow my example;
  • though with some few modifications of his own. With his long tangled
  • hair and harpoon, he looked like the sea-god, that boards ships, for the
  • first time crossing the Equator. For tatooed Samoa, he yet sported both
  • kilt and turban, reminding one of a tawny leopard, though his spots were
  • all in one place. Besides this raiment of ours, against emergencies we
  • had provided our boat with divers nankeens and silks.
  • But now into full view comes a yoke of huge clumsy prows, shaggy with
  • carving, and driving through the water with considerable velocity; the
  • immense sprawling sail holding the wind like a bag. She seemed full of
  • men; and from the dissonant cries borne over to us, and the canoe's
  • widely yawing, it was plain that we had occasioned no small sensation.
  • They seemed undetermined what course to pursue: whether to court a
  • meeting, or avoid it; whether to regard us as friends or foes.
  • As we came still nearer, distinctly beholding their faces, we loudly
  • hailed them, inviting them to furl their sails, and allow us to board
  • them. But no answer was returned; their confusion increasing. And now,
  • within less than two ships'-lengths, they swept right across our bow,
  • gazing at us with blended curiosity and fear.
  • Their craft was about thirty feet long, consisting of a pair of parallel
  • canoes, very narrow, and at the distance of a yard or so, lengthwise,
  • united by stout cross-timbers, lashed across the four gunwales. Upon
  • these timbers was a raised platform or dais, quite dry; and astern an
  • arched cabin or tent; behind which, were two broad-bladed paddles
  • terminating in rude shark-tails, by which the craft was steered.
  • The yard, spreading a yellow sail, was a crooked bough, supported
  • obliquely in the crotch of a mast, to which the green bark was still
  • clinging. Here and there were little tufts of moss. The high, beaked
  • prow of that canoe in which the mast was placed, resembled a rude altar;
  • and all round it was suspended a great variety of fruits, including
  • scores of cocoanuts, unhusked. This prow was railed off, forming a sort
  • of chancel within.
  • The foremost beam, crossing the gunwales, extended some twelve feet
  • beyond the side of the dais; and at regular intervals hereupon, stout
  • cords were fastened, which, leading up to the head of the mast, answered
  • the purpose of shrouds. The breeze was now streaming fresh; and, as if
  • to force down into the water the windward side of the craft, five men
  • stood upon this long beam, grasping five shrouds. Yet they failed to
  • counterbalance the pressure of the sail; and owing to the opposite
  • inclination of the twin canoes, these living statues were elevated high
  • above the water; their appearance rendered still more striking by their
  • eager attitudes, and the apparent peril of their position, as the mad
  • spray from the bow dashed over them. Suddenly, the Islanders threw their
  • craft into the wind; while, for ourselves, we lay on our oars, fearful
  • of alarming them by now coming nearer. But hailing them again, we said
  • we were friends; and had friendly gifts for them, if they would
  • peaceably permit us to approach. This understood, there ensued a mighty
  • clamor; insomuch, that I bade Jarl and Samoa out oars, and row very
  • gently toward the strangers. Whereupon, amid a storm of vociferations,
  • some of them hurried to the furthest side of their dais; standing with
  • arms arched over their heads, as if for a dive; others menacing us with
  • clubs and spears; and one, an old man with a bamboo trellis on his head
  • forming a sort of arbor for his hair, planted himself full before the
  • tent, stretching behind him a wide plaited sling.
  • Upon this hostile display, Samoa dropped his oar, and brought his piece
  • to bear upon the old man, who, by his attitude, seemed to menace us with
  • the fate of the great braggart of Gath. But I quickly knocked down the
  • muzzle of his musket, and forbade the slightest token of hostility;
  • enjoining it upon my companions, nevertheless, to keep well on their
  • guard.
  • We now ceased rowing, and after a few minutes' uproar in the canoe, they
  • ran to the steering-paddles, and forcing round their craft before the
  • wind, rapidly ran away from us. With all haste we set our sail, and
  • pulling also at our oars, soon overtook them, determined upon coming
  • into closer communion.
  • CHAPTER XL Sire And Sons
  • Seeing flight was useless, the Islanders again stopped their canoe, and
  • once more we cautiously drew nearer; myself crying out to them not to be
  • fearful; and Samoa, with the odd humor of his race, averring that he had
  • known every soul of them from his infancy.
  • We approached within two or three yards; when we paused, which somewhat
  • allayed their alarm. Fastening a red China handkerchief to the blade of
  • our long mid-ship oar, I waved it in the air. A lively clapping of
  • hands, and many wild exclamations.
  • While yet waving the flag, I whispered to Jarl to give the boat a sheer
  • toward the canoe, which being adroitly done, brought the bow, where I
  • stood, still nearer to the Islanders. I then dropped the silk among
  • them; and the Islander, who caught it, at once handed it to the warlike
  • old man with the sling; who, on seating himself, spread it before him;
  • while the rest crowding round, glanced rapidly from the wonderful gift,
  • to the more wonderful donors.
  • This old man was the superior of the party. And Samoa asserted, that he
  • must be a priest of the country to which the Islanders belonged; that
  • the craft could be no other than one of their sacred canoes, bound on
  • some priestly voyage. All this he inferred from the altar-like prow, and
  • there being no women on board.
  • Bent upon conciliating the old priest, I dropped into the canoe another
  • silk handkerchief; while Samoa loudly exclaimed, that we were only three
  • men, and were peaceably inclined. Meantime, old Aaron, fastening the two
  • silks crosswise over his shoulders, like a brace of Highland plaids,
  • crosslegged sat, and eyed us.
  • It was a curious sight. The old priest, like a scroll of old parchment,
  • covered all over with hieroglyphical devices, harder to interpret, I'll
  • warrant, than any old Sanscrit manuscript. And upon his broad brow,
  • deep-graven in wrinkles, were characters still more mysterious, which no
  • Champollion nor gipsy could have deciphered. He looked old as the
  • elderly hills; eyes sunken, though bright; and head white as the summit
  • of Mont Blanc.
  • The rest were a youthful and comely set: their complexion that of Gold
  • Sherry, and all tattooed after this pattern: two broad cross-stripes on
  • the chest and back; reaching down to the waist, like a foot-soldier's
  • harness. Their faces were full of expression; and their mouths were full
  • of fine teeth; so that the parting of their lips, was as the opening of
  • pearl oysters. Marked, here and there, after the style of Tahiti, with
  • little round figures in blue, dotted in the middle with a spot of
  • vermilion, their brawny brown thighs looked not unlike the gallant hams
  • of Westphalia, spotted with the red dust of Cayenne.
  • But what a marvelous resemblance in the features of all. Were they born
  • at one birth? This resemblance was heightened by their uniform marks.
  • But it was subsequently ascertained, that they were the children of one
  • sire; and that sire, old Aaron; who, no doubt, reposed upon his sons, as
  • an old general upon the trophies of his youth.
  • They were the children of as many mothers; and he was training them up
  • for the priesthood.
  • CHAPTER XLI A Fray
  • So bent were the strangers upon concealing who they were, and the object
  • of their voyage, that it was some time ere we could obtain the
  • information we desired.
  • They pointed toward the tent, as if it contained their Eleusinian
  • mysteries. And the old priest gave us to know, that it would be
  • profanation to enter it.
  • But all this only roused my curiosity to unravel the wonder.
  • At last I succeeded.
  • In that mysterious tent was concealed a beautiful maiden. And, in
  • pursuance of a barbarous custom, by Aleema, the priest, she was being
  • borne an offering from the island of Amma to the gods of Tedaidee.
  • Now, hearing of the maiden, I waited for no more. Need I add, how
  • stirred was my soul toward this invisible victim; and how hotly I swore,
  • that precious blood of hers should never smoke upon an altar. If we
  • drowned for it, I was bent upon rescuing the captive. But as yet, no
  • gentle signal of distress had been waved to us from the tent. Thence, no
  • sound could be heard, but an occasional rustle of the matting. Was it
  • possible, that one about to be immolated could proceed thus tranquilly
  • to her fate?
  • But desperately as I resolved to accomplish the deliverance of the
  • maiden, it was best to set heedfully about it. I desired no shedding of
  • blood; though the odds were against us.
  • The old priest seemed determined to prevent us from boarding his craft.
  • But being equally determined the other way, I cautiously laid the bow of
  • the Chamois against the canoe's quarter, so as to present the smallest
  • possible chance for a hostile entrance into our boat. Then, Samoa, knife
  • in ear, and myself with a cutlass, stepped upon the dais, leaving Jarl
  • in the boat's head, equipped with his harpoon; three loaded muskets
  • lying by his side. He was strictly enjoined to resist the slightest
  • demonstration toward our craft.
  • As we boarded the canoe, the Islanders slowly retreated; meantime
  • earnestly conferring in whispers; all but the old priest, who, still
  • seated, presented an undaunted though troubled front. To our surprise,
  • he motioned us to sit down by him; which we did; taking care, however,
  • not to cut off our communication with Jarl.
  • With the hope of inspiring good will, I now unfolded a roll of printed
  • cotton, and spreading it before the priest, directed his attention to
  • the pictorial embellishments thereon, representing some hundreds of
  • sailor boys simultaneously ascending some hundreds of uniform sections
  • of a ship's rigging. Glancing at them a moment, by a significant sign,
  • he gave me to know, that long previous he himself had ascended the
  • shrouds of a ship. Making this allusion, his countenance was overcast
  • with a ferocious expression, as if something terrific was connected with
  • the reminiscence. But it soon passed away, and somewhat abruptly he
  • assumed an air of much merriment.
  • While we were thus sitting together, and my whole soul full of the
  • thoughts of the captive, and how best to accomplish my purpose, and
  • often gazing toward the tent; I all at once noticed a movement among the
  • strangers. Almost in the same instant, Samoa, right across the face of
  • Aleema, and in his ordinary tones, bade me take heed to myself, for
  • mischief was brewing. Hardly was this warning uttered, when, with carved
  • clubs in their hands, the Islanders completely surrounded us. Then up
  • rose the old priest, and gave us to know, that we were wholly in his
  • power, and if we did not swear to depart in our boat forthwith, and
  • molest him no more, the peril be ours.
  • "Depart and you live; stay and you die."
  • Fifteen to three. Madness to gainsay his mandate. Yet a beautiful maiden
  • was at stake.
  • The knife before dangling in Samoa's ear was now in his hand. Jarl cried
  • out for us to regain the boat, several of the Islanders making a rush
  • for it. No time to think. All passed quicker than it can be said. They
  • closed in upon us, to push us from the canoe: Rudely the old priest
  • flung me from his side, menacing me with his dagger, the sharp spine of
  • a fish. A thrust and a threat! Ere I knew it, my cutlass made a quick
  • lunge. A curse from the priest's mouth; red blood from his side; he
  • tottered, stared about him, and fell over like a brown hemlock into the
  • sea. A yell of maledictions rose on the air. A wild cry was heard from
  • the tent. Making a dead breach among the crowd, we now dashed side by
  • side for the boat. Springing into it, we found Jarl battling with two
  • Islanders; while the rest were still howling upon the dais. Rage and
  • grief had almost disabled them.
  • With one stroke of my cutlass, I now parted the line that held us to the
  • canoe, and with Samoa falling upon the two Islanders, by Jarl's help, we
  • quickly mastered them; forcing them down into the bottom of the boat.
  • The Skyeman and Samoa holding passive the captives, I quickly set our
  • sail, and snatching the sheet at the cavil, we rapidly shot from the
  • canoe. The strangers defying us with their spears; several couching them
  • as if to dart; while others held back their hands, as if to prevent them
  • from jeopardizing the lives of their countrymen in the Chamois.
  • Seemingly untoward events oftentimes lead to successful results: Far
  • from destroying all chance of rescuing the captive, our temporary
  • flight, indispensable for the safety of Jarl, only made the success of
  • our enterprise more probable. For having made prisoners two of the
  • strangers, I determined to retain them as hostages, through whom to
  • effect my plans without further bloodshed.
  • And here it must needs be related, that some of the natives were wounded
  • in the fray: while all three of their assailants had received several
  • bruises.
  • CHAPTER XLII Remorse
  • During the skirmish not a single musket had been discharged. The first
  • snatched by Jarl had missed fire, and ere he could seize another, it was
  • close quarters with him, and no gestures to spare. His harpoon was his
  • all. And truly, there is nothing like steel in a fray. It comes and it
  • goes with a will, and is never a-weary. Your sword is your life, and
  • that of your foe; to keep or to take as it happens. Closer home does it
  • go than a rammer; and fighting with steel is a play without ever an
  • interlude. There are points more deadly than bullets; and stocks packed
  • full of subtle tubes, whence comes an impulse more reliable than powder.
  • Binding our prisoners lengthwise across the boat's seats, we rowed for
  • the canoe, making signs of amity.
  • Now, if there be any thing fitted to make a high tide ebb in the veins,
  • it is the sight of a vanquished foe, inferior to yourself in powers of
  • destruction; but whom some necessity has forced you to subdue. All
  • victories are not triumphs, nor all who conquer, heroes.
  • As we drew near the canoe, it was plain, that the loss of their sire had
  • again for the instant overcome the survivors. Raising hands, they cursed
  • us; and at intervals sent forth a low, piercing wail, peculiar to their
  • race. As before, faint cries were heard from the tent. And all the while
  • rose and fell on the sea, the ill-fated canoe.
  • As I gazed at this sight, what iron mace fell on my soul; what curse
  • rang sharp in my ear! It was I, who was the author of the deed that
  • caused the shrill wails that I heard. By this hand, the dead man had
  • died. Remorse smote me hard; and like lightning I asked myself, whether
  • the death-deed I had done was sprung of a virtuous motive, the rescuing
  • a captive from thrall; or whether beneath that pretense, I had engaged
  • in this fatal affray for some other, and selfish purpose; the
  • companionship of a beautiful maid. But throttling the thought, I swore
  • to be gay. Am I not rescuing the maiden? Let them go down who withstand
  • me.
  • At the dismal spectacle before him, Jarl, hitherto menacing our
  • prisoners with his weapon, in order to intimidate their countrymen,
  • honest Jarl dropped his harpoon. But shaking his knife in the air, Samoa
  • yet defied the strangers; nor could we prevent him. His heathenish blood
  • was up.
  • Standing foremost in the boat, I now assured the strangers, that all we
  • sought at their hands was the maiden in the tent. That captive
  • surrendered, our own, unharmed, should be restored. If not, they must
  • die. With a cry, they started to their feet, and brandished their clubs;
  • but, seeing Jarl's harpoon quivering over the hearts of our prisoners,
  • they quickly retreated; at last signifying their acquiescence in my
  • demand. Upon this, I sprang to the dais, and across it indicating a line
  • near the bow, signed the Islanders to retire beyond it. Then, calling
  • upon them one by one to deliver their weapons, they were passed into the
  • boat.
  • The Chamois was now brought round to the canoe's stern; and leaving Jarl
  • to defend it as before, the Upoluan rejoined me on the dais. By these
  • precautions--the hostages still remaining bound hand and foot in the
  • boat--we deemed ourselves entirely secure.
  • Attended by Samoa, I stood before the tent, now still as the grave.
  • CHAPTER XLIII The Tent Entered
  • By means of thin spaces between the braids of matting, the place was
  • open to the air, but not to view. There was also a round opening on one
  • side, only large enough, however, to admit the arm; but this aperture
  • was partially closed from within. In front, a deep-dyed rug of osiers,
  • covering the entrance way, was intricately laced to the standing part of
  • the tent. As I divided this lacing with my cutlass, there arose an
  • outburst of voices from the Islanders. And they covered their faces, as
  • the interior was revealed to my gaze.
  • Before me crouched a beautiful girl. Her hands were drooping. And, like
  • a saint from a shrine, she looked sadly out from her long, fair hair. A
  • low wail issued from her lips, and she trembled like a sound. There were
  • tears on her cheek, and a rose-colored pearl on her bosom.
  • Did I dream?--A snow-white skin: blue, firmament eyes: Golconda locks.
  • For an instant spell-bound I stood; while with a slow, apprehensive
  • movement, and still gazing fixedly, the captive gathered more closely
  • about her a gauze-like robe. Taking one step within, and partially
  • dropping the curtain of the tent, I so stood, as to have both sight and
  • speech of Samoa, who tarried without; while the maiden, crouching in the
  • farther corner of the retreat, was wholly screened from all eyes but
  • mine.
  • Crossing my hands before me, I now stood without speaking. For the soul
  • of me, I could not link this mysterious creature with the tawny
  • strangers. She seemed of another race. So powerful was this impression,
  • that unconsciously, I addressed her in my own tongue. She started, and
  • bending over, listened intently, as if to the first faint echo of
  • something dimly remembered. Again I spoke, when throwing back her hair,
  • the maiden looked up with a piercing, bewildered gaze. But her eyes soon
  • fell, and bending over once more, she resumed her former attitude. At
  • length she slowly chanted to herself several musical words, unlike those
  • of the Islanders; but though I knew not what they meant, they vaguely
  • seemed familiar.
  • Impatient to learn her story, I now questioned her in Polynesian. But
  • with much earnestness, she signed me to address her as before. Soon
  • perceiving, however, that without comprehending the meaning of the words
  • I employed, she seemed merely touched by something pleasing in their
  • sound, I once more addressed her in Polynesian; saying that I was all
  • eagerness to hear her history.
  • After much hesitation she complied; starting with alarm at every sound
  • from without; yet all the while deeply regarding me.
  • Broken as these disclosures were at the time, they are here presented in
  • the form in which they were afterward more fully narrated.
  • So unearthly was the story, that at first I little comprehended it; and
  • was almost persuaded that the luckless maiden was some beautiful maniac.
  • She declared herself more than mortal, a maiden from Oroolia, the Island
  • of Delights, somewhere in the paradisiacal archipelago of the
  • Polynesians. To this isle, while yet an infant, by some mystical power,
  • she had been spirited from Amma, the place of her nativity. Her name was
  • Yillah. And hardly had the waters of Oroolia washed white her olive
  • skin, and tinged her hair with gold, when one day strolling in the
  • woodlands, she was snared in the tendrils of a vine. Drawing her into
  • its bowers, it gently transformed her into one of its blossoms, leaving
  • her conscious soul folded up in the transparent petals.
  • Here hung Yillah in a trance, the world without all tinged with the rosy
  • hue of her prison. At length when her spirit was about to burst forth in
  • the opening flower, the blossom was snapped from its stem; and borne by
  • a soft wind to the sea; where it fell into the opening valve of a shell;
  • which in good time was cast upon the beach of the Island of Amma.
  • In a dream, these events were revealed to Aleema the priest; who by a
  • spell unlocking its pearly casket, took forth the bud, which now showed
  • signs of opening in the reviving air, and bore faint shadowy revealings,
  • as of the dawn behind crimson clouds. Suddenly expanding, the blossom
  • exhaled away in perfumes; floating a rosy mist in the air. Condensing at
  • last, there emerged from this mist the same radiant young Yillah as
  • before; her locks all moist, and a rose-colored pearl on her bosom.
  • Enshrined as a goddess, the wonderful child now tarried in the sacred
  • temple of Apo, buried in a dell; never beheld of mortal eyes save
  • Aleema's.
  • Moon after moon passed away, and at last, only four days gone by, Aleema
  • came to her with a dream; that the spirits in Oroolia had recalled her
  • home by the way of Tedaidee, on whose coast gurgled up in the sea an
  • enchanted spring; which streaming over upon the brine, flowed on between
  • blue watery banks; and, plunging into a vortex, went round and round,
  • descending into depths unknown. Into this whirlpool Yillah was to
  • descend in a canoe, at last to well up in an inland fountain of Oroolia.
  • CHAPTER XLIV Away
  • Though clothed in language of my own, the maiden's story is in substance
  • the same as she related. Yet were not these things narrated as past
  • events; she merely recounted them as impressions of her childhood, and
  • of her destiny yet unaccomplished. And mystical as the tale most
  • assuredly was, my knowledge of the strange arts of the island
  • priesthood, and the rapt fancies indulged in by many of their victims,
  • deprived it in good part of the effect it otherwise would have produced.
  • For ulterior purposes connected with their sacerdotal supremacy, the
  • priests of these climes oftentimes secrete mere infants in their
  • temples; and jealously secluding them from all intercourse with the
  • world, craftily delude them, as they grow up, into the wildest conceits.
  • Thus wrought upon, their pupils almost lose their humanity in the
  • constant indulgence of seraphic imaginings. In many cases becoming
  • inspired as oracles; and as such, they are sometimes resorted to by
  • devotees; always screened from view, however, in the recesses of the
  • temples. But in every instance, their end is certain. Beguiled with some
  • fairy tale about revisiting the islands of Paradise, they are led to the
  • secret sacrifice, and perish unknown to their kindred.
  • But, would that all this had been hidden from me at the time. For Yillah
  • was lovely enough to be really divine; and so I might have been tranced
  • into a belief of her mystical legends.
  • But with what passionate exultation did I find myself the deliverer of
  • this beautiful maiden; who, thinking no harm, and rapt in a dream, was
  • being borne to her fate on the coast of Tedaidee. Nor now, for a moment,
  • did the death of Aleema her guardian seem to hang heavy upon my heart. I
  • rejoiced that I had sent him to his gods; that in place of the sea moss
  • growing over sweet Yillah drowned in the sea, the vile priest himself
  • had sunk to the bottom.
  • But though he had sunk in the deep, his ghost sunk not in the deep
  • waters of my soul. However in exultations its surface foamed up, at
  • bottom guilt brooded. Sifted out, my motives to this enterprise
  • justified not the mad deed, which, in a moment of rage, I had done:
  • though, those motives had been covered with a gracious pretense;
  • concealing myself from myself. But I beat down the thought.
  • In relating her story, the maiden frequently interrupted it with
  • questions concerning myself:--Whence I came: being white, from Oroolia?
  • Whither I was going: to Amma? And what had happened to Aleema? For she
  • had been dismayed at the fray, though knowing not what it could mean;
  • and she had heard the priest's name called upon in lamentations. These
  • questions for the time I endeavored to evade; only inducing her to fancy
  • me some gentle demigod, that had come over the sea from her own fabulous
  • Oroolia. And all this she must verily have believed. For whom, like me,
  • ere this could she have beheld? Still fixed she her eyes upon me
  • strangely, and hung upon the accents of my voice.
  • While this scene was passing, the strangers began to show signs of
  • impatience, and a voice from the Chamois repeatedly hailed us to
  • accelerate our movements.
  • My course was quickly decided. The only obstacle to be encountered was
  • the possibility of Yillah's alarm at being suddenly borne into my prow.
  • For this event I now sought to prepare her. I informed the damsel that
  • Aleema had been dispatched on a long errand to Oroolia; leaving to my
  • care, for the present, the guardianship of the lovely Yillah; and that
  • therefore, it was necessary to carry her tent into my own canoe, then
  • waiting to receive it.
  • This intelligence she received with the utmost concern; and not knowing
  • to what her perplexity might lead, I thought fit to transport her into
  • the Chamois, while yet overwhelmed by the announcement of my intention.
  • Quitting her retreat, I apprised Jarl of my design; and then, no more
  • delay!
  • At bottom, the tent was attached to a light framework of bamboos; and
  • from its upper corners, four cords, like those of a marquee, confined it
  • to the dais. These, Samoa's knife soon parted; when lifting the light
  • tent, we speedily transferred it to the Chamois; a wild yell going up
  • from the Islanders, which drowned the faint cries of the maiden. But we
  • heeded not the din. Toss in the fruit, hanging from the altar-prow! It
  • was done; and then running up our sail, we glided away;--Chamois, tent,
  • hostages, and all. Rushing to the now vacant stern of their canoe, the
  • Islanders once more lifted up their hands and their voices in curses.
  • A suitable distance gained, we paused to fling overboard the arms we had
  • taken; and Jarl proceeded to liberate the hostages.
  • Meanwhile, I entered the tent, and by many tokens, sought to allay the
  • maiden's alarm. Thus engaged, violent plunges were heard: our prisoners
  • taking to the sea to regain their canoe. All dripping, they were
  • received by their brethren with wild caresses.
  • From something now said by the captives, the rest seemed suddenly
  • inspirited with hopes of revenge; again wildly shaking their spears,
  • just before picked up from the sea. With great clamor and confusion they
  • soon set their mat-sail; and instead of sailing southward for Tedaidee,
  • or northward for Amma their home, they steered straight after us, in our
  • wake.
  • Foremost in the prow stood three; javelins poised for a dart; at
  • intervals, raising a yell.
  • Did they mean to pursue me? Full in my rear they came on, baying like
  • hounds on their game. Yillah trembled at their cries. My own heart beat
  • hard with undefinable dread. The corpse of Aleema seemed floating
  • before: its avengers were raging behind.
  • But soon these phantoms departed. For very soon it appeared that in vain
  • the pagans pursued. Their craft, our fleet Chamois outleaped. And
  • farther and farther astern dropped the evil-boding canoe, till at last
  • but a speck; when a great swell of the sea surged up before it, and it
  • was seen no more. Samoa swore that it must have swamped, and gone down.
  • But however it was, my heart lightened apace. I saw none but ourselves
  • on the sea: I remembered that our keel left no track as it sailed.
  • Let the Oregon Indian through brush, bramble, and brier, hunt his
  • enemy's trail, far over the mountains and down in the vales; comes he to
  • the water, he snuffs idly in air.
  • CHAPTER XLV Reminiscences
  • In resecuing the gentle Yillah from the hands of the Islanders, a design
  • seemed accomplished. But what was now to be done? Here, in our
  • adventurous Chamois, was a damsel more lovely than the flushes of
  • morning; and for companions, whom had she but me and my comrades?
  • Besides, her bosom still throbbed with alarms, her fancies all roving
  • through mazes.
  • How subdue these dangerous imaginings? How gently dispel them?
  • But one way there was: to lead her thoughts toward me, as her friend and
  • preserver; and a better and wiser than Aleema the priest. Yet could not
  • this be effected but by still maintaining my assumption of a divine
  • origin in the blessed isle of Oroolia; and thus fostering in her heart
  • the mysterious interest, with which from the first she had regarded me.
  • But if punctilious reserve on the part of her deliverer should teach her
  • to regard him as some frigid stranger from the Arctic Zone, what
  • sympathy could she have for him? and hence, what peace of mind, having
  • no one else to cling to?
  • Now re-entering the tent, she again inquired where tarried Aleema.
  • "Think not of him, sweet Yillah," I cried. "Look on me. Am I not white
  • like yourself? Behold, though since quitting Oroolia the sun has dyed my
  • cheek, am I not even as you? Am I brown like the dusky Aleema? They
  • snatched you away from your isle in the sea, too early for you to
  • remember me there. But you have not been forgotten by me, sweetest
  • Yillah. Ha! ha! shook we not the palm-trees together, and chased we not
  • the rolling nuts down the glen? Did we not dive into the grotto on the
  • sea-shore, and come up together in the cool cavern in the hill? In my
  • home in Oroolia, dear Yillah, I have a lock of your hair, ere yet it was
  • golden: a little dark tress like a ring. How your cheeks were then
  • changing from olive to white. And when shall I forget the hour, that I
  • came upon you sleeping among the flowers, with roses and lilies for
  • cheeks. Still forgetful? Know you not my voice? Those little spirits in
  • your eyes have seen me before. They mimic me now as they sport in their
  • lakes. All the past a dim blank? Think of the time when we ran up and
  • down in our arbor, where the green vines grew over the great ribs of the
  • stranded whale. Oh Yillah, little Yillah, has it all come to this? am I
  • forever forgotten? Yet over the wide watery world have I sought thee:
  • from isle to isle, from sea to sea. And now we part not. Aleema is gone.
  • My prow shall keep kissing the waves, till it kisses the beach at
  • Oroolia. Yillah, look up."
  • Sunk the ghost of Aleema: Sweet Yillah was mine!
  • CHAPTER XLVI The Chamois With A Roving Commission
  • Through the assiduity of my Viking, ere nightfall our Chamois was again
  • in good order. And with many subtle and seamanlike splices the light
  • tent was lashed in its place; the sail taken up by a reef.
  • My comrades now questioned me, as to my purposes; whether they had been
  • modified by the events of the day. I replied that our destination was
  • still the islands to the westward.
  • But from these we had steadily been drifting all the morning long; so
  • that now no loom of the land was visible. But our prow was kept pointing
  • as before.
  • As evening came on, my comrades fell fast asleep, leaving me at the
  • helm.
  • How soft and how dreamy the light of the hour. The rays of the sun,
  • setting behind golden-barred clouds, came to me like the gleaming of a
  • shaded light behind a lattice. And the low breeze, pervaded with the
  • peculiar balm of the mid-Pacific near land, was fragrant as the breath
  • of a bride.
  • Such was the scene; so still and witching that the hand of Yillah in
  • mine seemed no hand, but a touch. Visions flitted before me and in me;
  • something hummed in my ear; all the air was a lay.
  • And now entered a thought into my heart. I reflected how serenely we
  • might thus glide along, far removed from all care and anxiety. And then,
  • what different scenes might await us upon any of the shores roundabout.
  • But there seemed no danger in the balmy sea; the assured vicinity of
  • land imparting a sense of security. We had ample supplies for several
  • days more, and thanks to the Pagan canoe, an abundance of fruit.
  • Besides, what cared I now for the green groves and bright shore? Was not
  • Yillah my shore and my grove? my meadow, my mead, my soft shady vine,
  • and my arbor? Of all things desirable and delightful, the full-plumed
  • sheaf, and my own right arm the band? Enough: no shore for me yet. One
  • sweep of the helm, and our light prow headed round toward the vague land
  • of song, sun, and vine: the fabled South.
  • As we glided along, strange Yillah gazed down in the sea, and would fain
  • have had me plunge into it with her, to rove through its depths. But I
  • started dismayed; in fancy, I saw the stark body of the priest drifting
  • by. Again that phantom obtruded; again guilt laid his red hand on my
  • soul. But I laughed. Was not Yillah my own? by my arm rescued from ill?
  • To do her a good, I had periled myself. So down, down, Aleema.
  • When next morning, starting from slumber, my comrades beheld the sun on
  • our beam, instead of astern as before at that hour, they eagerly
  • inquired, "Whither now?" But very briefly I gave them to know, that
  • after devoting the night to the due consideration of a matter so
  • important, I had determined upon voyaging for the island Tedaidee, in
  • place of the land to the westward.
  • At this, they were not displeased. But to tell the plain truth, I
  • harbored some shadowy purpose of merely hovering about for a while, till
  • I felt more landwardly inclined.
  • But had I not declared to Yillah, that our destination was the fairy
  • isle she spoke of, even Oroolia? Yet that shore was so exceedingly
  • remote, and the folly of endeavoring to reach it in a craft built with
  • hands, so very apparent, that what wonder I really nourished no thought
  • of it?
  • So away floated the Chamois, like a vagrant cloud in the heavens: bound,
  • no one knew whither.
  • CHAPTER XLVII Yillah, Jarl, And Samoa
  • But time to tell, how Samoa and Jarl regarded this mystical Yillah; and
  • how Yillah regarded them.
  • As Beauty from the Beast, so at first shrank the damsel from my one-armed companion. But seeing my confidence in the savage, a reaction soon
  • followed. And in accordance with that curious law, by which, under
  • certain conditions, the ugliest mortals become only amiably hideous,
  • Yillah at length came to look upon Samoa as a sort of harmless and good-natured goblin. Whence came he, she cared not; or what was his history;
  • or in what manner his fortunes were united to mine.
  • May be, she held him a being of spontaneous origin.
  • Now, as every where women are the tamers of the menageries of men; so
  • Yillah in good time tamed down Samoa to the relinquishment of that
  • horrible thing in his ear, and persuaded him to substitute a vacancy for
  • the bauble in his nose. On his part, however, all this was conditional.
  • He stipulated for the privilege of restoring both trinkets upon suitable
  • occasions.
  • But if thus gayly the damsel sported with Samoa; how different his
  • emotions toward her? The fate to which she had been destined, and every
  • nameless thing about her, appealed to all his native superstitions,
  • which ascribed to beings of her complexion a more than terrestrial
  • origin. When permitted to approach her, he looked timid and awkwardly
  • strange; suggesting the likeness of some clumsy satyr, drawing in his
  • horns; slowly wagging his tail; crouching abashed before some radiant
  • spirit.
  • And this reverence of his was most pleasing to me, Bravo! thought I; be
  • a pagan forever. No more than myself; for, after a different fashion,
  • Yillah was an idol to both.
  • But what of my Viking? Why, of good Jarl I grieve to say, that the old-fashioned interest he took in my affairs led him to look upon Yillah as
  • a sort of intruder, an Ammonite syren, who might lead me astray. This
  • would now and then provoke a phillipic; but he would only turn toward my
  • resentment his devotion; and then I was silent.
  • Unsophisticated as a wild flower in the germ, Yillah seemed incapable of
  • perceiving the contrasted lights in which she was regarded by our
  • companions. And like a true beauty seemed to cherish the presumption,
  • that it was quite impossible for such a person as hers to prove
  • otherwise than irresistible to all.
  • She betrayed much surprise at my Vikings appearance. But most of all was
  • she struck by a characteristic device upon the arm of the wonderful
  • mariner--our Saviour on the cross, in blue; with the crown of thorns,
  • and three drops of blood in vermilion, falling one by one from each hand
  • and foot.
  • Now, honest Jarl did vastly pride himself upon this ornament. It was the
  • only piece of vanity about him. And like a lady keeping gloveless her
  • hand to show off a fine Turquoise ring, he invariably wore that sleeve
  • of his frock rolled up, the better to display the embellishment.
  • And round and round would Yillah turn Jarl's arm, till Jarl was fain to
  • stand firm, for fear of revolving all over. How such untutored homage
  • would have thrilled the heart of the ingenious artist!
  • Eventually, through the Upoluan, she made overtures to the Skyeman,
  • concerning the possession of his picture in her own proper right. In her
  • very simplicity, little heeding, that like a landscape in fresco, it
  • could not be removed.
  • CHAPTER XLVIII Something Under The Surface
  • Not to omit an occurrence of considerable interest, we must needs here
  • present some account of a curious retinue of fish which overtook our
  • Chamois, a day or two after parting with the canoe.
  • A violent creaming and frothing in our rear announced their approach.
  • Soon we found ourselves the nucleus of an incredible multitude of finny
  • creatures, mostly anonymous.
  • First, far in advance of our prow, swam the helmeted Silver-heads; side
  • by side, in uniform ranks, like an army. Then came the Boneetas, with
  • their flashing blue flanks. Then, like a third distinct regiment, wormed
  • and twisted through the water like Archimedean screws, the quivering
  • Wriggle-tails; followed in turn by the rank and file of the Trigger-fish--so called from their quaint dorsal fins being set in their backs
  • with a comical curve, as if at half-cock. Far astern the rear was
  • brought up by endless battalions of Yellow-backs, right martially vested
  • in buff.
  • And slow sailing overhead were flights of birds; a wing in the air for
  • every fin in the sea.
  • But let the sea-fowls fly on: turn we to the fish.
  • Their numbers were amazing; countless as the tears shed for perfidious
  • lovers. Far abroad on both flanks, they swam in long lines, tier above
  • tier; the water alive with their hosts. Locusts of the sea,
  • peradventure, going to fall with a blight upon some green, mossy
  • province of Neptune. And tame and fearless they were, as the first fish
  • that swam in Euphrates; hardly evading the hand; insomuch that Samoa
  • caught many without lure or line.
  • They formed a decorous escort; paddling along by our barnacled sides, as
  • if they had been with us from the very beginning; neither scared by our
  • craft's surging in the water; nor in the least sympathetic at losing a
  • comrade by the hand of Samoa. They closed in their ranks and swam on.
  • How innocent, yet heartless they looked! Had a plank dropped out of our
  • boat, we had sunk to the bottom; and belike, our cheerful retinue would
  • have paid the last rites to our remains.
  • But still we kept company; as sociably as you please; Samoa helping
  • himself when he listed, and Yillah clapping her hands as the radiant
  • creatures, by a simultaneous turning round on their silvery bellies,
  • caused the whole sea to glow like a burnished shield.
  • But what has befallen this poor little Boneeta astern, that he swims so
  • toilingly on, with gills showing purple? What has he there, towing
  • behind? It is tangled sea-kelp clinging to its fins. But the clogged
  • thing strains to keep up with its fellows. Yet little they heed. Away
  • they go; every fish for itself, and any fish for Samoa.
  • At last the poor Boneeta is seen no more. The myriad fins swim on; a
  • lonely waste, where the lost one drops behind.
  • Strange fish! All the live-long day, they were there by our side; and at
  • night still tarried and shone; more crystal and scaly in the pale
  • moonbeams, than in the golden glare of the sun.
  • How prettily they swim; all silver life; darting hither and thither
  • between their long ranks, and touching their noses, and scraping
  • acquaintance. No mourning they wear for the Boneeta left far astern; nor
  • for those so cruelly killed by Samoa. No, no; all is glee, fishy glee,
  • and frolicking fun; light hearts and light fins; gay backs and gay
  • spirits.--Swim away, swim away! my merry fins all. Let us roam the
  • flood; let us follow this monster fish with the barnacled sides; this
  • strange-looking fish, so high out of water; that goes without fins. What
  • fish can it be? What rippling is that? Dost hear the great monster
  • breathe? Why, 'tis sharp at both ends; a tail either way; nor eyes has
  • it any, nor mouth. What a curious fish! what a comical fish! But more
  • comical far, those creatures above, on its hollow back, clinging thereto
  • like the snaky eels, that cling and slide on the back of the Sword fish,
  • our terrible foe. But what curious eels these are! Do they deem
  • themselves pretty as we? No, no; for sure, they behold our limber fins,
  • our speckled and beautiful scales. Poor, powerless things! How they must
  • wish they were we, that roam the flood, and scour the seas with a wish.
  • Swim away; merry fins, swim away! Let him drop, that fellow that halts;
  • make a lane; close in, and fill up. Let him drown, if he can not keep
  • pace. No laggards for us:--We fish, we fish, we merrily swim, We care
  • not for friend nor for foe: Our fins are stout, Our tails are out, As
  • through the seas we go.
  • Fish, Fish, we are fish with red gills; Naught disturbs us, our blood is
  • at zero: We are buoyant because of our bags, Being many, each fish is a
  • hero. We care not what is it, this life That we follow, this phantom
  • unknown: To swim, it's exceedingly pleasant,-- So swim away, making
  • a foam. This strange looking thing by our side, Not for safety, around
  • it we flee:-- Its shadow's so shady, that's all,-- We only swim
  • under its lee. And as for the eels there above, And as for the fowls in
  • the air, We care not for them nor their ways, As we cheerily glide afar!
  • We fish, we fish, we merrily swim, We care not for friend nor for foe:
  • Our fins are stout, Our tails are out, As through the seas we go.
  • But how now, my fine fish! what alarms your long ranks, and tosses them
  • all into a hubbub of scales and of foam? Never mind that long knave with
  • the spear there, astern. Pipe away, merry fish, and give us a stave or
  • two more, keeping time with your doggerel tails. But no, no! their
  • singing was over. Grim death, in the shape of a Chevalier, was after
  • them.
  • How they changed their boastful tune! How they hugged the vilified boat!
  • How they wished they were in it, the braggarts! And how they all tingled
  • with fear!
  • For, now here, now there, is heard a terrific rushing sound under water,
  • betokening the onslaught of the dread fish of prey, that with spear ever
  • in rest, charges in upon the out-skirts of the shoal, transfixing the
  • fish on his weapon. Re-treating and shaking them off, the Chevalier
  • devours them; then returns to the charge.
  • Hugging the boat to desperation, the poor fish fairly crowded themselves
  • up to the surface, and floundered upon each other, as men are lifted off
  • their feet in a mob. They clung to us thus, out of a fancied security in
  • our presence. Knowing this, we felt no little alarm for ourselves,
  • dreading lest the Chevalier might despise our boat, full as much as his
  • prey; and in pursuing the fish, run through the poor Chamois with a
  • lunge. A jacket, rolled up, was kept in readiness to be thrust into the
  • first opening made; while as the thousand fins audibly patted against
  • our slender planks, we felt nervously enough; as if treading upon thin,
  • crackling ice.
  • At length, to our no small delight, the enemy swam away; and again by
  • our side merrily paddled our escort; ten times merrier than ever.
  • CHAPTER XLIX Yillah
  • While for a few days, now this way, now that, as our craft glides along,
  • surrounded by these locusts of the deep, let the story of Yillah flow
  • on.
  • Of her beauty say I nothing. It was that of a crystal lake in a
  • fathomless wood: all light and shade; full of fleeting revealings; now
  • shadowed in depths; now sunny in dimples; but all sparkling and
  • shifting, and blending together.
  • But her wild beauty was a vail to things still more strange. As often
  • she gazed so earnestly into my eyes, like some pure spirit looking far
  • down into my soul, and seeing therein some upturned faces, I started in
  • amaze, and asked what spell was on me, that thus she gazed.
  • Often she entreated me to repeat over and over again certain syllables
  • of my language. These she would chant to herself, pausing now and then,
  • as if striving to discover wherein lay their charm.
  • In her accent, there was something very different from that of the
  • people of the canoe. Wherein lay the difference. I knew not; but it
  • enabled her to pronounce with readiness all the words which I taught
  • her; even as if recalling sounds long forgotten.
  • If all this filled me with wonder, how much was that wonder increased,
  • and yet baffled again, by considering her complexion, and the cast of
  • her features.
  • After endeavoring in various ways to account for these things, I was led
  • to imagine, that the damsel must be an Albino (Tulla) occasionally to be
  • met with among the people of the Pacific. These persons are of an
  • exceedingly delicate white skin, tinted with a faint rose hue, like the
  • lips of a shell. Their hair is golden. But, unlike the Albinos of other
  • climes, their eyes are invariably blue, and no way intolerant of light.
  • As a race, the Tullas die early. And hence the belief, that they pertain
  • to some distant sphere, and only through irregularities in the
  • providence of the gods, come to make their appearance upon earth:
  • whence, the oversight discovered, they are hastily snatched. And it is
  • chiefly on this account, that in those islands where human sacrifices
  • are offered, the Tullas are deemed the most suitable oblations for the
  • altar, to which from their birth many are prospectively devoted. It was
  • these considerations, united to others, which at times induced me to
  • fancy, that by the priest, Yillah was regarded as one of these beings.
  • So mystical, however, her revelations concerning her past history, that
  • often I knew not what to divine. But plainly they showed that she had
  • not the remotest conception of her real origin.
  • But these conceits of a state of being anterior to an earthly existence
  • may have originated in one of those celestial visions seen transparently
  • stealing over the face of a slumbering child. And craftily drawn forth
  • and re-echoed by another, and at times repeated over to her with many
  • additions, these imaginings must at length have assumed in her mind a
  • hue of reality, heightened into conviction by the dreamy seclusion of
  • her life.
  • But now, let her subsequent and more credible history be related, as
  • from time to time she rehearsed it.
  • CHAPTER L Yillah In Ardair
  • In the verdant glen of Ardair, far in the silent interior of Amma, shut
  • in by hoar old cliffs, Yillah the maiden abode.
  • So small and so deep was this glen, so surrounded on all sides by steep
  • acclivities, and so vividly green its verdure, and deceptive the shadows
  • that played there; that, from above, it seemed more like a lake of cool,
  • balmy air, than a glen: its woodlands and grasses gleaming shadowy all,
  • like sea groves and mosses beneath the calm sea.
  • Here, none came but Aleema the priest, who at times was absent for days
  • together. But at certain seasons, an unseen multitude with loud chants
  • stood upon the verge of the neighboring precipices, and traversing those
  • shaded wilds, slowly retreated; their voices lessening and lessening, as
  • they wended their way through the more distant groves.
  • At other times, Yillah being immured in the temple of Apo, a band of men
  • entering the vale, surrounded her retreat, dancing there till evening
  • came. Meanwhile, heaps of fruit, garlands of flowers, and baskets of
  • fish, were laid upon an altar without, where stood Aleema, arrayed in
  • white tappa, and muttering to himself, as the offerings were laid at his
  • feet.
  • When Aleema was gone, Yillah went forth into the glen, and wandered
  • among the trees, and reposed by the banks of the stream. And ever as she
  • strolled, looked down upon her the grim old cliffs, bearded with
  • trailing moss.
  • Toward the lower end of the vale, its lofty walls advancing and
  • overhanging their base, almost met in mid air. And a great rock, hurled
  • from an adjacent height, and falling into the space intercepted, there
  • remained fixed. Aerial trees shot up from its surface; birds nested in
  • its clefts; and strange vines roved abroad, overrunning the tops of the
  • trees, lying thereon in coils and undulations, like anacondas basking in
  • the light. Beneath this rock, was a lofty wall of ponderous stones.
  • Between its crevices, peeps were had of a long and leafy arcade,
  • quivering far away to where the sea rolled in the sun. Lower down, these
  • crevices gave an outlet to the waters of the brook, which, in a long
  • cascade, poured over sloping green ledges near the foot of the wall,
  • into a deep shady pool; whose rocky sides, by the perpetual eddying of
  • the water, had been worn into a grotesque resemblance to a group of
  • giants, with heads submerged, indolently reclining about the basin.
  • In this pool, Yillah would bathe. And once, emerging, she heard the
  • echoes of a voice, and called aloud. But the only reply, was the
  • rustling of branches, as some one, invisible, fled down the valley
  • beyond. Soon after, a stone rolled inward, and Aleema the priest stood
  • before her; saying that the voice she had heard was his. But it was not.
  • At last the weary days grew, longer and longer, and the maiden pined for
  • companionship. When the breeze blew not, but slept in the caves of the
  • mountains, and all the leaves of the trees stood motionless as tears in
  • the eye, Yillah would sadden, and call upon the spirits in her soul to
  • awaken. She sang low airs, she thought she had heard in Oroolia; but
  • started affrighted, as from dingles and dells, came back to her strains
  • more wild than hers. And ever, when sad, Aleema would seek to cheer her
  • soul, by calling to mind the bright scenes of Oroolia the Blest, to
  • which place, he averred, she was shortly to return, never more to
  • depart.
  • Now, at the head of the vale of Ardair, rose a tall, dark peak,
  • presenting at the top the grim profile of a human face; whose shadow,
  • every afternoon, crept down the verdant side of the mountain: a silent
  • phantom, stealing all over the bosom of the glen.
  • At times, when the phantom drew near, Aleema would take Yillah forth,
  • and waiting its approach, lay her down by the shadow, disposing her arms
  • in a caress; saying, "Oh, Apo! dost accept thy bride?" And at last, when
  • it crept beyond the place where he stood, and buried the whole valley in
  • gloom; Aleema would say, "Arise Yillah; Apo hath stretched himself to
  • sleep in Ardair. Go, slumber where thou wilt; for thou wilt slumber in
  • his arms."
  • And so, every night, slept the maiden in the arms of grim Apo.
  • One day when Yillah had come to love the wild shadow, as something that
  • every day moved before her eyes, where all was so deathfully still; she
  • went forth alone to watch it, as softly it slid down from the peak. Of a
  • sudden, when its face was just edging a chasm, that made it to look as
  • if parting its lips, she heard a loud voice, and thought it was Apo
  • calling "Yillah! Yillah!" But now it seemed like the voice she had heard
  • while bathing in the pool. Glancing upward, she beheld a beautiful open-armed youth, gazing down upon her from an inaccessible crag. But
  • presently, there was a rustling in the groves behind, and swift as
  • thought, something darted through the air. The youth bounded forward.
  • Yillah opened her arms to receive him; but he fell upon the cliff, and
  • was seen no more. As alarmed, and in tears, she fled from the scene,
  • some one out of sight ran before her through the wood.
  • Upon recounting this adventure to Aleema, he said, that the being she
  • had seen, must have been a bad spirit come to molest her; and that Apo
  • had slain him.
  • The sight of this youth, filled Yillah with wild yearnings to escape
  • from her lonely retreat; for a glimpse of some one beside the priest and
  • the phantom, suggested vague thoughts of worlds of fair beings, in
  • regions beyond Ardair. But Aleema sought to put away these conceits;
  • saying, that ere long she would be journeying to Oroolia, there to
  • rejoin the spirits she dimly remembered.
  • Soon after, he came to her with a shell--one of those ever moaning of
  • ocean--and placing it to her ear, bade her list to the being within,
  • which in that little shell had voyaged from Oroolia to bear her company
  • in Amma.
  • Now, the maiden oft held it to her ear, and closing her eyes, listened
  • and listened to its soft inner breathings, till visions were born of the
  • sound, and her soul lay for hours in a trance of delight.
  • And again the priest came, and brought her a milk-white bird, with a
  • bill jet-black, and eyes like stars. "In this, lurks the soul of a
  • maiden; it hath flown from Oroolia to greet you." The soft stranger
  • willingly nestled in her bosom; turning its bright eyes upon hers, and
  • softly warbling.
  • Many days passed; and Yillah, the bird, and the shell were inseparable.
  • The bird grew familiar; pecked seeds from her mouth; perched upon her
  • shoulder, and sang in her ear; and at night, folded its wings in her
  • bosom, and, like a sea-fowl, went softly to sleep: rising and falling
  • upon the maiden's heart. And every morning it flew from its nest, and
  • fluttered and chirped; and sailed to and fro; and blithely sang; and
  • brushed Yillah's cheek till she woke. Then came to her hand: and Yillah,
  • looking earnestly in its eyes, saw strange faces there; and said to
  • herself as she gazed--"These are two souls, not one."
  • But at last, going forth into the groves with the bird, it suddenly flew
  • from her side, and perched in a bough; and throwing back its white downy
  • throat, there gushed from its bill a clear warbling jet, like a little
  • fountain in air. Now the song ceased; when up and away toward the head
  • of the vale, flew the bird. "Lil! Lil! come back, leave me not, blest
  • souls of the maidens." But on flew the bird, far up a defile, winging
  • its way till a speck.
  • It was shortly after this, and upon the evening of a day which had been
  • tumultuous with sounds of warfare beyond the lower wall of the glen;
  • that Aleema came to Yillah in alarm; saying--"Yillah, the time has come
  • to follow thy bird; come, return to thy home in Oroolia." And he told
  • her the way she would voyage there: by the vortex on the coast of
  • Tedaidee. That night, being veiled and placed in the tent, the maiden
  • was borne to the sea-side, where the canoe was in waiting. And setting
  • sail quickly, by next morning the island of Amma was no longer in sight.
  • And this was the voyage, whose sequel has already been recounted.
  • CHAPTER LI The Dream Begins To Fade
  • Stripped of the strange associations, with which a mind like Yillah's
  • must have invested every incident of her life, the story of her abode in
  • Ardair seemed not incredible.
  • But so etherealized had she become from the wild conceits she nourished,
  • that she verily believed herself a being of the lands of dreams. Her
  • fabulous past was her present.
  • Yet as our intimacy grew closer and closer, these fancies seemed to be
  • losing their hold. And often she questioned me concerning my own
  • reminiscences of her shadowy isle. And cautiously I sought to produce
  • the impression, that whatever I had said of that clime, had been
  • revealed to me in dreams; but that in these dreams, her own lineaments
  • had smiled upon me; and hence the impulse which had sent me roving after
  • the substance of this spiritual image.
  • And true it was to say so; and right it was to swear it, upon her white
  • arms crossed. For oh, Yillah; were you not the earthly semblance of that
  • sweet vision, that haunted my earliest thoughts?
  • At first she had wildly believed, that the nameless affinities between
  • us, were owing to our having in times gone by dwelt together in the same
  • ethereal region. But thoughts like these were fast dying out. Yet not
  • without many strange scrutinies. More intently than ever she gazed into
  • my eyes; rested her ear against my heart, and listened to its beatings.
  • And love, which in the eye of its object ever seeks to invest itself
  • with some rare superiority, love, sometimes induced me to prop my
  • failing divinity; though it was I myself who had undermined it.
  • But if it was with many regrets, that in the sight of Yillah, I
  • perceived myself thus dwarfing down to a mortal; it was with quite
  • contrary emotions, that I contemplated the extinguishment in her heart
  • of the notion of her own spirituality. For as such thoughts were chased
  • away, she clung the more closely to me, as unto one without whom she
  • would be desolate indeed.
  • And now, at intervals, she was sad, and often gazed long and fixedly
  • into the sea. Nor would she say why it was, that she did so; until at
  • length she yielded; and replied, that whatever false things Aleema might
  • have instilled into her mind; of this much she was certain: that the
  • whirlpool on the coast of Tedaidee prefigured her fate; that in the
  • waters she saw lustrous eyes, and beckoning phantoms, and strange shapes
  • smoothing her a couch among the mosses.
  • Her dreams seemed mine. Many visions I had of the green corse of the
  • priest, outstretching its arms in the water, to receive pale Yillah, as
  • she sunk in the sea.
  • But these forebodings departed, no happiness in the universe like ours.
  • We lived and we loved; life and love were united; in gladness glided our
  • days.
  • CHAPTER LII World Ho!
  • Five suns rose and set. And Yillah pining for the shore, we turned our
  • prow due west, and next morning came in sight of land.
  • It was innumerable islands; lifting themselves bluely through the azure
  • air, and looking upon the distant sea, like haycocks in a hazy field.
  • Towering above all, and mid-most, rose a mighty peak; one fleecy cloud
  • sloping against its summit; a column wreathed. Beyond, like purple
  • steeps in heaven at set of sun, stretched far away, what seemed lands on
  • lands, in infinite perspective.
  • Gliding on, the islands grew more distinct; rising up from the billows
  • to greet us; revealing hills, vales, and peaks, grouped within a milk-white zone of reef, so vast, that in the distance all was dim. The
  • jeweled vapors, ere-while hovering over these violet shores, now seemed
  • to be shedding their gems; and as the almost level rays of the sun,
  • shooting through the air like a variegated prism, touched the verdant
  • land, it trembled all over with dewy sparkles.
  • Still nearer we came: our sail faintly distended as the breeze died away
  • from our vicinity to the isles. The billows rolled listlessly by, as if
  • conscious that their long task was nigh done; while gleamed the white
  • reef, like the trail of a great fish in a calm. But as yet, no sign of
  • paddle or canoe; no distant smoke; no shining thatch. Bravo! good
  • comrades, we've discovered some new constellation in the sea.
  • Sweet Yillah, no more of Oroolia; see you not this flowery land?
  • Nevermore shall we desire to roam.
  • Voyaging along the zone, we came to an opening; and quitting the
  • firmament blue of the open sea, we glided in upon the still, green
  • waters of the wide lagoon. Mapped out in the broad shadows of the isles,
  • and tinted here and there with the reflected hues of the sun clouds, the
  • mild waters stretched all around us like another sky. Near by the break
  • in the reef, was a little island, with palm trees harping in the breeze;
  • an aviary of alluring sounds, that seemed calling upon us to land. And
  • here, Yillah, whom the sight of the verdure had made glad, threw out a
  • merry suggestion. Nothing less, than to plant our mast, sail-set, upon
  • the highest hill; and fly away, island and all; trees rocking, birds
  • caroling, flowers springing; away, away, across the wide waters, to
  • Oroolia! But alas! how weigh the isle's coral anchor, leagues down in
  • the fathomless sea?
  • We glanced around; but all the islands seemed slumbering in the flooding
  • light.
  • "A canoe! a canoe!" cried Samoa, as three proas showed themselves
  • rounding a neighboring shore. Instantly we sailed for them; but after
  • shooting to and fro for a time, and standing up and gazing at us, the
  • Islanders retreated behind the headland. Hardly were they out of sight,
  • when from many a shore roundabout, other proas pushed off. Soon the
  • water all round us was enlivened by fleets of canoes, darting hither and
  • thither like frighted water-fowls. Presently they all made for one
  • island.
  • From their actions we argued that these people could have had but little
  • or no intercourse with whites; and most probably knew not how to account
  • for our appearance among them. Desirous, therefore, of a friendly
  • meeting, ere any hostile suspicions might arise, we pointed our craft
  • for the island, whither all the canoes were now hastening. Whereupon,
  • those which had not yet reached their destination, turned and fled;
  • while the occupants of the proas that had landed, ran into the groves,
  • and were lost to view.
  • Crossing the distinct outer line of the isle's shadow on the water, we
  • gained the shore; and gliding along its margin, passing canoe after
  • canoe, hauled up on the silent beach, which otherwise seemed entirely
  • innocent of man.
  • A dilemma. But I decided at last upon disembarking Jarl and Samoa, to
  • seek out and conciliate the natives. So, landing them upon a jutting
  • buttress of coral, whence they waded to the shore; I pushed off with
  • Yillah into the water beyond, to await the event.
  • Full an hour must have elapsed; when, to our great joy, loud shouts were
  • heard; and there burst into view a tumultuous crowd, in the midst of
  • which my Viking was descried, mounted upon the shoulders of two brawny
  • natives; while the Upoluan, striding on in advance, seemed resisting a
  • similar attempt to elevate him in the world.
  • Good omens both.
  • "Come ashore!" cried Jarl. "Aramai!" cried Samoa; while storms of
  • interjections went up from the Islanders who with extravagant gestures
  • danced about the beach.
  • Further caution seemed needless: I pointed our prow for the shore. No
  • sooner was this perceived, than, raising an applauding shout, the
  • Islanders ran up to their waists in the sea. And skimming like a gull
  • over the smooth lagoon, the light shallop darted in among them. Quick as
  • thought, fifty hands were on the gunwale: and, with all its contents,
  • lifted bodily into the air, the little Chamois, upon many a dripping
  • shoulder, was borne deep into the groves. Yillah shrieked at the rocking
  • motion, and when the boughs of the trees brushed against the tent.
  • With his staff, an old man now pointed to a couple of twin-like trees,
  • some four paces apart; and a little way from the ground conveniently
  • crotched.
  • And here, eftsoons, they deposited their burden; lowering the Chamois
  • gently between the forks of the trees, whose willow-like foliage fringed
  • the tent and its inmate.
  • CHAPTER LIII The Chamois Ashore
  • Until now, enveloped in her robe, and crouching like a fawn, Yillah had
  • been well nigh hidden from view. But presently she withdrew her hood.
  • What saw the Islanders, that they so gazed and adored in silence: some
  • retreating, some creeping nearer, and the women all in a flutter? Long
  • they gazed; and following Samoa's example, stretched forth their arms in
  • reverence.
  • The adoration of the maiden was extended to myself. Indeed, from the
  • singular gestures employed, I had all along suspected, that we were
  • being received with unwonted honors.
  • I now sought to get speech of my comrades. But so obstreperous was the
  • crowd, that it was next to impossible. Jarl was still in his perch in
  • the air; his enthusiastic bearers not yet suffering him to alight.
  • Samoa, however, who had managed to keep out of the saddle, by-and-by
  • contrived to draw nearer to the Chamois.
  • He advised me, by no means to descend for the present; since in any
  • event we were sure of remaining unmolested therein; the Islanders
  • regarding it as sacred.
  • The Upoluan attracted a great deal of attention; chiefly from his style
  • of tattooing, which, together with other peculiarities, so interested
  • the natives, that they were perpetually hanging about him, putting eager
  • questions, and all the time keeping up a violent clamor.
  • But despite the large demand upon his lungs, Samoa made out to inform
  • me, that notwithstanding the multitude assembled, there was no high
  • chief, or person of consequence present; the king of the place, also
  • those of the islands adjacent, being absent at a festival in another
  • quarter of the Archipelago. But upon the first distant glimpse of the
  • Chamois, fleet canoes had been dispatched to announce the surprising
  • event that had happened.
  • In good time, the crowd becoming less tumultuous, and abandoning the
  • siege of Samoa, I availed myself of this welcome lull, and called upon
  • him and my Viking to enter the Chamois; desirous of condensing our
  • forces against all emergencies.
  • Samoa now gave me to understand, that from all he could learn, the
  • Islanders regarded me as a superior being. They had inquired of him,
  • whether I was not white Taji, a sort of half-and-half deity, now and
  • then an Avatar among them, and ranking among their inferior ex-officio
  • demi-gods. To this, Samoa had said ay; adding, moreover, all he could to
  • encourage the idea.
  • He now entreated me, at the first opportunity, to announce myself as
  • Taji: declaring that if once received under that title, the unbounded
  • hospitality of our final reception would be certain; and our persons
  • fenced about from all harm.
  • Encouraging this. But it was best to be wary. For although among some
  • barbarians the first strangers landing upon their shores, are frequently
  • hailed as divine; and in more than one wild land have been actually
  • styled gods, as a familiar designation; yet this has not exempted the
  • celestial visitants from peril, when too much presuming upon the
  • reception extended to them. In sudden tumults they have been slain
  • outright, and while full faith in their divinity had in no wise abated.
  • The sad fate of an eminent navigator is a well-known illustration of
  • this unaccountable waywardness.
  • With no small anxiety, therefore, we awaited the approach of some of the
  • dignitaries of Mardi; for by this collective appellation, the people
  • informed us, their islands were known.
  • We waited not long. Of a sudden, from the sea-side, a single shrill cry
  • was heard. A moment more, and the blast of numerous conch shells
  • startled the air; a confused clamor drew nearer and nearer; and flying
  • our eyes in the direction of these sounds, we impatiently awaited what
  • was to follow.
  • CHAPTER LIV A Gentleman From The Sun
  • Never before had I seen the deep foliage of woodlands navigated by
  • canoes. But on they came sailing through the leaves; two abreast; borne
  • on men's shoulders; in each a chief, carried along to the measured march
  • of his bearers; paddle blades reversed under arms. As they emerged, the
  • multitude made gestures of homage. At the distance of some eight or ten
  • paces the procession halted; when the kings alighted to the ground.
  • They were fine-looking men, arrayed in various garbs. Rare the show of
  • stained feathers, and jewels, and other adornments. Brave the floating
  • of dyed mantles.
  • The regal bearing of these personages, the deference paid them, and
  • their entire self-possession, not a little surprised me. And it seemed
  • preposterous, to assume a divine dignity in the presence of these
  • undoubted potentates of _terra firma_. Taji seemed oozing from my
  • fingers' ends. But courage! and erecting my crest, I strove to look
  • every inch the character I had determined to assume.
  • For a time, it was almost impossible to tell with what emotions
  • precisely the chiefs were regarding me. They said not a word.
  • But plucking up heart of grace, I crossed my cutlass on my chest, and
  • reposing my hand on the hilt, addressed their High Mightinesses thus.
  • "Men of Mardi, I come from the sun. When this morning it rose and
  • touched the wave, I pushed my shallop from its golden beach, and hither
  • sailed before its level rays. I am Taji."
  • More would have been added, but I paused for the effect of my exordium.
  • Stepping back a pace or two, the chiefs eagerly conversed.
  • Emboldened, I returned to the charge, and labored hard to impress them
  • with just such impressions of me and mine, as I deemed desirable. The
  • gentle Yillah was a seraph from the sun; Samoa I had picked off a reef
  • in my route from that orb; and as for the Skyeman, why, as his name
  • imported, he came from above. In a word, we were all strolling
  • divinities.
  • Advancing toward the Chamois, one of the kings, a calm old man, now
  • addressed me as follows:--"Is this indeed Taji? he, who according to a
  • tradition, was to return to us after five thousand moons? But that
  • period is yet unexpired. What bring'st thou hither then, Taji, before
  • thy time? Thou wast but a quarrelsome demi-god, say the legends, when
  • thou dwelt among our sires. But wherefore comest thou, Taji? Truly, thou
  • wilt interfere with the worship of thy images, and we have plenty of
  • gods besides thee. But comest thou to fight?--We have plenty of spears,
  • and desire not thine. Comest thou to dwell?--Small are the houses of
  • Mardi. Or comest thou to fish in the sea? Tell us, Taji."
  • Now, all this was a series of posers hard to be answered; furnishing a
  • curious example, moreover, of the reception given to strange demi-gods
  • when they travel without their portmanteaus; and also of the familiar
  • manner in which these kings address the immortals. Much I mourned that I
  • had not previously studied better my part, and learned the precise
  • nature of my previous existence in the land.
  • But nothing like carrying it bravely.
  • "Attend. Taji comes, old man, because it pleases him to come. And Taji
  • will depart when it suits him. Ask the shades of your sires whether Taji
  • thus scurvily greeted them, when they came stalking into his presence in
  • the land of spirits. No. Taji spread the banquet. He removed their
  • mantles. He kindled a fire to drive away the damp. He said not, 'Come
  • you to fight, you fogs and vapors? come you to dwell? or come you to
  • fish in the sea?' Go to, then, kings of Mardi!"
  • Upon this, the old king fell back; and his place was supplied by a noble
  • chief, of a free, frank bearing. Advancing quickly toward the boat, he
  • exclaimed--"I am Media, the son of Media. Thrice welcome, Taji. On my
  • island of Odo hast thou an altar. I claim thee for my guest." He then
  • reminded the rest, that the strangers had voyaged far, and needed
  • repose. And, furthermore, that he proposed escorting them forthwith to
  • his own dominions; where, next day, he would be happy to welcome all
  • visitants.
  • And good as his word, he commanded his followers to range themselves
  • under the Chamois. Springing out of our prow, the Upoluan was followed
  • by Jarl; leaving Yillah and Taji to be borne therein toward the sea.
  • Soon, we were once more afloat; by our side, Media sociably seated; six
  • of his paddlers, perched upon the gunwale, swiftly urging us over the
  • lagoon.
  • The transition from the grove to the sea was instantaneous. All seemed a
  • dream.
  • The place to which we were hastening, being some distance away, as we
  • rounded isle after isle, the extent of the Archipelago grew upon us
  • greatly.
  • CHAPTER LV Tiffin In A Temple
  • Upon at last drawing nigh to Odo, its appearance somewhat disappointed
  • me. A small island, of moderate elevation.
  • But plumb not the height of the house that feasts you. The beach was
  • lined with expectant natives, who, lifting the Chamois, carried us up
  • the beach.
  • Alighting, as they were bearing us along, King Media, designating a
  • canoe-house hard by, ordered our craft to be deposited therein. This
  • being done, we stepped upon the soil. It was the first we had pressed in
  • very many days. It sent a sympathetic thrill through our frames.
  • Turning his steps inland, Media signed us to follow.
  • Soon we came to a rude sort of inclosure, fenced in by an imposing wall.
  • Here a halt was sounded, and in great haste the natives proceeded to
  • throw down a portion of the stones. This accomplished, we were signed to
  • enter the fortress thus carried by storm. Upon an artificial mound,
  • opposite the breach, stood a small structure of bamboo, open in front.
  • Within, was a long pedestal, like a settee, supporting three images,
  • also of wood, and about the size of men; bearing, likewise, a remote
  • resemblance to that species of animated nature. Before these idols was
  • an altar, and at its base many fine mats.
  • Entering the temple, as if he felt very much at home, Media disposed
  • these mats so as to form a very pleasant lounge; where he deferentially
  • entreated Yillah to recline. Then deliberately removing the first idol,
  • he motioned me to seat myself in its place. Setting aside the middle
  • one, he quietly established himself in its stead. The displaced ciphers,
  • meanwhile, standing upright before us, and their blank faces looking
  • upon this occasion unusually expressive. As yet, not a syllable as to
  • the meaning of this cavalier treatment of their wooden godships.
  • We now tranquilly awaited what next might happen, and I earnestly
  • prayed, that if sacrilege was being committed, the vengeance of the gods
  • might be averted from an ignoramus like me; notwithstanding the
  • petitioner himself hailed from the other world. Perfect silence was
  • preserved: Jarl and Samoa standing a little without the temple; the
  • first looking quite composed, but his comrade casting wondering glances
  • at my sociable apotheosis with Media.
  • Now happening to glance upon the image last removed, I was not long in
  • detecting a certain resemblance between it and our host. Both were
  • decorated in the same manner; the carving on the idol exactly
  • corresponding with the tattooing of the king.
  • Presently, the silence was relieved by a commotion without: and a butler
  • approached, staggering under an immense wooden trencher; which, with
  • profound genuflexions, he deposited upon the altar before us. The tray
  • was loaded like any harvest wain; heaped up with good things sundry and
  • divers: Bread-fruit, and cocoanuts, and plantains, and guavas; all
  • pleasant to the eye, and furnishing good earnest of something equally
  • pleasant to the palate.
  • Transported at the sight of these viands, after so long an estrangement
  • from full indulgence in things green, I was forthwith proceeding to help
  • Yillah and myself, when, like lightning, a most unwelcome query
  • obtruded. Did deities dine? Then also recurred what Media had declared
  • about my shrine in Odo. Was this it? Self-sacrilegious demigod that I
  • was, was I going to gluttonize on the very offerings, laid before me in
  • my own sacred fane? Give heed to thy ways, oh Taji, lest thou stumble
  • and be lost.
  • But hereupon, what saw we, but his cool majesty of Odo tranquilly
  • proceeding to lunch in the temple?
  • How now? Was Media too a god? Egad, it must be so. Else, why his image
  • here in the fane, and the original so entirely at his ease, with legs
  • full cosily tucked away under the very altar itself. This put to flight
  • all appalling apprehensions of the necessity of starving to keep up the
  • assumption of my divinity. So without more ado I helped myself right and
  • left; taking the best care of Yillah; who over fed her flushed beauty
  • with juicy fruits, thereby transferring to her cheek the sweet glow of
  • the guava.
  • Our hunger appeased, and Media in token thereof celestially laying his
  • hand upon the appropriate region, we proceeded to quit the inclosure.
  • But coming to the wall where the breach had been made, lo, and behold,
  • no breach was to be seen. But down it came tumbling again, and forth we
  • issued.
  • This overthrowing of walls, be it known, is an incidental compliment
  • paid distinguished personages in this part of Mardi. It would seem to
  • signify, that such gentry can go nowhere without creating an impression;
  • even upon the most obdurate substances.
  • But to return to our ambrosial lunch.
  • Sublimate, as you will, the idea of our ethereality as intellectual
  • beings; no sensible man can harbor a doubt, but that there is a vast
  • deal of satisfaction in dining. More: there is a savor of life and
  • immortality in substantial fare. Like balloons, we are nothing till
  • filled.
  • And well knowing this, nature has provided this jolly round board, our
  • globe, which in an endless sequence of courses and crops, spreads a
  • perpetual feast. Though, as with most public banquets, there is no small
  • crowding, and many go away famished from plenty.
  • CHAPTER LVI King Media A Host
  • Striking into a grove, about sunset we emerged upon a fine, clear space,
  • and spied a city in the woods.
  • In the middle of all, like a generalissimo's marquee among tents, was a
  • structure more imposing than the rest. Here, abode King Media.
  • Disposed round a space some fifty yards square, were many palm posts
  • staked firmly in the earth. A man's height from the ground, these
  • supported numerous horizontal trunks, upon which lay a flooring of
  • habiscus. High over this dais, but resting upon independent supports
  • beyond, a gable-ended roof sloped away to within a short distance of the
  • ground.
  • Such was the palace.
  • We entered it by an arched, arbored entrance, at one of its palmetto-thatched ends. But not through this exclusive portal entered the
  • Islanders. Humbly stooping, they found ingress under the drooping eaves.
  • A custom immemorial, and well calculated to remind all contumacious
  • subjects of the dignity of the habitation thus entered.
  • Three steps led to the summit of the dais, where piles of soft mats, and
  • light pillows of woven grass, stuffed with the golden down of a wild
  • thistle, invited all loiterers to lounge.
  • How pleasant the twilight that welled up from under the low eaves, above
  • which we were seated. And how obvious now the design of the roof. No
  • shade more grateful and complete; the garish sun lingering without like
  • some lackey in waiting.
  • But who is this in the corner, gaping at us like a butler in a quandary?
  • Media's household deity, in the guise of a plethoric monster, his
  • enormous head lolling back, and wide, gaping mouth stuffed full of fresh
  • fruits and green leaves. Truly, had the idol possessed a soul under his
  • knotty ribs, how tantalizing to hold so glorious a mouthful without the
  • power of deglutition. Far worse than the inexorable lock-jaw, which will
  • not admit of the step preliminary to a swallow.
  • This jolly Josh image was that of an inferior deity, the god of Good
  • Cheer, and often after, we met with his merry round mouth in many other
  • abodes in Mardi. Daily, his jaws are replenished, as a flower vase in
  • summer.
  • But did the demi-divine Media thus brook the perpetual presence of a
  • subaltern divinity? Still more; did he render it homage? But ere long
  • the Mardian mythology will be discussed, thereby making plain what may
  • now seem anomalous.
  • Politely escorting us into his palace, Media did the honors by inviting
  • his guests to recline. He then seemed very anxious to impress us with
  • the fact, that, by bringing us to his home, and thereby charging the
  • royal larder with our maintenance, he had taken no hasty or imprudent
  • step. His merry butlers kept piling round us viands, till we were well
  • nigh walled in. At every fresh deposit, Media directing our attention to
  • the same, as yet additional evidence of his ample resources as a host.
  • The evidence was finally closed by dragging under the eaves a felled
  • plantain tree, the spike of red ripe fruit, sprouting therefrom,
  • blushing all over, at so rude an introduction to the notice of
  • strangers.
  • During this scene, Jarl was privily nudging Samoa, in wonderment, to
  • know what upon earth it all meant. But Samoa, scarcely deigning to
  • notice interrogatories propounded through the elbow, only let drop a
  • vague hint or two.
  • It was quite amusing, what airs Samoa now gave himself, at least toward
  • my Viking. Among the Mardians he was at home. And who, when there,
  • stretches not out his legs, and says unto himself, "Who is greater than
  • I?"
  • To be plain: concerning himself and the Skyeman, the tables were turned.
  • At sea, Jarl had been the oracle: an old sea-sage, learned in hemp and
  • helm. But our craft high and dry, the Upoluan lifted his crest as the
  • erudite pagan; master of Gog and Magog, expounder of all things
  • heathenish and obscure.
  • An hour or two was now laughed away in very charming conversation with
  • Media; when I hinted, that a couch and solitude would be acceptable.
  • Whereupon, seizing a taper, our host escorted us without the palace. And
  • ushering us into a handsome unoccupied mansion, gave me to understand
  • that the same was mine. Mounting to the dais, he then instituted a
  • vigorous investigation, to discern whether every thing was in order. Not
  • fancying something about the mats, he rolled them up into bundles, and
  • one by one sent them flying at the heads of his servitors; who, upon
  • that gentle hint made off with them, soon after returning with fresh
  • ones. These, with mathematical precision, Media in person now spread on
  • the dais; looking carefully to the fringes or ruffles with which they
  • were bordered, as if striving to impart to them a sentimental
  • expression.
  • This done, he withdrew.
  • CHAPTER LVII Taji Takes Counsel With Himself
  • My brief intercourse with our host, had by this time enabled me to form
  • a pretty good notion of the light, in which I was held by him and his
  • more intelligent subjects.
  • His free and easy carriage evinced, that though acknowledging my
  • assumptions, he was no way overawed by them; treating me as familiarly,
  • indeed, as if I were a mere mortal, one of the abject generation of
  • mushrooms.
  • The scene in the temple, however, had done much toward explaining this
  • demeanor of his. A demi-god in his own proper person, my claims to a
  • similar dignity neither struck him with wonder, nor lessened his good
  • opinion of himself.
  • As for any thing foreign in my aspect, and my ignorance of Mardian
  • customs---all this, instead of begetting a doubt unfavorable to my
  • pretensions, but strengthened the conviction of them as verities. Thus
  • has it been in similar instances; but to a much greater extent. The
  • celebrated navigator referred to in a preceding chapter, was hailed by
  • the Hawaiians as one of their demi-gods, returned to earth, after a wide
  • tour of the universe. And they worshiped him as such, though incessantly
  • he was interrogating them, as to who under the sun his worshipers were;
  • how their ancestors came on the island; and whether they would have the
  • kindness to provide his followers with plenty of pork during his stay.
  • But a word or two concerning the idols in the shrine at Odo. Superadded
  • to the homage rendered him as a temporal prince, Media was there
  • worshiped as a spiritual being. In his corporeal absence, his effigy
  • receiving all oblations intended for him. And in the days of his
  • boyhood, listening to the old legends of the Mardian mythology, Media
  • had conceived a strong liking for the fabulous Taji; a deity whom he had
  • often declared was worthy a niche in any temple extant. Hence he had
  • honored my image with a place in his own special shrine; placing it side
  • by side with his worshipful likeness.
  • I appreciated the compliment. But of the close companionship of the
  • other image there, I was heartily ashamed. And with reason. The nuisance
  • in question being the image of a deified maker of plantain-pudding,
  • lately deceased; who had been famed far and wide as the most notable
  • fellow of his profession in the whole Archipelago. During his sublunary
  • career, having been attached to the household of Media, his grateful
  • master had afterward seen fit to crown his celebrity by this posthumous
  • distinction: a circumstance sadly subtracting from the dignity of an
  • apotheosis. Nor must it here be omitted, that in this part of Mardi
  • culinary artists are accounted worthy of high consideration. For among
  • these people of Odo, the matter of eating and drinking is held a matter
  • of life and of death. "Drag away my queen from my arms," said old Tyty
  • when overcome of Adommo, "but leave me my cook."
  • Now, among the Mardians there were plenty of incarnated deities to keep
  • me in countenance. Most of the kings of the Archipelago, besides Media,
  • claiming homage as demi-gods; and that, too, by virtue of hereditary
  • descent, the divine spark being transmissable from father to son. In
  • illustration of this, was the fact, that in several instances the people
  • of the land addressed the supreme god Oro, in the very same terms
  • employed in the political adoration of their sublunary rulers.
  • Ay: there were deities in Mardi far greater and taller than I: right
  • royal monarchs to boot, living in jolly round tabernacles of jolly brown
  • clay; and feasting, and roystering, and lording it in yellow tabernacles
  • of bamboo. These demi-gods had wherewithal to sustain their lofty
  • pretensions. If need were, could crush out of him the infidelity of a
  • non-conformist. And by this immaculate union of church and state, god
  • and king, in their own proper persons reigned supreme Caesars over the
  • souls and bodies of their subjects.
  • Beside these mighty magnates, I and my divinity shrank into nothing. In
  • their woodland ante-chambers plebeian deities were kept lingering. For
  • be it known, that in due time we met with several decayed, broken down
  • demi-gods: magnificos of no mark in Mardi; having no temples wherein to
  • feast personal admirers, or spiritual devotees. They wandered about
  • forlorn and friendless. And oftentimes in their dinnerless despair
  • hugely gluttonized, and would fain have grown fat, by reflecting upon
  • the magnificence of their genealogies. But poor fellows! like shabby
  • Scotch lords in London in King James's time, the very multitude of them
  • confounded distinction. And since they could show no rent-roll, they
  • were permitted to fume unheeded.
  • Upon the whole, so numerous were living and breathing gods in Mardi,
  • that I held my divinity but cheaply. And seeing such a host of
  • immortals, and hearing of multitudes more, purely spiritual in their
  • nature, haunting woodlands and streams; my views of theology grew
  • strangely confused; I began to bethink me of the Jew that rejected the
  • Talmud, and his all-permeating principle, to which Goethe and others
  • have subscribed.
  • Instead, then, of being struck with the audacity of endeavoring to palm
  • myself off as a god--the way in which the thing first impressed me--I
  • now perceived that I might be a god as much as I pleased, and yet not
  • whisk a lion's tail after all at least on that special account.
  • As for Media's reception, its graciousness was not wholly owing to the
  • divine character imputed to me. His, he believed to be the same. But to
  • a whim, a freakishness in his soul, which led him to fancy me as one
  • among many, not as one with no peer.
  • But the apparent unconcern of King Media with respect to my godship, by
  • no means so much surprised me, as his unaffected indifference to my
  • amazing voyage from the sun; his indifference to the sun itself; and all
  • the wonderful circumstances that must have attended my departure.
  • Whether he had ever been there himself, that he regarded a solar trip
  • with so much unconcern, almost became a question in my mind. Certain it
  • is, that as a mere traveler he must have deemed me no very great
  • prodigy.
  • My surprise at these things was enhanced by reflecting, that to the
  • people of the Archipelago the map of Mardi was the map of the world.
  • With the exception of certain islands out of sight and at an indefinite
  • distance, they had no certain knowledge of any isles but their own.
  • And, no long time elapsed ere I had still additional reasons to cease
  • wondering at the easy faith accorded to the story which I had given of
  • myself. For these Mardians were familiar with still greater marvels than
  • mine; verily believing in prodigies of all sorts. Any one of them put my
  • exploits to the blush.
  • Look to thy ways then, Taji, thought I, and carry not thy crest too
  • high. Of a surety, thou hast more peers than inferiors. Thou art
  • overtopped all round. Bear thyself discreetly and not haughtily, Taji.
  • It will not answer to give thyself airs. Abstain from all consequential
  • allusions to the other world, and the genteel deities among whom thou
  • hast circled. Sport not too jauntily thy raiment, because it is novel in
  • Mardi; nor boast of the fleetness of thy Chamois, because it is unlike a
  • canoe. Vaunt not of thy pedigree, Taji; for Media himself will measure
  • it with thee there by the furlong. Be not a "snob," Taji.
  • So then, weighing all things well, and myself severely, I resolved to
  • follow my Mentor's wise counsel; neither arrogating aught, nor abating
  • of just dues; but circulating freely, sociably, and frankly, among the
  • gods, heroes, high_ priests, kings, and gentlemen, that made up the
  • principalities of Mardi.
  • CHAPTER LVIII Mardi By Night And Yillah By Day
  • During the night following our arrival, many dreams were no doubt dreamt
  • in Odo. But my thoughts were wakeful. And while all others slept,
  • obeying a restless impulse, I stole without into the magical starlight.
  • There are those who in a strange land ever love to view it by night.
  • It has been said, that the opening in the groves where was situated
  • Media's city, was elevated above the surrounding plains. Hence was
  • commanded a broad reach of prospect.
  • Far and wide was deep low-sobbing repose of man and nature. The groves
  • were motionless; and in the meadows, like goblins, the shadows advanced
  • and retreated. Full before me, lay the Mardian fleet of isles,
  • profoundly at anchor within their coral harbor. Near by was one belted
  • round by a frothy luminous reef, wherein it lay, like Saturn in its
  • ring.
  • From all their summits, went up a milk-white smoke, as from Indian
  • wigwams in the hazy harvest-moon. And floating away, these vapors
  • blended with the faint mist, as of a cataract, hovering over the
  • circumvallating reef. Far beyond all, and far into the infinite night,
  • surged the jet-black ocean.
  • But how tranquil the wide lagoon, which mirrored the burning spots in
  • heaven! Deep down into its innermost heart penetrated the slanting rays
  • of Hesperus like a shaft of light, sunk far into mysterious Golcondas,
  • where myriad gnomes seemed toiling. Soon a light breeze rippled the
  • water, and the shaft was seen no more. But the moon's bright wake was
  • still revealed: a silver track, tipping every wave-crest in its course,
  • till each seemed a pearly, scroll-prowed nautilus, buoyant with some
  • elfin crew.
  • From earth to heaven! High above me was Night's shadowy bower,
  • traversed, vine-like, by the Milky Way, and heavy with golden
  • clusterings. Oh stars! oh eyes, that see me, wheresoe'er I roam: serene,
  • intent, inscrutable for aye, tell me Sybils, what I am.--Wondrous worlds
  • on worlds! Lo, round and round me, shining, awful spells: all glorious,
  • vivid constellations, God's diadem ye are! To you, ye stars, man owes
  • his subtlest raptures, thoughts unspeakable, yet full of faith.
  • But how your mild effulgence stings the boding heart. Am I a murderer,
  • stars?
  • Hours pass. The starry trance is departed. Long waited for, the dawn now
  • comes.
  • First, breaking along the waking face; peeping from out the languid
  • lids; then shining forth in longer glances; till, like the sun, up comes
  • the soul, and sheds its rays abroad.
  • When thus my Yillah did daily dawn, how she lit up my world; tinging
  • more rosily the roseate clouds, that in her summer cheek played to and
  • fro, like clouds in Italian air.
  • CHAPTER LIX Their Morning Meal
  • Not wholly is our world made up of bright stars and bright eyes: so now
  • to our story.
  • A conscientious host should ever be up betimes, to look after the
  • welfare of his guests, and see to it that their day begin auspiciously.
  • King Media announced the advent of the sun, by rustling at my bower's
  • eaves in person.
  • A repast was spread in an adjoining arbor, which Media's pages had
  • smoothed for our reception, and where his subordinate chiefs were in
  • attendance. Here we reclined upon mats. Balmy and fresh blew the breath
  • of the morning; golden vapors were upon the mountains, silver sheen upon
  • the grass; and the birds were at matins in the groves; their bright
  • plumage flashing into view, here and there, as if some rainbow were
  • crouching in the foliage.
  • Spread before us were viands, served in quaint-shaped, curiously-dyed
  • gourds, not Sevres, but almost as tasteful; and like true porcelain,
  • fire had tempered them. Green and yielding, they are plucked from the
  • tree; and emptied of their pulp, are scratched over with minute marks,
  • like those of a line engraving. The ground prepared, the various figures
  • are carefully etched. And the outlines filled up with delicate
  • punctures, certain vegetable oils are poured over them, for coloring.
  • Filled with a peculiar species of earth, the gourd is now placed in an
  • oven in the ground. And in due time exhumed, emptied of its contents,
  • and washed in the stream, it presents a deep-dyed exterior; every figure
  • distinctly traced and opaque, but the ground semi-transparent. In some
  • cases, owing to the variety of dyes employed, each figure is of a
  • different hue.
  • More glorious goblets than these for the drinking of wine, went never
  • from hand to mouth. Capacious as pitchers, they almost superseded
  • decanters.
  • Now, in a tropical climate, fruit, with light wines, forms the only fit
  • meal of a morning. And with orchards and vineyards forever in sight, who
  • but the Hetman of the Cossacs would desire more? We had plenty of the
  • juice of the grape. But of this hereafter; there are some fine old
  • cellars, and plenty of good cheer in store.
  • During the repast, Media, for a time, was much taken up with our
  • raiment. He begged me to examine for a moment the texture of his right
  • royal robe, and observe how much superior it was to my own. It put my
  • mantle to the blush; being tastefully stained with rare devices in red
  • and black; and bordered with dyed fringes of feathers, and tassels of
  • red birds' claws.
  • Next came under observation the Skyeman's Guayaquil hat; at whose
  • preposterous shape, our host laughed in derision; clapping a great
  • conical calabash upon the head of an attendant, and saying that now he
  • was Jarl. At this, and all similar sallies, Samoa was sure to roar
  • louder than any; though mirth was no constitutional thing with him. But
  • he seemed rejoiced at the opportunity of turning upon us the ridicule,
  • which as a barbarian among whites, he himself had so often experienced.
  • These pleasantries over, King Media very slightly drew himself up, as if
  • to make amends for his previous unbending. He discoursed imperially with
  • his chiefs; nodded his sovereign will to his pages; called for another
  • gourd of wine; in all respects carrying his royalty bravely.
  • The repast concluded, we journeyed to the canoe-house, where we found
  • the little Chamois stabled like a steed. One solitary depredation had
  • been committed. Its sides and bottom had been completely denuded of the
  • minute green barnacles, and short sea-grass, which, like so many
  • leeches, had fastened to our planks during our long, lazy voyage.
  • By the people they had been devoured as dainties.
  • CHAPTER LX Belshazzar On The Bench
  • Now, Media was king of Odo. And from the simplicity of his manners
  • hitherto, and his easy, frank demeanor toward ourselves, had we
  • foolishly doubted that fact, no skepticism could have survived an
  • illustration of it, which this very day we witnessed at noon.
  • For at high noon, Media was wont to don his dignity with his symbols of
  • state; and sit on his judgment divan or throne, to hear and try all
  • causes brought before him, and fulminate his royal decrees.
  • This divan was elevated at one end of a spacious arbor, formed by an
  • avenue of regal palms, which in brave state, held aloft their majestical
  • canopy.
  • The crown of the island prince was of the primitive old Eastern style;
  • in shape, similar, perhaps, to that jauntily sported as a foraging cap
  • by his sacred majesty King Nimrod, who so lustily followed the hounds.
  • It was a plaited turban of red tappa, radiated by the pointed and
  • polished white bones of the Ray-fish. These diverged from a bandeau or
  • fillet of the most precious pearls; brought up from the sea by the
  • deepest diving mermen of Mardi. From the middle of the crown rose a tri-foiled spear-head. And a spear-headed scepter graced the right hand of
  • the king.
  • Now, for all the rant of your democrats, a fine king on a throne is a
  • very fine sight to behold. He looks very much like a god. No wonder that
  • his more dutiful subjects so swore, that their good lord and master King
  • Media was demi-divine.
  • A king on his throne! Ah, believe me, ye Gracchi, ye Acephali, ye
  • Levelers, it is something worth seeing, be sure; whether beheld at
  • Babylon the Tremendous, when Nebuchadnezzar was crowned; at old Scone in
  • the days of Macbeth; at Rheims, among Oriflammes, at the coronation of
  • Louis le Grand; at Westminster Abbey, when the gentlemanly George doffed
  • his beaver for a diadem; or under the soft shade of palm trees on an
  • isle in the sea.
  • Man lording it over man, man kneeling to man, is a spectacle that
  • Gabriel might well travel hitherward to behold; for never did he behold
  • it in heaven. But Darius giving laws to the Medes and the Persians, or
  • the conqueror of Bactria with king-cattle yoked to his car, was not a
  • whit more sublime, than Beau Brummel magnificently ringing for his
  • valet.
  • A king on his throne! It is Jupiter nodding in the councils of Olympus;
  • Satan, seen among the coronets in Hell.
  • A king on his throne! It is the sun over a mountain; the sun over law-giving Sinai; the sun in our system: planets, duke-like, dancing
  • attendance, and baronial satellites in waiting.
  • A king on his throne! After all, but a gentleman seated. And thus sat
  • the good lord, King Media.
  • Time passed. And after trying and dismissing several minor affairs,
  • Media called for certain witnesses to testify concerning one Jiromo, a
  • foolhardy wight, who had been silly enough to plot against the majesty
  • now sitting judge and jury upon him.
  • His guilt was clear. And the witnesses being heard, from a bunch of palm
  • plumes Media taking a leaf, placed it in the hand of a runner or
  • pursuivant, saying, "This to Jiromo, where he is prisoned; with his
  • king's compliments; say we here wait for his head."
  • It was doffed like a turban before a Dey, and brought back on the
  • instant.
  • Now came certain lean-visaged, poverty-stricken, and hence suspicious-looking varlets, grumbling and growling, and amiable as Bruin. They came
  • muttering some wild jargon about "bulwarks," "bulkheads," "cofferdams,"
  • "safeguards," "noble charters," "shields," and "paladiums," "great and
  • glorious birthrights," and other unintelligible gibberish.
  • Of the pursuivants, these worthies asked audience of Media.
  • "Go, kneel at the throne," was the answer.
  • "Our knee-pans are stiff with sciatics," was the rheumatic reply.
  • "An artifice to keep on your legs," said the pursuivants.
  • And advancing they salamed, and told Media the excuse of those sour-looking varlets. Whereupon my lord commanded them to down on their
  • marrow-bones instanter, either before him or the headsman, whichsoever
  • they pleased.
  • They preferred the former. And as they there kneeled, in vain did men
  • with sharp ears (who abound in all courts) prick their auriculars, to
  • list to that strange crackling and firing off of bone balls and sockets,
  • ever incident to the genuflections of rheumatic courtiers.
  • In a row, then, these selfsame knee-pans did kneel before the king; who
  • eyed them as eagles in air do goslings on dunghills; or hunters, hounds
  • crouching round their calves.
  • "Your prayer?" said Media.
  • It was a petition, that thereafter all differences between man and man
  • in Ode, together with all alleged offenses against the state, might be
  • tried by twelve good men and true. These twelve to be unobnoxious to the
  • party or parties concerned; their peers; and previously unbiased
  • touching the matter at issue. Furthermore, that unanimity in these
  • twelve should be indispensable to a verdict; and no dinner be vouchsafed
  • till unanimity came.
  • Loud and long laughed King Media in scorn.
  • "This be your judge," he cried, swaying his scepter. "What! are twelve
  • wise men more wise than one? or will twelve fools, put together, make
  • one sage? Are twelve honest men more honest than one? or twelve knaves
  • less knavish than one? And if, of twelve men, three be fools, and three
  • wise, three knaves, and three upright, how obtain real unanimity from
  • such?
  • "But if twelve judges be better than one, then are twelve hundred better
  • than twelve. But take the whole populace for a judge, and you will long
  • wait for a unanimous verdict.
  • "If upon a thing dubious, there be little unanimity in the conflicting
  • opinions of one man's mind, how expect it in the uproar of twelve
  • puzzled brains? though much unanimity be found in twelve hungry
  • stomachs.
  • "Judges unobnoxious to the accused! Apply it to a criminal case. Ha! ha!
  • if peradventure a Cacti be rejected, because he had seen the accused
  • commit the crime for which he is arraigned. Then, his mind would be
  • biased: no impartiality from him! Or your testy accused might object to
  • another, because of his tomahawk nose, or a cruel squint of the eye.
  • "Of all follies the most foolish! Know ye from me, that true peers
  • render not true verdicts. Jiromo was a rebel. Had I tried him by his
  • peers, I had tried him by rebels; and the rebel had rebelled to some
  • purpose.
  • "Away! As unerring justice dwells in a unity, and as one judge will at
  • last judge the world beyond all appeal; so--though often here below
  • justice be hard to attain--does man come nearest the mark, when he
  • imitates that model divine. Hence, one judge is better than twelve."
  • "And as Justice, in ideal, is ever painted high lifted above the crowd;
  • so, from the exaltation of his rank, an honest king is the best of those
  • unical judges, which individually are better than twelve. And therefore
  • am I, King Media, the best judge in this land."
  • "Subjects! so long as I live, I will rule you and judge you alone. And
  • though you here kneeled before me till you grew into the ground, and
  • there took root, no yea to your petition will you get from this throne.
  • I am king: ye are slaves. Mine to command: yours to obey. And this hour
  • I decree, that henceforth no gibberish of bulwarks and bulkheads be
  • heard in this land. For a dead bulwark and a bulkhead, to dam off
  • sedition, will I make of that man, who again but breathes those bulky
  • words. Ho! spears! see that these knee-pans here kneel till set of sun."
  • High noon was now passed; and removing his crown, and placing it on the
  • dais for the kneelers to look at during their devotions, King Media
  • departed from that place, and once more played the agreeable host.
  • CHAPTER LXI An Incognito
  • For the rest of that day, and several that followed, we were continually
  • receiving visits from the neighboring islands; whose inhabitants in
  • fleets and flotillas flocked round Odo to behold the guests of its lord.
  • Among them came many messengers from the neighboring kings with soft
  • speeches and gifts.
  • But it were needless to detail our various interviews, or relate in what
  • manifold ways, the royal strangers gave token of their interest
  • concerning us.
  • Upon the third day, however, there was noticed a mysterious figure, like
  • the inscrutable incognitos sometimes encountered, crossing the tower-shadowed Plaza of Assignations at Lima. It was enveloped in a dark robe
  • of tappa, so drawn and plaited about the limbs; and with one hand, so
  • wimpled about the face, as only to expose a solitary eye. But that eye
  • was a world. Now it was fixed upon Yillah with a sinister glance, and
  • now upon me, but with a different expression. However great the crowd,
  • however tumultuous, that fathomless eye gazed on; till at last it seemed
  • no eye, but a spirit, forever prying into my soul. Often I strove to
  • approach it, but it would evade me, soon reappearing.
  • Pointing out the apparition to Media, I intreated him to take means to
  • fix it, that my suspicions might be dispelled, as to its being
  • incorporeal. He replied that, by courtesy, incognitos were sacred.
  • Insomuch that the close-plaited robe and the wimple were secure as a
  • castle. At last, to my relief, the phantom disappeared, and was seen no
  • more.
  • Numerous and fervent the invitations received to return the calls
  • wherewith we were honored. But for the present we declined them;
  • preferring to establish ourselves firmly in the heart of Media, ere
  • encountering the vicissitudes of roaming. In a multitude of
  • acquaintances is less security, than in one faithful friend.
  • Now, while these civilities were being received, and on the fourth
  • morning after our arrival, there landed on the beach three black-eyed
  • damsels, deep brunettes, habited in long variegated robes, and with gay
  • blossoms on their heads.
  • With many salams, the strangers were ushered into my presence by an old
  • white-haired servitor of Media's, who with a parting congé murmured,
  • "From Queen Hautia," then departed. Surprised, I stood mute, and
  • welcomed them.
  • The first, with many smiles and blandishments, waved before me a many-tinted Iris: the flag-flower streaming with pennons. Advancing, the
  • second then presented three rose-hued purple-veined Circea flowers, the
  • dew still clinging to them. The third placed in my hand a moss-rose bud;
  • then, a Venus-car.
  • "Thanks for your favors! now your message."
  • Starting at this reception, graciously intended, they conferred a
  • moment; when the Iris-bearer said in winning phrase, "We come from
  • Hautia, whose moss-rose you hold."
  • "All thanks to Hautia then; the bud is very fragrant."
  • Then she pointed to the Venus-car.
  • "This too is sweet; thanks to Hautia for her flowers. Pray, bring me
  • more."
  • "He mocks our mistress," and gliding from me, they waved witch-hazels,
  • leaving me alone and wondering.
  • Informing Media of this scene, he smiled; threw out queer hints of
  • Hautia; but knew not what her message meant.
  • At first this affair occasioned me no little uneasiness, with much
  • matter for marveling; but in the novel pleasure of our sojourn in Odo,
  • it soon slipped from my mind; nor for some time, did I again hear aught
  • of Queen Hautia.
  • CHAPTER LXII Taji Retires From The World
  • After a while, when the strangers came not in shoals as before, I
  • proposed to our host, a stroll over his dominions; desirous of beholding
  • the same, and secretly induced by the hope of selecting an abode, more
  • agreeable to my fastidious taste, than the one already assigned me.
  • The ramble over--a pleasant one it was--it resulted in a determination
  • on my part to quit Odo. Yet not to go very far; only ten or twelve
  • yards, to a little green tuft of an islet; one of many, which here and
  • there, all round the island, nestled like birds' nests in the branching
  • boughs of the coral grove, whose roots laid hold of the foundations of
  • the deep. Between these islets and the shore, extended shelving ledges,
  • with shallows above, just sufficient to float a canoe. One of these
  • islets was wooded and wined; an arbor in the sea. And here, Media
  • permitting, I decided to dwell.
  • Not long was Media in complying; nor long, ere my retreat was in
  • readiness. Laced together, the twisting boughs were closely thatched.
  • And thatched were the sides also, with deep crimson pandannus leaves;
  • whose long, forked spears, lifted by the breeze, caused the whole place
  • to blaze, as with flames. Canes, laid on palm trunks, formed the floor.
  • How elastic! In vogue all over Odo, among the chiefs, it imparted such a
  • buoyancy to the person, that to this special cause may be imputed in
  • good part the famous fine spirits of the nobles.
  • Hypochondriac! essay the elastic flooring! It shall so pleasantly and
  • gently jolt thee, as to shake up, and pack off the stagnant humors
  • mantling thy pool-like soul.
  • Such was my dwelling. But I make no mention of sundry little
  • appurtenances of tropical housekeeping: calabashes, cocoanut shells, and
  • rolls of fine tappa; till with Yillah seated at last in my arbor, I
  • looked round, and wanted for naught.
  • But what of Jarl and Samoa? Why Jarl must needs be fanciful, as well as
  • myself. Like a bachelor in chambers, he settled down right opposite to
  • me, on the main land, in a little wigwam in the grove.
  • But Samoa, following not his comrade's example, still tarried in the
  • camp of the Hittites and Jebusites of Odo. Beguiling men of their
  • leisure by his marvelous stories: and maidens of their hearts by his
  • marvelous wiles.
  • When I chose, I was completely undisturbed in my arbor; an ukase of
  • Media's forbidding indiscriminate intrusion. But thrice in the day came
  • a garrulous old man with my viands.
  • Thus sequestered, however, I could not entirely elude the pryings of the
  • people of the neighboring islands; who often passed by, slowly paddling,
  • and earnestly regarding my retreat. But gliding along at a distance, and
  • never essaying a landing, their occasional vicinity troubled me but
  • little. But now and then of an evening, when thick and fleet the shadows
  • were falling, dim glimpses of a canoe would be spied; hovering about the
  • place like a ghost. And once, in the stillness of the night, hearing the
  • near ripple of a prow, I sallied forth, but the phantom quickly
  • departed.
  • That night, Yillah shuddered as she slept. "The whirl-pool," she
  • murmured, "sweet mosses." Next day she was lost in reveries, plucking
  • pensive hyacinths, or gazing intently into the lagoon.
  • CHAPTER LXIII Odo And Its Lord
  • Time now to enter upon some further description of the island and its
  • lord.
  • And first for Media: a gallant gentleman and king. From a goodly stock
  • he came. In his endless pedigree, reckoning deities by decimals,
  • innumerable kings, and scores of great heroes, chiefs, and priests. Nor
  • in person, did he belie his origin. No far-descended dwarf was he, the
  • least of a receding race. He stood like a palm tree; about whose
  • acanthus capital droops not more gracefully the silken fringes, than
  • Media's locks upon his noble brow. Strong was his arm to wield the club,
  • or hurl the javelin; and potent, I ween, round a maiden's waist.
  • Thus much here for Media. Now comes his isle.
  • Our pleasant ramble found it a little round world by itself; full of
  • beauties as a garden; chequered by charming groves; watered by roving
  • brooks; and fringed all round by a border of palm trees, whose roots
  • drew nourishment from the water. But though abounding in other quarters
  • of the Archipelago, not a solitary bread-fruit grew in Odo. A noteworthy
  • circumstance, observable in these regions, where islands close
  • adjoining, so differ in their soil, that certain fruits growing genially
  • in one, are foreign to another. But Odo was famed for its guavas, whose
  • flavor was likened to the flavor of new-blown lips; and for its grapes,
  • whose juices prompted many a laugh and many a groan.
  • Beside the city where Media dwelt, there were few other clusters of
  • habitations in Odo. The higher classes living, here and there, in
  • separate households; but not as eremites. Some buried themselves in the
  • cool, quivering bosoms of the groves. Others, fancying a marine
  • vicinity, dwelt hard by the beach in little cages of bamboo; whence of
  • mornings they sallied out with jocund cries, and went plunging into the
  • refreshing bath, whose frothy margin was the threshold of their
  • dwellings. Others still, like birds, built their nests among the sylvan
  • nooks of the elevated interior; whence all below, and hazy green, lay
  • steeped in languor the island's throbbing heart.
  • Thus dwelt the chiefs and merry men of mark. The common sort, including
  • serfs, and Helots, war-captives held in bondage, lived in secret places,
  • hard to find. Whence it came, that, to a stranger, the whole isle looked
  • care-free and beautiful. Deep among the ravines and the rocks, these
  • beings lived in noisome caves, lairs for beasts, not human homes; or
  • built them coops of rotten boughs--living trees were banned them--whose
  • mouldy hearts hatched vermin. Fearing infection of some plague, born of
  • this filth, the chiefs of Odo seldom passed that way and looking round
  • within their green retreats, and pouring out their wine, and plucking
  • from orchards of the best, marveled how these swine could grovel in the
  • mire, and wear such sallow cheeks. But they offered no sweet homes; from
  • that mire they never sought to drag them out; they open threw no
  • orchard; and intermitted not the mandates that condemned their drudges
  • to a life of deaths. Sad sight! to see those round-shouldered Helots,
  • stooping in their trenches: artificial, three in number, and concentric:
  • the isle well nigh surrounding. And herein, fed by oozy loam, and kindly
  • dew from heaven, and bitter sweat from men, grew as in hot-beds the
  • nutritious Taro.
  • Toil is man's allotment; toil of brain, or toil of hands, or a grief
  • that's more than either, the grief and sin of idleness. But when man
  • toils and slays himself for masters who withhold the life he gives to
  • them--then, then, the soul screams out, and every sinew cracks. So with
  • these poor serfs. And few of them could choose but be the brutes they
  • seemed.
  • Now needs it to be said, that Odo was no land of pleasure unalloyed, and
  • plenty without a pause?--Odo, in whose lurking-places infants turned
  • from breasts, whence flowed no nourishment.--Odo, in whose inmost
  • haunts, dark groves were brooding, passing which you heard most dismal
  • cries, and voices cursing Media. There, men were scourged; their crime,
  • a heresy; the heresy, that Media was no demigod. For this they shrieked.
  • Their fathers shrieked before; their fathers, who, tormented, said,
  • "Happy we to groan, that our children's children may be glad." But their
  • children's children howled. Yet these, too, echoed previous generations,
  • and loudly swore, "The pit that's dug for us may prove another's grave."
  • But let all pass. To look at, and to roam about of holidays, Odo seemed
  • a happy land. The palm-trees waved--though here and there you marked one
  • sear and palsy-smitten; the flowers bloomed--though dead ones moldered
  • in decay; the waves ran up the strand in glee--though, receding, they
  • sometimes left behind bones mixed with shells.
  • But else than these, no sign of death was seen throughout the isle. Did
  • men in Odo live for aye? Was Ponce de Leon's fountain there? For near
  • and far, you saw no ranks and files of graves, no generations harvested
  • in winrows. In Odo, no hard-hearted nabob slept beneath a gentle
  • epitaph; no _requiescat-in-pace_ mocked a sinner damned; no _memento-mori_ admonished men to live while yet they might. Here Death hid his
  • skull; and hid it in the sea, the common sepulcher of Odo. Not dust to
  • dust, but dust to brine; not hearses but canoes. For all who died upon
  • that isle were carried out beyond the outer reef, and there were buried
  • with their sires' sires. Hence came the thought, that of gusty nights,
  • when round the isles, and high toward heaven, flew the white reef's
  • rack and foam, that then and there, kept chattering watch and ward, the
  • myriads that were ocean-tombed.
  • But why these watery obsequies?
  • Odo was but a little isle, and must the living make way for the dead,
  • and Life's small colony be dislodged by Death's grim hosts; as the gaunt
  • tribes of Tamerlane o'erspread the tented pastures of the Khan?
  • And now, what follows, said these Islanders: "Why sow corruption in the
  • soil which yields us life? We would not pluck our grapes from over
  • graves. This earth's an urn for flowers, not for ashes."
  • They said that Oro, the supreme, had made a cemetery of the sea.
  • And what more glorious grave? Was Mausolus more sublimely urned? Or do
  • the minster-lamps that burn before the tomb of Charlemagne, show more of
  • pomp, than all the stars, that blaze above the shipwrecked mariner?
  • But no more of the dead; men shrug their shoulders, and love not their
  • company; though full soon we shall all have them for fellows.
  • CHAPTER LXIV Yillah A Phantom
  • For a time we were happy in Odo: Yillah and I in our islet. Nor did the
  • pearl on her bosom glow more rosily than the roses in her cheeks; though
  • at intervals they waned and departed; and deadly pale was her glance,
  • when she murmured of the whirlpool and mosses. As pale my soul,
  • bethinking me of Aleema the priest.
  • But day by day, did her spell weave round me its magic, and all the
  • hidden things of her being grew more lovely and strange. Did I commune
  • with a spirit? Often I thought that Paradise had overtaken me on earth,
  • and that Yillah was verily an angel, and hence the mysteries that
  • hallowed her.
  • But how fleeting our joys. Storms follow bright dawnings.--Long memories
  • of short-lived scenes, sad thoughts of joyous hours--how common are ye
  • to all mankind. When happy, do we pause and say--"Lo, thy felicity, my
  • soul?" No: happiness seldom seems happiness, except when looked back
  • upon from woes. A flowery landscape, you must come out of, to behold.
  • Sped the hours, the days, the one brief moment of our joys. Fairy bower
  • in the fair lagoon, scene of sylvan ease and heart's repose,--Oh,
  • Yillah, Yillah! All the woods repeat the sound, the wild, wild woods of
  • my wild soul. Yillah! Yillah! cry the small strange voices in me, and
  • evermore, and far and deep, they echo on.
  • Days passed. When one morning I found the arbor vacant. Gone! A dream. I
  • closed my eyes, and would have dreamed her back. In vain. Starting, I
  • called upon her name; but none replied. Fleeing from the islet, I gained
  • the neighboring shore, and searched among the woods; and my comrades
  • meeting, besought their aid. But idle all. No glimpse of aught, save
  • trees and flowers. Then Media was sought out; the event made known; and
  • quickly, bands were summoned to range the isle.
  • Noon came; but no Yillah. When Media averred she was no longer in Odo.
  • Whither she was gone, or how, he knew not; nor could any imagine.
  • At this juncture, there chanced to arrive certain messengers from
  • abroad; who, presuming that all was well with Taji, came with renewed
  • invitations to visit various pleasant places round about. Among these,
  • came Queen Hautia's heralds, with their Iris flag, once more bringing
  • flowers. But they came and went unheeded.
  • Setting out to return, these envoys were accompanied by numerous
  • followers of Media, dispatched to the neighboring islands, to seek out
  • the missing Yillah. But three days passed; and, one by one, they all
  • returned; and stood before me silently.
  • For a time I raved. Then, falling into outer repose, lived for a space
  • in moods and reveries, with eyes that knew no closing, one glance
  • forever fixed.
  • They strove to rouse me. Girls danced and sang; and tales of fairy times
  • were told; of monstrous imps, and youths enchanted; of groves and
  • gardens in the sea. Yet still I moved not, hearing all, yet noting
  • naught. Media cried, "For shame, oh Taji; thou, a god?" and placed a
  • spear in my nerveless hand. And Jarl loud called upon me to awake. Samoa
  • marveled.
  • Still sped the days. And at length, my memory was restored. The thoughts
  • of things broke over me like returning billows on a beach long bared. A
  • rush, a foam of recollections!--Sweet Yillah gone, and I bereaved.
  • Another interval, and that mood was past. Misery became a memory. The
  • keen pang a deep vibration. The remembrance seemed the thing remembered;
  • though bowed with sadness. There are thoughts that lie and glitter deep:
  • tearful pearls beneath life's sea, that surges still, and rolls sunlit,
  • whatever it may hide. Common woes, like fluids, mix all round. Not so
  • with that other grief. Some mourners load the air with lamentations; but
  • the loudest notes are struck from hollows. Their tears flow fast: but
  • the deep spring only wells.
  • At last I turned to Media, saying I must hie from Odo, and rove
  • throughout all Mardi; for Yillah might yet be found.
  • But hereafter, in words, little more of the maiden, till perchance her
  • fate be learned.
  • CHAPTER LXV Taji Makes Three Acquaintances
  • Down to this period, I had restrained Samoa from wandering to the
  • neighboring islands, though he had much desired it, in compliance with
  • the invitations continually received. But now I informed both him, and
  • his comrade, of the tour I purposed; desiring their company.
  • Upon the announcement of my intention to depart, to my no small surprise
  • Media also proposed to accompany me: a proposition gladly embraced. It
  • seems, that for some reason, he had not as yet extended his travels to
  • the more distant islands. Hence the voyage in prospect was particularly
  • agreeable to him. Nor did he forbear any pains to insure its prosperity;
  • assuring me, furthermore, that its object must eventually be crowned
  • with success. "I myself am interested in this pursuit," said he; "and
  • trust me, Yillah will be found."
  • For the tour of the lagoon, the docile Chamois was proposed; but Media
  • dissented; saying, that it befitted not the lord of Odo to voyage in the
  • equipage of his guest. Therefore, three canoes were selected from his
  • own royal fleet.
  • One for ourselves, and a trio of companions whom he purposed introducing
  • to my notice; the rest were reserved for attendants.
  • Thanks to Media's taste and heedfulness, the strangers above mentioned
  • proved truly acceptable.
  • The first was Mohi, or Braid-Beard, so called from the manner in which
  • he wore that appendage, exceedingly long and gray. He was a venerable
  • teller of stories and legends, one of the Keepers of the Chronicles of
  • the Kings of Mardi.
  • The second was Babbalanja, a man of a mystical aspect, habited in a
  • voluminous robe. He was learned in Mardian lore; much given to
  • quotations from ancient and obsolete authorities: the Ponderings of Old
  • Bardianna: the Pandects of Alla-Malolla.
  • Third and last, was Yoomy, or the Warbler. A youthful, long-haired,
  • blue-eyed minstrel; all fits and starts; at times, absent of mind, and
  • wan of cheek; but always very neat and pretty in his apparel; wearing
  • the most becoming of turbans, a Bird of Paradise feather its plume, and
  • sporting the gayest of sashes. Most given was Yoomy to amorous melodies,
  • and rondos, and roundelays, very witching to hear. But at times
  • disdaining the oaten reed, like a clarion he burst forth with lusty lays
  • of arms and battle; or, in mournful strains, sounded elegies for
  • departed bards and heroes.
  • Thus much for Yoomy as a minstrel. In other respects, it would be hard
  • to depict him. He was so capricious a mortal; so swayed by contrary
  • moods; so lofty, so humble, so sad, so merry; so made up of a thousand
  • contradictions, that we must e'en let him depict himself as our story
  • progresses. And herein it is hoped he will succeed; since no one in
  • Mardi comprehended him.
  • Now the trio, thus destined for companions on our voyage, had for some
  • time been anxious to take the tour of the Archipelago. In particular,
  • Babbalanja had often expressed the most ardent desire to visit every one
  • of the isles, in quest of some object, mysteriously hinted. He murmured
  • deep concern for my loss, the sincerest sympathy; and pressing my hand
  • more than once, said lowly, "Your pursuit is mine, noble Taji. Where'er
  • you search, I follow."
  • So, too, Yoomy addressed me; but with still more feeling. And something
  • like this, also, Braid-Beard repeated.
  • But to my sorrow, I marked that both Mohi and Babbalanja, especially the
  • last, seemed not so buoyant of hope, concerning lost Yillah, as the
  • youthful Yoomy, and his high-spirited lord, King Media.
  • As our voyage would embrace no small period of time, it behoved King
  • Media to appoint some trustworthy regent, to rule during his absence.
  • This regent was found in Almanni, a stem-eyed, resolute warrior, a
  • kinsman of the king.
  • All things at last in readiness, and the ensuing morning appointed for a
  • start, Media, on the beach, at eventide, when both light and water
  • waned, drew a rude map of the lagoon, to compensate for the obstructions
  • in the way of a comprehensive glance at it from Odo.
  • And thus was sketched the plan of our voyage; which islands first to
  • visit; and which to touch at, when we should be homeward bound.
  • CHAPTER LXVI With A Fair Wind, At Sunrise They Sail
  • True each to his word, up came the sun, and round to my isle came Media.
  • How glorious a morning! The new-born clouds all dappled with gold, and
  • streaked with violet; the sun in high spirits; and the pleasant air
  • cooled overnight by the blending circumambient fountains, forever
  • playing all round the reef; the lagoon within, the coral-rimmed basin,
  • into which they poured, subsiding, hereabouts, into green tranquillity.
  • But what monsters of canoes! Would they devour an innocent voyager?
  • their great black prows curling aloft, and thrown back like trunks of
  • elephants; a dark, snaky length behind, like the sea-serpent's train.
  • The prow of the foremost terminated in a large, open, shark's mouth,
  • garnished with ten rows of pearly human teeth, curiously inserted into
  • the sculptured wood. The gunwale was ornamented with rows of rich
  • spotted Leopard and Tiger-shells; here and there, varied by others, flat
  • and round, and spirally traced; gay serpents petrified in coils. These
  • were imbedded in a grooved margin, by means of a resinous compound,
  • exhaling such spices, that the canoes were odoriferous as the Indian
  • chests of the Maldives.
  • The likeness of the foremost canoe to an elephant, was helped by a sort
  • of canopied Howdah in its stern, of heavy, russet-dyed tappa, tasselled
  • at the corners with long bunches of cocoanut fibres, stained red. These
  • swayed to and fro, like the fox-tails on a Tuscarora robe.
  • But what is this, in the head of the canoe, just under the shark's
  • mouth? A grinning little imp of an image; a ring in its nose; cowrie
  • shells jingling at its ears; with an abominable leer, like that of
  • Silenus reeling on his ass. It was taking its ease; cosily smoking a
  • pipe; its bowl, a duodecimo edition of the face of the smoker. This
  • image looked sternward; everlastingly mocking us.
  • Of these canoes, it may be well to state, that although during our stay
  • in Odo, so many barges and shallops had touched there, nothing similar
  • to Media's had been seen. But inquiring whence his sea-equipage came, we
  • were thereupon taught to reverence the same as antiquities and heir-looms; claw-keeled, dragon-prowed crafts of a bygone generation; at
  • present, superseded in general use by the more swan-like canoes,
  • significant of the advanced stage of marine architecture in Mardi. No
  • sooner was this known, than what had seemed almost hideous in my eyes,
  • became merely grotesque. Nor could I help being greatly delighted with
  • the good old family pride of our host.
  • The upper corners of our sails displayed the family crest of Media;
  • three upright boars' tusks, in an heraldic field argent. A fierce
  • device: Whom rends he?
  • All things in readiness, we glided away: the multitude waving adieu; and
  • our flotilla disposed in the following order.
  • First went the royal Elephant, carrying Media, myself, Jarl, and Samoa;
  • Mohi the Teller of Legends, Babbalanja, and Yoomy, and six vivacious
  • paddlers; their broad paddle-blades carved with the royal boars' tusks,
  • the same tattooed on their chests for a livery.
  • And thus, as Media had promised, we voyaged in state. To crown all,
  • seated sideways in the high, open shark's-mouth of our prow was a little
  • dwarf of a boy, one of Media's pages, a red conch-shell, bugle-wise
  • suspended at his side. Among various other offices, it was the duty of
  • little Vee-Vee to announce the advent of his master, upon drawing near
  • to the islands in our route. Two short bars, projecting from one side of
  • the prow, furnished him the means of ascent to his perch.
  • As we gained the open lagoon with bellied sails, and paddles playing, a
  • sheaf of foam borne upright at our prow; Yoomy, standing where the spicy
  • spray flew over him, stretched forth his hand and cried--"The dawn of
  • day is passed, and Mardi lies all before us: all her isles, and all her
  • lakes; all her stores of good and evil. Storms may come, our barks may
  • drown. But blow before us, all ye winds; give us a lively blast, good
  • clarion; rally round us all our wits; and be this voyage full gayly
  • sailed, for Yillah will yet be found."
  • CHAPTER LXVII Little King Peepi
  • Valapee, or the Isle of Yams, being within plain sight of Media's
  • dominions, we were not very long in drawing nigh to its shores.
  • Two long parallel elevations, rising some three arrow-flights into the
  • air, double-ridge the island's entire length, lapping between, a
  • widening vale, so level withal, that at either extremity, the green of
  • its groves blends with the green of the lagoon; and the isle seems
  • divided by a strait.
  • Within several paces of the beach, our canoes keeled the bottom, and
  • camel-like mutely hinted that we voyagers must dismount.
  • Hereupon, the assembled islanders ran into the water, and with bent
  • shoulders obsequiously desired the honor of transporting us to land. The
  • beach gained, all present wearing robes instantly stripped them to the
  • waist; a naked chest being their salute to kings. Very convenient for
  • the common people, this; their half-clad forms presenting a perpetual
  • and profound salutation.
  • Presently, Peepi, the ruler of Valapee drew near: a boy, hardly ten
  • years old, striding the neck of a burly mute, bearing a long spear erect
  • before him, to which was attached a canopy of five broad banana leaves,
  • new plucked. Thus shaded, little Peepi advanced, steadying himself by
  • the forelock of his bearer.
  • Besides his bright red robe, the young prince wore nothing but the
  • symbol of Valapeean royalty; a string of small, close-fitting, concave
  • shells, coiled and ambushed in his profuse, curly hair; one end falling
  • over his ear, revealing a serpent's head, curiously carved from a
  • nutmeg.
  • Quite proverbial, the unembarrassed air of young slips of royalty. But
  • there was something so surprisingly precocious in this young Peepi, that
  • at first one hardly knew what to conclude.
  • The first compliments over, the company were invited inland to a shady
  • retreat.
  • As we pursued the path, walking between old Mohi the keeper of
  • chronicles and Samoa the Upoluan, Babbalanja besought the former to
  • enlighten a stranger concerning the history of this curious Peepi.
  • Whereupon the chronicler gave us the following account; for all of which
  • he alone is responsible.
  • Peepi, it seems, had been proclaimed king before he was born; his sire
  • dying some few weeks previous to that event; and vacating his divan,
  • declared that he left a monarch behind.
  • Marvels were told of Peepi. Along with the royal dignity, and superadded
  • to the soul possessed in his own proper person, the infant monarch was
  • supposed to have inherited the valiant spirits of some twenty heroes,
  • sages, simpletons, and demi-gods, previously lodged in his sire.
  • Most opulent in spiritual gifts was this lord of Valapee; the legatee,
  • moreover, of numerous anonymous souls, bequeathed to him by their late
  • loyal proprietors. By a slavish act of his convocation of chiefs, he
  • also possessed the reversion of all and singular the immortal spirits,
  • whose first grantees might die intestate in Valapee. Servile, yet
  • audacious senators! thus prospectively to administrate away the
  • inalienable rights of posterity. But while yet unborn, the people of
  • Valapee had been deprived of more than they now sought to wrest from
  • their descendants. And former Peepies, infant and adult, had received
  • homage more profound, than Peepi the Present. Witness the demeanor of
  • the chieftains of old, upon every new investiture of the royal serpent.
  • In a fever of loyalty, they were wont to present themselves before the
  • heir to the isle, to go through with the court ceremony of the Pupera; a
  • curious proceeding, so called: inverted endeavors to assume an erect
  • posture: the nasal organ the base.
  • It was to the frequent practice of this ceremony, that most intelligent
  • observers imputed the flattened noses of the elderly chiefs of the
  • island; who, nevertheless, much gloried therein.
  • It was these chiefs, also, who still observed the old-fashioned custom
  • of retiring from the presence of royalty with their heads between their
  • thighs; so that while advancing in the contrary direction, their faces
  • might be still deferentially turned toward their lord and master. A fine
  • view of him did they obtain. All objects look well through an arch.
  • But to return to Peepi, the inheritor of souls and subjects. It was an
  • article of faith with the people of Valapee, that Peepi not only
  • actually possessed the souls bequeathed to him; but that his own was
  • enriched by their peculiar qualities: The headlong valor of the late
  • Tongatona; the pusillanimous discretion of Blandoo; the cunning of Voyo;
  • the simplicity of Raymonda; the prodigality of Zonoree; the thrift of
  • Titonti.
  • But had all these, and similar opposite qualities, simultaneously acted
  • as motives upon Peepi, certes, he would have been a most pitiable
  • mortal, in a ceaseless eddy of resolves, incapable of a solitary act.
  • But blessed be the gods, it was otherwise. Though it fared little better
  • for his subjects as it was. His assorted souls were uppermost and active
  • in him, one by one. Today, valiant Tongatona ruled the isle, meditating
  • wars and invasions; tomorrow, thrice discreet Blandoo, who, disbanding
  • the levies, turned his attention to the terraces of yams. And so on in
  • rotation to the end.
  • Whence, though capable of action, Peepi, by reason of these revolving
  • souls in him, was one of the most unreliable of beings. What the open-handed Zonoree promised freely to-day, the parsimonious Titonti withheld
  • to-morrow; and forever Raymonda was annulling the doings of Voyo; and
  • Voyo the doings of Raymonda.
  • What marvel then, that in Valapee all was legislative uproar and
  • confusion; advance and retreat; abrogations and revivals; foundations
  • without superstructures; nothing permanent but the island itself.
  • Nor were there those in the neighboring countries, who failed to reap
  • profit from this everlasting transition state of the affairs of the
  • kingdom. All boons from Peepi were entreated when the prodigal Zonoree
  • was lord of the ascendant. And audacious claims were urged upon the
  • state when the pusillanimous Blandoo shrank from the thought of
  • resisting them.
  • Thus subject to contrary impulses, over which he had not the faintest
  • control, Peepi was plainly denuded of all moral obligation to virtue. He
  • was no more a free agent, than the heart which beat in his bosom.
  • Wherefore, his complaisant parliament had passed a law, recognizing that
  • curious, but alarming fact; solemnly proclaiming, that King Peepi was
  • minus a conscience. Agreeable to truth. But when they went further, and
  • vowed by statute, that Peepi could do no wrong, they assuredly did
  • violence to the truth; besides, making a sad blunder in their logic. For
  • far from possessing an absolute aversion to evil, by his very nature it
  • was the hardest thing in the world for Peepi to do right.
  • Taking all these things into consideration, then, no wonder that this
  • wholly irresponsible young prince should be a lad of considerable
  • assurance, and the easiest manners imaginable.
  • CHAPTER LXVIII How Teeth Were Regarded In Valapee
  • Coiling through the thickets, like the track of a serpent, wound along
  • the path we pursued. And ere long we came to a spacious grove,
  • embowering an oval arbor. Here, we reclined at our ease, and
  • refreshments were served.
  • Little worthy of mention occurred, save this. Happening to catch a
  • glimpse of the white even teeth of Hohora one of our attendants, King
  • Peepi coolly begged of Media the favor, to have those same dentals drawn
  • on the spot, and presented to him.
  • Now human teeth, extracted, are reckoned among the most valuable
  • ornaments in Mardi. So open wide thy strong box, Hohora, and show thy
  • treasures. What a gallant array! standing shoulder to shoulder, without
  • a hiatus between. A complete set of jewelry, indeed, thought Peepi. But,
  • it seems, not destined for him; Media leaving it to the present
  • proprietor, whether his dentals should change owners or not.
  • And here, to prepare the way for certain things hereafter to be
  • narrated, something farther needs be said concerning the light in which
  • men's molars are regarded in Mardi.
  • Strung together, they are sported for necklaces, or hung in drops from
  • the ear; they are wrought into dice; in lieu of silken locks, are
  • exchanged for love tokens.
  • As in all lands, men smite their breasts, and tear their hair, when
  • transported with grief; so, in some countries, teeth are stricken out
  • under the sway of similar emotions. To a very great extent, this was
  • once practiced in the Hawaiian Islands, ere idol and altar went down.
  • Still living in Oahu, are many old chiefs, who were present at the
  • famous obsequies of their royal old generalissimo, Tammahammaha, when
  • there is no telling how many pounds of ivory were cast upon his grave.
  • Ah! had the regal white elephants of Siam been there, doubtless they had
  • offered up their long, hooked tusks, whereon they impale the leopards,
  • their foes; and the unicorn had surrendered that fixed bayonet in his
  • forehead; and the imperial Cachalot-whale, the long chain of white
  • towers in his jaw; yea, over that grim warrior's grave, the mooses, and
  • elks, and stags, and fallow-deer had stacked their antlers, as soldiers
  • their arms on the field.
  • Terrific shade of tattooed Tammahammaha! if, from a vile dragon's
  • molars, rose mailed men, what heroes shall spring from the cannibal
  • canines once pertaining to warriors themselves!--Am I the witch of
  • Endor, that I conjure up this ghost? Or, King Saul, that I so quake at
  • the sight? For, lo! roundabout me Tammahammaha's tattooing expands, till
  • all the sky seems a tiger's skin. But now, the spotted phantom sweeps
  • by; as a man-of-war's main-sail, cloud-like, blown far to leeward in a
  • gale.
  • Banquo down, we return.
  • In Valapee, prevails not the barbarous Hindoo custom of offering up
  • widows to the shades of their lords; for, bereaved, the widows there
  • marry again. Nor yet prevails the savage Hawaiian custom of offering up
  • teeth to the manes of the dead; for, at the decease of a friend, the
  • people rob not their own mouths to testify their woe. On the contrary,
  • they extract the teeth from the departed, distributing them among the
  • mourners for memorial legacies; as elsewhere, silver spoons are
  • bestowed.
  • From the high value ascribed to dentals throughout the archipelago of
  • Mardi, and also from their convenient size, they are circulated as
  • money; strings of teeth being regarded by these people very much as
  • belts of wampum among the Winnebagoes of the North; or cowries, among
  • the Bengalese. So, that in Valapee the very beggars are born with a snug
  • investment in their mouths; too soon, however, to be appropriated by
  • their lords; leaving them toothless for the rest of their days, and
  • forcing them to diet on poee-pudding and banana blanc-mange.
  • As a currency, teeth are far less clumsy than cocoanuts; which, among
  • certain remote barbarians, circulate for coin; one nut being equivalent,
  • perhaps, to a penny. The voyager who records the fact, chuckles over it
  • hugely; as evincing the simplicity of those heathens; not knowing that
  • he himself was the simpleton; since that currency of theirs was
  • purposely devised by the men, to check the extravagance of their women;
  • cocoanuts, for spending money, being such a burden to carry.
  • It only remains to be added, that the most solemn oath of a native of
  • Valapee is that sworn by his tooth. "By this tooth," said Bondo to
  • Noojoomo, "by this tooth I swear to be avenged upon thee, oh Noojoomo!"
  • CHAPTER LXIX The Company Discourse, And Braid-Beard Rehearses A Legend
  • Finding in Valapee no trace of her whom we sought, and but little
  • pleased with the cringing demeanor of the people, and the wayward
  • follies of Peepi their lord, we early withdrew from the isle.
  • As we glided away, King Media issued a sociable decree. He declared it
  • his royal pleasure, that throughout the voyage, all stiffness and state
  • etiquette should be suspended: nothing must occur to mar the freedom of
  • the party. To further this charming plan, he doffed his symbols of
  • royalty, put off his crown, laid aside his scepter, and assured us that
  • he would not wear them again, except when we landed; and not invariably,
  • then.
  • "Are we not all now friends and companions?" he said. "So companions and
  • friends let us be. I unbend my bow; do ye likewise."
  • "But are we not to be dignified?" asked Babbalanja.
  • "If dignity be free and natural, be as dignified as you please; but away
  • with rigidities."
  • "Away they go," said Babbalanja; "and, my lord, now that you mind me of
  • it, I have often thought, that it is all folly and vanity for any man to
  • attempt a dignified carriage. Why, my lord,"--frankly crossing his legs
  • where he lay--"the king, who receives his ambassadors with a majestic
  • toss of the head, may have just recovered from the tooth-ache. That
  • thought should cant over the spine he bears so bravely."
  • "Have a care, sir! there is a king within hearing."
  • "Pardon, my lord; I was merely availing myself of the immunity bestowed
  • upon the company. Hereafter, permit a subject to rebel against your
  • sociable decrees. I will not be so frank any more."
  • "Well put, Babbalanja; come nearer; here, cross your legs by mine; you
  • have risen a cubit in my regard. Vee-Vee, bring us that gourd of wine;
  • so, pass it round with the cups. Now, Yoomy, a song!"
  • And a song was sung.
  • And thus did we sail; pleasantly reclining on the mats stretched out
  • beneath the canopied howdah.
  • At length, we drew nigh to a rock, called Pella, or The Theft. A high,
  • green crag, toppling over its base, and flinging a cavernous shadow upon
  • the lagoon beneath, bubbling with the moisture that dropped.
  • Passing under this cliff was like finding yourself, as some sea-hunters
  • unexpectedly have, beneath the open, upper jaw of a whale; which,
  • descending, infallibly entombs you. But familiar with the rock, our
  • paddlers only threw back their heads, to catch the cool, pleasant
  • tricklings from the mosses above.
  • Wiping away several glittering beads from his beard, old Mohi turning
  • round where he sat, just outside the canopy, solemnly affirmed, that the
  • drinking of that water had cured many a man of ambition.
  • "How so, old man?" demanded Media.
  • "Because of its passing through the ashes of ten kings, of yore buried
  • in a sepulcher, hewn in the heart of the rock."
  • "Mighty kings, and famous, doubtless," said Babbalanja, "whose bones
  • were thought worthy of so noble and enduring as urn. Pray, Mohi, their
  • names and terrible deeds."
  • "Alas! their sepulcher only remains."
  • "And, no doubt, like many others, they made that sepul for themselves.
  • They sleep sound, my word for it, old man. But I very much question, if,
  • were the rock rent, any ashes would be found. Mohi, I deny that those
  • kings ever had any bones to bury."
  • "Why, Babbalanja," said Media, "since you intimate that they never had
  • ghosts to give up, you ignore them in toto; denying the very fact of
  • their being even defunct."
  • "Ten thousand pardons, my lord, no such discourtesy would I do the
  • anonymous memory of the illustrious dead. But whether they ever lived or
  • not, it is all the same with them now. Yet, grant that they lived; then,
  • if death be a deaf-and-dumb death, a triumphal procession over their
  • graves would concern them not. If a birth into brightness, then Mardi
  • must seem to them the most trivial of reminiscences. Or, perhaps, theirs
  • may be an utter lapse of memory concerning sublunary things; and they
  • themselves be not themselves, as the butterfly is not the larva."
  • Said Yoomy, "Then, Babbalanja, you account that a fit illustration of
  • the miraculous change to be wrought in man after death?"
  • "No; for the analogy has an unsatisfactory end. From its chrysalis
  • state, the silkworm but becomes a moth, that very quickly expires. Its
  • longest existence is as a worm. All vanity, vanity, Yoomy, to seek in
  • nature for positive warranty to these aspirations of ours. Through all
  • her provinces, nature seems to promise immortality to life, but
  • destruction to beings. Or, as old Bardianna has it, if not against us,
  • nature is not for us."
  • Said Media, rising, "Babbalanja, you have indeed put aside the courtier;
  • talking of worms and caterpillars to me, a king and a demi-god! To
  • renown, for your theme: a more agreeable topic."
  • "Pardon, once again, my lord. And since you will, let us discourse of
  • that subject. First, I lay it down for an indubitable maxim, that in
  • itself all posthumous renown, which is the only renown, is valueless. Be
  • not offended, my lord. To the nobly ambitious, renown hereafter may be
  • something to anticipate. But analyzed, that feverish typhoid feeling of
  • theirs may be nothing more than a flickering fancy, that now, while
  • living, they are recognized as those who will be as famous in their
  • shrouds, as in their girdles."
  • Said Yoomy, "But those great and good deeds, Babbalanja, of which the
  • philosophers so often discourse: must it not be sweet to believe that
  • their memory will long survive us; and we ourselves in them?"
  • "I speak now," said Babbalanja, "of the ravening for fame which even
  • appeased, like thirst slaked in the desert, yields no felicity, but only
  • relief; and which discriminates not in aught that will satisfy its
  • cravings. But let me resume. Not an hour ago, Braid-Beard was telling us
  • that story of prince Ottimo, who inodorous while living, expressed much
  • delight at the prospect of being perfumed and embalmed, when dead. But
  • was not Ottimo the most eccentric of mortals? For few men issue orders
  • for their shrouds, to inspect their quality beforehand. Far more anxious
  • are they about the texture of the sheets in which their living limbs
  • lie. And, my lord, with some rare exceptions, does not all Mardi, by its
  • actions, declare, that it is far better to be notorious now, than famous
  • hereafter?"
  • "A base sentiment, my lord," said Yoomy. "Did not poor Bonja, the
  • unappreciated poet, console himself for the neglect of his
  • contemporaries, by inspiriting thoughts of the future?"
  • "In plain words by bethinking him of the glorious harvest of bravos his
  • ghost would reap for him," said Babbalanja; "but Banjo,--Bonjo,--Binjo,--I never heard of him."
  • "Nor I," said Mohi.
  • "Nor I," said Media.
  • "Poor fellow!" cried Babbalanja; "I fear me his harvest is not yet
  • ripe."
  • "Alas!" cried Yoomy; "he died more than a century ago."
  • "But now that you speak of unappreciated poets, Yoomy," said Babbalanja,
  • "Shall I give you a piece of my mind?" "Do," said Mohi, stroking his
  • beard.
  • "He, who on all hands passes for a cypher to-day, if at all remembered
  • hereafter, will be sure to pass for the same. For there is more
  • likelihood of being overrated while living, than of being underrated
  • when dead. And to insure your fame, you must die."
  • "A rather discouraging thought for your race. But answer: I assume that
  • King Media is but a mortal like you; now, how may I best perpetuate my
  • name?"
  • Long pondered Babbalanja; then said, "Carve it, my lord, deep into a
  • ponderous stone, and sink it, face downward, into the sea; for the
  • unseen foundations of the deep are more enduring than the palpable tops
  • of the mountains."
  • Sailing past Pella, we gained a view of its farther side; and seated in
  • a lofty cleft, beheld a lonely fisherman; solitary as a seal on an
  • iceberg; his motionless line in the water.
  • "What recks he of the ten kings," said Babbalanja.
  • "Mohi," said Media, "methinks there is another tradition concerning that
  • rock: let us have it."
  • "In old times of genii and giants, there dwelt in barren lands, not very
  • remote from our outer reef, but since submerged, a band of evil-minded,
  • envious goblins, furlongs in stature, and with immeasurable arms; who
  • from time to time cast covetous glances upon our blooming isles. Long
  • they lusted; till at last, they waded through the sea, strode over the
  • reef, and seizing the nearest islet, rolled it over and over, toward an
  • adjoining outlet.
  • "But the task was hard; and day-break surprised them in the midst of
  • their audacious thieving; while in the very act of giving the devoted
  • land another doughty surge and Somerset. Leaving it bottom upward and
  • midway poised, gardens under water, its foundations in air, they
  • precipitately fled; in their great haste, deserting a comrade, vainly
  • struggling to liberate his foot caught beneath the overturned land."
  • "This poor fellow now raised such an outcry, as to awaken the god Upi,
  • or the Archer, stretched out on a long cloud in the East; who forthwith
  • resolved to make an example of the unwilling lingerer. Snatching his
  • bow, he let fly an arrow. But overshooting its mark, it pierced through
  • and through, the lofty promontory of a neighboring island; making an
  • arch in it, which remaineth even unto this day. A second arrow, however,
  • accomplished its errand: the slain giant sinking prone to the bottom."
  • "And now," added Mohi, "glance over the gunwale, and you will see his
  • remains petrified into white ribs of coral."
  • "Ay, there they are," said Yoomy, looking down into the water where they
  • gleamed. "A fanciful legend, Braid-beard."
  • "Very entertaining," said Media.
  • "Even so," said Babbalanja. "But perhaps we lost time in listening to
  • it; for though we know it, we are none the wiser."
  • "Be not a cynic," said Media. "No pastime is lost time."
  • Musing a moment, Babbalanja replied, "My lord, that maxim may be good as
  • it stands; but had you made six words of it, instead of six syllables,
  • you had uttered a better and a deeper."
  • CHAPTER LXX The Minstrel Leads Off With A Paddle-Song; And A Message Is
  • Received From Abroad
  • From seaward now came a breeze so blithesome and fresh, that it made us
  • impatient of Babbalanja's philosophy, and Mohi's incredible legends. One
  • and all, we called upon the minstrel Yoomy to give us something in
  • unison with the spirited waves wide-foaming around us.
  • "If my lord will permit, we will give Taji the Paddle-Chant of the
  • warriors of King Bello."
  • "By all means," said Media.
  • So the three canoes were brought side to side; their sails rolled up;
  • and paddles in hand, our paddlers seated themselves sideways on the
  • gunwales; Yoomy, as leader, occupying the place of the foremast, or Bow-Paddler of the royal barge.
  • Whereupon the six rows of paddle-blades being uplifted, and every eye on
  • the minstrel, this song was sung, with actions corresponding; the canoes
  • at last shooting through the water, with a violent roll.
  • (_All._) Thrice waved on high, Our paddles fly: Thrice round the head,
  • thrice dropt to feet: And then well timed, Of one stout mind, All fall,
  • and back the waters heap!
  • (_Bow-Paddler._) Who lifts this chant? Who sounds this vaunt?
  • (_All._) The wild sea song, to the billows' throng, Rising, falling,
  • Hoarsely calling, Now high, now low, as fast we go, Fast on our flying
  • foe!
  • (_Bow-Paddler._) Who lifts this chant? Who sounds this vaunt?
  • (_All._) Dip, dip, in the brine our paddles dip, Dip, dip, the fins of
  • our swimming ship! How the waters part, As on we dart; Our sharp prows
  • fly, And curl on high, As the upright fin of the rushing shark, Rushing
  • fast and far on his flying mark! Like him we prey; Like him we slay;
  • Swim on the fog, Our prow a blow!
  • (_Bow-Paddler._) Who lifts this chant? Who sounds this vaunt?
  • (_All._) Heap back; heap back; the waters back! Pile them high astern,
  • in billows black; Till we leave our wake, In the slope we make; And rush
  • and ride, On the torrent's tide!
  • Here we were overtaken by a swift gliding canoe, which, bearing down
  • upon us before the wind, lowered its sail when close by: its occupants
  • signing our paddlers to desist.
  • I started.
  • The strangers were three hooded damsels the enigmatical Queen Hautia's
  • heralds.
  • Their pursuit surprised and perplexed me. Nor was there wanting a vague
  • feeling of alarm to heighten these emotions. But perhaps I was mistaken,
  • and this time they meant not me.
  • Seated in the prow, the foremost waved her Iris flag. Cried Yoomy, "Some
  • message! Taji, that Iris points to you."
  • It was then, I first divined, that some meaning must have lurked in
  • those flowers they had twice brought me before.
  • The second damsel now flung over to me Circe flowers; then, a faded
  • jonquil, buried in a tuft of wormwood leaves.
  • The third sat in the shallop's stern, and as it glided from us, thrice
  • waved oleanders.
  • "What dumb show is this?" cried Media. "But it looks like poetry:
  • minstrel, you should know."
  • "Interpret then," said I.
  • "Shall I, then, be your Flora's flute, and Hautia's dragoman? Held
  • aloft, the Iris signified a message. These purple-woven Circe flowers
  • mean that some spell is weaving. That golden, pining jonquil, which you
  • hold, buried in those wormwood leaves, says plainly to you--Bitter love
  • in absence."
  • Said Media, "Well done, Taji, you have killed a queen." "Yet no Queen
  • Hautia have these eyes beheld."
  • Said Babbalanja, "The thrice waved oleanders, Yoomy; what meant they?"
  • "Beware--beware--beware."
  • "Then that, at least, seems kindly meant," said Babbalanja; "Taji,
  • beware of Hautia."
  • CHAPTER LXXI They Land Upon The Island Of Juam
  • Crossing the lagoon, our course now lay along the reef to Juam; a name
  • bestowed upon one of the largest islands hereabout; and also,
  • collectively, upon several wooded isles engulfing it, which together
  • were known as the dominions of one monarch. That monarch was Donjalolo.
  • Just turned of twenty-five, he was accounted not only the handsomest man
  • in his dominions, but throughout the lagoon. His comeliness, however,
  • was so feminine, that he was sometimes called "Fonoo," or the Girl.
  • Our first view of Juam was imposing. A dark green pile of cliffs,
  • towering some one hundred toises; at top, presenting a range of steep,
  • gable-pointed projections; as if some Titanic hammer and chisel had
  • shaped the mass.
  • Sailing nearer, we perceived an extraordinary rolling of the sea; which
  • bursting into the lagoon through an adjoining breach in the reef, surged
  • toward Juam in enormous billows. At last, dashing against the wall of
  • the cliff; they played there in unceasing fountains. But under the brow
  • of a beetling crag, the spray came and went unequally. There, the blue
  • billows seemed swallowed up, and lost.
  • Right regally was Juam guarded. For, at this point, the rock was pierced
  • by a cave, into which the great waves chased each other like lions;
  • after a hollow, subterraneous roaring issuing forth with manes
  • disheveled.
  • Cautiously evading the dangerous currents here ruffling the lagoon, we
  • rounded the wall of cliff; and shot upon a smooth expanse; on one side,
  • hemmed in by the long, verdent, northern shore of Juam; and across the
  • water, sentineled by its tributary islets.
  • With sonorous Vee-Vee in the shark's mouth, we swept toward the beach,
  • tumultuous with a throng.
  • Our canoes were secured. And surrounded by eager glances, we passed the
  • lower ends of several populous valleys; and crossing a wide, open
  • meadow, gradually ascending, came to a range of light-green bluffs.
  • Here, we wended our way down a narrow defile, almost cleaving this
  • quarter of the island to its base. Black crags frowned overhead: among
  • them the shouts of the Islanders reverberated. Yet steeper grew the
  • defile, and more overhanging the crags till at last, the keystone of the
  • arch seemed dropped into its place. We found ourselves in a subterranean
  • tunnel, dimly lighted by a span of white day at the end.
  • Emerging, what a scene was revealed! All round, embracing a circuit of
  • some three leagues, stood heights inaccessible, here and there, forming
  • buttresses, sheltering deep recesses between. The bosom of the place was
  • vivid with verdure.
  • Shining aslant into this wild hollow, the afternoon sun lighted up its
  • eastern side with tints of gold. But opposite, brooded a somber shadow,
  • double-shading the secret places between the salient spurs of the
  • mountains. Thus cut in twain by masses of day and night, it seemed as if
  • some Last Judgment had been enacted in the glen.
  • No sooner did we emerge from the defile, than we became sensible of a
  • dull, jarring sound; and Yoomy was almost tempted to turn and flee, when
  • informed that the sea-cavern, whose mouth we had passed, was believed to
  • penetrate deep into the opposite hills; and that the surface of the
  • amphitheater was depressed beneath that of the lagoon. But all over the
  • lowermost hillsides, and sloping into the glen, stood grand old groves;
  • still and stately, as if no insolent waves were throbbing in the
  • mountain's heart.
  • Such was Willamilla, the hereditary abode of the young monarch of Juam.
  • Was Yillah immured in this strange retreat? But from those around us
  • naught could we learn.
  • Our attention was now directed to the habitations of the glen; comprised
  • in two handsome villages; one to the west, the other to the east; both
  • stretching along the base of the cliffs.
  • Said Media, "Had we arrived at Willamilla in the morning, we had found
  • Donjalolo and his court in the eastern village; but being afternoon, we
  • must travel farther, and seek him in his western retreat; for that is
  • now in the shade."
  • Wending our way, Media added, that aside from his elevated station as a
  • monarch, Donjalolo was famed for many uncommon traits; but more
  • especially for certain peculiar deprivations, under which he labored.
  • Whereupon Braid-Beard unrolled his old chronicles; and regaled us with
  • the history, which will be found in the following chapter.
  • CHAPTER LXXII A Book From The Chronicles Of Mohi
  • Many ages ago, there reigned in Juam a king called Teei. This Teei's
  • succession to the sovereignty was long disputed by his brother Marjora;
  • who at last rallying round him an army, after many vicissitudes,
  • defeated the unfortunate monarch in a stout fight of clubs on the beach.
  • In those days, Willamilla during a certain period of the year was a
  • place set apart for royal games and diversions; and was furnished with
  • suitable accommodations for king and court. From its peculiar position,
  • moreover, it was regarded as the last stronghold of the Juam monarchy:
  • in remote times having twice withstood the most desperate assaults from
  • without. And when Roonoonoo, a famous upstart, sought to subdue all the
  • isles in this part of the Archipelago, it was to Willamilla that the
  • banded kings had repaired to take counsel together; and while there
  • conferring, were surprised at the sudden onslaught of Roonoonoo in
  • person. But in the end, the rebel was captured, he and all his army, and
  • impaled on the tops of the hills.
  • Now, defeated and fleeing for his life, Teei with his surviving
  • followers was driven across the plain toward the mountains. But to cut
  • him off from all escape to inland Willamilla, Marjora dispatched a fleet
  • band of warriors to occupy the entrance of the defile. Nevertheless,
  • Teei the pursued ran faster than his pursuers; first gained the spot;
  • and with his chiefs, fled swiftly down the gorge, closely hunted by
  • Marjora's men. But arriving at the further end, they in vain sought to
  • defend it. And after much desperate fighting, the main body of the foe
  • corning up with great slaughter the fugitives were driven into the glen.
  • They ran to the opposite wall of cliff; where turning, they fought at
  • bay, blood for blood, and life for life, till at last, overwhelmed by
  • numbers, they were all put to the point of the spear.
  • With fratricidal hate, singled out by the ferocious Marjora, Teei fell
  • by that brother's hand. When stripping from the body the regal girdle,
  • the victor wound it round his own loins; thus proclaiming himself king
  • over Juam.
  • Long torn by this intestine war, the island acquiesced in the new
  • sovereignty. But at length a sacred oracle declared, that since the
  • conqueror had slain his brother in deep Willamilla, so that Teei never
  • more issued from that refuge of death; therefore, the same fate should
  • be Marjora's; for never, thenceforth, from that glen, should he go
  • forth; neither Marjora; nor any son of his girdled loins; nor his son's
  • sons; nor the uttermost scion of his race.
  • But except this denunciation, naught was denounced against the usurper;
  • who, mindful of the tenure by which he reigned, ruled over the island
  • for many moons; at his death bequeathing the girdle to his son.
  • In those days, the wildest superstitions concerning the interference of
  • the gods in things temporal, prevailed to a much greater extent than at
  • present. Hence Marjora himself, called sometimes in the traditions of
  • the island, The-Heart-of-Black-Coral, even unscrupulous Marjora had
  • quailed before the oracle. "He bowed his head," say the legends. Nor was
  • it then questioned, by his most devoted adherents, that had he dared to
  • act counter to that edict, he had dropped dead, the very instant he went
  • under the shadow of the defile. This persuasion also guided the conduct
  • of the son of Marjora, and that of his grandson.
  • But there at last came to pass a change in the popular fancies
  • concerning this ancient anathema. The penalty denounced against the
  • posterity of the usurper should they issue from the glen, came to be
  • regarded as only applicable to an invested monarch, not to his
  • relatives, or heirs.
  • A most favorable construction of the ban; for all those related to the
  • king, freely passed in and out of Willamilla.
  • From the time of the usurpation, there had always been observed a
  • certain ceremony upon investing the heir to the sovereignty with the
  • girdle of Teei. Upon these occasions, the chief priests of the island
  • were present, acting an important part. For the space of as many days,
  • as there had reigned kings of Marjora's dynasty, the inner mouth of the
  • defile remained sealed; the new monarch placing the last stone in the
  • gap. This symbolized his relinquishment forever of all purpose of
  • passing out of the glen. And without this observance, was no king
  • girdled in Juam.
  • It was likewise an invariable custom, for the heir to receive the regal
  • investiture immediately upon the decease of his sire. No delay was
  • permitted. And instantly upon being girdled, he proceeded to take part
  • in the ceremony of closing the cave; his predecessor yet remaining
  • uninterred on the purple mat where he died.
  • In the history of the island, three instances were recorded; wherein,
  • upon the vacation of the sovereignty, the immediate heir had voluntarily
  • renounced all claim to the succession, rather than surrender the
  • privilege of roving, to which he had been entitled, as a prince of the
  • blood.
  • Said Rani, one of these young princes, in reply to the remonstrances of
  • his friends, "What! shall I be a king, only to be a slave? Teei's girdle
  • would clasp my waist less tightly, than my soul would be banded by the
  • mountains of Willamilla. A subject, I am free. No slave in Juam but its
  • king; for all the tassels round his loins."
  • To guard against a similar resolution in the mind of his only son, the
  • wise sire of Donjalolo, ardently desirous of perpetuating his dignities
  • in a child so well beloved, had from his earliest infancy, restrained
  • the boy from passing out of the glen, to contract in the free air of the
  • Archipelago, tastes and predilections fatal to the inheritance of the
  • girdle.
  • But as he grew in years, so impatient became young Donjalolo of the king
  • his father's watchfulness over him, though hitherto a most dutiful son,
  • that at last he was prevailed upon by his youthful companions to appoint
  • a day, on which to go abroad, and visit Mardi. Hearing this
  • determination, the old king sought to vanquish it. But in vain. And
  • early on the morning of the day, that Donjalolo was to set out, he
  • swallowed poison, and died; in order to force his son into the instant
  • assumption of the honors thus suddenly inherited.
  • The event, but not its dreadful circumstances, was communicated to the
  • prince; as with a gay party of young chiefs, he was about to enter the
  • mouth of the defile.
  • "My sire dead!" cried Donjalolo. "So sudden, it seems a bolt from
  • Heaven." And bursting into exclamations of grief, he wept upon the bosom
  • of Talara his friend.
  • But starting from his side:--"My fate converges to a point. If I but
  • cross that shadow, my kingdom is lost. One lifting of my foot, and the
  • girdle goes to my proud uncle Darfi, who would so joy to be my master.
  • Haughty Dwarf! Oh Oro! would that I had ere this passed thee, fatal
  • cavern; and seen for myself, what outer Mardi is. Say ye true, comrades,
  • that Willamilla is less lovely than the valleys without? that there is
  • bright light in the eyes of the maidens of Mina? and wisdom in the
  • hearts of the old priests of Maramma; that it is pleasant to tread the
  • green earth where you will; and breathe the free ocean air? Would, oh
  • would, that I were but the least of yonder sun-clouds, that look down
  • alike on Willamilla and all places besides, that I might determine
  • aright. Yet why do I pause? did not Rani, and Atama, and Mardonna, my
  • ancestors, each see for himself, free Mardi; and did they not fly the
  • proffered girdle; choosing rather to be free to come and go, than bury
  • themselves forever in this fatal glen? Oh Mardi! Mardi! art thou then so
  • fair to see? Is liberty a thing so glorious? Yet can I be no king, and
  • behold thee! Too late, too late, to view thy charms and then return. My
  • sire! my sire! thou hast wrung my heart with this agony of doubt. Tell
  • me, comrades,--for ye have seen it,--is Mardi sweeter to behold, than it
  • is royal to reign over Juam? Silent, are ye? Knowing what ye do, were ye
  • me, would ye be kings? Tell me, Talara.--No king: no king:--that were to
  • obey, and not command. And none hath Donjalolo ere obeyed but the king
  • his father. A king, and my voice may be heard in farthest Mardi, though
  • I abide in narrow Willamilla. My sire! my sire! Ye flying clouds, what
  • look ye down upon? Tell me, what ye see abroad? Methinks sweet spices
  • breathe from out the cave."
  • "Hail, Donjalolo, King of Juam," now sounded with acclamations from the
  • groves.
  • Starting, the young prince beheld a multitude approaching: warriors with
  • spears, and maidens with flowers; and Kubla, a priest, lifting on high
  • the tasseled girdle of Teei, and waving it toward him.
  • The young chiefs fell back. Kubla, advancing, came close to the prince,
  • and unclasping the badge of royalty, exclaimed, "Donjalolo, this instant
  • it is king or subject with thee: wilt thou be girdled monarch?"
  • Gazing one moment up the dark defile, then staring vacantly, Donjalolo
  • turned and met the eager gaze of Darfi. Stripping off his mantle, the
  • next instant he was a king.
  • Loud shouted the multitude, and exulted; but after mutely assisting at
  • the closing of the cavern, the new-girdled monarch retired sadly to his
  • dwelling, and was not seen again for many days.
  • CHAPTER LXXIII Something More Of The Prince
  • Previous to recording our stay in his dominions, it only remains to be
  • related of Donjalolo, that after assuming the girdle, a change came over
  • him.
  • During the lifetime of his father, he had been famed for his temperance
  • and discretion. But when Mardi was forever shut out; and he remembered
  • the law of his isle, interdicting abdication to its kings; he gradually
  • fell into desperate courses, to drown the emotions at times distracting
  • him.
  • His generous spirit thirsting after some energetic career, found itself
  • narrowed down within the little glen of Willamilla, where ardent
  • impulses seemed idle. But these are hard to die; and repulsed all round,
  • recoil upon themselves.
  • So with Donjalolo; who, in many a riotous scene, wasted the powers which
  • might have compassed the noblest designs.
  • Not many years had elapsed since the death of the king, his father. But
  • the still youthful prince was no longer the bright-eyed and elastic boy
  • who at the dawn of day had sallied out to behold the landscapes of the
  • neighboring isles.
  • Not more effeminate Sardanapalus, than he. And, at intervals, he was the
  • victim of unaccountable vagaries; haunted by specters, and beckoned to
  • by the ghosts of his sires.
  • At times, loathing his vicious pursuits, which brought him no solid
  • satisfaction, but ever filled him with final disgust, he would resolve
  • to amend his ways; solacing himself for his bitter captivity, by the
  • society of the wise and discreet.
  • But brief the interval of repentance. Anew, he burst into excesses, a
  • hundred fold more insane than ever.
  • Thus vacillating between virtue and vice; to neither constant, and
  • upbraided by both; his mind, like his person in the glen, was
  • continually passing and repassing between opposite extremes.
  • CHAPTER LXXIV Advancing Deeper Into The Vale, They Encounter Donjalolo
  • From the mouth of the cavern, a broad shaded way over-arched by
  • fraternal trees embracing in mid-air, conducted us to a cross-path, on
  • either hand leading to the opposite cliffs, shading the twin villages
  • before mentioned.
  • Level as a meadow, was the bosom of the glen. Here, nodding with green
  • orchards of the Bread-fruit and the Palm; there, flashing with golden
  • plantations of the Banana. Emerging from these, we came out upon a
  • grassy mead, skirting a projection of the mountain. And soon we crossed
  • a bridge of boughs, spanning a trench, thickly planted with roots of the
  • Tara, like alligators, or Hollanders, reveling in the soft alluvial.
  • Strolling on, the wild beauty of the mountains excited our attention.
  • The topmost crags poured over with vines; which, undulating in the air,
  • seemed leafy cascades; their sources the upland groves.
  • Midway up the precipice, along a shelf of rock, sprouted the
  • multitudinous roots of an apparently trunkless tree. Shooting from under
  • the shallow soil, they spread all over the rocks below, covering them
  • with an intricate net-work. While far aloft, great boughs--each a copse--clambered to the very summit of the mountain; then bending over, struck
  • anew into the soil; forming along the verge an interminable colonnade;
  • all manner of antic architecture standing against the sky.
  • According to Mohi, this tree was truly wonderful; its seed having been
  • dropped from the moon; where were plenty more similar forests, causing
  • the dark spots on its surface.
  • Here and there, the cool fluid in the veins of the mountains gushed
  • forth in living springs; their waters received in green mossy tanks,
  • half buried in grasses.
  • In one place, a considerable stream, bounding far out from a wooded
  • height, ere reaching the ground was dispersed in a wide misty shower,
  • falling so far from the base of the cliff; that walking close
  • underneath, you felt little moisture. Passing this fall of vapors, we
  • spied many Islanders taking a bath.
  • But what is yonder swaying of the foliage? And what now issues forth,
  • like a habitation astir? Donjalolo drawing nigh to his guests.
  • He came in a fair sedan; a bower, resting upon three long, parallel
  • poles, borne by thirty men, gayly attired; five at each pole-end. Decked
  • with dyed tappas, and looped with garlands of newly-plucked flowers,
  • from which, at every step, the fragrant petals were blown; with a
  • sumptuous, elastic motion the gay sedan came on; leaving behind it a
  • long, rosy wake of fluttering leaves and odors.
  • Drawing near, it revealed a slender, enervate youth, of pallid beauty,
  • reclining upon a crimson mat, near the festooned arch of the bower. His
  • anointed head was resting against the bosom of a girl; another stirred
  • the air, with a fan of Pintado plumes. The pupils of his eyes were as
  • floating isles in the sea. In a soft low tone he murmured "Media!"
  • The bearers paused; and Media advancing; the Island Kings bowed their
  • foreheads together.
  • Through tubes ignited at the end, Donjaloln's reclining attendants now
  • blew an aromatic incense around him. These were composed of the
  • stimulating leaves of the "Aina," mixed with the long yellow blades of a
  • sweet-scented upland grass; forming a hollow stem. In general, the
  • agreeable fumes of the "Aina" were created by one's own inhalations; but
  • Donjalolo deeming the solace too dearly purchased by any exertion of the
  • royal lungs, regaled himself through those of his attendants, whose lips
  • were as moss-rose buds after a shower.
  • In silence the young prince now eyed us attentively; meanwhile gently
  • waving his hand, to obtain a better view through the wreaths of vapor.
  • He was about to address us, when chancing to catch a glimpse of Samoa,
  • he suddenly started; averted his glance; and wildly commanded the
  • warrior out of sight. Upon this, his attendants would have soothed him;
  • and Media desired the Upoluan to withdraw.
  • While we were yet lost in wonder at this scene, Donjalolo, with eyes
  • closed, fell back into the arms of his damsels. Recovering, he fetched a
  • deep sigh, and gazed vacantly around.
  • It seems, that he had fancied Samoa the noon-day specter of his ancestor
  • Marjora; the usurper having been deprived of an arm in the battle which
  • gained him the girdle. Poor prince: this was one of those crazy
  • conceits, so puzzling to his subjects.
  • Media now hastened to assure Donjalolo, that Samoa, though no cherub to
  • behold, was good flesh and blood, nevertheless. And soon the king
  • unconcernedly gazed; his monomania having departed as a dream.
  • But still suffering from the effects of an overnight feast, he presently
  • murmured forth a desire to be left to his women; adding that his people
  • would not fail to provide for the entertainment of his guests.
  • The curtains of the sedan were now drawn; and soon it disappeared in the
  • groves. Journeying on, ere long we arrived at the western side of the
  • glen; where one of the many little arbors scattered among the trees, was
  • assigned for our abode. Here, we reclined to an agreeable repast. After
  • which, we strolled forth to view the valley at large; more especially
  • the far-famed palaces of the prince.
  • CHAPTER LXXV Time And Temples
  • In the oriental Pilgrimage of the pious old Purchas, and in the fine old
  • folio Voyages of Hakluyt, Thevenot, Ramusio, and De Bry, we read of many
  • glorious old Asiatic temples, very long in erecting. And veracious
  • Gaudentia di Lucca hath a wondrous narration of the time consumed in
  • rearing that mighty three-hundred-and-seventy-five-pillared Temple of
  • the Year, somewhere beyond Libya; whereof, the columns did signify days,
  • and all round fronted upon concentric zones of palaces, cross-cut by
  • twelve grand avenues symbolizing the signs of the zodiac, all radiating
  • from the sun-dome in their midst. And in that wild eastern tale of his,
  • Marco Polo tells us, how the Great Mogul began him a pleasure-palace on
  • so imperial a scale, that his grandson had much ado to complete it.
  • But no matter for marveling all this: great towers take time to
  • construct.
  • And so of all else.
  • And that which long endures full-fledged, must have long lain in the
  • germ. And duration is not of the future, but of the past; and eternity
  • is eternal, because it has been, and though a strong new monument be
  • builded to-day, it only is lasting because its blocks are old as the
  • sun. It is not the Pyramids that are ancient, but the eternal granite
  • whereof they are made; which had been equally ancient though yet in the
  • quarry. For to make an eternity, we must build with eternities; whence,
  • the vanity of the cry for any thing alike durable and new; and the folly
  • of the reproach--Your granite hath come from the old-fashioned hills.
  • For we are not gods and creators; and the controversialists have
  • debated, whether indeed the All-Plastic Power itself can do more than
  • mold. In all the universe is but one original; and the very suns must to
  • their source for their fire; and we Prometheuses must to them for ours;
  • which, when had, only perpetual Vestal tending will keep alive.
  • But let us back from fire to store. No fine firm fabric ever yet grew
  • like a gourd. Nero's House of Gold was not raised in a day; nor the
  • Mexican House of the Sun; nor the Alhambra; nor the Escurial; nor
  • Titus's Amphitheater; nor the Illinois Mounds; nor Diana's great columns
  • at Ephesus; nor Pompey's proud Pillar; nor the Parthenon; nor the Altar
  • of Belus; nor Stonehenge; nor Solomon's Temple; nor Tadmor's towers; nor
  • Susa's bastions; nor Persepolis' pediments. Round and round, the Moorish
  • turret at Seville was not wound heavenward in the revolution of a day;
  • and from its first founding, five hundred years did circle, ere
  • Strasbourg's great spire lifted its five hundred feet into the air. No:
  • nor were the great grottos of Elephanta hewn out in an hour; nor did the
  • Troglodytes dig Kentucky's Mammoth Cave in a sun; nor that of
  • Trophonius, nor Antiparos; nor the Giant's Causeway. Nor were the
  • subterranean arched sewers of Etruria channeled in a trice; nor the airy
  • arched aqueducts of Nerva thrown over their values in the ides of a
  • month. Nor was Virginia's Natural Bridge worn under in a year; nor, in
  • geology, were the eternal Grampians upheaved in an age. And who shall
  • count the cycles that revolved ere earth's interior sedimentary strata
  • were crystalized into stone. Nor Peak of Piko, nor Teneriffe, were
  • chiseled into obelisks in a decade; nor had Mount Athos been turned into
  • Alexander's statue so soon. And the bower of Artaxerxes took a whole
  • Persian summer to grow; and the Czar's Ice Palace a long Muscovite
  • winter to congéal. No, no: nor was the Pyramid of Cheops masoned in a
  • month; though, once built, the sands left by the deluge might not have
  • submerged such a pile. Nor were the broad boughs of Charles' Oak grown
  • in a spring; though they outlived the royal dynasties of Tudor and
  • Stuart. Nor were the parts of the great Iliad put together in haste;
  • though old Homer's temple shall lift up its dome, when St. Peter's is a
  • legend. Even man himself lives months ere his Maker deems him fit to be
  • born; and ere his proud shaft gains its full stature, twenty-one long
  • Julian years must elapse. And his whole mortal life brings not his
  • immortal soul to maturity; nor will all eternity perfect him. Yea, with
  • uttermost reverence, as to human understanding, increase of dominion
  • seems increase of power; and day by day new planets are being added to
  • elder-born Saturn, even as six thousand years ago our own Earth made one
  • more in this system; so, in incident, not in essence, may the Infinite
  • himself be not less than more infinite now, than when old Aldebaran
  • rolled forth from his hand. And if time was, when this round Earth,
  • which to innumerable mortals has seemed an empire never to be wholly
  • explored; which, in its seas, concealed all the Indies over four
  • thousand five hundred years; if time was, when this great quarry of
  • Assyrias and Romes was not extant; then, time may have been, when the
  • whole material universe lived its Dark Ages; yea, when the Ineffable
  • Silence, proceeding from its unimaginable remoteness, espied it as an
  • isle in the sea. And herein is no derogation. For the Immeasurable's
  • altitude is not heightened by the arches of Mahomet's heavens; and were
  • all space a vacuum, yet would it be a fullness; for to Himself His own
  • universe is He.
  • Thus deeper and deeper into Time's endless tunnel, does the winged soul,
  • like a night-hawk, wend her wild way; and finds eternities before and
  • behind; and her last limit is her everlasting beginning.
  • But sent over the broad flooded sphere, even Noah's dove came back, and
  • perched on his hand. So comes back my spirit to me, and folds up her
  • wings.
  • Thus, then, though Time be the mightiest of Alarics, yet is he the
  • mightiest mason of all. And a tutor, and a counselor, and a physician,
  • and a scribe, and a poet, and a sage, and a king.
  • Yea, and a gardener, as ere long will be shown.
  • But first must we return to the glen.
  • CHAPTER LXXVI A Pleasant Place For A Lounge
  • Whether the hard condition of their kingly state, very naturally
  • demanding some luxurious requital, prevailed upon the monarchs of Juam
  • to house themselves so delightfully as they did; whether buried alive in
  • their glen, they sought to center therein a secret world of enjoyment;
  • however it may have been, throughout the Archipelago this saying was a
  • proverb--"You are lodged like the king in Willamilla." Hereby was
  • expressed the utmost sumptuousness of a palace.
  • A well warranted saying; for of all the bright places, where my soul
  • loves to linger, the haunts of Donjalolo are most delicious.
  • In the eastern quarter of the glen was the House of the Morning. This
  • fanciful palace was raised upon a natural mound, many rods square,
  • almost completely filling up a deep recess between deep-green and
  • projecting cliffs, overlooking many abodes distributed in the shadows of
  • the groves beyond.
  • Now, if it indeed be, that from the time employed in its construction,
  • any just notion may be formed of the stateliness of an edifice, it must
  • needs be determined, that this retreat of Donjalolo could not be
  • otherwise than imposing.
  • Full five hundred moons was the palace in completing; for by some
  • architectural arborist, its quadrangular foundations had been laid in
  • seed-cocoanuts, requiring that period to sprout up into pillars. In
  • front, these were horizontally connected, by elaborately carved beams,
  • of a scarlet hue, inserted into the vital wood; which, swelling out, and
  • over lapping, firmly secured them. The beams supported the rafters,
  • inclining from the rear; while over the aromatic grasses covering the
  • roof, waved the tufted tops of the Palms, green capitals to their dusky
  • shafts.
  • Through and through this vibrating verdure, bright birds flitted and
  • sang; the scented and variegated thatch seemed a hanging-garden; and
  • between it and the Palm tops, was leaf-hung an arbor in the air.
  • Without these columns, stood a second and third colonnade, forming the
  • most beautiful bowers; advancing through which, you fancied that the
  • palace beyond must be chambered in a fountain, or frozen in a crystal.
  • Three sparkling rivulets flowing from the heights were led across its
  • summit, through great trunks half buried in the thatch; and emptying
  • into a sculptured channel, running along the eaves, poured over in one
  • wide sheet, plaited and transparent. Received into a basin beneath, they
  • were thence conducted down the vale.
  • The sides of the palace were hedged by Diomi bushes bearing a flower,
  • from its perfume, called Lenora, or Sweet Breath; and within these
  • odorous hedges, were heavy piles of mats, richly dyed and embroidered.
  • Here lounging of a glowing noon, the plaited cascade playing, the
  • verdure waving, and the birds melodious, it was hard to say, whether you
  • were an inmate of a garden in the glen, or a grotto in the sea.
  • But enough for the nonce, of the House of the Morning. Cross we the
  • hollow, to the House of the Afternoon.
  • CHAPTER LXXVII The House Of The Afternoon
  • For the most part, the House of the Afternoon was but a wing built
  • against a mansion wrought by the hand of Nature herself; a grotto
  • running into the side of the mountain. From high over the mouth of this
  • grotto, sloped a long arbor, supported by great blocks of stone, rudely
  • chiseled into the likeness of idols, each bearing a carved lizard on its
  • chest: a sergeant's guard of the gods condescendingly doing duty as
  • posts.
  • From the grotto thus vestibuled, issued hilariously forth the most
  • considerable stream of the glen; which, seemingly overjoyed to find
  • daylight in Willamilla, sprang into the arbor with a cheery, white
  • bound. But its youthful enthusiasm was soon repressed; its waters being
  • caught in a large stone basin, scooped out of the natural rock; whence,
  • staid and decorous, they traversed sundry moats; at last meandering
  • away, to join floods with the streams trained to do service at the other
  • end of the vale.
  • Truant streams: the livelong day wending their loitering path to the
  • subterraneous outlet, flowing into which, they disappeared. But no
  • wonder they loitered; passing such ravishing landscapes. Thus with life:
  • man bounds out of night; runs and babbles in the sun; then returns to
  • his darkness again; though, peradventure, once more to emerge.
  • But the grotto was not a mere outlet to the stream. Flowing through a
  • dark flume in the rock, on both sides it left a dry, elevated shelf, to
  • which you ascend from the arbor by three artificially-wrought steps,
  • sideways disposed, to avoid the spray of the rejoicing cataract.
  • Mounting these, and pursuing the edge of the flume, the grotto gradually
  • expands and heightens; your way lighted by rays in the inner distance.
  • At last you come to a lofty subterraneous dome, lit from above by a
  • cleft in the mountain; while full before you, in the opposite wall, from
  • a low, black arch, midway up, and inaccessible, the stream, with a
  • hollow ring and a dash, falls in a long, snowy column into a bottomless
  • pool, whence, after many an eddy and whirl, it entered the flume, and
  • away with a rush. Half hidden from view by an overhanging brow of the
  • rock, the white fall looked like the sheeted ghost of the grotto.
  • Yet gallantly bedecked was the cave, as any old armorial hall hung round
  • with banners and arras. Streaming from the cleft, vines swung in the
  • air; or crawled along the rocks, wherever a tendril could be fixed. High
  • up, their leaves were green; but lower down, they were shriveled; and
  • dyed of many colors; and tattered and torn with much rustling; as old
  • banners again; sore raveled with much triumphing.
  • In the middle of this hall in the hill was incarcerated the stone image
  • of one Demi, the tutelar deity of Willamina. All green and oozy like a
  • stone under water, poor Demi looked as if sore harassed with sciatics
  • and lumbagos.
  • But he was cheered from aloft, by the promise of receiving a garland all
  • blooming on his crown; the Dryads sporting in the woodlands above,
  • forever peeping down the cleft, and essaying to drop him a coronal.
  • Now, the still, panting glen of Willamilla, nested so close by the
  • mountains, and a goodly green mark for the archer in the sun, would have
  • been almost untenable were it not for the grotto. Hereby, it breathed
  • the blessed breezes of Omi; a mountain promontory buttressing the island
  • to the east, receiving the cool stream of the upland Trades; much
  • pleasanter than the currents beneath.
  • At all times, even in the brooding noon-day, a gush of cool air came
  • hand-in-hand with the cool waters, that burst with a shout into the
  • palace of Donjalolo. And as, after first refreshing the king, as in
  • loyalty bound, the stream flowed at large through the glen, and bathed
  • its verdure; so, the blessed breezes of Omi, not only made pleasant the
  • House of the Afternoon; but finding ample outlet in its wide, open
  • front, blew forth upon the bosom of all Willamilla.
  • "Come let us take the air of Omi," was a very common saying in the glen.
  • And the speaker would hie with his comrade toward the grotto; and
  • flinging himself on the turf, pass his hand through his locks, and
  • recline; making a joy and a business of breathing; for truly the breezes
  • of Omi were as air-wine to the lungs.
  • Yet was not this breeze over-cool; though at times the zephyrs grew
  • boisterous. Especially at the season of high sea, when the strong Trades
  • drawn down the cleft in the mountain, rushed forth from the grotto with
  • wonderful force. Crossing it then, you had much ado to keep your robe on
  • your back.
  • Thus much for the House of the Afternoon. Whither--after spending the
  • shady morning under the eastern cliffs of the glen--daily, at a certain
  • hour, Donjalolo in his palanquin was borne; there, finding new shades;
  • and there tarrying till evening; when again he was transported whence he
  • came: thereby anticipating the revolution of the sun. Thus dodging day's
  • luminary through life, the prince hied to and fro in his dominions; on
  • his smooth, spotless brow Sol's rays never shining.
  • CHAPTER LXXVIII Babbalanja Solus
  • Of the House of the Afternoon something yet remains to be said.
  • It was chiefly distinguished by its pavement, where, according to the
  • strange customs of the isle, were inlaid the reputed skeletons of
  • Donjalolo's sires; each surrounded by a mosaic of corals,--red, white,
  • and black, intermixed with vitreous stones fallen from the skies in a
  • meteoric shower. These delineated the tattooing of the departed. Near
  • by, were imbedded their arms: mace, bow, and spear, in similar
  • marquetry; and over each skull was the likeness of a scepter.
  • First and conspicuous lay the half-decayed remains of Marjora, the
  • father of these Coral Kings; by his side, the storied, sickle-shaped
  • weapon, wherewith he slew his brother Teei.
  • "Line of kings and row of scepters," said Babbalanja as he gazed.
  • "Donjalolo, come forth and ponder on thy sires. Here they lie, from
  • dread Marjora down to him who fathered thee. Here are their bones, their
  • spears, and their javelins; their scepters, and the very fashion of
  • their tattooing: all that can be got together of what they were. Tell
  • me, oh king, what are thy thoughts? Dotest thou on these thy sires? Art
  • thou more truly royal, that they were kings? Or more a man, that they
  • were men? Is it a fable, or a verity about Marjora and the murdered
  • Teei? But here is the mighty conqueror,--ask him. Speak to him: son to
  • sire: king to king. Prick him; beg; buffet; entreat; spurn; split the
  • globe, he will not budge. Walk over and over thy whole ancestral line,
  • and they will not start. They are not here. Ay, the dead are not to be
  • found, even in their graves. Nor have they simply departed; for they
  • willed not to go; they died not by choice; whithersoever they have gone,
  • thither have they been dragged; and if so be, they are extinct, their
  • nihilities went not more against their grain, than their forced quitting
  • of Mardi. Either way, something has become of them that they sought not.
  • Truly, had stout-hearted Marjora sworn to live here in Willamilla for
  • ay, and kept the vow, _that_ would have been royalty indeed; but here he
  • lies. Marjora! rise! Juam revolteth! Lo, I stamp upon thy scepter; base
  • menials tread upon thee where thou hest! Up, king, up! What? no reply?
  • Are not these bones thine? Oh, how the living triumph over the dead!
  • Marjora! answer. Art thou? or art thou not? I see thee not; I hear thee
  • not; I feel thee not; eyes, ears, hands, are worthless to test thy
  • being; and if thou art, thou art something beyond all human thought to
  • compass. We must have other faculties to know thee by. Why, thou art not
  • even a sightless sound; not the echo of an echo; here are thy bones.
  • Donjalolo, methinks I see thee fallen upon by assassins:--which of thy
  • fathers riseth to the rescue? I see thee dying:--which of them telleth
  • thee what cheer beyond the grave? But they have gone to the land
  • unknown. Meet phrase. Where is it? Not one of Oro's priests telleth a
  • straight story concerning it; 'twill be hard finding their paradises.
  • Touching the life of Alma, in Mohi's chronicles, 'tis related, that a
  • man was once raised from the tomb. But rubbed he not his eyes, and
  • stared he not most vacantly? Not one revelation did he make. Ye gods! to
  • have been a bystander there!
  • "At best, 'tis but a hope. But will a longing bring the thing desired?
  • Doth dread avert its object? An instinct is no preservative. The fire I
  • shrink from, may consume me.--But dead, and yet alive; alive, yet dead;--thus say the sages of Maramma. But die we then living? Yet if our dead
  • fathers somewhere and somehow live, why not our unborn sons? For
  • backward or forward, eternity is the same; already have we been the
  • nothing we dread to be. Icy thought! But bring it home,--it will not
  • stay. What ho, hot heart of mine: to beat thus lustily awhile, to feel
  • in the red rushing blood, and then be ashes,--can this be so? But peace,
  • peace, thou liar in me, telling me I am immortal--shall I not be as
  • these bones? To come to this! But the balsam-dropping palms, whose boles
  • run milk, whose plumes wave boastful in the air, they perish in their
  • prime, and bow their blasted trunks. Nothing abideth; the river of
  • yesterday floweth not to-day; the sun's rising is a setting; living is
  • dying; the very mountains melt; and all revolve:--systems and asteroids;
  • the sun wheels through the zodiac, and the zodiac is a revolution. Ah
  • gods! in all this universal stir, am _I_ to prove one stable thing?
  • "Grim chiefs in skeletons, avaunt! Ye are but dust; belike the dust of
  • beggars; for on this bed, paupers may lie down with kings, and filch
  • their skulls. _This_, great Marjora's arm? No, some old paralytic's.
  • _Ye_, kings? _ye_, men? Where are your vouchers? I do reject your
  • brother-hood, ye libelous remains. But no, no; despise them not, oh
  • Babbalanja! Thy own skeleton, thou thyself dost carry with thee, through
  • this mortal life; and aye would view it, but for kind nature's screen;
  • thou art death alive; and e'en to what's before thee wilt thou come. Ay,
  • thy children's children will walk over thee: thou, voiceless as a calm."
  • And over the Coral Kings, Babbalanja paced in profound meditation.
  • CHAPTER LXXIX The Center Of Many Circumferences
  • Like Donjalolo himself, we hie to and fro; for back now must we pace to
  • the House of the Morning.
  • In its rear, there diverged three separate arbors, leading to less
  • public apartments.
  • Traversing the central arbor, and fancying it will soon lead you to open
  • ground, you suddenly come upon the most private retreat of the prince: a
  • square structure; plain as a pyramid; and without, as inscrutable. Down
  • to the very ground, its walls are thatched; but on the farther side a
  • passage-way opens, which you enter. But not yet are you within. Scarce a
  • yard distant, stands an inner thatched wall, blank as the first. Passing
  • along the intervening corridor, lighted by narrow apertures, you reach
  • the opposite side, and a second opening is revealed. This entering,
  • another corridor; lighted as the first, but more dim, and a third blank
  • wall. And thus, three times three, you worm round and round, the
  • twilight lessening as you proceed; until at last, you enter the citadel
  • itself: the innermost arbor of a nest; whereof, each has its roof,
  • distinct from the rest.
  • The heart of the place is but small; illuminated by a range of open sky-lights, downward contracting.
  • Innumerable as the leaves of an endless folio, multitudinous mats cover
  • the floor; whereon reclining by night, like Pharaoh on the top of his
  • patrimonial pile, the inmate looks heavenward, and heavenward only;
  • gazing at the torchlight processions in the skies, when, in state, the
  • suns march to be crowned.
  • And here, in this impenetrable retreat, centrally slumbered the
  • universe-rounded, zodiac-belted, horizon-zoned, sea-girt, reef-sashed,
  • mountain-locked, arbor-nested, royalty-girdled, arm-clasped, self-hugged, indivisible Donjalolo, absolute monarch of Juam:--the husk-inhusked meat in a nut; the innermost spark in a ruby; the juice-nested
  • seed in a goldenrinded orange; the red royal stone in an effeminate
  • peach; the insphered sphere of spheres.
  • CHAPTER LXXX Donjalolo In The Bosom Of His Family
  • To pretend to relate the manner in which Juam's ruler passed his captive
  • days, without making suitable mention of his harem, would be to paint
  • one's full-length likeness and omit the face. For it was his harem that
  • did much to stamp the character of Donjalolo.
  • And had he possessed but a single spouse, most discourteous, surely, to
  • have overlooked the princess; much more, then, as it is; and by how-much
  • the more, a plurality exceeds a unit.
  • Exclusive of the female attendants, by day waiting upon the person of
  • the king, he had wives thirty in number, corresponding in name to the
  • nights of the moon. For, in Juam, time is not reckoned by days, but by
  • nights; each night of the lunar month having its own designation; which,
  • relatively only, is extended to the day.
  • In uniform succession, the thirty wives ruled queen of the king's heart.
  • An arrangement most wise and judicious; precluding much of that jealousy
  • and confusion prevalent in ill-regulated seraglios. For as thirty
  • spouses must be either more desirable, or less desirable than one; so is
  • a harem thirty times more difficult to manage than an establishment with
  • one solitary mistress. But Donjalolo's wives were so nicely drilled,
  • that for the most part, things went on very smoothly. Nor were his brows
  • much furrowed with wrinkles referable to domestic cares and
  • tribulations. Although, as in due time will be seen, from these he was
  • not altogether exempt.
  • Now, according to Braid-Beard, who, among other abstruse political
  • researches, had accurately informed himself concerning the internal
  • administration of Donjalolo's harem, the following was the method
  • pursued therein.
  • On the Aquella, or First Night of the month, the queen of that name
  • assumes her diadem, and reigns. So too with Azzolino the Second, and
  • Velluvi the Third Night of the Moon; and so on, even unto the utter
  • eclipse thereof; through Calends, Nones, and Ides.
  • For convenience, the king is furnished with a card, whereon are copied
  • the various ciphers upon the arms of his queens; and parallel thereto,
  • the hieroglyphics significant of the corresponding Nights of the month.
  • Glancing over this, Donjalolo predicts the true time of the rising and
  • setting of all his stars.
  • This Moon of wives was lodged in two spacious seraglios, which few
  • mortals beheld. For, so deeply were they buried in a grove; so
  • overpowered with verdure; so overrun with vines; and so hazy with the
  • incense of flowers; that they were almost invisible, unless closely
  • approached. Certain it was, that it demanded no small enterprise,
  • diligence, and sagacity, to explore the mysterious wood in search of
  • them. Though a strange, sweet, humming sound, as of the clustering and
  • swarming of warm bees among roses, at last hinted the royal honey at
  • hand. High in air, toward the summit of the cliff, overlooking this side
  • of the glen, a narrow ledge of rocks might have been seen, from which,
  • rumor whispered, was to be caught an angular peep at the tip of the apex
  • of the roof of the nearest seraglio. But this wild report had never been
  • established. Nor, indeed, was it susceptible of a test. For was not that
  • rock inaccessible as the eyrie of young eagles? But to guard against the
  • possibility of any visual profanation, Donjalolo had authorized an
  • edict, forever tabooing that rock to foot of man or pinion of fowl.
  • Birds and bipeds both trembled and obeyed; taking a wide circuit to
  • avoid the spot.
  • Access to the seraglios was had by corresponding arbors leading from the
  • palace. The seraglio to the right was denominated "Ravi" (Before), that
  • to the left "Zono" (After). The meaning of which was, that upon the
  • termination of her reign the queen wended her way to the Zono; there
  • tarrying with her predecessors till the Ravi was emptied; when the
  • entire Moon of wives, swallow-like, migrated back whence they came; and
  • the procession was gone over again.
  • In due order, the queens reposed upon mats inwoven with their respective
  • ciphers. In the Ravi, the mat of the queen-apparent, or next in
  • succession, was spread by the portal. In the Zono, the newly-widowed
  • queen reposed furthest from it.
  • But alas for all method where thirty wives are concerned.
  • Notwithstanding these excellent arrangements, the mature result of ages
  • of progressive improvement in the economy of the royal seraglios in
  • Willamilla, it must needs be related, that at times the order of
  • precedence became confused, and was very hard to restore.
  • At intervals, some one of the wives was weeded out, to the no small
  • delight of the remainder; but to their equal vexation her place would
  • soon after be supplied by some beautiful stranger; who assuming the
  • denomination of the vacated Night of the Moon, thenceforth commenced her
  • monthly revolutions in the king's infallible calendar.
  • In constant attendance, was a band of old men; woe-begone, thin of leg,
  • and puny of frame; whose grateful task it was, to tarry in the garden of
  • Donjalolo's delights, without ever touching the roses. Along with
  • innumerable other duties, they were perpetually kept coming and going
  • upon ten thousand errands; for they had it in strict charge to obey the
  • slightest behests of the damsels; and with all imaginable expedition to
  • run, fly, swim, or dissolve into impalpable air, at the shortest
  • possible notice.
  • So laborious their avocations, that none could discharge them for more
  • than a twelvemonth, at the end of that period giving up the ghost out of
  • pure exhaustion of the locomotive apparatus. It was this constant drain
  • upon the stock of masculine old age in the glen, that so bethinned its
  • small population of gray-beards and hoary-heads. And any old man
  • hitherto exempted, who happened to receive a summons to repair to the
  • palace, and there wait the pleasure of the king: this unfortunate, at
  • once suspecting his doom, put his arbor in order; oiled and suppled his
  • joints; took a long farewell of his friends; selected his burial-place;
  • and going resigned to his fate, in due time expired like the rest.
  • Had any one of them cast about for some alleviating circumstance, he
  • might possibly have derived some little consolation from the thought,
  • that though a slave to the whims of thirty princesses, he was
  • nevertheless one of their guardians, and as such, he might ingeniously
  • have concluded, their superior. But small consolation this. For the
  • damsels were as blithe as larks, more playful than kittens; never
  • looking sad and sentimental, projecting clandestine escapes. But
  • supplied with the thirtieth part of all that Aspasia could desire;
  • glorying in being the spouses of a king; nor in the remotest degree
  • anxious about eventual dowers; they were care-free, content, and
  • rejoicing, as the rays of the morning.
  • Poor old men, then; it would be hard to distill out of your fate, one
  • drop of the balm of consolation. For, commissioned to watch over those
  • who forever kept you on the trot, affording you no time to hunt up
  • peccadilloes; was not this circumstance an aggravation of hard times? a
  • sharpening and edge-giving to the steel in your souls?
  • But much yet remains unsaid.
  • To dwell no more upon the eternal wear-and-tear incident to these
  • attenuated old warders, they were intensely hated by the damsels.
  • Inasmuch, as it was archly opined, for what ulterior purposes they were
  • retained.
  • Nightly couching, on guard, round the seraglio, like fangless old bronze
  • dragons round a fountain enchanted, the old men ever and anon cried out
  • mightily, by reason of sore pinches and scratches received in the dark:
  • And tri-trebly-tri-triply girt about as he was, Donjalolo himself
  • started from his slumbers, raced round and round through his ten
  • thousand corridors; at last bursting all dizzy among his twenty-nine
  • queens, to see what under the seventh-heavens was the matter. When, lo
  • and behold! there lay the innocents all sound asleep; the dragons
  • moaning over their mysterious bruises.
  • Ah me! his harem, like all large families, was the delight and the
  • torment of the days and nights of Donjalolo.
  • And in one special matter was he either eminently miserable, or
  • otherwise: for all his multiplicity of wives, he had never an heir. Not
  • his, the proud paternal glance of the Grand Turk Solyman, looking round
  • upon a hundred sons, all bone of his bone, and squinting with his
  • squint.
  • CHAPTER LXXXI Wherein Babbalanja Relates The Adventure Of One Karkeke In
  • The Land Of Shades
  • At our morning repast on the second day of our stay in the hollow, our
  • party indulged in much lively discourse.
  • "Samoa," said I, "those isles of yours, of whose beauty you so often
  • make vauntful mention, can those isles, good Samoa, furnish a valley in
  • all respects equal to Willamilla?"
  • Disdainful answer was made, that Willamilla might be endurable enough
  • for a sojourn, but as a permanent abode, any glen of his own natal isle
  • was unspeakably superior.
  • "In the great valley of Savaii," cried Samoa, "for every leaf grown here
  • in Willamilla, grows a stately tree; and for every tree here waving, in
  • Savaii flourishes a goodly warrior."
  • Immeasurable was the disgust of the Upoluan for the enervated subjects
  • of Donjalolo; and for Donjalolo himself; though it was shrewdly divined,
  • that his annoying reception at the hands of the royalty of Juam, had
  • something to do with his disdain.
  • To Jarl, no similar question was put; for he was sadly deficient in a
  • taste for the picturesque. But he cursorily observed, that in his blue-water opinion, Willamilla was next to uninhabitable, all view of the sea
  • being intercepted.
  • And here it may be well to relate a comical blunder on the part of
  • honest Jarl; concerning which, Samoa, the savage, often afterward
  • twitted him; as indicating a rusticity, and want of polish in his
  • breeding. It rather originated, however, in his not heeding the
  • conventionalities of the strange people among whom he was thrown.
  • The anecdote is not an epic; but here it is.
  • Reclining in our arbor, we breakfasted upon a marble slab; so frost-white, and flowingly traced with blue veins, that it seemed a little
  • lake sheeted over with ice: Diana's virgin bosom congéaled.
  • Before each guest was a richly carved bowl and gourd, fruit and wine
  • freighted also the empty hemisphere of a small nut, the purpose of which
  • was a problem. Now, King Jarl scorned to admit the slightest degree of
  • under-breeding in the matter of polite feeding. So nothing was a problem
  • to him. At once reminded of the morsel of Arvaroot in his mouth, a
  • substitute for another sort of sedative then unattainable, he was
  • instantly illuminated concerning the purpose of the nut; and very
  • complacently introduced each to the other; in the innocence of his
  • ignorance making no doubt that he had acquitted himself with discretion;
  • the little hemisphere plainly being intended as a place of temporary
  • deposit for the Arva of the guests.
  • The company were astounded: Samoa more than all. King Jarl, meanwhile,
  • looking at all present with the utmost serenity. At length, one of the
  • horrified attendants, using two sticks for a forceps, disappeared with
  • the obnoxious nut, Upon which, the meal proceeded.
  • This attendant was not seen again for many days; which gave rise to the
  • supposition, that journeying to the sea-side, he had embarked for some
  • distant strand; there, to bury out of sight the abomination with which
  • he was freighted.
  • Upon this, his egregious misadventure, calculated to do discredit to our
  • party, and bring Media himself into contempt, Babbalanja had no scruples
  • in taking Jarl roundly to task. He assured him, that it argued but
  • little brains to evince a desire to be thought familiar with all things;
  • that however desirable as incidental attainments, conventionalities, in
  • themselves, were the very least of arbitrary trifles; the knowledge of
  • them, innate with no man. "Moreover Jarl," he added, "in essence,
  • conventionalities are but mimickings, at which monkeys succeed best.
  • Hence, when you find yourself at a loss in these matters, wait
  • patiently, and mark what the other monkeys do: and then follow suit. And
  • by so doing, you will gain a vast reputation as an accomplished ape.
  • Above all things, follow not the silly example of the young spark
  • Karkeke, of whom Mohi was telling me. Dying, and entering the other
  • world with a mincing gait, and there finding certain customs quite
  • strange and new; such as friendly shades passing through each other by
  • way of a salutation;--Karkeke, nevertheless, resolved to show no sign of
  • embarrassment. Accosted by a phantom, with wings folded pensively,
  • plumes interlocked across its chest, he off head; and stood obsequiously
  • before it. Staring at him for an instant, the spirit cut him dead;
  • murmuring to itself, 'Ah, some terrestrial bumpkin, I fancy,' and passed
  • on with its celestial nose in the highly rarified air. But silly Karkeke
  • undertaking to replace his head, found that it would no more stay on;
  • but forever tumbled off; even in the act of nodding a salute; which
  • calamity kept putting him out of countenance. And thus through all
  • eternity is he punished for his folly, in having pretended to be wise,
  • wherein he was ignorant. Head under arm, he wanders about, the scorn and
  • ridicule of the other world."
  • Our repast concluded, messengers arrived from the prince, courteously
  • inviting our presence at the House of the Morning. Thither we went;
  • journeying in sedans, sent across the hollow, for that purpose, by
  • Donjalolo.
  • CHAPTER LXXXII How Donjalolo, Sent Agents To The Surrounding Isles; With
  • The Result
  • Ere recounting what was beheld on entering the House of the Morning,
  • some previous information is needful. Though so many of Donjalolo's days
  • were consumed by sloth and luxury, there came to him certain intervals
  • of thoughtfulness, when all his curiosity concerning the things of outer
  • Mardi revived with augmented intensity. In these moods, he would send
  • abroad deputations, inviting to Willamilla the kings of the neighboring
  • islands; together with the most celebrated priests, bards, story-tellers, magicians, and wise men; that he might hear them converse of
  • those things, which he could not behold for himself.
  • But at last, he bethought him, that the various narrations he had heard,
  • could not have been otherwise than unavoidably faulty; by reason that
  • they had been principally obtained from the inhabitants of the countries
  • described; who, very naturally, must have been inclined to partiality or
  • uncandidness in their statements. Wherefore he had very lately
  • dispatched to the isles special agents of his own; honest of heart, keen
  • of eye, and shrewd of understanding; to seek out every thing that
  • promised to illuminate him concerning the places they visited, and also
  • to collect various specimens of interesting objects; so that at last he
  • might avail himself of the researches of others, and see with their
  • eyes.
  • But though two observers were sent to every one of the neighboring
  • lands; yet each was to act independently; make his own inquiries; form
  • his own conclusions; and return with his own specimens; wholly
  • regardless of the proceedings of the other.
  • It so came to pass, that on the very day of our arrival in the glen,
  • these pilgrims returned from their travels. And Donjalolo had set apart
  • the following morning to giving them a grand public reception. And it
  • was to this, that our party had been invited, as related in the chapter
  • preceding.
  • In the great Palm-hall of the House of the Morning, we were assigned
  • distinguished mats, to the right of the prince; his chiefs, attendants,
  • and subjects assembled in the open colonnades without.
  • When all was in readiness, in marched the company of savans and
  • travelers; and humbly standing in a semi-circle before the king, their
  • numerous hampers were deposited at their feet.
  • Donjalolo was now in high spirits, thinking of the rich store of
  • reliable information about to be furnished.
  • "Zuma," said he, addressing the foremost of the company, "you and
  • Varnopi were directed to explore the island of Rafona. Proceed now, and
  • relate all you know of that place. Your narration heard, we will list to
  • Varnopi."
  • With a profound inclination the traveler obeyed.
  • But soon Donjalolo interrupted him. "What say you, Zuma, about the
  • secret cavern, and the treasures therein? A very different account,
  • this, from all I have heard hitherto; but perhaps yours is the true
  • version. Go on."
  • But very soon, poor Zuma was again interrupted by exclamations of
  • surprise. Nay, even to the very end of his mountings.
  • But when he had done, Donjalolo observed, that if from any cause Zuma
  • was in error or obscure, Varnopi would not fail to set him right.
  • So Varnopi was called upon.
  • But not long had Varnopi proceeded, when Donjalolo changed color.
  • "What!" he exclaimed, "will ye contradict each other before our very
  • face. Oh Oro! how hard is truth to be come at by proxy! Fifty accounts
  • have I had of Rafona; none of which wholly agreed; and here, these two
  • varlets, sent expressly to behold and report, these two lying knaves,
  • speak crookedly both. How is it? Are the lenses in their eyes diverse-hued, that objects seem different to both; for undeniable is it, that
  • the things they thus clashingly speak of are to be known for the same;
  • though represented with unlike colors and qualities. But dumb things can
  • not lie nor err. Unpack thy hampers, Zuma. Here, bring them close: now:
  • what is this?"
  • "That," tremblingly replied Zuma, "is a specimen of the famous reef-bar
  • on the west side of the island of Rafona; your highness perceives its
  • deep red dyes."
  • Said Donjalolo, "Varnopi, hast thou a piece of this coral, also?"
  • "I have, your highness," said Varnopi; "here it is."
  • Taking it from his hand, Donjalolo gazed at its bleached, white hue;
  • then dashing it to the pavement, "Oh mighty Oro! Truth dwells in her
  • fountains; where every one must drink for himself. For me, vain all hope
  • of ever knowing Mardi! Away! Better know nothing, than be deceived.
  • Break up!"
  • And Donjalolo rose, and retired.
  • All present now broke out in a storm of vociferation; some siding with
  • Zuma; others with Varnopi; each of whom, in turn, was declared the man
  • to be relied upon.
  • Marking all this, Babbalanja, who had been silently looking on, leaning
  • against one of the palm pillars, quietly observed to Media:--"My lord, I
  • have seen this same reef at Rafona. In various places, it is of various
  • hues. As for Zuma and Varnopi, both are wrong, and both are right."
  • CHAPTER LXXXIII They Visit The Tributary Islets
  • In Willamilla, no Yillah being found, on the third day we took leave of
  • Donjalolo; who lavished upon us many caresses and, somewhat reluctantly
  • on Media's part, we quitted the vale.
  • One by one, we now visited the outer villages of Juam; and crossing the
  • waters, wandered several days among its tributary isles. There we saw
  • the viceroys of him who reigned in the hollow: chieftains of whom
  • Donjalolo was proud; so honest, humble, and faithful; so bent upon
  • ameliorating the condition of those under their rule. For, be it said,
  • Donjalolo was a charitable prince; in his serious intervals, ever
  • seeking the welfare of his subjects, though after an imperial view of
  • his own. But alas, in that sunny donjon among the mountains, where he
  • dwelt, how could Donjalolo be sure, that the things he decreed were
  • executed in regions forever remote from his view. Ah! very bland, very
  • innocent, very pious, the faces his viceroys presented during their
  • monthly visits to Willamilla. But as cruel their visage, when, returned
  • to their islets, they abandoned themselves to all the license of
  • tyrants; like Verres reveling down the rights of the Sicilians.
  • Like Carmelites, they came to Donjalolo, barefooted; but in their homes,
  • their proud latchets were tied by their slaves. Before their king-belted
  • prince, they stood rope-girdled like self-abased monks of St. Francis;
  • but with those ropes, before their palaces, they hung Innocence and
  • Truth.
  • As still seeking Yillah, and still disappointed, we roved through the
  • lands which these chieftains ruled, Babbalanja exclaimed--"Let us
  • depart; idle our search, in isles that have viceroys for kings."
  • At early dawn, about embarking for a distant land, there came to us
  • certain messengers of Donjalolo, saying that their lord the king,
  • repenting of so soon parting company with Media and Taji, besought them
  • to return with all haste; for that very morning, in Willamilla, a regal
  • banquet was preparing; to which many neighboring kings had been invited,
  • most of whom had already arrived.
  • Declaring that there was no alternative but compliance, Media acceded;
  • and with the king's messengers we returned to the glen.
  • CHAPTER LXXXIV Taji Sits Down To Dinner With Five-And-Twenty Kings, And
  • A Royal Time They Have
  • It was afternoon when we emerged from the defile. And informed that our
  • host was receiving his guests in the House of the Afternoon, thither we
  • directed our steps.
  • Soft in our face, blew the blessed breezes of Omi, stirring the leaves
  • overhead; while, here and there, through the trees, showed the idol-bearers of the royal retreat, hand in hand, linked with festoons of
  • flowers. Still beyond, on a level, sparkled the nodding crowns of the
  • kings, like the constellation Corona-Borealis, the horizon just gained.
  • Close by his noon-tide friend, the cascade at the mouth of the grotto,
  • reposed on his crimson mat, Donjalolo:--arrayed in a vestment of the
  • finest white tappa of Mardi, figured all over with bright yellow
  • lizards, so curiously stained in the gauze, that he seemed overrun, as
  • with golden mice.
  • Marjora's girdle girdled his loins, tasseled with the congregated teeth
  • of his sires. A jeweled turban-tiara, milk-white, surmounted his brow,
  • over which waved a copse of Pintado plumes.
  • But what sways in his hand? A scepter, similar to those likenesses of
  • scepters, imbedded among the corals at his feet. A polished thigh-bone;
  • by Braid-Beard declared once Teei's the Murdered. For to emphasize his
  • intention utterly to rule, Marjora himself had selected this emblem of
  • dominion over mankind.
  • But even this last despite done to dead Teei had once been transcended.
  • In the usurper's time, prevailed the belief, that the saliva of kings
  • must never touch ground; and Mohi's Chronicles made mention, that during
  • the life time of Marjora, Teei's skull had been devoted to the basest of
  • purposes: Marjora's, the hate no turf could bury.
  • Yet, traditions like these ever seem dubious. There be many who deny the
  • hump, moral and physical, of Gloster Richard.
  • Still advancing unperceived, in social hilarity we descried their
  • Highnesses, chatting together like the most plebeian of mortals; full as
  • merry as the monks of old. But marking our approach, all changed. A pair
  • of potentates, who had been playfully trifling, hurriedly adjusted their
  • diadems, threw themselves into attitudes, looking stately as statues.
  • Phidias turned not out his Jupiter so soon.
  • In various-dyed robes the five-and-twenty kings were arrayed; and
  • various their features, as the rows of lips, eyes and ears in John
  • Caspar Lavater's physiognomical charts. Nevertheless, to a king, all
  • their noses were aquiline.
  • There were long fox-tail beards of silver gray, and enameled chins, like
  • those of girls; bald pates and Merovingian locks; smooth brows and
  • wrinkles: forms erect and stooping; an eye that squinted; one king was
  • deaf; by his side, another that was halt; and not far off, a dotard.
  • They were old and young, tall and short, handsome and ugly, fat and
  • lean, cunning and simple.
  • With animated courtesy our host received us; assigning a neighboring
  • bower for Babbalanja and the rest; and among so many right-royal, demi-divine guests, how could the demi-gods Media and Taji be otherwise than
  • at home?
  • The unwonted sprightliness of Donjalolo surprised us. But he was in one
  • of those relapses of desperate gayety in-variably following his failures
  • in efforts to amend his life. And the bootless issue of his late mission
  • to outer Mardi had thrown him into a mood for revelry. Nor had he lately
  • shunned a wild wine, called Morando.
  • A slave now appearing with a bowl of this beverage, it circulated
  • freely.
  • Not to gainsay the truth, we fancied the Morando much. A nutty, pungent
  • flavor it had; like some kinds of arrack distilled in the Philippine
  • isles. And a marvelous effect did it have, in dissolving the
  • crystalization of the brain; leaving nothing but precious little drops
  • of good humor, beading round the bowl of the cranium.
  • Meanwhile, garlanded boys, climbing the limbs of the idol-pillars, and
  • stirruping their feet in their most holy mouths, suspended hangings of
  • crimson tappa all round the hall; so that sweeping the pavement they
  • rustled in the breeze from the grot.
  • Presently, stalwart slaves advanced; bearing a mighty basin of a
  • porphyry hue, deep-hollowed out of a tree. Outside, were innumerable
  • grotesque conceits; conspicuous among which, for a border, was an
  • endless string of the royal lizards circumnavigating the basin in
  • inverted chase of their tails.
  • Peculiar to the groves of Willamilla, the yellow lizard formed part of
  • the arms of Juam. And when Donjalolo's messenger went abroad, they
  • carried its effigy, as the emblem of their royal master; themselves
  • being known, as the Gentlemen of the Golden Lizard.
  • The porphyry-hued basin planted full in our midst, the attendants
  • forthwith filled the same with the living waters from the cascade; a
  • proceeding, for which some of the company were at a loss to account,
  • unless his highness, our host, with all the coolness of royalty,
  • purposed cooling himself still further, by taking a bath in presence of
  • his guests. A conjecture, most premature; for directly, the basin being
  • filled to within a few inches of the lizards, the attendants fell to
  • launching therein divers goodly sized trenchers, all laden with choice
  • viands:--wild boar meat; humps of grampuses; embrowned bread-fruit,
  • roasted in odoriferous fires of sandal wood, but suffered to cool; gold
  • fish, dressed with the fragrant juices of berries; citron sauce; rolls
  • of the baked paste of yams; juicy bananas, steeped in a saccharine oil;
  • marmalade of plantains; jellies of guava; confections of the treacle of
  • palm sap; and many other dainties; besides numerous stained calabashes
  • of Morando, and other beverages, fixed in carved floats to make them
  • buoyant.
  • The guests assigned seats, by the woven handles attached to his purple
  • mat, the prince, our host, was now gently moved by his servitors to the
  • head of the porphyry-hued basin. Where, flanked by lofty crowned-heads,
  • white-tiaraed, and radiant with royalty, he sat; like snow-turbaned Mont
  • Blanc, at sunrise presiding over the head waters of the Rhone; to right
  • and left, looming the gilded summits of the Simplon, the Gothard, the
  • Jungfrau, the Great St. Bernard, and the Grand Glockner.
  • Yet turbid from the launching of its freight, Lake Como tossed to and
  • fro its navies of good cheer, the shadows of the king-peaks wildly
  • flitting thereupon.
  • But no frigid wine and fruit cooler, Lake Como; as at first it did seem;
  • but a tropical dining table, its surface a slab of light blue St. Pons
  • marble in a state of fluidity.
  • Now, many a crown was doffed; scepters laid aside; girdles slackened;
  • and among those verdant viands the bearded kings like goats did browse;
  • or tusking their wild boar's meat, like mastiffs ate.
  • And like unto some well-fought fight, beginning calmly, but pressing
  • forward to a fiery rush, this well-fought feast did now wax warm.
  • A few royal epicures, however, there were: epicures intent upon
  • concoctions, admixtures, and masterly compoundings; who comported
  • themselves with all due deliberation and dignity; hurrying themselves
  • into no reckless deglutition of the dainties. Ah! admirable conceit,
  • Lake Como: superseding attendants. For, from hand to hand the trenchers
  • sailed; no sooner gaining one port, than dispatched over sea to another.
  • Well suited they were for the occasion; sailing high out of water, to
  • resist the convivial swell at times ruffling the sociable sea; and sharp
  • at both ends, still better adapting them to easy navigation.
  • But soon, the Morando, in triumphant decanters, went round, reeling like
  • barks before a breeze. But their voyages were brief; and ere long, in
  • certain havens, the accumulation of empty vessels threatened to bridge
  • the lake with pontoons. In those directions, Trade winds were setting.
  • But full soon, cut out were all unladen and unprofitable gourds; and
  • replaced by jolly-bellied calabashes, for a time sailing deep, yawing
  • heavily to the push.
  • At last, the whole flotilla of trenchers--wrecks and all--were sent
  • swimming to the further end of Lake Como; and thence removed, gave place
  • to ruddy hillocks of fruit, and floating islands of flowers. Chief among
  • the former, a quince-like, golden sphere, that filled the air with such
  • fragrance, you thought you were tasting its flavor.
  • Nor did the wine cease flowing. That day the Juam grape did bleed; that
  • day the tendril ringlets of the vines, did all uncurl and grape by
  • grape, in sheer dismay, the sun ripe clusters dropped. Grape-glad were
  • five-and-twenty kings: five-and-twenty kings were merry.
  • Morando's vintage had no end; nor other liquids, in the royal cellar
  • stored, somewhere secret in the grot. Oh! where's the endless Niger's
  • source? Search ye here, or search ye there; on, on, through ravine,
  • vega, vale--no head waters will ye find. But why need gain the hidden
  • spring, when its lavish stream flows by? At three-fold mouths that
  • Delta-grot discharged; rivers golden, white, and red.
  • But who may sing for aye? Down I come, and light upon the old and prosy
  • plain.
  • Among other decanters set afloat, was a pompous, lordly-looking
  • demijohn, but old and reverend withal, that sailed about, consequential
  • as an autocrat going to be crowned, or a treasure-freighted argosie
  • bound home before the wind. It looked solemn, however, though it reeled;
  • peradventure, far gone with its own potent contents.
  • Oh! russet shores of Rhine and Rhone! oh, mellow memories of ripe old
  • vintages! oh, cobwebs in the Pyramids! oh, dust on Pharaoh's tomb!--all,
  • all recur, as I bethink me of that glorious gourd, its contents cogent
  • as Tokay, itself as old as Mohi's legends; more venerable to look at
  • than his beard. Whence came it? Buried in vases, so saith the label,
  • with the heart of old Marjora, now dead one hundred thousand moons.
  • Exhumed at last, it looked no wine, but was shrunk into a subtile syrup.
  • This special calabash was distinguished by numerous trappings,
  • caparisoned like the sacred bay steed led before the Great Khan of
  • Tartary. A most curious and betasseled network encased it; and the royal
  • lizard was jealously twisted about its neck, like a hand on a throat
  • containing some invaluable secret.
  • All Hail, Marzilla! King's Own Royal Particular! A vinous Percy! Dating
  • back to the Conquest! Distilled of yore from purple berries growing in
  • the purple valley of Ardair! Thrice hail.
  • But the imperial Marzilla was not for all; gods only could partake; the
  • Kings and demigods of the isles; excluding left-handed descendants of
  • sad rakes of immortals, in old times breaking heads and hearts in Mardi,
  • bequeathing bars-sinister to many mortals, who now in vain might urge a
  • claim to a cup-full of right regal Marzilla.
  • The Royal Particular was pressed upon me, by the now jovial Donjalolo.
  • With his own sceptered hand charging my flagon to the brim, he declared
  • his despotic pleasure, that I should quaff it off to the last lingering
  • globule. No hard calamity, truly; for the drinking of this wine was as
  • the singing of a mighty ode, or frenzied lyric to the soul.
  • "Drink, Taji," cried Donjalolo, "drink deep. In this wine a king's heart
  • is dissolved. Drink long; in this wine lurk the seeds of the life
  • everlasting. Drink deep; drink long: thou drinkest wisdom and valor at
  • every draught. Drink forever, oh Taji, for thou drinkest that which will
  • enable thee to stand up and speak out before mighty Oro himself."
  • "Borabolla," he added, turning round upon a domed old king at his left,
  • "Was it not the god Xipho, who begged of my great-great-grandsire a
  • draught of this same wine, saying he was about to beget a hero?"
  • "Even so. And thy glorious Marzilla produced thrice valiant Ononna, who
  • slew the giants of the reef."
  • "Ha, ha, hear'st that, oh Taji?" And Donjalolo drained another cup.
  • Amazing! the flexibility of the royal elbow, and the rigidity of the
  • royal spine! More especially as we had been impressed with a notion of
  • their debility. But, sometimes these seemingly enervated young blades
  • approve themselves steadier of limb, than veteran revelers of very long
  • standing.
  • "Discharge the basin, and refill it with wine," cried Donjalolo. "Break
  • all empty gourds! Drink, kings, and dash your cups at every draught."
  • So saying, he started from his purple mat; and with one foot planted
  • unknowingly upon the skull of Marjora; while all the skeletons grinned
  • at him from the pavement; Donjalolo, holding on high his blood-red
  • goblet, burst forth with the following invocation:--Ha, ha, gods and
  • kings; fill high, one and all; Drink, drink! shout and drink! mad
  • respond to the call! Fill fast, and fill frill; 'gainst the goblet ne'er
  • sin; Quaff there, at high tide, to the uttermost rim:-- Flood-tide,
  • and soul-tide to the brim!
  • Who with wine in him fears? who thinks of his cares? Who sighs to be
  • wise, when wine in him flares? Water sinks down below, in currents full
  • slow; But wine mounts on high with its genial glow:-- Welling up,
  • till the brain overflow!
  • As the spheres, with a roll, some fiery of soul, Others golden, with
  • music, revolve round the pole;
  • So let our cups, radiant with many hued wines, Round and round in groups
  • circle, our Zodiac's Signs:-- Round reeling, and ringing their
  • chimes!
  • Then drink, gods and kings; wine merriment brings; It bounds through the
  • veins; there, jubilant sings. Let it ebb, then, and flow; wine never
  • grows dim; Drain down that bright tide at the foam beaded rim:--Fill up,
  • every cup, to the brim!
  • Caught by all present, the chorus resounded again and again. The beaded
  • wine danced on many a beard; the cataract lifted higher its voice; the
  • grotto sent back a shout; the ghosts of the Coral Monarchs seemed
  • starting from their insulted bones. But ha, ha, ha, roared forth the
  • five-and-twenty kings--alive, not dead--holding both hands to their
  • girdles, and baying out their laughter from abysses; like Nimrod's
  • hounds over some fallen elk.
  • Mad and crazy revelers, how ye drank and roared! but kings no more:
  • vestures loosed; and scepters rolling on the ground.
  • Glorious agrarian, thou wine! bringing all hearts on a level, and at
  • last all legs to the earth; even those of kings, who, to do them
  • justice, have been much maligned for imputed qualities not theirs. For
  • whoso has touched flagons with monarchs, bear they their back bones
  • never so stiffly on the throne, well know the rascals, to be at bottom
  • royal good fellows; capable of a vinous frankness exceeding that of
  • base-born men. Was not Alexander a boon companion? And daft Cambyses?
  • and what of old Rowley, as good a judge of wine and other matters, as
  • ever sipped claret or kisses.
  • If ever Taji joins a club, be it a Beef-Steak Club of Kings!
  • Donjalolo emptied yet another cup.
  • The mirth now blew a gale; like a ship's shrouds in a Typhoon, every
  • tendon vibrated; the breezes of Omi came forth with a rush; the hangings
  • shook; the goblets danced fandangos; and Donjalolo, clapping his hands,
  • called before him his dancing women.
  • Forth came from the grotto a reed-like burst of song, making all start,
  • and look that way to behold such enchanting strains. Sounds heralding
  • sights! Swimming in the air, emerged the nymphs, lustrous arms
  • interlocked like Indian jugglers' glittering snakes. Round the cascade
  • they thronged; then paused in its spray. Of a sudden, seemed to spring
  • from its midst, a young form of foam, that danced into the soul like a
  • thought. At last, sideways floating off, it subsided into the grotto, a
  • wave. Evening drawing on apace, the crimson draperies were lifted, and
  • festooned to the arms of the idol-pillars, admitting the rosy light of
  • the even.
  • Yielding to the re-action of the banquet, the kings now reclined; and
  • two mute damsels entered: one with a gourd of scented waters; the other
  • with napkins. Bending over Donjalolo's steaming head, the first let fall
  • a shower of aromatic drops, slowly aborbed by her companion. Thus, in
  • turn, all were served; nothing heard but deep breathing.
  • In a marble vase they now kindled some incense: a handful of spices.
  • Shortly after, came three of the king's beautiful smokers; who, lighting
  • their tubes at this odorous fire, blew over the company the sedative
  • fumes of the Aina.
  • Steeped in languor, I strove against it long; essayed to struggle out of
  • the enchanted mist. But a syren hand seemed ever upon me, pressing me
  • back.
  • Half-revealed, as in a dream, and the last sight that I saw, was
  • Donjalolo:--eyes closed, face pale, locks moist, borne slowly to his
  • sedan, to cross the hollow, and wake in the seclusion of his harem.
  • CHAPTER LXXXV After Dinner
  • As in dreams I behold thee again, Willamila! as in dreams, once again I
  • stroll through thy cool shady groves, oh fairest of the vallies of
  • Mardi! the thought of that mad merry feasting steals over my soul till I
  • faint.
  • Prostrate here and there over the bones of Donjalolo's sires, the royal
  • bacchanals lay slumbering till noon.
  • "Which are the deadest?" said Babbalanja, peeping in, "the live kings,
  • or the dead ones?"
  • But the former were drooping flowers sought to be revived by watering.
  • At intervals the sedulous attendants went to and fro, besprinkling their
  • heads with the scented contents of their vases.
  • At length, one by one, the five-and-twenty kings lifted their ambrosial
  • curls; and shaking the dew therefrom, like eagles opened their right
  • royal eyes, and dilated their aquiline nostrils, full upon the golden
  • rays of the sun.
  • But why absented himself, Donjalolo? Had he cavalierly left them to
  • survive the banquet by themselves? But this apparent incivility was soon
  • explained by heralds, announcing to their prone majesties, that through
  • the over solicitude of his slaves, their lord the king had been borne to
  • his harem, without being a party to the act. But to make amends, in his
  • sedan, Donjalolo was even now drawing nigh. Not, however, again to make
  • merry; but socially to sleep in company with his guests; for, together
  • they had all got high, and together they must all lie low.
  • So at it they went: each king to his bones, and slumbered like heroes
  • till evening; when, availing themselves of the cool moonlight
  • approaching, the royal guests bade adieu to their host; and summoning
  • their followers, quitted the glen.
  • Early next day, having determined to depart for our canoes, we proceeded
  • to the House of the Morning, to take leave of Donjalolo.
  • An amazing change, one night of solitude had wrought! Pale and languid,
  • we found him reclining: one hand on his throbbing temples.
  • Near an overturned vessel of wine, the royal girdle lay tossed at his
  • feet. He had waved off his frightened attendants, who crouched out of
  • sight.
  • We advanced.
  • "Do ye too leave me? Ready enough are ye to partake of my banquetings,
  • which, to such as ye, are but mad incidents in one round of more
  • tranquil diversions. But heed me not, Media;--I am mad. Oh, ye gods! am
  • I forever a captive?--Ay, free king of Odo, when you list, condescend to
  • visit the poor slave in Willamilla. I account them but charity, your
  • visits; would fain allure ye by sumptuous fare. Go, leave me; go, and be
  • rovers again throughout blooming Mardi. For, me, I am here for aye.--Bring me wine, slaves! quick! that I may pledge my guests fitly. Alas,
  • Media, at the bottom of this cup are no sparkles as at top. Oh,
  • treacherous, treacherous friend! full of smiles and daggers. Yet for
  • such as me, oh wine, thou art e'en a prop, though it pierce the side;
  • for man must lean. Thou wine art the friend of the friendless, though a
  • foe to all. King Media, let us drink. More cups!--And now, farewell."
  • Falling back, he averted his face; and silently we quitted the palace.
  • CHAPTER LXXXVI Of Those Scamps The Plujii
  • The beach gained, we embarked.
  • In good time our party recovered from the seriousness into which we had
  • been thrown; and a rather long passage being now before us, we whiled
  • away the hours as best we might.
  • Among many entertaining, narrations, old Braid-Beard, crossing his
  • calves, and peaking his beard, regaled us with some account of certain
  • invisible spirits, ycleped the Plujii, arrant little knaves as ever
  • gulped moonshine.
  • They were spoken of as inhabiting the island of Quelquo, in a remote
  • corner of the lagoon; the innocent people of which island were sadly
  • fretted and put out by their diabolical proceedings. Not to be wondered
  • at; since, dwelling as they did in the air, and completely inaccessible,
  • these spirits were peculiarly provocative of ire.
  • Detestable Plujii! With malice aforethought, they brought about high
  • winds that destroyed the banana plantations, and tumbled over the heads
  • of its occupants many a bamboo dwelling. They cracked the calabashes;
  • soured the "poee;" induced the colic; begat the spleen; and almost rent
  • people in twain with stitches in the side. In short, from whatever evil,
  • the cause of which the Islanders could not directly impute to their
  • gods, or in their own opinion was not referable to themselves,--of that
  • very thing must the invisible Plujii be guilty. With horrible dreams,
  • and blood-thirsty gnats, they invaded the most innocent slumbers.
  • All things they bedeviled. A man with a wry neck ascribed it to the
  • Plujii; he with a bad memory railed against the Plujii; and the boy,
  • bruising his finger, also cursed those abominable spirits.
  • Nor, to some minds, at least, was there wanting strong presumptive
  • evidence, that at times, with invisible fingers, the above mentioned
  • Plujii did leave direct and tangible traces of their presence; pinching
  • and pounding the unfortunate Islanders; pulling their hair; plucking
  • their ears, and tweaking their beards and their noses. And thus
  • perpetually vexing, incensing, tormenting, and exasperating their
  • helpless victims, the atrocious Plujii reveled in their malicious
  • dominion over the souls and bodies of the people of Quelquo.
  • What it was, that induced them to enact such a part, Oro only knew; and
  • never but once, it seems, did old Mohi endeavor to find out.
  • Once upon a time, visiting Quelquo, he chanced to encounter an old woman
  • almost doubled together, both hands upon her abdomen; in that manner
  • running about distracted.
  • "My good woman," said he, "what under the firmament is the matter?"
  • "The Plujii! the Plujii!" affectionately caressing the field of their
  • operations.
  • "But why do they torment you?" he soothingly inquired. "How should I
  • know? and what good would it do me if I did?"
  • And on she ran.
  • At this part of his narration, Mohi was interrupted by Media; who, much
  • to the surprise of all present, observed, that, unbeknown to him (Braid-Beard), he happened to have been on that very island, at that very time,
  • and saw that identical old lady in the very midst of those abdominal
  • tribulations.
  • "That she was really in great distress," he went on to say, "was plainly
  • to be seen; but that in that particular instance, your Plujii had any
  • hand in tormenting her, I had some boisterous doubts. For, hearing that
  • an hour or two previous she had been partaking of some twenty unripe
  • bananas, I rather fancied that that circumstance might have had
  • something to do with her sufferings. But however it was, all the herb-leeches on the island would not have altered her own opinions on the
  • subject."
  • "No," said Braid-Beard; "a post-mortem examination would not have
  • satisfied her ghost."
  • "Curious to relate," he continued, "the people of that island never
  • abuse the Plujii, notwithstanding all they suffer at their hands, unless
  • under direct provocation; and a settled matter of faith is it, that at
  • such times all bitter words and hasty objurgations are entirely
  • overlooked, nay, pardoned on the spot, by the unseen genii against whom
  • they are directed."
  • "Magnanimous Plujii!" cried Media. "But, Babbalanja, do you, who run a
  • tilt at all things, suffer this silly conceit to be uttered with
  • impunity in your presence? Why so silent?"
  • "I have been thinking, my lord," said Babbalanja, "that though the
  • people of that island may at times err, in imputing their calamities to
  • the Plujii, that, nevertheless, upon the whole, they indulge in a
  • reasonable belief. For, Plujii or no Plujii, it is undeniable, that in
  • ten thousand ways, as if by a malicious agency, we mortals are woefully
  • put out and tormented; and that, too, by things in themselves so
  • exceedingly trivial, that it would seem almost impiety to ascribe them
  • to the august gods. No; there must exist some greatly inferior spirits;
  • so insignificant, comparatively, as to be overlooked by the supernal
  • powers; and through them it must be, that we are thus grievously
  • annoyed. At any rate; such a theory would supply a hiatus in my system
  • of meta-physics."
  • "Well, peace to the Plujii," said Media; "they trouble not me."
  • CHAPTER LXXXVII Nora-Bamma
  • Still onward gliding, the lagoon a calm.
  • Hours pass; and full before us, round and green, a Moslem turban by us
  • floats--Nora-Bamma, Isle of Nods.
  • Noon-tide rolls its flood. Vibrates the air, and trembles. And by
  • illusion optical, thin-draped in azure haze, drift here and there the
  • brilliant lands: swans, peacock-plumaged, sailing through the sky. Down
  • to earth hath heaven come; hard telling sun-clouds from the isles.
  • And high in air nods Nora-Bamma. Nid-nods its tufted summit like three
  • ostrich plumes; its beetling crags, bent poppies, shadows, willowy
  • shores, all nod; its streams are murmuring down the hills; its wavelets
  • hush the shore.
  • Who dwells in Nora-Bamma? Dreamers, hypochondriacs, somnambulists; who,
  • from the cark and care of outer Mardi fleeing, in the poppy's jaded
  • odors, seek oblivion for the past, and ecstasies to come.
  • Open-eyed, they sleep and dream; on their roof-trees, grapes unheeded
  • drop. In Nora-Bamma, whispers are as shouts; and at a zephyr's breath,
  • from the woodlands shake the leaves, as of humming-birds, a flight.
  • All this spake Braid-Beard, of the isle. How that none ere touched its
  • strand, without rendering instant tribute of a nap; how that those who
  • thither voyaged, in golden quest of golden gourds, fast dropped asleep,
  • ere one was plucked; waking not till night; how that you must needs rub
  • hard your eyes, would you wander through the isle; and how that silent
  • specters would be met, haunting twilight groves, and dreamy meads;
  • hither gliding, thither fading, end or purpose none.
  • True or false, so much for Mohi's Nora Bamma.
  • But as we floated on, it looked the place described. We yawned, and
  • yawned, as crews of vessels may; as in warm Indian seas, their winnowing
  • sails all swoon, when by them glides some opium argosie.
  • CHAPTER LXXXVIII In A Calm, Hautia's Heralds Approach
  • "How still!" cried Babbalanja. "This calm is like unto Oro's everlasting
  • serenity, and like unto man's last despair."
  • But now the silence was broken by a strange, distant, intermitted melody
  • in the water.
  • Gazing over the side, we saw naught but a far-darting ray in its depths.
  • Then Yoomy, before buried in a reverie, burst forth with a verse, sudden
  • as a jet from a Geyser.
  • Like the fish of the bright and twittering fin, Bright fish! diving deep
  • as high soars the lark, So, far, far, far, doth the maiden swim, Wild
  • song, wild light, in still ocean's dark.
  • "What maiden, minstrel?" cried Media.
  • "None of these," answered Yoomy, pointing out a shallop gliding near.
  • "The damsels three:--Taji, they pursue you yet." That still canoe drew
  • nigh, the Iris in its prow.
  • Gliding slowly by, one damsel flung a Venus-car, the leaves yet fresh.
  • Said Yoomy--"Fly to love."
  • The second maiden flung a pallid blossom, buried in hemlock leaves.
  • Said Yoomy, starting--"I have wrought a death."
  • Then came showering Venus-cars, and glorious moss-roses numberless, and
  • odorous handfuls of Verbena.
  • Said Yoomy--"Yet fly, oh fly to me: all rosy joys and sweets are mine."
  • Then the damsels floated on.
  • "Was ever queen more enigmatical?" cried Media--"Love,--death,--joy, --fly to me? But what says Taji?"
  • "That I turn not back for Hautia; whoe'er she be, that wild witch I
  • contemn."
  • "Then spread our pinions wide! a breeze! up sails! ply paddles all!
  • Come, Flora's flute, float forth a song."
  • To pieces picking the thorny roses culled from Hautia's gifts, and
  • holding up their blighted cores, thus plumed and turbaned Yoomy sang,
  • leaning against the mast:--Oh! royal is the rose, But barbed with many a
  • dart; Beware, beware the rose, 'Tis cankered at the heart.
  • Sweet, sweet the sunny down, Oh! lily, lily, lily down! Sweet, sweet,
  • Verbena's bloom! Oh! pleasant, gentle, musky bloom!
  • Dread, dread the sunny down; Lo! lily-hooded asp; Blooms, blooms no more
  • Verbena; White-withered in your clasp.
  • CHAPTER LXXXIX Braid-Beard Rehearses The Origin Of The Isle Of Rogues
  • Judge not things by their names. This, the maxim illustrated respecting
  • the isle toward which we were sailing.
  • Ohonoo was its designation, in other words the Land of Rogues. So what
  • but a nest of villains and pirates could one fancy it to be: a downright
  • Tortuga, swarming with "Brethren of the coast,"--such as Montbars,
  • L'Ollonais, Bartolomeo, Peter of Dieppe, and desperadoes of that kidney.
  • But not so. The men of Ohonoo were as honest as any in Mardi. They had a
  • suspicious appellative for their island, true; but not thus seemed it to
  • them. For, upon nothing did they so much plume themselves as upon this
  • very name. Why? Its origin went back to old times; and being venerable
  • they gloried therein; though they disclaimed its present applicability
  • to any of their race; showing, that words are but algebraic signs,
  • conveying no meaning except what you please. And to be called one thing,
  • is oftentimes to be another.
  • But how came the Ohonoose by their name?
  • Listen, and Braid-Beard, our Herodotus, will tell.
  • Long and long ago, there were banished to Ohonoo all the bucaniers,
  • flibustiers, thieves, and malefactors of the neighboring islands; who,
  • becoming at last quite a numerous community, resolved to make a stand
  • for their dignity, and number one among the nations of Mardi. And even
  • as before they had been weeded out of the surrounding countries; so now,
  • they went to weeding out themselves; banishing all objectionable persons
  • to still another island.
  • These events happened at a period so remote, that at present it was
  • uncertain whether those twice banished, were thrust into their second
  • exile by reason of their superlative knavery, or because of their
  • comparative honesty. If the latter, then must the residue have been a
  • precious enough set of scoundrels.
  • However it was, the commonwealth of knaves now mustered together their
  • gray-beards, and wise-pates, and knowing-ones, of which last there was a
  • plenty, chose a king to rule over them, and went to political
  • housekeeping for themselves.
  • And in the fullness of time, this people became numerous and mighty. And
  • the more numerous and mighty they waxed, by so much the more did they
  • take pride and glory in their origin, frequently reverting to it with
  • manifold boastings. The proud device of their monarch was a hand with
  • the forefinger crooked, emblematic of the peculatory propensities of his
  • ancestors.
  • And all this, at greater length, said Mohi.
  • "It would seem, then, my lord," said Babbalanja, reclining, "as if these
  • men of Ohonoo had canonized the derelictions of their progenitors,
  • though the same traits are deemed scandalous among themselves. But it is
  • time that makes the difference. The knave of a thousand years ago seems
  • a fine old fellow full of spirit and fun, little malice in his soul;
  • whereas, the knave of to-day seems a sour-visaged wight, with nothing to
  • redeem him. Many great scoundrels of our Chronicler's chronicles are
  • heroes to us:--witness, Marjora the usurper. Ay, time truly works
  • wonders. It sublimates wine; it sublimates fame; nay, is the creator
  • thereof; it enriches and darkens our spears of the Palm; enriches and
  • enlightens the mind; it ripens cherries and young lips; festoons old
  • ruins, and ivies old heads; imparts a relish to old yams, and a pungency
  • to the Ponderings of old Bardianna; of fables distills truths; and
  • finally, smooths, levels, glosses, softens, melts, and meliorates all
  • things. Why, my lord, round Mardi itself is all the better for its
  • antiquity, and the more to be revered; to the cozy-minded, more
  • comfortable to dwell in. Ah! if ever it lay in embryo like a green seed
  • in the pod, what a damp, shapeless thing it must have been, and how
  • unpleasant from the traces of its recent creation. The first man, quoth
  • old Bardianna, must have felt like one going into a new habitation,
  • where the bamboos are green. Is there not a legend in Maramma, that his
  • family were long troubled with influenzas and catarrhs?"
  • "Oh Time, Time, Time!" cried Yoomy--"it is Time, old midsummer Time,
  • that has made the old world what it is. Time hoared the old mountains,
  • and balded their old summits, and spread the old prairies, and built the
  • old forests, and molded the old vales. It is Time that has worn glorious
  • old channels for the glorious old rivers, and rounded the old lakes, and
  • deepened the old sea! It is Time--"
  • "Ay, full time to cease," cried Media. "What have you to do with
  • cogitations not in verse, minstrel? Leave prose to Babbalanja, who is
  • prosy enough."
  • "Even so," said Babbalanja, "Yoomy, you have overstepped your province.
  • My lord Media well knows, that your business is to make the metal in you
  • jingle in tags, not ring in the ingot."
  • CHAPTER XC Rare Sport At Ohonoo
  • Approached from the northward, Ohonoo, midway cloven down to the sea,
  • one half a level plain; the other, three mountain terraces--Ohonoo looks
  • like the first steps of a gigantic way to the sun. And such, if Braid-Beard spoke truth, it had formerly been.
  • "Ere Mardi was made," said that true old chronicler, "Vivo, one of the
  • genii, built a ladder of mountains whereby to go up and go down. And of
  • this ladder, the island of Ohonoo was the base. But wandering here and
  • there, incognito in a vapor, so much wickedness did Vivo spy out, that
  • in high dudgeon he hurried up his ladder, knocking the mountains from
  • under him as he went. These here and there fell into the lagoon, forming
  • many isles, now green and luxuriant; which, with those sprouting from
  • seeds dropped by a bird from the moon, comprise all the groups in the
  • reef."
  • Surely, oh, surely, if I live till Mardi be forgotten by Mardi, I shall
  • not forget the sight that greeted us, as we drew nigh the shores of this
  • same island of Ohonoo; for was not all Ohonoo bathing in the surf of the
  • sea?
  • But let the picture be painted.
  • Where eastward the ocean rolls surging against the outer reef of Mardi,
  • there, facing a flood-gate in the barrier, stands cloven Ohonoo; her
  • plains sloping outward to the sea, her mountains a bulwark behind. As at
  • Juam, where the wild billows from seaward roll in upon its cliffs; much
  • more at Ohonoo, in billowy battalions charge they hotly into the lagoon,
  • and fall on the isle like an army from the deep. But charge they never
  • so boldly, and charge they forever, old Ohonoo gallantly throws them
  • back till all before her is one scud and rack. So charged the bright
  • billows of cuirassiers at Waterloo: so hurled them off the long line of
  • living walls, whose base was as the sea-beach, wreck-strown, in a gale.
  • Without the break in the reef wide banks of coral shelve off, creating
  • the bar, where the waves muster for the onset, thundering in water-bolts, that shake the whole reef, till its very spray trembles. And then
  • is it, that the swimmers of Ohonoo most delight to gambol in the surf.
  • For this sport, a surf-board is indispensable: some five feet in length;
  • the width of a man's body; convex on both sides; highly polished; and
  • rounded at the ends. It is held in high estimation; invariably oiled
  • after use; and hung up conspicuously in the dwelling of the owner.
  • Ranged on the beach, the bathers, by hundreds dash in; and diving under
  • the swells, make straight for the outer sea, pausing not till the
  • comparatively smooth expanse beyond has been gained. Here, throwing
  • themselves upon their boards, tranquilly they wait for a billow that
  • suits. Snatching them up, it hurries them landward, volume and speed
  • both increasing, till it races along a watery wall, like the smooth,
  • awful verge of Niagara. Hanging over this scroll, looking down from it
  • as from a precipice, the bathers halloo; every limb in motion to
  • preserve their place on the very crest of the wave. Should they fall
  • behind, the squadrons that follow would whelm them; dismounted, and
  • thrown forward, as certainly would they be run over by the steed they
  • ride. 'Tis like charging at the head of cavalry: you must on.
  • An expert swimmer shifts his position on his plank; now half striding
  • it; and anon, like a rider in the ring, poising himself upright in the
  • scud, coming on like a man in the air.
  • At last all is lost in scud and vapor, as the overgrown billow bursts
  • like a bomb. Adroitly emerging, the swimmers thread their way out; and
  • like seals at the Orkneys, stand dripping upon the shore.
  • Landing in smooth water, some distance from the scene, we strolled
  • forward; and meeting a group resting, inquired for Uhia, their king. He
  • was pointed out in the foam. But presently drawing nigh, he embraced
  • Media, bidding all welcome.
  • The bathing over, and evening at hand, Uhia and his subjects repaired to
  • their canoes; and we to ours.
  • Landing at another quarter of the island, we journeyed up a valley
  • called Monlova, and were soon housed in a very pleasant retreat of our
  • host.
  • Soon supper was spread. But though the viands were rare, and the red
  • wine went round and round like a foaming bay horse in the ring; yet we
  • marked, that despite the stimulus of his day's good sport, and the
  • stimulus of his brave good cheer, Uhia our host was moody and still.
  • Said Babbalanja "My lord, he fills wine cups for others to quaff."
  • But whispered King Media, "Though Uhia be sad, be we merry, merry men."
  • And merry some were, and merrily went to their mats.
  • CHAPTER XCI Of King Uhia And His Subjects
  • As beseemed him, Uhia was royally lodged. Ample his roof. Beneath it a
  • hundred attendants nightly laying their heads. But long since, he had
  • disbanded his damsels.
  • Springing from syren embrace--"They shall sap and mine me no more" he
  • cried "my destiny commands me. I will don my manhood. By Keevi! no more
  • will I clasp a waist."
  • "From that time forth," said Braid-Beard, "young Uhia spread like the
  • tufted top of the Palm; his thigh grew brawny as the limb of the Banian;
  • his arm waxed strong as the back bone of the shark; yea, his voice grew
  • sonorous as a conch."
  • "And now he bent his whole soul to the accomplishment of the destiny
  • believed to be his. Nothing less than bodily to remove Ohonoo to the
  • center of the lagoon, in fulfillment of an old prophecy running thus--When a certain island shall stir from its foundations and stand in the
  • middle of the still water, then shall the ruler of that island be ruler
  • of all Mardi."
  • The task was hard, but how glorious the reward! So at it he went, and
  • all Ohonoo helped him. Not by hands, but by calling in the magicians.
  • Thus far, nevertheless, in vain. But Uhia had hopes.
  • Now, informed of all this, said Babbalanja to Media, "My lord, if the
  • continual looking-forward to something greater, be better than an
  • acquiescence in things present; then, wild as it is, this belief of
  • Uhia's he should hug to his heart, as erewhile his wives. But my lord,
  • this faith it is, that robs his days of peace; his nights of sweet
  • unconsciousness. For holding himself foreordained to the dominion of the
  • entire Archipelago, he upbraids the gods for laggards, and curses
  • himself as deprived of his rights; nay, as having had wrested from him,
  • what he never possessed. Discontent dwarfs his horizon till he spans it
  • with his hand. 'Most miserable of demi-gods,' he cries, 'here am I
  • cooped up in this insignificant islet, only one hundred leagues by
  • fifty, when scores of broad empires own me not for their lord.' Yet Uhia
  • himself is envied. 'Ah!' cries Karrolono, one of his chieftains, master
  • of a snug little glen, 'Here am I cabined in this paltry cell among the
  • mountains, when that great King Uhia is lord of the whole island, and
  • every cubic mile of matter therein.' But this same Karrolono is envied.
  • 'Hard, oh beggarly lot is mine,' cries Donno, one of his retainers.
  • 'Here am I fixed and screwed down to this paltry plantation, when my
  • lord Karrolono owns the whole glen, ten long parasangs from cliff to
  • sea.' But Donno too is envied. 'Alas, cursed fate!' cries his servitor
  • Flavona. 'Here am I made to trudge, sweat, and labor all day, when Donno
  • my master does nothing but command.' But others envy Flavona; and those
  • who envy him are envied in turn; even down to poor bed-ridden Manta, who
  • dying of want, groans forth, 'Abandoned wretch that I am! here I
  • miserably perish, while so many beggars gad about and live!' But surely;
  • none envy Manta! Yes; great Uhia himself. 'Ah!' cries the king. 'Here am
  • I vexed and tormented by ambition; no peace night nor day; my temples
  • chafed sore by this cursed crown that I wear; while that ignoble wight
  • Manta, gives up the ghost with none to molest him.'"
  • In vain we wandered up and down in this isle, and peered into its
  • innermost recesses: no Yillah was there.
  • CHAPTER XCII The God Keevi And The Precipice Op Mondo
  • One object of interest in Ohonoo was the original image of Keevi the god
  • of Thieves; hence, from time immemorial, the tutelar deity of the isle.
  • His shrine was a natural niche in a cliff, walling in the valley of
  • Monlova And here stood Keevi, with his five eyes, ten hands, and three
  • pair of legs, equipped at all points for the vocation over which he
  • presided. Of mighty girth, his arms terminated in hands, every finger a
  • limb, spreading in multiplied digits: palms twice five, and fifty
  • fingers.
  • According to the legend, Keevi fell from a golden cloud, burying himself
  • to the thighs in the earth, tearing up the soil all round. Three
  • meditative mortals, strolling by at the time, had a narrow escape.
  • A wonderful recital; but none of us voyagers durst flout it. Did they
  • not show us the identical spot where the idol fell? We descended into
  • the hollow, now verdant. Questionless, Keevi himself would have vouched
  • for the truth of the miracle, had he not been unfortunately dumb. But by
  • far the most cogent, and pointed argument advanced in support of this
  • story, is a spear which the priests of Keevi brought forth, for
  • Babbalanja to view.
  • "Let me look at it closer," said Babbalanja.
  • And turning it over and over and curiously inspecting it, "Wonderful
  • spear," he cried. "Doubtless, my reverends, this self-same spear must
  • have persuaded many recusants!"
  • "Nay, the most stubborn," they answered.
  • "And all afterward quoted as additional authority for the truth of the
  • legend?"
  • "Assuredly."
  • From the sea to the shrine of this god, the fine valley of Monlova
  • ascends with a gentle gradation, hardly perceptible; but upon turning
  • round toward the water, one is surprised to find himself high elevated
  • above its surface. Pass on, and the same silent ascent deceives you; and
  • the valley contracts; and on both sides the cliffs advance; till at last
  • you come to a narrow space, shouldered by buttresses of rock. Beyond,
  • through this cleft, all is blue sky. If the Trades blow high, and you
  • came unawares upon the spot, you would think Keevi himself pushing you
  • forward with all his hands; so powerful is the current of air rushing
  • through this elevated defile. But expostulate not with the tornado that
  • blows you along; sail on; but soft; look down; the land breaks off in
  • one sheer descent of a thousand feet, right down to the wide plain
  • below. So sudden and profound this precipice, that you seem to look off
  • from one world to another. In a dreamy, sunny day, the spangled plain
  • beneath assumes an uncertain fleeting aspect. Had you a deep-sea-lead
  • you would almost be tempted to sound the ocean-haze at your feet.
  • This, mortal! is the precipice of Mondo.
  • From this brink, spear in hand, sprang fifty rebel warriors, driven back
  • into the vale by a superior force. Finding no spot to stand at bay, with
  • a fierce shout they took the fatal leap.
  • Said Mohi, "Their souls ascended, ere their bodies touched."
  • This tragical event took place many generations gone by, and now a
  • dizzy, devious way conducts one, firm of foot, from the verge to the
  • plain. But none ever ascended. So perilous, indeed, is the descent
  • itself, that the islanders venture not the feat, without invoking
  • supernatural aid. Flanking the precipice beneath beetling rocks, stand
  • the guardian deities of Mondo; and on altars before them, are placed the
  • propitiatory offerings of the traveler.
  • To the right of the brink of the precipice, and far over it, projects a
  • narrow ledge. The test of legitimacy in the Ohonoo monarchs is to stand
  • hereon, arms folded, and javelins darting by.
  • And there in his youth Uhia stood.
  • "How felt you, cousin?" asked Media.
  • "Like the King of Ohonoo," he replied. "As I _shall_ again feel; when
  • King of all Mardi."
  • CHAPTER XCIII Babbalanja Steps In Between Mohi And Yoomy; And Yoomy
  • Relates A Legend
  • Embarking from Ohonoo, we at length found ourselves gliding by the
  • pleasant shores of Tupia, an islet which according to Braid-Beard had
  • for ages remained uninhabited by man. Much curiosity being expressed to
  • know more of the isle, Mohi was about to turn over his chronicles, when,
  • with modesty, the minstrel Yoomy interposed; saying, that if my Lord
  • Media permitted, he himself would relate the legend. From its nature,
  • deeming the same pertaining to his province as poet; though, as yet, it
  • had not been versified. But he added, that true pearl shells rang
  • musically, though not strung upon a cord.
  • Upon this presumptuous interference, Mohi looked highly offended; and
  • nervously twitching his beard, uttered something invidious about
  • frippery young poetasters being too full of silly imaginings to tell a
  • plain tale.
  • Said Yoomy, in reply, adjusting his turban, "Old Mohi, let us not
  • clash. I honor your calling; but, with submission, your chronicles are
  • more wild than my cantos. I deal in pure conceits of my own; which have
  • a shapeliness and a unity, however unsubstantial; but you, Braid-Beard,
  • deal in mangled realities. In all your chapters, you yourself grope in
  • the dark. Much truth is not in thee, historian. Besides, Mohi: my songs
  • perpetuate many things which you sage scribes entirely overlook. Have
  • you not oftentimes come to me, and my ever dewy ballads for information,
  • in which you and your musty old chronicles were deficient?"
  • "In much that is precious, Mohi, we poets are the true historians; we
  • embalm; you corrode."
  • To this Mohi, with some ire, was about to make answer, when, flinging
  • over his shoulder a new fold of his mantle, Babbalanja spoke thus:
  • "Peace, rivals. As Bardianna has it, like all who dispute upon
  • pretensions of their own, you are each nearest the right, when you speak
  • of the other; and furthest therefrom, when you speak of yourselves."
  • Said Mohi and Yoomy in a breath, "Who sought your opinion, philosopher?
  • you filcher from old Bardianna, and monger of maxims!"
  • "You, who have so long marked the vices of Mardi, that you flatter
  • yourself you have none of your own," added Braid-Beard.
  • "You, who only seem wise, because of the contrasting follies of others,
  • and not of any great wisdom in yourself," continued the minstrel, with
  • unwonted asperity."
  • "Now here," said Babballanja, "am I charged upon by a bearded old ram,
  • and a lamb. One butting with his carious and brittle old frontlet; the
  • other pushing with its silly head before its horns are sprouted. But
  • this comes of being impartial. Had I espoused the cause of Yoomy versus
  • Mohi, or that of Mohi versus Yoomy, I had been sure to have had at least
  • one voice in my favor. The impartialist insulteth all sides, saith old
  • Bardianna; but smite with but one hand, and the other shall be kissed.--Oh incomparable Bardianna!"
  • "Will no one lay that troubled old ghost," exclaimed Media, devoutly.
  • "Proceed with thy legend, Yoomy; and see to it, that it be brief; for I
  • mistrust me, these legends do but test the patience of the hearers. But
  • draw a long breath, and begin."
  • "A long bow," muttered Mohi.
  • And Yoomy began.
  • "It is now about ten hundred thousand moons--"
  • "Great Oro! How long since, say you?" cried Mohi, making Gothic arches
  • of his brows.
  • Looking at him disdainfully, but vouchsafing no reply, Yoomy began over
  • again.
  • "It is now above ten hundred thousand moons, since there died the last
  • of a marvelous race, once inhabiting the very shores by which we are
  • sailing. They were a very diminutive people, only a few inches high--"
  • "Stop, minstrel," cried Mohi; "how many pennyweights did they weigh?"
  • Continued Yoomy, unheedingly, "They were covered all over with a soft,
  • silky down, like that on the rind of the Avee; and there grew upon their
  • heads a green, lance-leaved vine, of a most delicate texture. For
  • convenience, the manikins reduced their tendrils, sporting, nothing but
  • coronals. Whereas, priding themselves upon the redundancy of their
  • tresses, the little maidens assiduously watered them with the early dew
  • of the morning; so that all wreathed and festooned with verdure, they
  • moved about in arbors, trailing after them trains."
  • "I can hear no more," exclaimed Mohi, stopping his ears.
  • Continued Yoomy, "The damsels lured to their bowers, certain red-plumaged insect-birds, and taught them to nestle therein, and warble;
  • which, with the pleasant vibrating of the leaves, when the little
  • maidens moved, produced a strange blending of sweet, singing sounds. The
  • little maidens embraced not with their arms, but with their viny locks;
  • whose tendrils instinctively twined about their lovers, till both were
  • lost in the bower."
  • "And what then?" asked Mohi, who, notwithstanding the fingers in his
  • ears, somehow contrived to listen; "What then?"
  • Vouchsafing no reply, Yoomy went on.
  • "At a certain age, but while yet the maidens were very young, their
  • vines bore blossoms. Ah! fatal symptoms. For soon as they burst, the
  • maidens died in their arbors; and were buried in the valleys; and their
  • vines spread forth; and the flowers bloomed; but the maidens themselves
  • were no more. And now disdaining the earth, the vines shot upward:
  • climbing to the topmost boughs of the trees; and flowering in the
  • sunshine forever and aye."
  • Yoomy here paused for a space; but presently continued:
  • "The little eyes of the people of Tupia were very strange to behold:
  • full of stars, that shone from within, like the Pleiades, deep-bosomed
  • in blue. And like the stars, they were intolerant of sunlight; and
  • slumbering through the day, the people of Tupia only went abroad by
  • night. But it was chiefly when the moon was at full, that they were
  • mostly in spirits.
  • "Then the little manikins would dive down into the sea, and rove about
  • in the coral groves, making love to the mermaids. Or, racing round, make
  • a mad merry night of it with the sea-urchins:--plucking the reverend
  • mullets by the beard; serenading the turtles in their cells; worrying
  • the sea-nettles; or tormenting with their antics the touchy torpedos.
  • Sometimes they went prying about with the starfish, that have an eye at
  • the end of each ray; and often with coral files in their hands stole
  • upon slumbering swordfish, slyly blunting their weapons. In short, these
  • stout little manikins were passionately fond of the sea, and swore by
  • wave and billow, that sooner or later they would embark thereon in
  • nautilus shells, and spend the rest of their roving days thousands of
  • inches from Tupia. Too true, they were shameless little rakes. Oft would
  • they return to their sweethearts, sporting musky girdles of sea-kelp,
  • tasseled with green little pouches of grass, brimful of seed-pearls; and
  • jingling their coin in the ears of the damsels, throw out inuendoes
  • about the beautiful and bountiful mermaids: how wealthy and amorous they
  • were, and how they delighted in the company of the brave gallants of
  • Tupia. Ah! at such heartless bravadoes, how mourned the poor little
  • nymphs. Deep into their arbors they went; and their little hearts burst
  • like rose-buds, and filled the whole air with an odorous grief. But when
  • their lovers were gentle and true, no happier maidens haunted the lilies
  • than they. By some mystical process they wrought minute balls of light:
  • touchy, mercurial globules, very hard to handle; and with these, at
  • pitch and toss, they played in the groves. Or mischievously inclined,
  • they toiled all night long at braiding the moon-beams together, and
  • entangling the plaited end to a bough; so that at night, the poor planet
  • had much ado to set."
  • Here Yoomy once more was mute.
  • "Pause you to invent as you go on?" said old Mohi, elevating his chin,
  • till his beard was horizontal.
  • Yoomy resumed.
  • "Little or nothing more, my masters, is extant of the legend; only it
  • must be mentioned, that these little people were very tasteful in their
  • personal adornings; the manikins wearing girdles of fragrant leaves, and
  • necklaces of aromatic seeds; and the little damsels, not content with
  • their vines, and their verdure, sporting pearls in their ears; bracelets
  • of wee little porpoise teeth; and oftentimes dancing with their mates in
  • the moonlit glades, coquettishly fanned themselves with the transparent
  • wings of the flying fish."
  • "Now, I appeal to you, royal Media; to you, noble Taji; to you,
  • Babbalanja;" said the chronicler, with an impressive gesture, "whether
  • this seems a credible history: Yoomy has invented."
  • "But perhaps he has entertained, old Mohi," said Babbalanja.
  • "He has not spoken the truth," persisted the chronicler.
  • "Mohi," said Babbalanja, "truth is in things, and not in words: truth is
  • voiceless; so at least saith old Bardianna. And I, Babbalanja, assert,
  • that what are vulgarly called fictions are as much realities as the
  • gross mattock of Dididi, the digger of trenches; for things visible are
  • but conceits of the eye: things imaginative, conceits of the fancy. If
  • duped by one, we are equally duped by the other."
  • "Clear as this water," said Yoomy.
  • "Opaque as this paddle," said Mohi, "But, come now, thou oracle, if all
  • things are deceptive, tell us what is truth?"
  • "The old interrogatory; did they not ask it when the world began? But
  • ask it no more. As old Bardianna hath it, that question is more final
  • than any answer."
  • CHAPTER XCIV Of That Jolly Old Lord, Borabolla; And That Jolly Island Of
  • His, Mondoldo; And Of The Fish-Ponds, And The Hereafters Of Fish
  • Drawing near Mondoldo, our next place of destination, we were greeted by
  • six fine canoes, gayly tricked out with streamers, and all alive with
  • the gestures of their occupants. King Borabolla and court were hastening
  • to welcome our approach; Media, unbeknown to all, having notified him at
  • the Banquet of the Five-and-Twenty Kings, of our intention to visit his
  • dominions.
  • Soon, side by side, these canoes floated with ours; each barge of Odo
  • courteously flanked by those of Mondoldo.
  • Not long were we in identifying Borabolla: the portly, pleasant old
  • monarch, seated cross-legged upon a dais, projecting over the bow of the
  • largest canoe of the six, close-grappling to the side of the Sea
  • Elephant.
  • Was he not a goodly round sight to behold? Round all over; round of eye
  • and of head; and like the jolly round Earth, roundest and biggest about
  • the Equator. A girdle of red was his Equinoctial Line, giving a
  • compactness to his plumpness.
  • This old Borabolla permitted naught to come between his head and the
  • sun; not even gray hairs. Bald as a gourd, right down on his brazen
  • skull, the rays of the luminary converged.
  • He was all hilarity; full of allusions to the feast at Willamilla, where
  • he had done royal execution. Rare old Borabolla! thou wert made for
  • dining out; thy ample mouth an inlet for good cheer, and a sally-port
  • for good humor.
  • Bustling about on his dais, he now gave orders for the occupants of our
  • canoes to be summarily emptied into his own; saying, that in that manner
  • only did he allow guests to touch the beach of Mondoldo.
  • So, with no little trouble--for the waves were grown somewhat riotous--we proceeded to comply; bethinking ourselves all the while, how annoying
  • is sometimes an over-strained act of hospitality.
  • We were now but little less than a mile from the shore. But what of
  • that? There was plenty of time, thought Borabolla, for a hasty lunch,
  • and the getting of a subsequent appetite ere we effected a landing. So
  • viands were produced; to which the guests were invited to pay heedful
  • attention; or take the consequences, and famish till the long voyage in
  • prospect was ended.
  • Soon the water shoaled (approaching land is like nearing truth in
  • metaphysics), and ere we yet touched the beach, Borabolla declared, that
  • we were already landed. Which paradoxical assertion implied, that the
  • hospitality of Mondoldo was such, that in all directions it radiated far
  • out upon the lagoon, embracing a great circle; so that no canoe could
  • sail by the island, without its occupants being so long its guests.
  • In most hospitable vicinity to the water, was a fine large structure,
  • inclosed by a stockade; both rather dilapidated; as if the cost of
  • entertaining its guests, prevented outlays for repairing the place. But
  • it was one of Borabolla's maxims, that generally your tumble-down old
  • homesteads yield the most entertainment; their very dilapidation
  • betokening their having seen good service in hospitality; whereas,
  • spruce-looking, finical portals, have a phiz full of meaning; for
  • niggards are oftentimes neat.
  • Now, after what has been said, who so silly as to fancy, that because
  • Borabolla's mansion was inclosed by a stockade, that the same was
  • intended as a defense against guests? By no means. In the palisade was a
  • mighty breach, not an entrance-way, wide enough to admit six Daniel
  • Lamberts abreast.
  • "Look," cried Borabolla, as landing we stepped toward the place. "Look
  • Media! look all. These gates, you here see, lashed back with osiers,
  • have been so lashed during my life-time; and just where they stand,
  • shall they rot; ay, they shall perish wide open."
  • "But why have them at all?" inquired Media.
  • "Ah! there you have old Borabolla," cried the other.
  • "No," said Babbalanja, "a fence whose gate is ever kept open, seems
  • unnecessary, I grant; nevertheless, it gives a notable hint, otherwise
  • not so aptly conveyed; for is not the open gate the sign of the open
  • heart?"
  • "Right, right," cried Borabolla; "so enter both, cousin Media;" and with
  • one hand smiting his chest, with the other he waved us on.
  • But if the stockade seemed all open gate, the structure within seemed
  • only a roof; for nothing but a slender pillar here and there, supported
  • it.
  • "This is my mode of building," said Borabolla; "I will have no outside
  • to my palaces. Walls are superfluous. And to a high-minded guest, the
  • entering a narrow doorway is like passing under a yoke; every time he
  • goes in, or comes out, it reminds him, that he is being entertained at
  • the cost of another. So storm in all round."
  • Within, was one wide field-bed; where reclining, we looked up to endless
  • rows of brown calabashes, and trenchers suspended along the rafters;
  • promissory of ample cheer as regiments of old hams in a baronial
  • refectory.
  • They were replenished with both meat and drink; the trenchers readily
  • accessible by means of cords; but the gourds containing arrack,
  • suspended neck downward, were within easy reach where they swung.
  • Seeing all these indications of hard roystering; like a cautious young
  • bridegroom at his own marriage merry-making, Taji stood on his guard.
  • And when Borabolla urged him to empty a gourd or two, by way of making
  • room in him for the incidental repast about to be served, Taji civilly
  • declined; not wishing to cumber the floor, before the cloth was laid.
  • Jarl, however, yielding to importunity, and unmindful of the unities of
  • time and place, went freely about, from gourd to gourd, concocting in
  • him a punch. At which, Samoa expressed much surprise, that he should be
  • so unobservant as not to know, that in Mardi, guests might be pressed to
  • demean themselves, without its being expected that so they would do. A
  • true toss-pot himself, he bode his time.
  • The second lunch over, Borabolla placed both hands to the ground, and
  • giving the sigh of the fat man, after three vigorous efforts, succeeded
  • in gaining his pins; which pins of his, were but small for his body;
  • insomuch that they hugely staggered about, under the fine old load they
  • carried.
  • The specific object of his thus striving after an erect posture, was to
  • put himself in motion, and conduct us to his fish-ponds, famous
  • throughout the Archipelago as the hobby of the king of Mondoldo.
  • Furthermore, as the great repast of the day, yet to take place, was to
  • be a grand piscatory one, our host was all anxiety, that we should have
  • a glimpse of our fish, while yet alive and hearty.
  • We were alarmed at perceiving, that certain servitors were preparing to
  • accompany us with trenchers of edibles. It begat the notion, that our
  • trip to the fish-ponds was to prove a long journey. But they were not
  • three hundred yards distant; though Borabolla being a veteran traveler,
  • never stirred from his abode without his battalion of butlers.
  • The ponds were four in number, close bordering the water, embracing
  • about an acre each, and situated in a low fen, draining several valleys.
  • The excavated soil was thrown up in dykes, made tight by being beaten
  • all over, while in a soft state, with the heavy, flat ends of Palm
  • stalks. Lying side by side, by three connecting trenches, these ponds
  • could be made to communicate at pleasure; while two additional canals
  • afforded means of letting in upon them the salt waters of the lagoon on
  • one hand, or those of an inland stream on the other. And by a third
  • canal with four branches, together or separately, they could be
  • partially drained. Thus, the waters could be mixed to suit any gills;
  • and the young fish taken from the sea, passed through a stated process
  • of freshening; so that by the time they graduated, the salt was well out
  • of them, like the brains out of some diplomaed collegians.
  • Fresh-water fish are only to be obtained in Mondoldo by the artificial
  • process above mentioned; as the streams and brooks abound not in trout
  • or other Waltonian prey.
  • Taken all floundering from the sea, Borabolla's fish, passing through
  • their regular training for the table, and daily tended by their keepers,
  • in course of time became quite tame and communicative. To prove which,
  • calling his Head Ranger, the king bade him administer the customary
  • supply of edibles.
  • Accordingly, mouthfuls were thrown into the ponds. Whereupon, the fish
  • darted in a shoal toward the margin; some leaping out of the water in
  • their eagerness. Crouching on the bank, the Ranger now called several by
  • name, patted their scales, carrying on some heathenish nursery-talk,
  • like St. Anthony, in ancient Coptic, instilling virtuous principles into
  • his finny flock on the sea shore.
  • But alas, for the hair-shirted old dominie's backsliding disciples. For,
  • of all nature's animated kingdoms, fish are the most unchristian,
  • inhospitable, heartless, and cold-blooded of creatures. At least, so
  • seem they to strangers; though at bottom, somehow, they must be all
  • right. And truly it is not to be wondered at, that the very reverend
  • Anthony strove after the conversion of fish. For, whoso shall
  • Christianize, and by so doing, humanize the sharks, will do a greater
  • good, by the saving of human life in all time to come, than though he
  • made catechumens of the head-hunting Dyaks of Borneo, or the blood-bibbing Battas of Sumatra. And are these Dyaks and Battas one whit
  • better than tiger-sharks? Nay, are they so good? Were a Batta your
  • intimate friend, you would often mistake an orang-outang for him; and
  • have orang-outangs immortal souls? True, the Battas believe in a
  • hereafter; but of what sort? Full of Blue-Beards and bloody bones. So,
  • also, the sharks; who hold that Paradise is one vast Pacific, ploughed
  • by navies of mortals, whom an endless gale forever drops into their
  • maws.
  • Not wholly a surmise. For, does it not appear a little unreasonable to
  • imagine, that there is any creature, fish, flesh, or fowl, so little in
  • love with life, as not to cherish hopes of a future state? Why does man
  • believe in it? One reason, reckoned cogent, is, that he desires it. Who
  • shall say, then, that the leviathan this day harpooned on the coast of
  • Japan, goes not straight to his ancestor, who rolled all Jonah, as a
  • sweet morsel, under his tongue?
  • Though herein, some sailors are slow believers, or at best hold
  • themselves in a state of philosophical suspense. Say they--"That
  • catastrophe took place in the Mediterranean; and the only whales
  • frequenting the Mediterranean, are of a sort having not a swallow large
  • enough to pass a man entire; for those Mediterranean whales feed upon
  • small things, as horses upon oats." But hence, the sailors draw a rash
  • inference. Are not the Straits of Gibralter wide enough to admit a
  • sperm-whale, even though none have sailed through, since Nineveh and the
  • gourd in its suburbs dried up?
  • As for the possible hereafter of the whales; a creature eighty feet long
  • without stockings, and thirty feet round the waist before dinner, is not
  • inconsiderately to be consigned to annihilation.
  • CHAPTER XCV That Jolly Old Lord Borabolla Laughs On Both Sides Of His
  • Face
  • "A very good palace, this, coz, for you and me," said waddling old
  • Borabolla to Media, as, returned from our excursion, he slowly lowered
  • himself down to his mat, sighing like a grampus.
  • By this, he again made known the vastness of his hospitality, which led
  • him for the nonce to parcel out his kingdom with his guests.
  • But apart from these extravagant expressions of good feeling, Borabolla
  • was the prince of good fellows. His great tun of a person was
  • indispensable to the housing of his bullock-heart; under which, any lean
  • wight would have sunk. But alas! unlike Media and Taji, Borabolla,
  • though a crowned king, was accounted no demi-god; his obesity excluding
  • him from that honor. Indeed, in some quarters of Mardi, certain pagans
  • maintain, that no fat man can be even immortal. A dogma! truly, which
  • should be thrown to the dogs. For fat men are the salt and savor of the
  • earth; full of good humor, high spirits, fun, and all manner of jollity.
  • Their breath clears the atmosphere: their exhalations air the world. Of
  • men, they are the good measures; brimmed, heaped, pressed down, piled
  • up, and running over. They are as ships from Teneriffe; swimming deep,
  • full of old wine, and twenty steps down into their holds. Soft and
  • susceptible, all round they are easy of entreaty. Wherefore, for all
  • their rotundity, they are too often circumnavigated by hatchet-faced
  • knaves. Ah! a fat uncle, with a fat paunch, and a fat purse, is a joy
  • and a delight to all nephews; to philosophers, a subject of endless
  • speculation, as to how many droves of oxen and Lake Eries of wine might
  • have run through his great mill during the full term of his mortal
  • career. Fat men not immortal! This very instant, old Lambert is rubbing
  • his jolly abdomen in Paradise.
  • Now, to the fact of his not being rated a demi-god, was perhaps
  • ascribable the circumstance, that Borabolla comported himself with less
  • dignity, than was the wont of their Mardian majesties. And truth to say,
  • to have seen him regaling himself with one of his favorite cuttle-fish,
  • its long snaky arms and feelers instinctively twining round his head as
  • he ate; few intelligent observers would have opined that the individual
  • before them was the sovereign lord of Mondoldo.
  • But what of the banquet of fish? Shall we tell how the old king
  • ungirdled himself thereto; how as the feast waxed toward its close, with
  • one sad exception, he still remained sunny-sided all round; his disc of
  • a face joyous as the South Side of Madeira in the hilarious season of
  • grapes? Shall we tell how we all grew glad and frank; and how the din of
  • the dinner was heard far into night?
  • We will.
  • When Media ate slowly, Borabolla took him to task, bidding him dispatch
  • his viands more speedily.
  • Whereupon said Media "But Borabolla, my round fellow, that would abridge
  • the pleasure."
  • "Not at all, my dear demi-god; do like me: eat fast and eat long."
  • In the middle of the feast, a huge skin of wine was brought in. The
  • portly peltry of a goat; its horns embattling its effigy head; its mouth
  • the nozzle; and its long beard flowed to its jet-black hoofs. With many
  • ceremonial salams, the attendants bore it along, placing it at one end
  • of the convivial mats, full in front of Borabolla; where seated upon its
  • haunches it made one of the party.
  • Brimming a ram's horn, the mellowest of bugles, Borabolla bowed to his
  • silent guest, and thus spoke--"In this wine, which yet smells of the
  • grape, I pledge you my reverend old toper, my lord Capricornus; you
  • alone have enough; and here's full skins to the rest!"
  • "How jolly he is," whispered Media to Babbalanja.
  • "Ay, his lungs laugh loud; but is laughing, rejoicing?"
  • "Help! help!" cried Borabolla "lay me down! lay me down! good gods, what
  • a twinge!"
  • The goblet fell from his hand; the purple flew from his wine to his
  • face; and Borabolla fell back into the arms of his servitors. "That
  • gout! that gout!" he groaned. "Lord! lord! no more cursed wine will I
  • drink!"
  • Then at ten paces distant, a clumsy attendant let fall a trencher--"Take
  • it off my foot, you knave!"
  • Afar off another entered gallanting a calabash--"Look out for my toe,
  • you hound!"
  • During all this, the attendants tenderly nursed him. And in good time,
  • with its thousand fangs, the gout-fiend departed for a while.
  • Reprieved, the old king brightened up; by degrees becoming jolly as
  • ever.
  • "Come! let us be merry again," he cried, "what shall we eat? and what
  • shall we drink? that infernal gout is gone; come, what will your
  • worships have?"
  • So at it once more we went.
  • But of our feast, little more remains to be related than this;--that out
  • of it, grew a wondrous kindness between Borabolla and Jarl. Strange to
  • tell, from the first our fat host had regarded my Viking with a most
  • friendly eye. Still stranger to add, this feeling was returned. But
  • though they thus fancied each other, they were very unlike; Borabolla
  • and Jarl. Nevertheless, thus is it ever. And as the convex fits not into
  • the convex, but into the concave; so do men fit into their opposites;
  • and so fitted Borabolla's arched paunch into Jarl's, hollowed out to
  • receive it.
  • But how now? Borabolla was jolly and loud: Jarl demure and silent;
  • Borabolla a king: Jarl only a Viking;--how came they together? Very
  • plain, to repeat:--because they were heterogeneous; and hence the
  • affinity. But as the affinity between those chemical opposites chlorine
  • and hydrogen, is promoted by caloric; so the affinity between Borabolla
  • and Jarl was promoted by the warmth of the wine that they drank at this
  • feast. For of all blessed fluids, the juice of the grape is the greatest
  • foe to cohesion. True, it tightens the girdle; but then it loosens the
  • tongue, and opens the heart.
  • In sum, Borabolla loved Jarl; and Jarl, pleased with this sociable
  • monarch, for all his garrulity, esteemed him the most sensible old
  • gentleman and king he had as yet seen in Mardi. For this reason,
  • perhaps; that his talkativeness favored that silence in listeners, which
  • was my Viking's delight in himself.
  • Repeatedly during the banquet, our host besought Taji to allow his
  • henchman to remain on the island, after the rest of our party should
  • depart; and he faithfully promised to surrender Jarl, whenever we should
  • return to claim him.
  • But though I harbored no distrust of Borabolla's friendly intentions, I
  • could not so readily consent to his request; for with Jarl for my one
  • only companion, had I not both famished and feasted? was he not my only
  • link to things past?
  • Things past!--Ah Yillah! for all its mirth, and though we hunted wide,
  • we found thee not in Mondoldo.
  • CHAPTER XCVI Samoa A Surgeon
  • The second day of our stay in Mondoldo was signalized by a noteworthy
  • exhibition of the surgical skill of Samoa; who had often boasted, that
  • though well versed in the science of breaking men's heads, he was
  • equally an adept in mending their crockery.
  • Overnight, Borabolla had directed his corps of sea-divers to repair
  • early on the morrow, to a noted section of the great Mardian reef, for
  • the purpose of procuring for our regalement some of the fine Hawk's-bill
  • turtle, whose secret retreats were among the cells and galleries of that
  • submerged wall of coral, from whose foamy coping no plummet dropped ever
  • yet touched bottom.
  • These turtles were only to be obtained by diving far down under the
  • surface; and then swimming along horizontally, and peering into the
  • coral honeycomb; snatching at a flipper when seen, as at a pinion in a
  • range of billing dove-cotes.
  • As the king's divers were thus employed, one of them, Karhownoo by name,
  • perceived a Devil-shark, so called, swimming wistfully toward him from
  • out his summer grotto in the reef. No way petrified by the sight, and
  • pursuing the usual method adopted by these divers in such emergencies,
  • Karhownoo, splashing the water, instantly swam toward the stranger. But
  • the shark, undaunted, advanced: a thing so unusual, and fearful, that,
  • in an agony of fright, the diver shot up for the surface. Heedless, he
  • looked not up as he went; and when within a few inches of the open air,
  • dashed his head against a projection of the reef. He would have sank
  • into the live tomb beneath, were it not that three of his companions,
  • standing on the brink, perceived his peril, and dragged him into safety.
  • Seeing the poor fellow was insensible, they endeavored, ineffectually,
  • to revive him; and at last, placing him in their canoe, made all haste
  • for the shore. Here a crowd soon gathered, and the diver was borne to a
  • habitation, close adjoining Borabolla's; whence, hearing of the
  • disaster, we sallied out to render assistance.
  • Upon entering the hut, the benevolent old king commanded it to be
  • cleared; and then proceeded to examine the sufferer.
  • The skull proved to be very badly fractured; in one place, splintered.
  • "Let me mend it," said Samoa, with ardor.
  • And being told of his experience in such matters, Borabolla surrendered
  • the patient.
  • With a gourd of water, and a tappa cloth, the one-armed Upoluan
  • carefully washed the wound; and then calling for a sharp splinter of
  • bamboo, and a thin, semi-transparent cup of cocoa-nut shell, he went
  • about the operation: nothing less than the "Tomoti" (head-mending), in
  • other words the trepan.
  • The patient still continuing insensible, the fragments were disengaged
  • by help of a bamboo scalpel; when a piece of the drinking cup--previously dipped in the milk of a cocoanut--was nicely fitted into the
  • vacancy, the skin as nicely adjusted over it, and the operation was
  • complete.
  • And now, while all present were crying out in admiration of Samoa's
  • artistic skill, and Samoa himself stood complacently regarding his
  • workmanship, Babbalanja suggested, that it might be well to ascertain
  • whether the patient survived. When, upon sounding his heart, the diver
  • was found to be dead.
  • The bystanders loudly lamented; but declared the surgeon a man of
  • marvelous science.
  • Returning to Borabolla's, much conversation ensued, concerning the sad
  • scene we had witnessed, which presently branched into a learned
  • discussion upon matters of surgery at large.
  • At length, Samoa regaled the company with a story; for the truth of
  • which no one but him can vouch, for no one but him was by, at the time;
  • though there is testimony to show that it involves nothing at variance
  • with the customs of certain barbarous tribes.
  • Read on.
  • CHAPTER XCVII Faith And Knowledge
  • A thing incredible is about to be related; but a thing may be incredible
  • and still be true; sometimes it is incredible because it is true. And
  • many infidels but disbelieve the least incredible things; and many
  • bigots reject the most obvious. But let us hold fast to all we have; and
  • stop all leaks in our faith; lest an opening, but of a hand's breadth,
  • should sink our seventy-fours. The wide Atlantic can rush in at one
  • port-hole; and if we surrender a plank, we surrender the fleet.
  • Panoplied in all the armor of St. Paul, morion, hauberk, and greaves,
  • let us fight the Turks inch by inch, and yield them naught but our
  • corpse.
  • But let us not turn round upon friends, confounding them with foes. For
  • dissenters only assent to more than we. Though Milton was a heretic to
  • the creed of Athanasius, his faith exceeded that of Athanasius himself;
  • and the faith of Athanasius that of Thomas, the disciple, who with his
  • own eyes beheld the mark of the nails. Whence it comes that though we be
  • all Christians now, the best of us had perhaps been otherwise in the
  • days of Thomas.
  • The higher the intelligence, the more faith, and the less credulity:
  • Gabriel rejects more than we, but out-believes us all. The greatest
  • marvels are first truths; and first truths the last unto which we
  • attain. Things nearest are furthest off. Though your ear be next-door to
  • your brain, it is forever removed from your sight. Man has a more
  • comprehensive view of the moon, than the man in the moon himself. We
  • know the moon is round; he only infers it. It is because we ourselves
  • are in ourselves, that we know ourselves not. And it is only of our easy
  • faith, that we are not infidels throughout; and only of our lack of
  • faith, that we believe what we do.
  • In some universe-old truths, all mankind are disbelievers. Do you
  • believe that you lived three thousand years ago? That you were at the
  • taking of Tyre, were overwhelmed in Gomorrah? No. But for me, I was at
  • the subsiding of the Deluge, and helped swab the ground, and build the
  • first house. With the Israelites, I fainted in the wilderness; was in
  • court, when Solomon outdid all the judges before him. I, it was, who
  • suppressed the lost work of Manetho, on the Egyptian theology, as
  • containing mysteries not to be revealed to posterity, and things at war
  • with the canonical scriptures; I, who originated the conspiracy against
  • that purple murderer, Domitian; I, who in the senate moved, that great
  • and good Aurelian be emperor. I instigated the abdication of Diocletian,
  • and Charles the Fifth; I touched Isabella's heart, that she hearkened to
  • Columbus. I am he, that from the king's minions hid the Charter in the
  • old oak at Hartford; I harbored Goffe and Whalley: I am the leader of
  • the Mohawk masks, who in the Old Commonwealth's harbor, overboard threw
  • the East India Company's Souchong; I am the Vailed Persian Prophet; I,
  • the man in the iron mask; I, Junius.
  • CHAPTER XCVIII The Tale Of A Traveler
  • It was Samoa, who told the incredible tale; and he told it as a
  • traveler. But stay-at-homes say travelers lie. Yet a voyage to Ethiopia
  • would cure them of that; for few skeptics are travelers; fewer travelers
  • liars, though the proverb respecting them lies. It is false, as some
  • say, that Bruce was cousin-german to Baron Munchausen; but true, as
  • Bruce said, that the Abysinnians cut live steaks from their cattle. It
  • was, in good part, his villainous transcribers, who made monstrosities
  • of Mandeville's travels. And though all liars go to Gehenna; yet,
  • assuming that Mandeville died before Dante; still, though Dante took the
  • census of Hell, we find not Sir John, under the likeness of a roasted
  • neat's tongue, in that infernalest of infernos, The Inferno.
  • But let not the truth be postponed. To the stand, Samoa, and through
  • your interpreter, speak.
  • Once upon a time, during his endless sea-rovings, the Upoluan was called
  • upon to cobble the head of a friend, grievously hurt in a desperate
  • fight of slings.
  • Upon examination, that part of the brain proving as much injured as the
  • cranium itself, a young pig was obtained; and preliminaries being over,
  • part of its live brain was placed in the cavity, the trepan accomplished
  • with cocoanut shell, and the scalp drawn over and secured.
  • This man died not, but lived. But from being a warrior of great sense
  • and spirit, he became a perverse-minded and piggish fellow, showing many
  • of the characteristics of his swinish grafting. He survived the
  • operation more than a year; at the end of that period, however, going
  • mad, and dying in his delirium.
  • Stoutly backed by the narrator, this anecdote was credited by some
  • present. But Babbalanja held out to the last.
  • "Yet, if this story be true," said he, "and since it is well settled,
  • that our brains are somehow the organs of sense; then, I see not why
  • human reason could not be put into a pig, by letting into its cranium
  • the contents of a man's. I have long thought, that men, pigs, and
  • plants, are but curious physiological experiments; and that science
  • would at last enable philosophers to produce new species of beings, by
  • somehow mixing, and concocting the essential ingredients of various
  • creatures; and so forming new combinations. My friend Atahalpa, the
  • astrologer and alchymist, has long had a jar, in which he has been
  • endeavoring to hatch a fairy, the ingredients being compounded according
  • to a receipt of his own."
  • But little they heeded Babbalanja. It was the traveler's tale that most
  • arrested attention.
  • Tough the thews, and tough the tales of Samoa.
  • CHAPTER XCIX "Marnee Ora, Ora Marnee"
  • During the afternoon of the day of the diver's decease, preparations
  • were making for paying the last rites to his remains, and carrying them
  • by torch-light to their sepulcher, the sea; for, as in Odo, so was the
  • custom here.
  • Meanwhile, all over the isle, to and fro went heralds, dismally arrayed,
  • beating shark-skin drums; and, at intervals, crying--"A man is dead; let
  • no fires be kindled; have mercy, oh Oro!--Let no canoes put to sea till
  • the burial. This night, oh Oro!--Let no food be cooked."
  • And ever and anon, passed and repassed these, others in brave attire;
  • with castanets of pearl shells, making gay music; and these sang--Be
  • merry, oh men of Mondoldo, A maiden this night is to wed: Be merry, oh
  • damsels of Mardi,-- Flowers, flowers for the bridal bed.
  • Informed that the preliminary rites were about being rendered, we
  • repaired to the arbor, whither the body had been removed.
  • Arrayed in white, it was laid out on a mat; its arms mutely crossed,
  • between its lips an asphodel; at the feet, a withered hawthorn bough.
  • The relatives were wailing, and cutting themselves with shells, so that
  • blood flowed, and spotted their vesture.
  • Upon remonstrating with the most abandoned of these mourners, the wife
  • of the diver, she exclaimed, "Yes; great is the pain, but greater my
  • affliction."
  • Another, the deaf sire of the dead, went staggering about, and groping;
  • saying, that he was now quite blind; for some months previous he had
  • lost one eye in the death of his eldest son and now the other was gone.
  • "I am childless," he cried; "henceforth call me Roi Mori," that is,
  • Twice-Blind.
  • While the relatives were thus violently lamenting, the rest of the
  • company occasionally scratched themselves with their shells; but very
  • slightly, and mostly on the soles of their feet; from long exposure,
  • quite callous. This was interrupted, however, when the real mourners
  • averted their eyes; though at no time was there any deviation in the
  • length of their faces.
  • But on all sides, lamentations afresh broke forth, upon the appearance
  • of a person who had been called in to assist in solemnizing the
  • obsequies, and also to console the afflicted.
  • In rotundity, he was another Borabolla. He puffed and panted.
  • As he approached the corpse, a sobbing silence ensued; when holding the
  • hand of the dead, between his, the stranger thus spoke:--"Mourn not, oh
  • friends of Karhownoo, that this your brother lives not. His wounded head
  • pains him no more; he would not feel it, did a javelin pierce him. Yea;
  • Karhownoo is exempt from all the ills and evils of this miserable
  • Mardi!"
  • Hereupon, the Twice-Blind, who being deaf, heard not what was said, tore
  • his gray hair, and cried, "Alas! alas! my boy; thou wert the merriest
  • man in Mardi, and now thy pranks are over!"
  • But the other proceeded--"Mourn not, I say, oh friends of Karhownoo; the
  • dead whom ye deplore is happier than the living; is not his spirit in
  • the aerial isles?"
  • "True! true!" responded the raving wife, mingling her blood with her
  • tears, "my own poor hapless Karhownoo is thrice happy in Paradise!" And
  • anew she wailed, and lacerated her cheeks.
  • "Rave not, I say."
  • But she only raved the more.
  • And now the good stranger departed; saying, he must hie to a wedding,
  • waiting his presence in an arbor adjoining.
  • Understanding that the removal of the body would not take place till
  • midnight, we thought to behold the mode of marrying in Mondoldo.
  • Drawing near the place, we were greeted by merry voices, and much
  • singing, which greatly increased when the good stranger was perceived.
  • Gayly arrayed in fine robes, with plumes on their heads, the bride and
  • groom stood in the middle of a joyous throng, in readiness for the
  • nuptial bond to be tied.
  • Standing before them, the stranger was given a cord, so bedecked with
  • flowers, as to disguise its stout fibers; and taking: the bride's hands,
  • he bound them together to a ritual chant; about her neck, in festoons,
  • disposing the flowery ends of the cord. Then turning to the groom, he
  • was given another, also beflowered; but attached thereto was a great
  • stone, very much carved, and stained; indeed, so every way disguised,
  • that a person not knowing what it was, and lifting it, would be greatly
  • amazed at its weight. This cord being attached to the waist of the
  • groom, he leaned over toward the bride, by reason of the burden of the
  • drop.
  • All present now united in a chant, and danced about the happy pair, who
  • meanwhile looked ill at ease; the one being so bound by the hands, and
  • the other solely weighed down by his stone.
  • A pause ensuing, the good stranger, turning them back to back, thus
  • spoke:--"By thy flowery gyves, oh bride, I make thee a wife; and by thy
  • burdensome stone, oh groom, I make thee a husband. Live and be happy,
  • both; for the wise and good Oro hath placed us in Mardi to be glad. Doth
  • not all nature rejoice in her green groves and her flowers? and woo and
  • wed not the fowls of the air, trilling their bliss in their bowers? Live
  • then, and be happy, oh bride and groom; for Oro is offended with the
  • unhappy, since he meant them to be gay."
  • And the ceremony ended with a joyful feast.
  • But not all nuptials in Mardi were like these. Others were wedded with
  • different rites; without the stone and flowery gyves. These were they
  • who plighted their troth with tears not smiles, and made responses in
  • the heart.
  • Returning from the house of the merry to the house of the mournful, we
  • lingered till midnight to witness the issuing forth of the body.
  • By torch light, numerous canoes, with paddlers standing by, were drawn
  • up on the beach, to accommodate those who purposed following the poor
  • diver to his home.
  • The remains embarked, some confusion ensued concerning the occupancy of
  • the rest of the shallops. At last the procession glided off, our party
  • included. Two by two, forming a long line of torches trailing round the
  • isle, the canoes all headed toward the opening in the reef.
  • For a time, a decorous silence was preserved; but presently, some
  • whispering was heard; perhaps melancholy discoursing touching the close
  • of the diver's career. But we were shocked to discover, that poor
  • Karhownoo was not much in their thoughts; they were conversing about the
  • next bread-fruit harvest, and the recent arrival of King Media and party
  • at Mondoldo. From far in advance, however, were heard the lamentations
  • of the true mourners, the relatives of the diver.
  • Passing the reef, and sailing a little distance therefrom, the canoes
  • were disposed in a circle; the one bearing the corpse in the center.
  • Certain ceremonies over, the body was committed to the waves; the white
  • foam lighting up the last, long plunge of the diver, to see sights more
  • strange than ever he saw in the brooding cells of the Turtle Reef.
  • And now, while in the still midnight, all present were gazing down into
  • the ocean, watching the white wake of the corpse, ever and anon
  • illuminated by sparkles, an unknown voice was heard, and all started and
  • vacantly stared, as this wild song was sung:--We drop our dead in the
  • sea, The bottomless, bottomless sea; Each bubble a hollow sigh, As it
  • sinks forever and aye.
  • We drop our dead in the sea,-- The dead reek not of aught; We drop
  • our dead in the sea,-- The sea ne'er gives it a thought.
  • Sink, sink, oh corpse, still sink, Far down in the bottomless sea, Where
  • the unknown forms do prowl, Down, down in the bottomless sea.
  • 'Tis night above, and night all round, And night will it be with thee;
  • As thou sinkest, and sinkest for aye, Deeper down in the bottomless sea.
  • The mysterious voice died away; no sign of the corpse was now seen; and
  • mute with amaze, the company long listed to the low moan of the billows
  • and the sad sough of the breeze.
  • At last, without speaking, the obsequies were concluded by sliding into
  • the ocean a carved tablet of Palmetto, to mark the place of the burial.
  • But a wave-crest received it, and fast it floated away.
  • Returning to the isle, long silence prevailed. But at length, as if the
  • scene in which they had just taken part, afresh reminded them of the
  • mournful event which had called them together, the company again
  • recurred to it; some present, sadly and incidentally alluding to
  • Borabolla's banquet of turtle, thereby postponed.
  • CHAPTER C The Pursuer Himself Is Pursued
  • Next morning, when much to the chagrin of Borabolla we were preparing to
  • quit his isle, came tidings to the palace, of a wonderful event,
  • occurring in one of the "Motoos," or little islets of the great reef;
  • which "Motoo" was included in the dominions of the king.
  • The men who brought these tidings were highly excited; and no sooner did
  • they make known what they knew, than all Mondoldo was in a tumult of
  • marveling.
  • Their story was this.
  • Going at day break to the Motoo to fish, they perceived a strange proa
  • beached on its seaward shore; and presently were hailed by voices; and
  • saw among the palm trees, three specter-like men, who were not of Mardi.
  • The first amazement of the fishermen over, in reply to their eager
  • questions, the strangers related, that they were the survivors of a
  • company of men, natives of some unknown island to the northeast; whence
  • they had embarked for another country, distant three days' sail to the
  • southward of theirs. But falling in with a terrible adventure, in which
  • their sire had been slain, they altered their course to pursue the
  • fugitive who murdered him; one and all vowing, never more to see home,
  • until their father's fate was avenged. The murderer's proa outsailing
  • theirs, soon ran out of sight; yet after him they blindly steered by day
  • and by night: steering by the blood-red star in Bootes. Soon, a violent
  • gale overtook them; driving them to and fro; leaving them they knew not
  • where. But still struggling against strange currents, at times
  • counteracting their sailing, they drifted on their way; nigh to
  • famishing for water; and no shore in sight. In long calms, in vain they
  • held up their dry gourds to heaven, and cried "send us a breeze, sweet
  • gods!" The calm still brooded; and ere it was gone, all but three
  • gasped; and dead from thirst, were plunged into the sea. The breeze
  • which followed the calm, soon brought them in sight of a low,
  • uninhabited isle; where tarrying many days, they laid in good store of
  • cocoanuts and water, and again embarked.
  • The next land they saw was Mardi; and they landed on the Motoo, still
  • intent on revenge.
  • This recital filled Taji with horror.
  • Who could these avengers be, but the sons of him I had slain. I had
  • thought them far hence, and myself forgotten; and now, like adders, they
  • started up in my path, as I hunted for Yillah.
  • But I dissembled my thoughts.
  • Without waiting to hear more, Borabolla, all curiosity to behold the
  • strangers, instantly dispatched to the Motoo one of his fleetest canoes,
  • with orders to return with the voyagers.
  • Ere long they came in sight; and perceiving that strange pros in tow of
  • the king's, Samoa cried out: "Lo! Taji, the canoe that was going to
  • Tedaidee!"
  • Too true; the same double-keeled craft, now sorely broken, the fatal
  • dais in wild disarray: the canoe, the canoe of Aleema! And with it came
  • the spearmen three, who, when the Chamois was fleeing from their bow,
  • had poised their javelins. But so wan their aspect now, their faces
  • looked like skulls.
  • Then came over me the wild dream of Yillah; and, for a space, like a
  • madman, I raved. It seemed as if the mysterious damsel must still be
  • there; the rescue yet to be achieved. In my delirium I rushed upon the
  • skeletons, as they landed--"Hide not the maiden!" But interposing, Media
  • led me aside; when my transports abated.
  • Now, instantly, the strangers knew who I was; and, brandishing their
  • javelins, they rushed upon me, as I had on them, with a yell. But
  • deeming us all mad, the crowd held us apart; when, writhing in the arms
  • that restrained them, the pale specters foamed out their curses again
  • and again: "Oh murderer! white curses upon thee! Bleached be thy soul
  • with our hate! Living, our brethren cursed thee; and dying, dry-lipped,
  • they cursed thee again. They died not through famishing for water, but
  • for revenge upon thee! Thy blood, their thirst would have slaked!"
  • I lay fainting against the hard-throbbing heart of Samoa, while they
  • showered their yells through the air. Once more, in my thoughts, the
  • green corpse of the priest drifted by.
  • Among the people of Mondoldo, a violent commotion now raged. They were
  • amazed at Taji's recognition by the strangers, and at the deadly
  • ferocity they betrayed.
  • Rallying upon this, and perceiving that by divulging all they knew,
  • these sons of Aleema might stir up the Islanders against me, I resolved
  • to anticipate their story; and, turning to Borabolla, said--"In these
  • strangers, oh, king! you behold the survivors of a band we encountered
  • on our voyage. From them I rescued a maiden, called Yillah, whom they
  • were carrying captive. Little more of their history do I know."
  • "Their maledictions?" exclaimed Borabolla.
  • "Are they not delirious with suffering?" I cried. "They know not what
  • they say."
  • So, moved by all this, he commanded them to be guarded, and conducted
  • within his palisade; and having supplied them with cheer, entered into
  • earnest discourse. Yet all the while, the pale strangers on me fixed
  • their eyes; deep, dry, crater-like hollows, lurid with flames, reflected
  • from the fear-frozen glacier, my soul.
  • But though their hatred appalled, spite of that spell, again the sweet
  • dream of Yillah stole over me, with all the mysterious things by her
  • narrated, but left unexplained. And now, before me were those who might
  • reveal the lost maiden's whole history, previous to the fatal affray.
  • Thus impelled, I besought them to disclose what they knew.
  • But, "Where now is your Yillah?" they cried. "Is the murderer wedded and
  • merry? Bring forth the maiden!"
  • Yet, though they tore out my heart's core, I told them not of my loss.
  • Then, anxious, to learn the history of Yillah, all present commanded
  • them to divulge it; and breathlessly I heard what follows.
  • "Of Yillah, we know only this:--that many moons ago, a mighty canoe,
  • full of beings, white, like this murderer Taji, touched at our island of
  • Amma. Received with wonder, they were worshiped as gods; were feasted
  • all over the land. Their chief was a tower to behold; and with him, was
  • a being, whose cheeks were of the color of the red coral; her eye,
  • tender as the blue of the sky. Every day our people brought her
  • offerings of fruit and flowers; which last she would not retain for
  • herself; but hung them round the neck of her child, Yillah; then only an
  • infant in her mother's arms; a bud, nestling close to a flower, full-blown. All went well between our people and the gods, till at last they
  • slew three of our countrymen, charged with stealing from their great
  • canoe. Our warriors retired to the hills, brooding over revenge. Three
  • days went by; when by night, descending to the plain, in silence they
  • embarked; gained the great vessel, and slaughtered every soul but
  • Yillah. The bud was torn from the flower; and, by our father Aleema, was
  • carried to the Valley of Ardair; there set apart as a sacred offering
  • for Apo, our deity. Many moons passed; and there arose a tumult, hostile
  • to our sire's longer holding custody of Yillah; when, foreseeing that
  • the holy glen would ere long be burst open, he embarked the maiden in
  • yonder canoe, to accelerate her sacrifice at the great shrine of Apo, in
  • Tedaidee.--The rest thou knowest, murderer!"
  • "Yillah! Yillah!" now hunted again that sound through my soul. "Oh,
  • Yillah! too late, too late have I learned what thou art!"
  • Apprised of the disappearance of their former captive, the meager
  • strangers exulted; declaring that Apo had taken her to himself. For me,
  • ere long, my blood they would quaff from my skull.
  • But though I shrunk from their horrible threats, I dissembled anew; and
  • turning, again swore that they raved.
  • "Ay!" they retorted, "we rave and raven for you; and your white heart
  • will we have!"
  • Perceiving the violence of their rage, and persuaded from what I said,
  • that much suffering at sea must have maddened them; Borabolla thought
  • fit to confine them for the present; so that they could not molest me.
  • CHAPTER CI The Iris
  • That evening, in the groves, came to me three gliding forms:--Hautia's
  • heralds: the Iris mixed with nettles. Said Yoomy, "A cruel message!"
  • With the right hand, the second syren presented glossy, green wax-myrtle
  • berries, those that burn like tapers; the third, a lily of the valley,
  • crushed in its own broad leaf.
  • This done, they earnestly eyed Yoomy; who, after much pondering, said--"I speak for Hautia; who by these berries says, I will enlighten you."
  • "Oh, give me then that light! say, where is Yillah?" and I rushed upon
  • the heralds.
  • But eluding me, they looked reproachfully at Yoomy; and seemed offended.
  • "Then, I am wrong," said Yoomy. "It is thus:--Taji, you have been
  • enlightened, but the lily you seek is crushed."
  • Then fell my heart, and the phantoms nodded; flinging upon me
  • bilberries, like rose pearls, which bruised against my skin, left
  • stains.
  • Waving oleanders, they retreated.
  • "Harm! treachery! beware!" cried Yoomy.
  • Then they glided through the wood: one showering dead leaves along the
  • path I trod, the others gayly waving bunches of spring-crocuses, yellow,
  • white, and purple; and thus they vanished.
  • Said Yoomy, "Sad your path, but merry Hautia's."
  • "Then merry may she be, whoe'er she is; and though woe be mine, I turn
  • not from that to Hautia; nor ever will I woo her, though she woo me till
  • I die;--though Yillah never bless my eyes."
  • CHAPTER CII They Depart From Mondoldo
  • Night passed; and next morning we made preparations for leaving Mondoldo
  • that day.
  • But fearing anew, lest after our departure, the men of Amma might stir
  • up against me the people of the isle, I determined to yield to the
  • earnest solicitations of Borabolla, and leave Jarl behind, for a
  • remembrance of Taji; if necessary, to vindicate his name. Apprised
  • hereof, my follower was loth to acquiesce. His guiltless spirit feared
  • not the strangers: less selfish considerations prevailed. He was willing
  • to remain on the island for a time, but not without me. Yet, setting
  • forth my reasons; and assuring him, that our tour would not be long in
  • completing, when we would not fail to return, previous to sailing for
  • Odo, he at last, but reluctantly, assented.
  • At Mondoldo, we also parted with Samoa. Whether it was, that he feared
  • the avengers, whom he may have thought would follow on my track; or
  • whether the islands of Mardi answered not in attractiveness to the
  • picture his fancy had painted; or whether the restraint put upon him by
  • the domineering presence of King Media, was too irksome withal; or
  • whether, indeed, he relished not those disquisitions with which
  • Babbalanja regaled us: however it may have been, certain it was, that
  • Samoa was impatient of the voyage. He besought permission to return to
  • Odo, there to await my return; and a canoe of Mondoldo being about to
  • proceed in that direction, permission was granted; and departing for the
  • other side of the island, from thence he embarked.
  • Long after, dark tidings came, that at early dawn he had been found dead
  • in the canoe: three arrows in his side.
  • Yoomy was at a loss to account for the departure of Samoa; who, while
  • ashore, had expressed much desire to roam.
  • Media, however, declared that he must be returning to some inamorata.
  • But Babbalanja averred, that the Upoluan was not the first man, who had
  • turned back, after beginning a voyage like our own.
  • To this, after musing, Yoomy assented. Indeed, I had noticed, that
  • already the Warbler had abated those sanguine assurances of success,
  • with which he had departed from Odo. The futility of our search thus
  • far, seemed ominous to him, of the end.
  • On the eve of embarking, we were accompanied to the beach by Borabolla;
  • who, with his own hand, suspended from the shark's mouth of Media's
  • canoe, three red-ripe bunches of plantains, a farewell gift to his
  • guests.
  • Though he spoke not a word, Jarl was long in taking leave. His eyes
  • seemed to say, I will see you no more.
  • At length we pushed from the strand; Borabolla waving his adieus with a
  • green leaf of banana; our comrade ruefully eyeing the receding canoes;
  • and the multitude loudly invoking for us a prosperous voyage.
  • But to my horror, there suddenly dashed through the crowd, the three
  • specter sons of Aleema, escaped from their prison. With clenched hands,
  • they stood in the water, and cursed me anew. And with that curse in our
  • sails, we swept off.
  • CHAPTER CIII As They Sail
  • As the canoes now glided across the lagoon, I gave myself up to reverie;
  • and revolving over all that the men of Amma had rehearsed of the history
  • of Yillah, I one by one unriddled the mysteries, before so baffling.
  • Now, all was made plain: no secret remaining, but the subsequent event
  • of her disappearance. Yes, Hautia! enlightened I had been but where was
  • Yillah?
  • Then I recalled that last interview with Hautia's messengers, so full of
  • enigmas; and wondered, whether Yoomy had interpreted aright. Unseen, and
  • unsolicited; still pursuing me with omens, with taunts, and with
  • wooings, mysterious Hautia appalled me. Vaguely I began to fear her. And
  • the thought, that perhaps again and again, her heralds would haunt me,
  • filled me with a nameless dread, which I almost shrank from
  • acknowledging. Inwardly I prayed, that never more they might appear.
  • While full of these thoughts, Media interrupted them by saying, that the
  • minstrel was about to begin one of his chants, a thing of his own
  • composing; and therefore, as he himself said, all critics must be
  • lenient; for Yoomy, at times, not always, was a timid youth, distrustful
  • of his own sweet genius for poesy.
  • The words were about a curious hereafter, believed in by some people in
  • Mardi: a sort of nocturnal Paradise, where the sun and its heat are
  • excluded: one long, lunar day, with twinkling stars to keep company.
  • THE SONG Far off in the sea is Marlena, A land of shades and streams, A
  • land of many delights. Dark and bold, thy shores, Marlena; But green,
  • and timorous, thy soft knolls, Crouching behind the woodlands. All shady
  • thy hills; all gleaming thy springs, Like eyes in the earth looking at
  • you. How charming thy haunts Marlena!-- Oh, the waters that flow
  • through Onimoo: Oh, the leaves that rustle through Ponoo: Oh, the roses
  • that blossom in Tarma: Come, and see the valley of Vina: How sweet, how
  • sweet, the Isles from Hind: 'Tis aye afternoon of the full, full moon,
  • And ever the season of fruit, And ever the hour of flowers, And never
  • the time of rains and gales, All in and about Marlena. Soft sigh the
  • boughs in the stilly air, Soft lap the beach the billows there; And in
  • the woods or by the streams, You needs must nod in the Land of Dreams.
  • "Yoomy," said old Mohi with a yawn, "you composed that song, then, did
  • you?"
  • "I did," said Yoomy, placing his turban a little to one side.
  • "Then, minstrel, you shall sing me to sleep every night, especially with
  • that song of Marlena; it is soporific as the airs of Nora-Bamma."
  • "Mean you, old man, that my lines, setting forth the luxurious repose to
  • be enjoyed hereafter, are composed with such skill, that the description
  • begets the reality; or would you ironically suggest, that the song is a
  • sleepy thing itself?"
  • "An important discrimination," said Media; "which mean you, Mohi?"
  • "Now, are you not a silly boy," said Babbalanja, "when from the
  • ambiguity of his speech, you could so easily have derived something
  • flattering, thus to seek to extract unpleasantness from it? Be wise,
  • Yoomy; and hereafter, whenever a remark like that seems equivocal, be
  • sure to wrest commendation from it, though you torture it to the quick."
  • "And most sure am I, that I would ever do so; but often I so incline to
  • a distrust of my powers, that I am far more keenly alive to censure,
  • than to praise; and always deem it the more sincere of the two; and no
  • praise so much elates me, as censure depresses."
  • CHAPTER CIV Wherein Babbalanja Broaches A Diabolical Theory, And, In His
  • Own Person, Proves It
  • "A truce!" cried Media, "here comes a gallant before the wind.--Look,
  • Taji!"
  • Turning, we descried a sharp-prowed canoe, dashing on, under the
  • pressure of an immense triangular sail, whose outer edges were streaming
  • with long, crimson pennons. Flying before it, were several small craft,
  • belonging to the poorer sort of Islanders.
  • "Out of his way there, ye laggards," cried Media, "or that mad prince,
  • Tribonnora, will ride over ye with a rush!"
  • "And who is Tribonnora," said Babbalanja, "that he thus bravely diverts
  • himself, running down innocent paddlers?"
  • "A harum-scarum young chief," replied Media, "heir to three islands; he
  • likes nothing better than the sport you now see see him at."
  • "He must be possessed by a devil," said Mohi.
  • Said Babbalanja, "Then he is only like all of us." "What say you?" cried
  • Media.
  • "I say, as old Bardianna in the Nine hundred and ninety ninth book of
  • his immortal Ponderings saith, that all men--"
  • "As I live, my lord, he has swamped three canoes," cried Mohi, pointing
  • off the beam.
  • But just then a fiery fin-back whale, having broken into the paddock of
  • the lagoon, threw up a high fountain of foam, almost under Tribonnora's
  • nose; who, quickly turning about his canoe, cur-like slunk off; his
  • steering-paddle between his legs.
  • Comments over; "Babbalanja, you were going to quote," said Media.
  • "Proceed."
  • "Thank you, my lord. Says old Bardianna, 'All men are possessed by
  • devils; but as these devils are sent into men, and kept in them, for an
  • additional punishment; not garrisoning a fortress, but limboed in a
  • bridewell; so, it may be more just to say, that the devils themselves
  • are possessed by men, not men by them.'"
  • "Faith!" cried Media, "though sometimes a bore, your old Bardianna is a
  • trump."
  • "I have long been of that mind, my lord. But let me go on. Says
  • Bardianna, 'Devils are divers;--strong devils, and weak devils; knowing
  • devils, and silly devils; mad devils, and mild devils; devils, merely
  • devils; devils, themselves bedeviled; devils, doubly bedeviled."
  • "And in the devil's name, what sort of a devil is yours?" cried Mohi.
  • "Of him anon; interrupt me not, old man. Thus, then, my lord, as devils
  • are divers, divers are the devils in men. Whence, the wide difference we
  • see. But after all, the main difference is this:--that one man's devil
  • is only more of a devil than another's; and be bedeviled as much as you
  • will; yet, may you perform the most bedeviled of actions with impunity,
  • so long as you only bedevil yourself. For it is only when your deviltry
  • injures another, that the other devils conspire to confine yours for a
  • mad one. That is to say, if you be easily handled. For there are many
  • bedeviled Bedlamites in Mardi, doing an infinity of mischief, who are
  • too brawny in the arms to be tied."
  • "A very devilish doctrine that," cried Mohi. "I don't believe it."
  • "My lord," said Babbalanja, "here's collateral proof;--the sage lawgiver
  • Yamjamma, who flourished long before Bardianna, roundly asserts, that
  • all men who knowingly do evil are bedeviled; for good is happiness;
  • happiness the object of living; and evil is not good."
  • "If the sage Yamjamma said that," said old Mohi, "the sage Yamjamma
  • might have bettered the saying; it's not quite so plain as it might be."
  • "Yamjamma disdained to be plain; he scorned to be fully comprehended by
  • mortals. Like all oracles, he dealt in dark sayings. But old Bardianna
  • was of another sort; he spoke right out, going straight to the point
  • like a javelin; especially when he laid it down for a universal maxim,
  • that minus exceptions, all men are bedeviled."
  • "Of course, then," said Media, "you include yourself among the number."
  • "Most assuredly; and so did old Bardianna; who somewhere says, that
  • being thoroughly bedeviled himself, he was so much the better qualified
  • to discourse upon the deviltries of his neighbors. But in another place
  • he seems to contradict himself, by asserting, that he is not so sensible
  • of his own deviltry as of other people's."
  • "Hold!" cried Media, "who have we here?" and he pointed ahead of our
  • prow to three men in the water, urging themselves along, each with a
  • paddle.
  • We made haste to overtake them.
  • "Who are you?" said Media, "where from, and where bound?"
  • "From Variora," they answered, "and bound to Mondoldo." "And did that
  • devil Tribonnora swamp your canoe?" asked Media, offering to help them
  • into ours.
  • "We had no such useless incumbrance to lose," they replied, resting on
  • their backs, and panting with their exertions. "If we had had a canoe,
  • we would have had to paddle it along with us; whereas we have only our
  • bodies to paddle."
  • "You are a parcel of loons," exclaimed Media. "But go your ways, if you
  • are satisfied with your locomotion, well and good."
  • "Now, it is an extreme case, I grant," said Babbalanja, "but those poor
  • devils there, help to establish old Bardianna's position. They belong to
  • that species of our bedeviled race, called simpletons; but their devils
  • harming none but themselves, are permitted to be at large with the fish.
  • Whereas, Tribonnora's devil, who daily runs down canoes, drowning their
  • occupants, belongs to the species of out and out devils; but being high
  • in station, and strongly backed by kith and kin, Tribonnora can not be
  • mastered, and put in a strait jacket. For myself, I think my devil is
  • some where between these two extremes; at any rate, he belongs to that
  • class of devils who harm not other devils."
  • "I am not so sure of that," retorted Media. "Methinks this doctrine of
  • yours, about all mankind being bedeviled, will work a deal of mischief;
  • seeing that by implication it absolves you mortals from moral
  • accountability. Further-more; as your doctrine is exceedingly evil, by
  • Yamjamma's theory it follows, that you must be proportionably bedeviled;
  • and since it harms others, your devil is of the number of those whom it
  • is best to limbo; and since he is one of those that can be limboed,
  • limboed he shall be in you."
  • And so saying, he humorously commanded his attendants to lay hands upon
  • the bedeviled philosopher, and place a bandage upon his mouth, that he
  • might no more disseminate his devilish doctrine.
  • Against this, Babbalanja demurred, protesting that he was no orang-outang, to be so rudely handled.
  • "Better and better," said Media, "you but illustrate Bardianna's theory;
  • that men are not sensible of their being bedeviled."
  • Thus tantalized, Babbalanja displayed few signs of philosophy.
  • Whereupon, said Media, "Assuredly his devil is foaming; behold his
  • mouth!" And he commanded him to be bound hand and foot.
  • At length, seeing all resistance ineffectual, Babbalanja submitted; but
  • not without many objurgations.
  • Presently, however, they released him; when Media inquired, how he
  • relished the application of his theory; and whether he was still' of old
  • Bardianna's mind?
  • To which, haughtily adjusting his robe, Babbalanja replied, "The strong
  • arm, my lord, is no argument, though it overcomes all logic."
  • END OF VOL. I.
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  • I (of 2), by Herman Melville
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