3957 lines
221 KiB
Plaintext
3957 lines
221 KiB
Plaintext
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**The Project Gutenberg Etext of Heart of Darkness, by Conrad**
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[See the movie "Apocalypse Now"]
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Heart of Darkness, by Joseph Conrad
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February, 1995 [Etext #219]
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**The Project Gutenberg Etext of Heart of Darkness, by Conrad**
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HEART OF DARKNESS
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by Joseph Conrad
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I
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The Nellie, a cruising yawl, swung to her anchor without
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a flutter of the sails, and was at rest. The flood had made,
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the wind was nearly calm, and being bound down the river,
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the only thing for it was to come to and wait for the turn
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of the tide.
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The sea-reach of the Thames stretched before us like the beginning of an
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interminable waterway. In the offing the sea and the sky were welded
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together without a joint, and in the luminous space the tanned sails
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of the barges drifting up with the tide seemed to stand still in red
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clusters of canvas sharply peaked, with gleams of varnished sprits.
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A haze rested on the low shores that ran out to sea in vanishing flatness.
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The air was dark above Gravesend, and farther back still seemed
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condensed into a mournful gloom, brooding motionless over the biggest,
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and the greatest, town on earth.
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The Director of Companies was our captain and our host. We four
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affectionately watched his back as he stood in the bows looking to seaward.
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On the whole river there was nothing that looked half so nautical.
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He resembled a pilot, which to a seaman is trustworthiness personified.
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It was difficult to realize his work was not out there in the luminous
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estuary, but behind him, within the brooding gloom.
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Between us there was, as I have already said somewhere,
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the bond of the sea. Besides holding our hearts together
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through long periods of separation, it had the effect of making
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us tolerant of each other's yarns--and even convictions.
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The Lawyer--the best of old fellows--had, because of his many
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years and many virtues, the only cushion on deck, and was lying
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on the only rug. The Accountant had brought out already a box
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of dominoes, and was toying architecturally with the bones.
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Marlow sat cross-legged right aft, leaning against
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the mizzen-mast. He had sunken cheeks, a yellow complexion,
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a straight back, an ascetic aspect, and, with his arms dropped,
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the palms of hands outwards, resembled an idol.
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The director, satisfied the anchor had good hold, made his way
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aft and sat down amongst us. We exchanged a few words lazily.
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Afterwards there was silence on board the yacht.
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For some reason or other we did not begin that game of dominoes.
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We felt meditative, and fit for nothing but placid staring.
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The day was ending in a serenity of still and exquisite brilliance.
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The water shone pacifically; the sky, without a speck, was a
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benign immensity of unstained light; the very mist on the Essex
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marsh was like a gauzy and radiant fabric, hung from the wooded
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rises inland, and draping the low shores in diaphanous folds.
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Only the gloom to the west, brooding over the upper reaches,
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became more sombre every minute, as if angered by the approach
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of the sun.
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And at last, in its curved and imperceptible fall, the sun sank low,
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and from glowing white changed to a dull red without rays and without heat,
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as if about to go out suddenly, stricken to death by the touch of that gloom
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brooding over a crowd of men.
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Forthwith a change came over the waters, and the serenity
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became less brilliant but more profound. The old river
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in its broad reach rested unruffled at the decline of day,
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after ages of good service done to the race that peopled its banks,
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spread out in the tranquil dignity of a waterway leading
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to the uttermost ends of the earth. We looked at the venerable
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stream not in the vivid flush of a short day that comes and
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departs for ever, but in the august light of abiding memories.
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And indeed nothing is easier for a man who has, as the phrase goes,
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"followed the sea" with reverence and affection, that to evoke
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the great spirit of the past upon the lower reaches of the Thames.
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The tidal current runs to and fro in its unceasing service,
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crowded with memories of men and ships it had borne
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to the rest of home or to the battles of the sea.
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It had known and served all the men of whom the nation is proud,
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from Sir Francis Drake to Sir John Franklin, knights all,
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titled and untitled--the great knights-errant of the sea.
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It had borne all the ships whose names are like jewels
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flashing in the night of time, from the GOLDEN HIND returning
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with her rotund flanks full of treasure, to be visited by
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the Queen's Highness and thus pass out of the gigantic tale,
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to the EREBUS and TERROR, bound on other conquests--
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and that never returned. It had known the ships and the men.
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They had sailed from Deptford, from Greenwich, from Erith--
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the adventurers and the settlers; kings' ships and the ships
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of men on 'Change; captains, admirals, the dark "interlopers"
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of the Eastern trade, and the commissioned "generals"
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of East India fleets. Hunters for gold or pursuers of fame,
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they all had gone out on that stream, bearing the sword,
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and often the torch, messengers of the might within the land,
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bearers of a spark from the sacred fire. What greatness had not
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floated on the ebb of that river into the mystery of an unknown
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earth! . . . The dreams of men, the seed of commonwealths,
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the germs of empires.
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The sun set; the dusk fell on the stream, and lights began to
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appear along the shore. The Chapman light-house, a three-legged
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thing erect on a mud-flat, shone strongly. Lights of ships moved
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in the fairway--a great stir of lights going up and going down.
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And farther west on the upper reaches the place of the monstrous town
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was still marked ominously on the sky, a brooding gloom in sunshine,
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a lurid glare under the stars.
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"And this also," said Marlow suddenly, "has been one of the dark
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places of the earth."
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He was the only man of us who still "followed the sea."
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The worst that could be said of him was that he did not represent
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his class. He was a seaman, but he was a wanderer, too, while most
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seamen lead, if one may so express it, a sedentary life.
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Their minds are of the stay-at-home order, and their home is
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always with them--the ship; and so is their country--the sea.
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One ship is very much like another, and the sea is always the same.
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In the immutability of their surroundings the foreign shores,
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the foreign faces, the changing immensity of life, glide past,
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veiled not by a sense of mystery but by a slightly disdainful ignorance;
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for there is nothing mysterious to a seaman unless it be the sea itself,
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which is the mistress of his existence and as inscrutable as Destiny.
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For the rest, after his hours of work, a casual stroll or a casual
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spree on shore suffices to unfold for him the secret of a whole
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continent, and generally he finds the secret not worth knowing.
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The yarns of seamen have a direct simplicity, the whole meaning
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of which lies within the shell of a cracked nut. But Marlow was
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not typical (if his propensity to spin yarns be excepted), and to him
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the meaning of an episode was not inside like a kernel but outside,
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enveloping the tale which brought it out only as a glow brings out
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a haze, in the likeness of one of these misty halos that sometimes
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are made visible by the spectral illumination of moonshine.
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His remark did not seem at all surprising. It was just like Marlow.
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It was accepted in silence. No one took the trouble to grunt even;
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and presently he said, very slow--"I was thinking of very old times,
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when the Romans first came here, nineteen hundred years ago--the other day.
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. . . Light came out of this river since--you say Knights? Yes; but it is
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like a running blaze on a plain, like a flash of lightning in the clouds.
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We live in the flicker--may it last as long as the old earth keeps rolling!
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But darkness was here yesterday. Imagine the feelings of a commander
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of a fine--what d'ye call 'em?--trireme in the Mediterranean,
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ordered suddenly to the north; run overland across the Gauls in a hurry;
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put in charge of one of these craft the legionaries--a wonderful lot
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of handy men they must have been, too--used to build, apparently by
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the hundred, in a month or two, if we may believe what we read.
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Imagine him here--the very end of the world, a sea the colour of lead,
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a sky the colour of smoke, a kind of ship about as rigid as a concertina--
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and going up this river with stores, or orders, or what you like.
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Sand-banks, marshes, forests, savages,--precious little to eat fit for a
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civilized man, nothing but Thames water to drink. No Falernian wine here,
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no going ashore. Here and there a military camp lost in a wilderness,
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like a needle in a bundle of hay--cold, fog, tempests, disease, exile,
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and death--death skulking in the air, in the water, in the bush.
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They must have been dying like flies here. Oh, yes--he did it.
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Did it very well, too, no doubt, and without thinking much about it either,
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|
except afterwards to brag of what he had gone through in his time, perhaps.
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|
They were men enough to face the darkness. And perhaps he was cheered
|
|
by keeping his eye on a chance of promotion to the fleet at Ravenna
|
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by and by, if he had good friends in Rome and survived the awful climate.
|
|
Or think of a decent young citizen in a toga--perhaps too much dice,
|
|
you know--coming out here in the train of some prefect, or tax-gatherer,
|
|
or trader even, to mend his fortunes. Land in a swamp, march through
|
|
the woods, and in some inland post feel the savagery, the utter savagery,
|
|
had closed round him--all that mysterious life of the wilderness
|
|
that stirs in the forest, in the jungles, in the hearts of wild men.
|
|
There's no initiation either into such mysteries. He has to live
|
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in the midst of the incomprehensible, which is also detestable.
|
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And it has a fascination, too, that goes to work upon him.
|
|
The fascination of the abomination--you know, imagine the growing regrets,
|
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the longing to escape, the powerless disgust, the surrender, the hate."
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He paused.
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"Mind," he began again, lifting one arm from the elbow, the palm
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of the hand outwards, so that, with his legs folded before him,
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he had the pose of a Buddha preaching in European clothes and without
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a lotus-flower--"Mind, none of us would feel exactly like this.
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|
What saves us is efficiency--the devotion to efficiency.
|
|
But these chaps were not much account, really. They were no colonists;
|
|
their administration was merely a squeeze, and nothing more, I suspect.
|
|
They were conquerors, and for that you want only brute force--
|
|
nothing to boast of, when you have it, since your strength
|
|
is just an accident arising from the weakness of others.
|
|
They grabbed what they could get for the sake of what was to be got.
|
|
It was just robbery with violence, aggravated murder on a great scale,
|
|
and men going at it blind--as is very proper for those who tackle
|
|
a darkness. The conquest of the earth, which mostly means
|
|
the taking it away from those who have a different complexion
|
|
or slightly flatter noses than ourselves, is not a pretty thing
|
|
when you look into it too much. What redeems it is the idea only.
|
|
An idea at the back of it; not a sentimental pretence but an idea;
|
|
and an unselfish belief in the idea--something you can set up,
|
|
and bow down before, and offer a sacrifice to. . . ."
|
|
|
|
He broke off. Flames glided in the river, small green flames, red flames,
|
|
white flames, pursuing, overtaking, joining, crossing each other--
|
|
then separating slowly or hastily. The traffic of the great city went
|
|
on in the deepening night upon the sleepless river. We looked on,
|
|
waiting patiently--there was nothing else to do till the end of the flood;
|
|
but it was only after a long silence, when he said, in a hesitating voice,
|
|
"I suppose you fellows remember I did once turn fresh-water sailor
|
|
for a bit," that we knew we were fated, before the ebb began to run,
|
|
to hear about one of Marlow's inconclusive experiences.
|
|
|
|
"I don't want to bother you much with what happened to me personally,"
|
|
he began, showing in this remark the weakness of many tellers
|
|
of tales who seem so often unaware of what their audience would
|
|
like best to hear; "yet to understand the effect of it on me you ought
|
|
to know how I got out there, what I saw, how I went up that river
|
|
to the place where I first met the poor chap. It was the farthest
|
|
point of navigation and the culminating point of my experience.
|
|
It seemed somehow to throw a kind of light on everything about me--
|
|
and into my thoughts. It was sombre enough, too--and pitiful--
|
|
not extraordinary in any way--not very clear either. No, not very clear.
|
|
And yet it seemed to throw a kind of light.
|
|
|
|
"I had then, as you remember, just returned to London after a lot of Indian
|
|
Ocean, Pacific, China Seas--a regular dose of the East--six years or so,
|
|
and I was loafing about, hindering you fellows in your work and invading
|
|
your homes, just as though I had got a heavenly mission to civilize you.
|
|
It was very fine for a time, but after a bit I did get tired of resting.
|
|
Then I began to look for a ship--I should think the hardest work on earth.
|
|
But the ships wouldn't even look at me. And I got tired of that game, too.
|
|
|
|
"Now when I was a little chap I had a passion for maps.
|
|
I would look for hours at South America, or Africa, or Australia,
|
|
and lose myself in all the glories of exploration.
|
|
At that time there were many blank spaces on the earth,
|
|
and when I saw one that looked particularly inviting on a map
|
|
(but they all look that) I would put my finger on it
|
|
and say, `When I grow up I will go there.' The North Pole
|
|
was one of these places, I remember. Well, I haven't been
|
|
there yet, and shall not try now. The glamour's off.
|
|
Other places were scattered about the hemispheres. I have been
|
|
in some of them, and . . . well, we won't talk about that.
|
|
But there was one yet--the biggest, the most blank, so to speak--
|
|
that I had a hankering after.
|
|
|
|
"True, by this time it was not a blank space any more.
|
|
It had got filled since my boyhood with rivers and lakes and names.
|
|
It had ceased to be a blank space of delightful mystery--
|
|
a white patch for a boy to dream gloriously over.
|
|
It had become a place of darkness. But there was in it
|
|
one river especially, a mighty big river, that you could
|
|
see on the map, resembling an immense snake uncoiled,
|
|
with its head in the sea, its body at rest curving afar over
|
|
a vast country, and its tail lost in the depths of the land.
|
|
And as I looked at the map of it in a shop-window, it
|
|
fascinated me as a snake would a bird--a silly little bird.
|
|
Then I remembered there was a big concern, a Company for
|
|
trade on that river. Dash it all! I thought to myself,
|
|
they can't trade without using some kind of craft on that lot of
|
|
fresh water--steamboats! Why shouldn't I try to get charge of one?
|
|
I went on along Fleet Street, but could not shake off the idea.
|
|
The snake had charmed me.
|
|
|
|
"You understand it was a Continental concern, that Trading society;
|
|
but I have a lot of relations living on the Continent, because it's
|
|
cheap and not so nasty as it looks, they say.
|
|
|
|
"I am sorry to own I began to worry them. This was already a fresh
|
|
departure for me. I was not used to get things that way, you know.
|
|
I always went my own road and on my own legs where I had a mind to go.
|
|
I wouldn't have believed it of myself; but, then--you see--I felt
|
|
somehow I must get there by hook or by crook. So I worried them.
|
|
The men said `My dear fellow,' and did nothing. Then--would you
|
|
believe it?--I tried the women. I, Charlie Marlow, set the women to work--
|
|
to get a job. Heavens! Well, you see, the notion drove me.
|
|
I had an aunt, a dear enthusiastic soul. She wrote: `It will be delightful.
|
|
I am ready to do anything, anything for you. It is a glorious idea.
|
|
I know the wife of a very high personage in the Administration,
|
|
and also a man who has lots of influence with,' etc. She was determined
|
|
to make no end of fuss to get me appointed skipper of a river steamboat,
|
|
if such was my fancy.
|
|
|
|
"I got my appointment--of course; and I got it very quick.
|
|
It appears the Company had received news that one of their
|
|
captains had been killed in a scuffle with the natives.
|
|
This was my chance, and it made me the more anxious to go.
|
|
It was only months and months afterwards, when I made the attempt
|
|
to recover what was left of the body, that I heard the original
|
|
quarrel arose from a misunderstanding about some hens.
|
|
Yes, two black hens. Fresleven--that was the fellow's name,
|
|
a Dane--thought himself wronged somehow in the bargain,
|
|
so he went ashore and started to hammer the chief of the village
|
|
with a stick. Oh, it didn't surprise me in the least to
|
|
hear this, and at the same time to be told that Fresleven was
|
|
the gentlest, quietest creature that ever walked on two legs.
|
|
No doubt he was; but he had been a couple of years already out
|
|
there engaged in the noble cause, you know, and he probably felt
|
|
the need at last of asserting his self-respect in some way.
|
|
Therefore he whacked the old nigger mercilessly, while a big
|
|
crowd of his people watched him, thunderstruck, till some man--
|
|
I was told the chief's son--in desperation at hearing the old
|
|
chap yell, made a tentative jab with a spear at the white man--
|
|
and of course it went quite easy between the shoulder-blades.
|
|
Then the whole population cleared into the forest, expecting all
|
|
kinds of calamities to happen, while, on the other hand,
|
|
the steamer Fresleven commanded left also in a bad panic,
|
|
in charge of the engineer, I believe. Afterwards nobody seemed
|
|
to trouble much about Fresleven's remains, till I got out and
|
|
stepped into his shoes. I couldn't let it rest, though; but when
|
|
an opportunity offered at last to meet my predecessor, the grass
|
|
growing through his ribs was tall enough to hide his bones.
|
|
They were all there. The supernatural being had not been
|
|
touched after he fell. And the village was deserted, the huts
|
|
gaped black, rotting, all askew within the fallen enclosures.
|
|
A calamity had come to it, sure enough. The people had vanished.
|
|
Mad terror had scattered them, men, women, and children,
|
|
through the bush, and they had never returned.
|
|
What became of the hens I don't know either. I should think
|
|
the cause of progress got them, anyhow. However, through this
|
|
glorious affair I got my appointment, before I had fairly
|
|
begun to hope for it.
|
|
|
|
"I flew around like mad to get ready, and before forty-eight
|
|
hours I was crossing the Channel to show myself to my employers,
|
|
and sign the contract. In a very few hours I arrived in a city that
|
|
always makes me think of a whited sepulchre. Prejudice no doubt.
|
|
I had no difficulty in finding the Company's offices. It was
|
|
the biggest thing in the town, and everybody I met was full of it.
|
|
They were going to run an over-sea empire, and make no end of
|
|
coin by trade.
|
|
|
|
"A narrow and deserted street in deep shadow, high houses,
|
|
innumerable windows with venetian blinds, a dead silence, grass sprouting
|
|
right and left, immense double doors standing ponderously ajar.
|
|
I slipped through one of these cracks, went up a swept and ungarnished
|
|
staircase, as arid as a desert, and opened the first door I came to.
|
|
Two women, one fat and the other slim, sat on straw-bottomed chairs,
|
|
knitting black wool. The slim one got up and walked straight at me--
|
|
still knitting with downcast eyes--and only just as I began to
|
|
think of getting out of her way, as you would for a somnambulist,
|
|
stood still, and looked up. Her dress was as plain as an
|
|
umbrella-cover, and she turned round without a word and preceded
|
|
me into a waiting-room. I gave my name, and looked about.
|
|
Deal table in the middle, plain chairs all round the walls, on one
|
|
end a large shining map, marked with all the colours of a rainbow.
|
|
There was a vast amount of red--good to see at any time, because one
|
|
knows that some real work is done in there, a deuce of a lot
|
|
of blue, a little green, smears of orange, and, on the East Coast,
|
|
a purple patch, to show where the jolly pioneers of progress drink
|
|
the jolly lager-beer. However, I wasn't going into any of these.
|
|
I was going into the yellow. Dead in the centre. And the river
|
|
was there--fascinating--deadly--like a snake. Ough! A door opened,
|
|
ya white-haired secretarial head, but wearing a compassionate expression,
|
|
appeared, and a skinny forefinger beckoned me into the sanctuary.
|
|
Its light was dim, and a heavy writing-desk squatted in the middle.
|
|
From behind that structure came out an impression of pale plumpness
|
|
in a frock-coat. The great man himself. He was five feet six,
|
|
I should judge, and had his grip on the handle-end of ever
|
|
so many millions. He shook hands, I fancy, murmured vaguely,
|
|
was satisfied with my French. BON VOYAGE.
|
|
|
|
"In about forty-five seconds I found myself again in the waiting-room
|
|
with the compassionate secretary, who, full of desolation and sympathy,
|
|
made me sign some document. I believe I undertook amongst other things
|
|
not to disclose any trade secrets. Well, I am not going to.
|
|
|
|
"I began to feel slightly uneasy. You know I am not used to
|
|
such ceremonies, and there was something ominous in the atmosphere.
|
|
It was just as though I had been let into some conspiracy--
|
|
I don't know--something not quite right; and I was glad to get out.
|
|
In the outer room the two women knitted black wool feverishly.
|
|
People were arriving, and the younger one was walking back
|
|
and forth introducing them. The old one sat on her chair.
|
|
Her flat cloth slippers were propped up on a foot-warmer, and a cat
|
|
reposed on her lap. She wore a starched white affair on her head,
|
|
had a wart on one cheek, and silver-rimmed spectacles hung
|
|
on the tip of her nose. She glanced at me above the glasses.
|
|
The swift and indifferent placidity of that look troubled me.
|
|
Two youths with foolish and cheery countenances were being piloted over,
|
|
and she threw at them the same quick glance of unconcerned wisdom.
|
|
She seemed to know all about them and about me, too.
|
|
An eerie feeling came over me. She seemed uncanny and fateful.
|
|
Often far away there I thought of these two, guarding the door
|
|
of Darkness, knitting black wool as for a warm pall,
|
|
one introducing, introducing continuously to the unknown,
|
|
the other scrutinizing the cheery and foolish faces with unconcerned
|
|
old eyes. AVE! Old knitter of black wool. MORITURI TE SALUTANT.
|
|
Not many of those she looked at ever saw her again--not half,
|
|
by a long way.
|
|
|
|
"There was yet a visit to the doctor. `A simple formality,' assured me
|
|
the secretary, with an air of taking an immense part in all my sorrows.
|
|
Accordingly a young chap wearing his hat over the left eyebrow,
|
|
some clerk I suppose--there must have been clerks in the business,
|
|
though the house was as still as a house in a city of the dead--
|
|
came from somewhere up-stairs, and led me forth. He was shabby
|
|
and careless, with inkstains on the sleeves of his jacket, and his
|
|
cravat was large and billowy, under a chin shaped like the toe
|
|
of an old boot. It was a little too early for the doctor, so I
|
|
proposed a drink, and thereupon he developed a vein of joviality.
|
|
As we sat over our vermouths he glorified the Company's business,
|
|
and by and by I expressed casually my surprise at him not going
|
|
out there. He became very cool and collected all at once.
|
|
`I am not such a fool as I look, quoth Plato to his disciples,'
|
|
he said sententiously, emptied his glass with great resolution,
|
|
and we rose.
|
|
|
|
"The old doctor felt my pulse, evidently thinking of something
|
|
else the while. `Good, good for there,' he mumbled,
|
|
and then with a certain eagerness asked me whether I would
|
|
let him measure my head. Rather surprised, I said Yes,
|
|
when he produced a thing like calipers and got the dimensions
|
|
back and front and every way, taking notes carefully.
|
|
He was an unshaven little man in a threadbare coat like a gaberdine,
|
|
with his feet in slippers, and I thought him a harmless fool.
|
|
`I always ask leave, in the interests of science, to measure
|
|
the crania of those going out there,' he said. `And when they
|
|
come back, too?' I asked. `Oh, I never see them,' he remarked;
|
|
`and, moreover, the changes take place inside, you know.'
|
|
He smiled, as if at some quiet joke. `So you are going
|
|
out there. Famous. Interesting, too.' He gave me a searching
|
|
glance, and made another note. `Ever any madness in your family?'
|
|
he asked, in a matter-of-fact tone. I felt very annoyed.
|
|
`Is that question in the interests of science, too?'
|
|
`It would be,' he said, without taking notice of my irritation,
|
|
`interesting for science to watch the mental changes
|
|
of individuals, on the spot, but . . .' `Are you an alienist?'
|
|
I interrupted. `Every doctor should be--a little,'
|
|
answered that original, imperturbably. `I have a little theory
|
|
which you messieurs who go out there must help me to prove.
|
|
This is my share in the advantages my country shall reap
|
|
from the possession of such a magnificent dependency.
|
|
The mere wealth I leave to others. Pardon my questions,
|
|
but you are the first Englishman coming under my observation .
|
|
. .' I hastened to assure him I was not in the least typical.
|
|
`If I were,' said I, `I wouldn't be talking like this with you.'
|
|
`What you say is rather profound, and probably erroneous,'
|
|
he said, with a laugh. `Avoid irritation more than exposure
|
|
to the sun. Adieu. How do you English say, eh? Good-bye. Ah!
|
|
Good-bye. Adieu. In the tropics one must before everything
|
|
keep calm.' . . . He lifted a warning forefinger.
|
|
. . . `DU CALME, DU CALME. ADIEU.'
|
|
|
|
"One thing more remained to do--say good-bye to my excellent aunt.
|
|
I found her triumphant. I had a cup of tea--the last decent
|
|
cup of tea for many days--and in a room that most soothingly
|
|
looked just as you would expect a lady's drawing-room to look,
|
|
we had a long quiet chat by the fireside. In the course of these
|
|
confidences it became quite plain to me I had been represented
|
|
to the wife of the high dignitary, and goodness knows to how many
|
|
more people besides, as an exceptional and gifted creature--
|
|
a piece of good fortune for the Company--a man you don't get hold
|
|
of every day. Good heavens! and I was going to take charge of a
|
|
two-penny-half-penny river-steamboat with a penny whistle attached!
|
|
It appeared, however, I was also one of the Workers, with a capital--
|
|
you know. Something like an emissary of light, something like a
|
|
lower sort of apostle. There had been a lot of such rot let loose
|
|
in print and talk just about that time, and the excellent woman,
|
|
living right in the rush of all that humbug, got carried off her feet.
|
|
She talked about 'weaning those ignorant millions from their
|
|
horrid ways,' till, upon my word, she made me quite uncomfortable.
|
|
I ventured to hint that the Company was run for profit.
|
|
|
|
"`You forget, dear Charlie, that the labourer is worthy of his hire,'
|
|
she said, brightly. It's queer how out of touch with truth women are.
|
|
They live in a world of their own, and there has never been anything
|
|
like it, and never can be. It is too beautiful altogether, and if they
|
|
were to set it up it would go to pieces before the first sunset.
|
|
Some confounded fact we men have been living contentedly with ever
|
|
since the day of creation would start up and knock the whole thing over.
|
|
|
|
"After this I got embraced, told to wear flannel, be sure
|
|
to write often, and so on--and I left. In the street--I don't
|
|
know why--a queer feeling came to me that I was an imposter.
|
|
Odd thing that I, who used to clear out for any part of the world
|
|
at twenty-four hours' notice, with less thought than most men give
|
|
to the crossing of a street, had a moment--I won't say of hesitation,
|
|
but of startled pause, before this commonplace affair. The best
|
|
way I can explain it to you is by saying that, for a second or two,
|
|
I felt as though, instead of going to the centre of a continent,
|
|
I were about to set off for the centre of the earth.
|
|
|
|
"I left in a French steamer, and she called in every blamed
|
|
port they have out there, for, as far as I could see,
|
|
the sole purpose of landing soldiers and custom-house officers.
|
|
I watched the coast. Watching a coast as it slips by the ship
|
|
is like thinking about an enigma. There it is before you--
|
|
smiling, frowning, inviting, grand, mean, insipid, or savage,
|
|
and always mute with an air of whispering, `Come and find out.'
|
|
This one was almost featureless, as if still in the making,
|
|
with an aspect of monotonous grimness. The edge of a colossal jungle,
|
|
so dark-green as to be almost black, fringed with white surf,
|
|
ran straight, like a ruled line, far, far away along
|
|
a blue sea whose glitter was blurred by a creeping mist.
|
|
The sun was fierce, the land seemed to glisten and drip with steam.
|
|
Here and there greyish-whitish specks showed up clustered
|
|
inside the white surf, with a flag flying above them perhaps.
|
|
Settlements some centuries old, and still no bigger than
|
|
pinheads on the untouched expanse of their background.
|
|
We pounded along, stopped, landed soldiers; went on,
|
|
landed custom-house clerks to levy toll in what looked like a
|
|
God-forsaken wilderness, with a tin shed and a flag-pole lost
|
|
in it; landed more soldiers--to take care of the custom-house
|
|
clerks, presumably. Some, I heard, got drowned in the surf;
|
|
but whether they did or not, nobody seemed particularly to care.
|
|
They were just flung out there, and on we went.
|
|
Every day the coast looked the same, as though we had not moved;
|
|
but we passed various places--trading places--with names
|
|
like Gran' Bassam, Little Popo; names that seemed to belong
|
|
to some sordid farce acted in front of a sinister back-cloth.
|
|
The idleness of a passenger, my isolation amongst all these men
|
|
with whom I had no point of contact, the oily and languid sea,
|
|
the uniform sombreness of the coast, seemed to keep me away
|
|
from the truth of things, within the toil of a mournful
|
|
and senseless delusion. The voice of the surf heard now and
|
|
then was a positive pleasure, like the speech of a brother.
|
|
It was something natural, that had its reason, that had a meaning.
|
|
Now and then a boat from the shore gave one a momentary
|
|
contact with reality. It was paddled by black fellows.
|
|
You could see from afar the white of their eyeballs glistening.
|
|
They shouted, sang; their bodies streamed with perspiration;
|
|
they had faces like grotesque masks--these chaps; but they
|
|
had bone, muscle, a wild vitality, an intense energy of movement,
|
|
that was as natural and true as the surf along their coast.
|
|
They wanted no excuse for being there. They were a great comfort
|
|
to look at. For a time I would feel I belonged still to a world
|
|
of straightforward facts; but the feeling would not last long.
|
|
Something would turn up to scare it away. Once, I remember,
|
|
we came upon a man-of-war anchored off the coast.
|
|
There wasn't even a shed there, and she was shelling the bush.
|
|
It appears the French had one of their wars going on thereabouts.
|
|
Her ensign dropped limp like a rag; the muzzles of the long
|
|
six-inch guns stuck out all over the low hull; the greasy,
|
|
slimy swell swung her up lazily and let her down, swaying her
|
|
thin masts. In the empty immensity of earth, sky, and water,
|
|
there she was, incomprehensible, firing into a continent.
|
|
Pop, would go one of the six-inch guns; a small flame would
|
|
dart and vanish, a little white smoke would disappear, a tiny
|
|
projectile would give a feeble screech--and nothing happened.
|
|
Nothing could happen. There was a touch of insanity in
|
|
the proceeding, a sense of lugubrious drollery in the sight;
|
|
and it was not dissipated by somebody on board assuring me
|
|
earnestly there was a camp of natives--he called them enemies!--
|
|
hidden out of sight somewhere.
|
|
|
|
"We gave her her letters (I heard the men in that lonely ship
|
|
were dying of fever at the rate of three a day) and went on.
|
|
We called at some more places with farcical names,
|
|
where the merry dance of death and trade goes on in a still
|
|
and earthy atmosphere as of an overheated catacomb; all along
|
|
the formless coast bordered by dangerous surf, as if Nature
|
|
herself had tried to ward off intruders; in and out of rivers,
|
|
streams of death in life, whose banks were rotting into mud,
|
|
whose waters, thickened into slime, invaded the contorted mangroves,
|
|
that seemed to writhe at us in the extremity of an impotent despair.
|
|
Nowhere did we stop long enough to get a particularized impression,
|
|
but the general sense of vague and oppressive wonder grew upon me.
|
|
It was like a weary pilgrimage amongst hints for nightmares.
|
|
|
|
"It was upward of thirty days before I saw the mouth of
|
|
the big river. We anchored off the seat of the government.
|
|
But my work would not begin till some two hundred miles farther on.
|
|
So as soon as I could I made a start for a place thirty
|
|
miles higher up.
|
|
|
|
"I had my passage on a little sea-going steamer.
|
|
Her captain was a Swede, and knowing me for a seaman, invited me
|
|
on the bridge. He was a young man, lean, fair, and morose,
|
|
with lanky hair and a shuffling gait. As we left the miserable
|
|
little wharf, he tossed his head contemptuously at the shore.
|
|
`Been living there?' he asked. I said, `Yes.' `Fine
|
|
lot these government chaps--are they not?' he went on,
|
|
speaking English with great precision and considerable bitterness.
|
|
`It is funny what some people will do for a few francs a month.
|
|
I wonder what becomes of that kind when it goes upcountry?'
|
|
I said to him I expected to see that soon.
|
|
`So-o-o!' he exclaimed. He shuffled athwart, keeping one
|
|
eye ahead vigilantly. `Don't be too sure,' he continued.
|
|
`The other day I took up a man who hanged himself on the road.
|
|
He was a Swede, too.' `Hanged himself! Why, in God's name?'
|
|
I cried. He kept on looking out watchfully. `Who knows?
|
|
The sun too much for him, or the country perhaps.'
|
|
|
|
"At last we opened a reach. A rocky cliff appeared,
|
|
mounds of turned-up earth by the shore, houses on a hill,
|
|
others with iron roofs, amongst a waste of excavations,
|
|
or hanging to the declivity. A continuous noise of the rapids
|
|
above hovered over this scene of inhabited devastation.
|
|
A lot of people, mostly black and naked, moved about like ants.
|
|
A jetty projected into the river. A blinding sunlight
|
|
drowned all this at times in a sudden recrudescence of glare.
|
|
`There's your Company's station,' said the Swede, pointing to
|
|
three wooden barrack-like structures on the rocky slope. `I will
|
|
send your things up. Four boxes did you say? So. Farewell.'
|
|
|
|
"I came upon a boiler wallowing in the grass, then found a path leading up
|
|
the hill. It turned aside for the boulders, and also for an undersized
|
|
railway-truck lying there on its back with its wheels in the air.
|
|
One was off. The thing looked as dead as the carcass of some animal.
|
|
I came upon more pieces of decaying machinery, a stack of rusty rails.
|
|
To the left a clump of trees made a shady spot, where dark things seemed
|
|
to stir feebly. I blinked, the path was steep. A horn tooted to the right,
|
|
and I saw the black people run. A heavy and dull detonation shook
|
|
the ground, a puff of smoke came out of the cliff, and that was all.
|
|
No change appeared on the face of the rock. They were building a railway.
|
|
The cliff was not in the way or anything; but this objectless blasting
|
|
was all the work going on.
|
|
|
|
"A slight clinking behind me made me turn my head.
|
|
Six black men advanced in a file, toiling up the path.
|
|
They walked erect and slow, balancing small baskets full of earth
|
|
on their heads, and the clink kept time with their footsteps.
|
|
Black rags were wound round their loins, and the short ends
|
|
behind waggled to and fro like tails. I could see every rib,
|
|
the joints of their limbs were like knots in a rope; each had
|
|
an iron collar on his neck, and all were connected together with
|
|
a chain whose bights swung between them, rhythmically clinking.
|
|
Another report from the cliff made me think suddenly
|
|
of that ship of war I had seen firing into a continent.
|
|
It was the same kind of ominous voice; but these men could
|
|
by no stretch of imagination be called enemies. They were
|
|
called criminals, and the outraged law, like the bursting shells,
|
|
had come to them, an insoluble mystery from the sea.
|
|
All their meagre breasts panted together, the violently
|
|
dilated nostrils quivered, the eyes stared stonily uphill.
|
|
They passed me within six inches, without a glance,
|
|
with that complete, deathlike indifference of unhappy savages.
|
|
Behind this raw matter one of the reclaimed, the product of
|
|
the new forces at work, strolled despondently, carrying a rifle
|
|
by its middle. He had a uniform jacket with one button off,
|
|
and seeing a white man on the path, hoisted his weapon
|
|
to his shoulder with alacrity. This was simple prudence,
|
|
white men being so much alike at a distance that he could
|
|
not tell who I might be. He was speedily reassured, and with
|
|
a large, white, rascally grin, and a glance at his charge,
|
|
seemed to take me into partnership in his exalted trust.
|
|
After all, I also was a part of the great cause of these high
|
|
and just proceedings.
|
|
|
|
"Instead of going up, I turned and descended to the left.
|
|
My idea was to let that chain-gang get out of sight before I
|
|
climbed the hill. You know I am not particularly tender;
|
|
I've had to strike and to fend off. I've had to resist
|
|
and to attack sometimes--that's only one way of resisting--
|
|
without counting the exact cost, according to the demands
|
|
of such sort of life as I had blundered into. I've seen
|
|
the devil of violence, and the devil of greed, and the devil
|
|
of hot desire; but, by all the stars! these were strong, lusty,
|
|
red-eyed devils, that swayed and drove men--men, I tell you.
|
|
But as I stood on this hillside, I foresaw that in the blinding
|
|
sunshine of that land I would become acquainted with a flabby,
|
|
pretending, weak-eyed devil of a rapacious and pitiless folly.
|
|
How insidious he could be, too, I was only to find
|
|
out several months later and a thousand miles farther.
|
|
For a moment I stood appalled, as though by a warning.
|
|
Finally I descended the hill, obliquely, towards the trees
|
|
I had seen.
|
|
|
|
"I avoided a vast artificial hole somebody had been digging on
|
|
the slope, the purpose of which I found it impossible to divine.
|
|
It wasn't a quarry or a sandpit, anyhow. It was just a hole.
|
|
It might have been connected with the philanthropic desire
|
|
of giving the criminals something to do. I don't know.
|
|
Then I nearly fell into a very narrow ravine, almost no
|
|
more than a scar in the hillside. I discovered that a lot
|
|
of imported drainage-pipes for the settlement had been
|
|
tumbled in there. There wasn't one that was not broken.
|
|
It was a wanton smash-up. At last I got under the trees.
|
|
My purpose was to stroll into the shade for a moment;
|
|
but no sooner within than it seemed to me I had stepped into
|
|
the gloomy circle of some Inferno. The rapids were near,
|
|
and an uninterrupted, uniform, headlong, rushing noise filled
|
|
the mournful stillness of the grove, where not a breath stirred,
|
|
not a leaf moved, with a mysterious sound--as though the tearing
|
|
pace of the launched earth had suddenly become audible.
|
|
|
|
"Black shapes crouched, lay, sat between the trees leaning against
|
|
the trunks, clinging to the earth, half coming out, half effaced within
|
|
the dim light, in all the attitudes of pain, abandonment, and despair.
|
|
Another mine on the cliff went off, followed by a slight shudder
|
|
of the soil under my feet. The work was going on. The work!
|
|
And this was the place where some of the helpers had withdrawn to die.
|
|
|
|
"They were dying slowly--it was very clear. They were not enemies,
|
|
they were not criminals, they were nothing earthly now--
|
|
nothing but black shadows of disease and starvation, lying
|
|
confusedly in the greenish gloom. Brought from all the recesses
|
|
of the coast in all the legality of time contracts, lost in
|
|
uncongenial surroundings, fed on unfamiliar food, they sickened,
|
|
became inefficient, and were then allowed to crawl away and rest.
|
|
These moribund shapes were free as air--and nearly as thin.
|
|
I began to distinguish the gleam of the eyes under the trees.
|
|
Then, glancing down, I saw a face near my hand. The black bones
|
|
reclined at full length with one shoulder against the tree,
|
|
and slowly the eyelids rose and the sunken eyes looked up at me,
|
|
enormous and vacant, a kind of blind, white flicker in the depths
|
|
of the orbs, which died out slowly. The man seemed young--
|
|
almost a boy--but you know with them it's hard to tell.
|
|
I found nothing else to do but to offer him one of my good Swede's
|
|
ship's biscuits I had in my pocket. The fingers closed slowly
|
|
on it and held--there was no other movement and no other glance.
|
|
He had tied a bit of white worsted round his neck--Why?
|
|
Where did he get it? Was it a badge--an ornament--a charm--
|
|
a propitiatory act? Was there any idea at all connected with it?
|
|
It looked startling round his black neck, this bit of white
|
|
thread from beyond the seas.
|
|
|
|
"Near the same tree two more bundles of acute angles sat with
|
|
their legs drawn up. One, with his chin propped on his knees,
|
|
stared at nothing, in an intolerable and appalling manner:
|
|
his brother phantom rested its forehead, as if overcome with a
|
|
great weariness; and all about others were scattered in every pose
|
|
of contorted collapse, as in some picture of a massacre or a pestilence.
|
|
While I stood horror-struck, one of these creatures rose to his hands
|
|
and knees, and went off on all-fours towards the river to drink.
|
|
He lapped out of his hand, then sat up in the sunlight, crossing his
|
|
shins in front of him, and after a time let his woolly head fall
|
|
on his breastbone.
|
|
|
|
"I didn't want any more loitering in the shade, and I made
|
|
haste towards the station. When near the buildings I met
|
|
a white man, in such an unexpected elegance of get-up
|
|
that in the first moment I took him for a sort of vision.
|
|
I saw a high starched collar, white cuffs, a light alpaca jacket,
|
|
snowy trousers, a clean necktie, and varnished boots. No hat.
|
|
Hair parted, brushed, oiled, under a green-lined parasol held
|
|
in a big white hand. He was amazing, and had a penholder
|
|
behind his ear.
|
|
|
|
"I shook hands with this miracle, and I learned he was the Company's
|
|
chief accountant, and that all the book-keeping was done at this station.
|
|
He had come out for a moment, he said, `to get a breath of fresh air.
|
|
The expression sounded wonderfully odd, with its suggestion of sedentary
|
|
desk-life. I wouldn't have mentioned the fellow to you at all, only it was
|
|
from his lips that I first heard the name of the man who is so indissolubly
|
|
connected with the memories of that time. Moreover, I respected the fellow.
|
|
Yes; I respected his collars, his vast cuffs, his brushed hair.
|
|
His appearance was certainly that of a hairdresser's dummy; but in the great
|
|
demoralization of the land he kept up his appearance. That's backbone.
|
|
His starched collars and got-up shirt-fronts were achievements of character.
|
|
He had been out nearly three years; and, later, I could not help asking
|
|
him how he managed to sport such linen. He had just the faintest blush,
|
|
and said modestly, `I've been teaching one of the native women about
|
|
the station. It was difficult. She had a distaste for the work.'
|
|
Thus this man had verily accomplished something. And he was devoted
|
|
to his books, which were in apple-pie order.
|
|
|
|
"Everything else in the station was in a muddle--heads, things, buildings.
|
|
Strings of dusty niggers with splay feet arrived and departed; a stream
|
|
of manufactured goods, rubbishy cottons, beads, and brass-wire set into
|
|
the depths of darkness, and in return came a precious trickle of ivory.
|
|
|
|
"I had to wait in the station for ten days--an eternity.
|
|
I lived in a hut in the yard, but to be out of the chaos
|
|
I would sometimes get into the accountant's office.
|
|
It was built of horizontal planks, and so badly put together that,
|
|
as he bent over his high desk, he was barred from neck
|
|
to heels with narrow strips of sunlight. There was no need
|
|
to open the big shutter to see. It was hot there, too;
|
|
big flies buzzed fiendishly, and did not sting, but stabbed.
|
|
I sat generally on the floor, while, of faultless appearance
|
|
(and even slightly scented), perching on a high stool,
|
|
he wrote, he wrote. Sometimes he stood up for exercise.
|
|
When a truckle-bed with a sick man (some invalid agent
|
|
from upcountry) was put in there, he exhibited a gentle annoyance.
|
|
`The groans of this sick person,' he said, `distract my attention.
|
|
And without that it is extremely difficult to guard against
|
|
clerical errors in this climate.'
|
|
|
|
"One day he remarked, without lifting his head,
|
|
`In the interior you will no doubt meet Mr. Kurtz.'
|
|
On my asking who Mr. Kurtz was, he said he was a first-class agent;
|
|
and seeing my disappointment at this information, he added slowly,
|
|
laying down his pen, `He is a very remarkable person.'
|
|
Further questions elicited from him that Mr. Kurtz was at
|
|
present in charge of a trading-post, a very important one,
|
|
in the true ivory-country, at `the very bottom of there.
|
|
Sends in as much ivory as all the others put together . . .'
|
|
He began to write again. The sick man was too ill to groan.
|
|
The flies buzzed in a great peace.
|
|
|
|
"Suddenly there was a growing murmur of voices and a great
|
|
tramping of feet. A caravan had come in. A violent babble
|
|
of uncouth sounds burst out on the other side of the planks.
|
|
All the carriers were speaking together, and in the midst
|
|
of the uproar the lamentable voice of the chief agent was heard
|
|
`giving it up' tearfully for the twentieth time that day.
|
|
. . . He rose slowly. `What a frightful row,' he said.
|
|
He crossed the room gently to look at the sick man,
|
|
and returning, said to me, `He does not hear.' `What! Dead?'
|
|
I asked, startled. `No, not yet,' he answered, with great composure.
|
|
Then, alluding with a toss of the head to the tumult in
|
|
the station-yard, `When one has got to make correct entries,
|
|
one comes to hate those savages--hate them to the death.'
|
|
He remained thoughtful for a moment. `When you see Mr. Kurtz'
|
|
he went on, `tell him from me that everything here'--
|
|
he glanced at the deck--' is very satisfactory. I don't like
|
|
to write to him--with those messengers of ours you never know
|
|
who may get hold of your letter--at that Central Station.'
|
|
He stared at me for a moment with his mild, bulging eyes.
|
|
`Oh, he will go far, very far,' he began again.
|
|
`He will be a somebody in the Administration before long.
|
|
They, above--the Council in Europe, you know--mean him to be.'
|
|
|
|
"He turned to his work. The noise outside had ceased,
|
|
and presently in going out I stopped at the door.
|
|
In the steady buzz of flies the homeward-bound agent was lying
|
|
finished and insensible; the other, bent over his books,
|
|
was making correct entries of perfectly correct transactions;
|
|
and fifty feet below the doorstep I could see the still
|
|
tree-tops of the grove of death.
|
|
|
|
"Next day I left that station at last, with a caravan of sixty men,
|
|
for a two-hundred-mile tramp.
|
|
|
|
"No use telling you much about that. Paths, paths, everywhere;
|
|
a stamped-in network of paths spreading over the empty land,
|
|
through the long grass, through burnt grass, through thickets,
|
|
down and up chilly ravines, up and down stony hills ablaze
|
|
with heat; and a solitude, a solitude, nobody, not a hut.
|
|
The population had cleared out a long time ago. Well, if a lot
|
|
of mysterious niggers armed with all kinds of fearful weapons
|
|
suddenly took to travelling on the road between Deal and Gravesend,
|
|
catching the yokels right and left to carry heavy loads
|
|
for them, I fancy every farm and cottage thereabouts would get
|
|
empty very soon. Only here the dwellings were gone, too.
|
|
Still I passed through several abandoned villages.
|
|
There's something pathetically childish in the ruins of grass walls.
|
|
Day after day, with the stamp and shuffle of sixty pair
|
|
of bare feet behind me, each pair under a 60-lb. load.
|
|
Camp, cook, sleep, strike camp, march. Now and then a carrier
|
|
dead in harness, at rest in the long grass near the path,
|
|
with an empty water-gourd and his long staff lying by his side.
|
|
A great silence around and above. Perhaps on some quiet night
|
|
the tremor of far-off drums, sinking, swelling, a tremor vast, faint;
|
|
a sound weird, appealing, suggestive, and wild--and perhaps with as
|
|
profound a meaning as the sound of bells in a Christian country.
|
|
Once a white man in an unbuttoned uniform, camping on the path
|
|
with an armed escort of lank Zanzibaris, very hospitable and festive--
|
|
not to say drunk. Was looking after the upkeep of the road,
|
|
he declared. Can't say I saw any road or any upkeep,
|
|
unless the body of a middle-aged negro, with a bullet-hole
|
|
in the forehead, upon which I absolutely stumbled three miles
|
|
farther on, may be considered as a permanent improvement.
|
|
I had a white companion, too, not a bad chap, but rather
|
|
too fleshy and with the exasperating habit of fainting on
|
|
the hot hillsides, miles away from the least bit of shade
|
|
and water. Annoying, you know, to hold your own coat
|
|
like a parasol over a man's head while he is coming to.
|
|
I couldn't help asking him once what he meant by coming there
|
|
at all. `To make money, of course. What do you think?'
|
|
he said, scornfully. Then he got fever, and had to be carried
|
|
in a hammock slung under a pole. As he weighed sixteen stone I
|
|
had no end of rows with the carriers. They jibbed, ran away,
|
|
sneaked off with their loads in the night--quite a mutiny.
|
|
So, one evening, I made a speech in English with gestures,
|
|
not one of which was lost to the sixty pairs of eyes before me,
|
|
and the next morning I started the hammock off in front all right.
|
|
An hour afterwards I came upon the whole concern wrecked
|
|
in a bush--man, hammock, groans, blankets, horrors. The heavy
|
|
pole had skinned his poor nose. He was very anxious for me
|
|
to kill somebody, but there wasn't the shadow of a carrier near.
|
|
I remembered the old doctor--'It would be interesting for science
|
|
to watch the mental changes of individuals, on the spot.'
|
|
I felt I was becoming scientifically interesting. However, all
|
|
that is to no purpose. On the fifteenth day I came in sight
|
|
of the big river again, and hobbled into the Central Station.
|
|
It was on a back water surrounded by scrub and forest,
|
|
with a pretty border of smelly mud on one side, and on the three
|
|
others enclosed by a crazy fence of rushes. A neglected gap
|
|
was all the gate it had, and the first glance at the place was
|
|
enough to let you see the flabby devil was running that show.
|
|
White men with long staves in their hands appeared languidly
|
|
from amongst the buildings, strolling up to take a look at me,
|
|
and then retired out of sight somewhere. One of them,
|
|
a stout, excitable chap with black moustaches, informed me
|
|
with great volubility and many digressions, as soon as I told
|
|
him who I was, that my steamer was at the bottom of the river.
|
|
I was thunderstruck. What, how, why? Oh, it was `all right.'
|
|
The `manager himself' was there. All quite correct.
|
|
`Everybody had behaved splendidly! splendidly!'--'you must,'
|
|
he said in agitation, `go and see the general manager at once.
|
|
He is waiting!'
|
|
|
|
"I did not see the real significance of that wreck at once.
|
|
I fancy I see it now, but I am not sure--not at all.
|
|
Certainly the affair was too stupid--when I think of it--
|
|
to be altogether natural. Still . . . But at the moment it presented
|
|
itself simply as a confounded nuisance. The steamer was sunk.
|
|
They had started two days before in a sudden hurry up the river
|
|
with the manager on board, in charge of some volunteer skipper,
|
|
and before they had been out three hours they tore the bottom
|
|
out of her on stones, and she sank near the south bank.
|
|
I asked myself what I was to do there, now my boat was lost.
|
|
As a matter of fact, I had plenty to do in fishing my command
|
|
out of the river. I had to set about it the very next day.
|
|
That, and the repairs when I brought the pieces to the station,
|
|
took some months.
|
|
|
|
"My first interview with the manager was curious. He did not
|
|
ask me to sit down after my twenty-mile walk that morning.
|
|
He was commonplace in complexion, in features, in manners,
|
|
and in voice. He was of middle size and of ordinary build.
|
|
His eyes, of the usual blue, were perhaps remarkably cold,
|
|
and he certainly could make his glance fall on one as trenchant
|
|
and heavy as an axe. But even at these times the rest of his
|
|
person seemed to disclaim the intention. Otherwise there was only
|
|
an indefinable, faint expression of his lips, something stealthy--
|
|
a smile--not a smile--I remember it, but I can't explain.
|
|
It was unconscious, this smile was, though just after
|
|
he had said something it got intensified for an instant.
|
|
It came at the end of his speeches like a seal applied on
|
|
the words to make the meaning of the commonest phrase appear
|
|
absolutely inscrutable. He was a common trader, from his youth
|
|
up employed in these parts--nothing more. He was obeyed,
|
|
yet he inspired neither love nor fear, nor even respect.
|
|
He inspired uneasiness. That was it! Uneasiness. Not a
|
|
definite mistrust--just uneasiness--nothing more. You have
|
|
no idea how effective such a . . . a. . . . faculty can be.
|
|
He had no genius for organizing, for initiative, or for order even.
|
|
That was evident in such things as the deplorable state
|
|
of the station. He had no learning, and no intelligence.
|
|
His position had come to him--why? Perhaps because he was never
|
|
ill . . . He had served three terms of three years out there . .
|
|
. Because triumphant health in the general rout of constitutions
|
|
is a kind of power in itself. When he went home on leave he rioted
|
|
on a large scale--pompously. Jack ashore--with a difference--
|
|
in externals only. This one could gather from his casual talk.
|
|
He originated nothing, he could keep the routine going--that's all.
|
|
But he was great. He was great by this little thing that it
|
|
was impossible to tell what could control such a man.
|
|
He never gave that secret away. Perhaps there was nothing
|
|
within him. Such a suspicion made one pause--for out there there
|
|
were no external checks. Once when various tropical diseases
|
|
had laid low almost every `agent' in the station, he was heard
|
|
to say, `Men who come out here should have no entrails.'
|
|
He sealed the utterance with that smile of his, as though it
|
|
had been a door opening into a darkness he had in his keeping.
|
|
You fancied you had seen things--but the seal was on.
|
|
When annoyed at meal-times by the constant quarrels of the white
|
|
men about precedence, he ordered an immense round table
|
|
to be made, for which a special house had to be built.
|
|
This was the station's mess-room. Where he sat was the
|
|
first place--the rest were nowhere. One felt this to be his
|
|
unalterable conviction. He was neither civil nor uncivil.
|
|
He was quiet. He allowed his `boy'--an overfed young negro
|
|
from the coast--to treat the white men, under his very eyes,
|
|
with provoking insolence.
|
|
|
|
"He began to speak as soon as he saw me. I had been very long
|
|
on the road. He could not wait. Had to start without me.
|
|
The up-river stations had to be relieved. There had been so many
|
|
delays already that he did not know who was dead and who was alive,
|
|
and how they got on--and so on, and so on. He paid no attention
|
|
to my explanations, and, playing with a stick of sealing-wax, repeated
|
|
several times that the situation was `very grave, very grave.'
|
|
There were rumours that a very important station was in jeopardy,
|
|
and its chief, Mr. Kurtz, was ill. Hoped it was not true.
|
|
Mr. Kurtz was . . . I felt weary and irritable. Hang Kurtz, I thought.
|
|
I interrupted him by saying I had heard of Mr. Kurtz on the coast.
|
|
`Ah! So they talk of him down there,' he murmured to himself.
|
|
Then he began again, assuring me Mr. Kurtz was the best agent he had,
|
|
an exceptional man, of the greatest importance to the Company;
|
|
therefore I could understand his anxiety. He was, he said,
|
|
`very, very uneasy.' Certainly he fidgeted on his chair a
|
|
good deal, exclaimed, `Ah, Mr. Kurtz!' broke the stick of sealing-wax
|
|
and seemed dumfounded by the accident. Next thing he wanted
|
|
to know `how long it would take to' . . . I interrupted him again.
|
|
Being hungry, you know, and kept on my feet too. I was getting savage.
|
|
`How can I tell?' I said. `I haven't even seen the wreck yet--
|
|
some months, no doubt.' All this talk seemed to me so futile.
|
|
`Some months,' he said. `Well, let us say three months before we
|
|
can make a start. Yes. That ought to do the affair.' I flung out
|
|
of his hut (he lived all alone in a clay hut with a sort of verandah)
|
|
muttering to myself my opinion of him. He was a chattering idiot.
|
|
Afterwards I took it back when it was borne in upon me startlingly
|
|
with what extreme nicety he had estimated the time requisite
|
|
for the `affair.'
|
|
|
|
"I went to work the next day, turning, so to speak, my back
|
|
on that station. In that way only it seemed to me I could
|
|
keep my hold on the redeeming facts of life. Still, one must
|
|
look about sometimes; and then I saw this station, these men
|
|
strolling aimlessly about in the sunshine of the yard.
|
|
I asked myself sometimes what it all meant. They wandered
|
|
here and there with their absurd long staves in their hands,
|
|
like a lot of faithless pilgrims bewitched inside a rotten fence.
|
|
The word `ivory' rang in the air, was whispered, was sighed.
|
|
You would think they were praying to it. A taint of imbecile
|
|
rapacity blew through it all, like a whiff from some corpse.
|
|
By Jove! I've never seen anything so unreal in my life.
|
|
And outside, the silent wilderness surrounding this cleared
|
|
speck on the earth struck me as something great and invincible,
|
|
like evil or truth, waiting patiently for the passing away
|
|
of this fantastic invasion.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, these months! Well, never mind. Various things yhappened.
|
|
One evening a grass shed full of calico, cotton prints, beads, and I don't
|
|
know what else, burst into a blaze so suddenly that you would have thought
|
|
the earth had opened to let an avenging fire consume all that trash.
|
|
I was smoking my pipe quietly by my dismantled steamer, and saw
|
|
them all cutting capers in the light, with their arms lifted high,
|
|
when the stout man with moustaches came tearing down to the river,
|
|
a tin pail in his hand, assured me that everybody was `behaving splendidly,
|
|
splendidly,' dipped about a quart of water and tore back again.
|
|
I noticed there was a hole in the bottom of his pail.
|
|
|
|
"I strolled up. There was no hurry. You see the thing had gone off
|
|
like a box of matches. It had been hopeless from the very first.
|
|
The flame had leaped high, driven everybody back, lighted up everything--
|
|
and collapsed. The shed was already a heap of embers glowing fiercely.
|
|
A nigger was being beaten near by. They said he had caused the fire
|
|
in some way; be that as it may, he was screeching most horribly.
|
|
I saw him, later, for several days, sitting in a bit of shade looking
|
|
very sick and trying to recover himself; afterwards he arose and went out--
|
|
and the wilderness without a sound took him into its bosom again.
|
|
As I approached the glow from the dark I found myself at the back of
|
|
two men, talking. I heard the name of Kurtz pronounced, then the words, `take
|
|
advantage of this unfortunate accident.' One of the men was the manager.
|
|
I wished him a good evening. `Did you ever see anything like it--
|
|
eh? it is incredible,' he said, and walked off. The other man remained.
|
|
He was a first-class agent, young, gentlemanly, a bit reserved,
|
|
with a forked little beard and a hooked nose. He was stand-offish
|
|
with the other agents, and they on their side said he was the manager's
|
|
spy upon them. As to me, I had hardly ever spoken to him before.
|
|
We got into talk, and by and by we strolled away from the hissing ruins.
|
|
Then he asked me to his room, which was in the main building of the station.
|
|
He struck a match, and I perceived that this young aristocrat had not only
|
|
a silver-mounted dressing-case but also a whole candle all to himself.
|
|
Just at that time the manager was the only man supposed to have any
|
|
right to candles. Native mats covered the clay walls; a collection
|
|
of spears, assegais, shields, knives was hung up in trophies.
|
|
The business intrusted to this fellow was the making of bricks--
|
|
so I had been informed; but there wasn't a fragment of a brick anywhere
|
|
in the station, and he had been there more than a year--waiting. It seems
|
|
he could not make bricks without something, I don't know what--straw maybe.
|
|
Anyway, it could not be found there and as it was not likely to be sent
|
|
from Europe, it did not appear clear to me what he was waiting for.
|
|
An act of special creation perhaps. However, they were all waiting--
|
|
all the sixteen or twenty pilgrims of them--for something; and upon
|
|
my word it did not seem an uncongenial occupation, from the way they
|
|
took it, though the only thing that ever came to them was disease--
|
|
as far as I could see. They beguiled the time by back-biting and
|
|
intriguing against each other in a foolish kind of way. There was an air
|
|
of plotting about that station, but nothing came of it, of course.
|
|
It was as unreal as everything else--as the philanthropic pretence of the
|
|
whole concern, as their talk, as their government, as their show of work.
|
|
The only real feeling was a desire to get appointed to a trading-post
|
|
where ivory was to be had, so that they could earn percentages.
|
|
They intrigued and slandered and hated each other only on that account--
|
|
but as to effectually lifting a little finger--oh, no. By heavens! there
|
|
is something after all in the world allowing one man to steal a horse
|
|
while another must not look at a halter. Steal a horse straight out.
|
|
Very well. He has done it. Perhaps he can ride. But there is a way
|
|
of looking at a halter that would provoke the most charitable of saints
|
|
into a kick.
|
|
|
|
"I had no idea why he wanted to be sociable, but as we chatted in there
|
|
it suddenly occurred to me the fellow was trying to get at something--
|
|
in fact, pumping me. He alluded constantly to Europe, to the people I was
|
|
supposed to know there--putting leading questions as to my acquaintances
|
|
in the sepulchral city, and so on. His little eyes glittered like mica discs--
|
|
with curiosity--though he tried to keep up a bit of superciliousness.
|
|
At first I was astonished, but very soon I became awfully curious
|
|
to see what he would find out from me. I couldn't possibly imagine
|
|
what I had in me to make it worth his while. It was very pretty to see
|
|
how he baffled himself, for in truth my body was full only of chills,
|
|
and my head had nothing in it but that wretched steamboat business.
|
|
It was evident he took me for a perfectly shameless prevaricator.
|
|
At last he got angry, and, to conceal a movement of furious annoyance,
|
|
he yawned. I rose. Then I noticed a small sketch in oils, on a panel,
|
|
representing a woman, draped and blindfolded, carrying a lighted torch.
|
|
The background was sombre--almost black. The movement of the woman
|
|
was stately, and the effect of the torchlight on the face was sinister.
|
|
|
|
"It arrested me, and he stood by civilly, holding an empty half-pint
|
|
champagne bottle (medical comforts) with the candle stuck in it.
|
|
To my question he said Mr. Kurtz had painted this--in this very station
|
|
more than a year ago--while waiting for means to go to his trading post.
|
|
`Tell me, pray,' said I, `who is this Mr. Kurtz?'
|
|
|
|
"`The chief of the Inner Station,' he answered in a short tone,
|
|
looking away. `Much obliged,' I said, laughing.
|
|
`And you are the brickmaker of the Central Station.
|
|
Every one knows that.' He was silent for a while.
|
|
`He is a prodigy,' he said at last. `He is an emissary of pity
|
|
and science and progress, and devil knows what else. We want,'
|
|
he began to declaim suddenly, `for the guidance of the cause
|
|
intrusted to us by Europe, so to speak, higher intelligence,
|
|
wide sympathies, a singleness of purpose.' `Who says that?'
|
|
I asked. `Lots of them,' he replied. `Some even write that;
|
|
and so HE comes here, a special being, as you ought to know.'
|
|
`Why ought I to know?' I interrupted, really surprised.
|
|
He paid no attention. `Yes. Today he is chief of the best station,
|
|
next year he will be assistant-manager, two years more and . .
|
|
. but I dare-say you know what he will be in two years' time.
|
|
You are of the new gang--the gang of virtue. The same people
|
|
who sent him specially also recommended you. Oh, don't say no.
|
|
I've my own eyes to trust.' Light dawned upon me. My dear
|
|
aunt's influential acquaintances were producing an unexpected
|
|
effect upon that young man. I nearly burst into a laugh.
|
|
`Do you read the Company's confidential correspondence?'
|
|
I asked. He hadn't a word to say. It was great fun.
|
|
`When Mr. Kurtz,' I continued, severely, `is General Manager,
|
|
you won't have the opportunity.'
|
|
|
|
"He blew the candle out suddenly, and we went outside.
|
|
The moon had risen. Black figures strolled about listlessly,
|
|
pouring water on the glow, whence proceeded a sound of hissing;
|
|
steam ascended in the moonlight, the beaten nigger groaned somewhere.
|
|
`What a row the brute makes!' said the indefatigable man
|
|
with the moustaches, appearing near us. `Serve him right.
|
|
Transgression--punishment--bang! Pitiless, pitiless.
|
|
That's the only way. This will prevent all conflagrations
|
|
for the future. I was just telling the manager . . .' He
|
|
noticed my companion, and became crestfallen all at once.
|
|
`Not in bed yet,' he said, with a kind of servile heartiness;
|
|
`it's so natural. Ha! Danger--agitation.' He vanished.
|
|
I went on to the riverside, and the other followed me.
|
|
I heard a scathing murmur at my ear, `Heap of muffs--go to.'
|
|
The pilgrims could be seen in knots gesticulating, discussing.
|
|
Several had still their staves in their hands. I verily believe
|
|
they took these sticks to bed with them. Beyond the fence
|
|
the forest stood up spectrally in the moonlight, and through that
|
|
dim stir, through the faint sounds of that lamentable courtyard,
|
|
the silence of the land went home to one's very heart--its mystery,
|
|
its greatness, the amazing reality of its concealed life.
|
|
The hurt nigger moaned feebly somewhere near by, and then
|
|
fetched a deep sigh that made me mend my pace away from there.
|
|
I felt a hand introducing itself under my arm. `My dear sir,'
|
|
said the fellow, `I don't want to be misunderstood, and especially
|
|
by you, who will see Mr. Kurtz long before I can have that pleasure.
|
|
I wouldn't like him to get a false idea of my disposition.
|
|
. . .'
|
|
|
|
"I let him run on, this papier-mache Mephistopheles, and it seemed
|
|
to me that if I tried I could poke my forefinger through him,
|
|
and would find nothing inside but a little loose dirt, maybe.
|
|
He, don't you see, had been planning to be assistant-manager
|
|
by and by under the present man, and I could see that
|
|
the coming of that Kurtz had upset them both not a little.
|
|
He talked precipitately, and I did not try to stop him.
|
|
I had my shoulders against the wreck of my steamer, hauled up
|
|
on the slope like a carcass of some big river animal.
|
|
The smell of mud, of primeval mud, by Jove! was in my nostrils,
|
|
the high stillness of primeval forest was before my eyes;
|
|
there were shiny patches on the black creek.
|
|
The moon had spread over everything a thin layer of silver--
|
|
over the rank grass, over the mud, upon the wall of matted
|
|
vegetation standing higher than the wall of a temple,
|
|
over the great river I could see through a sombre gap glittering,
|
|
glittering, as it flowed broadly by without a murmur.
|
|
All this was great, expectant, mute, while the man jabbered
|
|
about himself. I wondered whether the stillness on the face
|
|
of the immensity looking at us two were meant as an appeal
|
|
or as a menace. What were we who had strayed in here?
|
|
Could we handle that dumb thing, or would it handle us?
|
|
I felt how big, how confoundedly big, was that thing that
|
|
couldn't talk, and perhaps was deaf as well. What was in there?
|
|
I could see a little ivory coming out from there, and I had heard
|
|
Mr. Kurtz was in there. I had heard enough about it, too--
|
|
God knows! Yet somehow it didn't bring any image with it--
|
|
no more than if I had been told an angel or a fiend was in there.
|
|
I believed it in the same way one of you might believe there
|
|
are inhabitants in the planet Mars. I knew once a Scotch
|
|
sailmaker who was certain, dead sure, there were people in Mars.
|
|
If you asked him for some idea how they looked and behaved,
|
|
he would get shy and mutter something about `walking on all-fours.'
|
|
If you as much as smiled, he would--though a man of sixty--
|
|
offer to fight you. I would not have gone so far as to
|
|
fight for Kurtz, but I went for him near enough to a lie.
|
|
You know I hate, detest, and can't bear a lie, not because I am
|
|
straighter than the rest of us, but simply because it appalls me.
|
|
There is a taint of death, a flavour of mortality in lies--
|
|
which is exactly what I hate and detest in the world--
|
|
what I want to forget. It makes me miserable and sick,
|
|
like biting something rotten would do. Temperament, I suppose.
|
|
Well, I went near enough to it by letting the young fool there
|
|
believe anything he liked to imagine as to my influence in Europe.
|
|
I became in an instant as much of a pretence as the rest
|
|
of the bewitched pilgrims. This simply because I had a notion
|
|
it somehow would be of help to that Kurtz whom at the time
|
|
I did not see--you understand. He was just a word for me.
|
|
I did not see the man in the name any more than you do.
|
|
Do you see him? Do you see the story? Do you see anything? It seems
|
|
to me I am trying to tell you ya dream--making a vain attempt,
|
|
because no relation of a dream can convey the dream-sensation,
|
|
that commingling of absurdity, surprise, and bewilderment
|
|
in a tremor of struggling revolt, that notion of being captured
|
|
by the incredible which is of the very essence of dreams.
|
|
. . ."
|
|
|
|
He was silent for a while.
|
|
|
|
". . . No, it is impossible; it is impossible to convey the life-sensation
|
|
of any given epoch of one's existence--that which makes its truth,
|
|
its meaning--its subtle and penetrating essence. It is impossible.
|
|
We live, as we dream--alone. . . ."
|
|
|
|
He paused again as if reflecting, then added:
|
|
|
|
"Of course in this you fellows see more than I could then.
|
|
You see me, whom you know. . . ."
|
|
|
|
It had become so pitch dark that we listeners could hardly see
|
|
one another. For a long time already he, sitting apart, had been
|
|
no more to us than a voice. There was not a word from anybody.
|
|
The others might have been asleep, but I was awake.
|
|
I listened, I listened on the watch for the sentence, for the word,
|
|
that would give me the clue to the faint uneasiness inspired
|
|
by this narrative that seemed to shape itself without human
|
|
lips in the heavy night-air of the river.
|
|
|
|
". . . Yes--I let him run on," Marlow began again,
|
|
"and think what he pleased about the powers that were
|
|
behind me. I did! And there was nothing behind me!
|
|
There was nothing but that wretched, old, mangled steamboat
|
|
I was leaning against, while he talked fluently about `the
|
|
necessity for every man to get on.' `And when one comes
|
|
out here, you conceive, it is not to gaze at the moon.'
|
|
Mr. Kurtz was a `universal genius,' but even a genius would
|
|
find it easier to work with `adequate tools--intelligent men.'
|
|
He did not make bricks--why, there was a physical impossibility
|
|
in the way--as I was well aware; and if he did secretarial
|
|
work for the manager, it was because `no sensible man rejects
|
|
wantonly the confidence of his superiors.' Did I see it?
|
|
I saw it. What more did I want? What I really wanted was rivets,
|
|
by heaven! Rivets. To get on with the work--to stop the hole.
|
|
Rivets I wanted. There were cases of them down at the coast--
|
|
cases--piled up--burst--split! You kicked a loose rivet
|
|
at every second step in that station-yard on the hillside.
|
|
Rivets had rolled into the grove of death. You could fill
|
|
your pockets with rivets for the trouble of stooping down--
|
|
and there wasn't one rivet to be found where it was wanted.
|
|
We had plates that would do, but nothing to fasten them with.
|
|
And every week the messenger, a long negro, letter-bag on
|
|
shoulder and staff in hand, left our station for the coast.
|
|
And several times a week a coast caravan came in with
|
|
trade goods--ghastly glazed calico that made you shudder
|
|
only to look at it, glass beads value about a penny a quart,
|
|
confounded spotted cotton handkerchiefs. And no rivets.
|
|
Three carriers could have brought all that was wanted to set
|
|
that steamboat afloat.
|
|
|
|
"He was becoming confidential now, but I fancy my unresponsive
|
|
attitude must have exasperated him at last, for he judged
|
|
it necessary to inform me he feared neither God nor devil,
|
|
let alone any mere man. I said I could see that very well,
|
|
but what I wanted was a certain quantity of rivets--and rivets
|
|
were what really Mr. Kurtz wanted, if he had only known it.
|
|
Now letters went to the coast every week. . . . `My dear sir,'
|
|
he cried, `I write from dictation.' I demanded rivets.
|
|
There was a way--for an intelligent man. He changed his manner;
|
|
became very cold, and suddenly began to talk about
|
|
a hippopotamus; wondered whether sleeping on board the steamer
|
|
(I stuck to my salvage night and day) I wasn't disturbed.
|
|
There was an old hippo that had the bad habit of getting out
|
|
on the bank and roaming at night over the station grounds.
|
|
The pilgrims used to turn out in a body and empty every rifle they
|
|
could lay hands on at him. Some even had sat up o' nights for him.
|
|
All this energy was wasted, though. `That animal has a charmed life,'
|
|
he said; `but you can say this only of brutes in this country.
|
|
No man--you apprehend me?--no man here bears a charmed life.'
|
|
He stood there for a moment in the moonlight with his delicate
|
|
hooked nose set a little askew, and his mica eyes glittering
|
|
without a wink, then, with a curt Good-night, he strode off.
|
|
I could see he was disturbed and considerably puzzled,
|
|
which made me feel more hopeful than I had been for days.
|
|
It was a great comfort to turn from that chap to my influential
|
|
friend, the battered, twisted, ruined, tin-pot steamboat.
|
|
I clambered on board. She rang under my feet like an empty
|
|
Huntley & Palmer biscuit-tin kicked along a gutter; she was
|
|
nothing so solid in make, and rather less pretty in shape,
|
|
but I had expended enough hard work on her to make me love her.
|
|
No influential friend would have served me better.
|
|
She had given me a chance to come out a bit--to find out
|
|
what I could do. No, I don't like work. I had rather laze
|
|
about and think of all the fine things that can be done.
|
|
I don't like work--no man does--but I like what is in the work--
|
|
the chance to find yourself. Your own reality--for yourself,
|
|
not for others--what no other man can ever know.
|
|
They can only see the mere show, and never can tell what
|
|
it really means.
|
|
|
|
"I was not surprised to see somebody sitting aft, on the deck,
|
|
with his legs dangling over the mud. You see I rather chummed with
|
|
the few mechanics there were in that station, whom the other pilgrims
|
|
naturally despised--on account of their imperfect manners, I suppose.
|
|
This was the foreman--a boiler-maker by trade--a good worker.
|
|
He was a lank, bony, yellow-faced man, with big intense eyes.
|
|
His aspect was worried, and his head was as bald as the palm of my hand;
|
|
but his hair in falling seemed to have stuck to his chin, and had
|
|
prospered in the new locality, for his beard hung down to his waist.
|
|
He was a widower with six young children (he had left them in charge
|
|
of a sister of his to come out there), and the passion of his
|
|
life was pigeon-flying. He was an enthusiast and a connoisseur.
|
|
He would rave about pigeons. After work hours he used sometimes to come
|
|
over from his hut for a talk about his children and his pigeons; at work,
|
|
when he had to crawl in the mud under the bottom of the steamboat,
|
|
he would tie up that beard of his in a kind of white serviette
|
|
he brought for the purpose. It had loops to go over his ears.
|
|
In the evening he could be seen squatted on the bank rinsing that
|
|
wrapper in the creek with great care, then spreading it solemnly
|
|
on a bush to dry.
|
|
|
|
"I slapped him on the back and shouted, `We shall have rivets!'
|
|
He scrambled to his feet exclaiming, `No! Rivets!' as though
|
|
he couldn't believe his ears. Then in a low voice, `You . . . eh?'
|
|
I don't know why we behaved like lunatics. I put my finger
|
|
to the side of my nose and nodded mysteriously. `Good for you!'
|
|
he cried, snapped his fingers above his head, lifting one foot.
|
|
I tried a jig. We capered on the iron deck. A frightful clatter came
|
|
out of that hulk, and the virgin forest on the other bank of the creek
|
|
sent it back in a thundering roll upon the sleeping station.
|
|
It must have made some of the pilgrims sit up in their hovels.
|
|
A dark figure obscured the lighted doorway of the manager's hut,
|
|
vanished, then, a second or so after, the doorway itself vanished, too.
|
|
We stopped, and the silence driven away by the stamping
|
|
of our feet flowed back again from the recesses of the land.
|
|
The great wall of vegetation, an exuberant and entangled mass of trunks,
|
|
branches, leaves, boughs, festoons, motionless in the moonlight,
|
|
was like a rioting invasion of soundless life, a rolling wave
|
|
of plants, piled up, crested, ready to topple over the creek,
|
|
to sweep every little man of us out of his little existence.
|
|
And it moved not. A deadened burst of mighty splashes and snorts
|
|
reached us from afar, as though an icthyosaurus had been taking a bath
|
|
of glitter in the great river. `After all,' said the boiler-maker
|
|
in a reasonable tone, `why shouldn't we get the rivets?'
|
|
Why not, indeed! I did not know of any reason why we shouldn't.
|
|
`They'll come in three weeks,' I said confidently.
|
|
|
|
"But they didn't. Instead of rivets there came an invasion,
|
|
an infliction, a visitation. It came in sections during
|
|
the next three weeks, each section headed by a donkey carrying
|
|
a white man in new clothes and tan shoes, bowing from
|
|
that elevation right and left to the impressed pilgrims.
|
|
A quarrelsome band of footsore sulky niggers trod on the heels
|
|
of the donkey; a lot of tents, camp-stools, tin boxes, white cases,
|
|
brown bales would be shot down in the courtyard, and the air
|
|
of mystery would deepen a little over the muddle of the station.
|
|
Five such instalments came, with their absurd air of disorderly
|
|
flight with the loot of innumerable outfit shops and
|
|
provision stores, that, one would think, they were lugging,
|
|
after a raid, into the wilderness for equitable division.
|
|
It was an inextricable mess of things decent in themselves
|
|
but that human folly made look like the spoils of thieving.
|
|
|
|
"This devoted band called itself the Eldorado Exploring
|
|
Expedition, and I believe they were sworn to secrecy.
|
|
Their talk, however, was the talk of sordid buccaneers:
|
|
it ywas reckless without hardihood, greedy without audacity,
|
|
and cruel without courage; there was not an atom of foresight
|
|
or of serious intention in the whole batch of them, and they
|
|
did not seem aware these things are wanted for the work
|
|
of the world. To tear treasure out of the bowels of the land
|
|
was their desire, with no more moral purpose at the back
|
|
of it than there is in burglars breaking into a safe.
|
|
Who paid the expenses of the noble enterprise I don't know;
|
|
but the uncle of our manager was leader of that lot.
|
|
|
|
"In exterior he resembled a butcher in a poor neighbourhood,
|
|
and his eyes had a look of sleepy cunning. He carried his fat
|
|
paunch with ostentation on his short legs, and during the time
|
|
his gang infested the station spoke to no one but his nephew.
|
|
You could see these two roaming about all day long with their
|
|
heads close together in an everlasting confab.
|
|
|
|
"I had given up worrying myself about the rivets.
|
|
One's capacity for that kind of folly is more limited than
|
|
you would suppose. I said Hang!--and let things slide.
|
|
I had plenty of time for meditation, and now and then I would
|
|
give some thought to Kurtz. I wasn't very interested in him.
|
|
No. Still, I was curious to see whether this man, who had come
|
|
out equipped with moral ideas of some sort, would climb to the top
|
|
after all and how he would set about his work when there."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
II
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"One evening as I was lying flat on the deck of my steamboat,
|
|
I heard voices approaching--and there were the nephew and the uncle
|
|
strolling along the bank. I laid my head on my arm again,
|
|
and had nearly lost myself in a doze, when somebody said in my ear,
|
|
as it were: `I am as harmless as a little child, but I don't
|
|
like to be dictated to. Am I the manager--or am I not?
|
|
I was ordered to send him there. It's incredible.'
|
|
. . . I became aware that the two were standing on the shore
|
|
alongside the forepart of the steamboat, just below my head.
|
|
I did not move; it did not occur to me to move: I was sleepy.
|
|
`It IS unpleasant,' grunted the uncle. `He has asked the
|
|
Administration to be sent there,' said the other, `with the idea
|
|
of showing what he could do; and I was instructed accordingly.
|
|
Look at the influence that man must have. Is it not frightful?'
|
|
They both agreed it was frightful, then made several bizarre remarks:
|
|
`Make rain and fine weather--one man--the Council--by the nose'--
|
|
bits of absurd sentences that got the better of my drowsiness,
|
|
so that I had pretty near the whole of my wits about me when the
|
|
uncle said, `The climate may do away with this difficulty for you.
|
|
Is he alone there?' `Yes,' answered the manager; `he sent
|
|
his assistant down the river with a note to me in these terms:
|
|
"Clear this poor devil out of the country, and don't
|
|
bother sending more of that sort. I had rather be alone
|
|
than have the kind of men you can dispose of with me."
|
|
It was more than a year ago. Can you imagine such impudence!'
|
|
`Anything since then?' asked the other hoarsely. `Ivory,' jerked
|
|
the nephew; `lots of it--prime sort--lots--most annoying,
|
|
from him.' `And with that?' questioned the heavy rumble.
|
|
`Invoice,' was the reply fired out, so to speak. Then silence.
|
|
They had been talking about Kurtz.
|
|
|
|
"I was broad awake by this time, but, lying perfectly at ease,
|
|
remained still, having no inducement to change my position.
|
|
`How did that ivory come all this way?' growled the elder man,
|
|
who seemed very vexed. The other explained that it had come
|
|
with a fleet of canoes in charge of an English half-caste
|
|
clerk Kurtz had with him; that Kurtz had apparently intended
|
|
to return himself, the station being by that time bare
|
|
of goods and stores, but after coming three hundred miles,
|
|
had suddenly decided to go back, which he started to do alone
|
|
in a small dugout with four paddlers, leaving the half-caste
|
|
to continue down the river with the ivory. The two fellows
|
|
there seemed astounded at anybody attempting such a thing.
|
|
They were at a loss for an adequate motive. As to me, I seemed
|
|
to see Kurtz for the first time. It was a distinct glimpse:
|
|
the dugout, four paddling savages, and the lone white man
|
|
turning his back suddenly on the headquarters, yon relief,
|
|
on thoughts of home--perhaps; setting his face towards the depths
|
|
of the wilderness, towards his empty and desolate station.
|
|
I did not know the motive. Perhaps he was just simply a fine
|
|
fellow who stuck to his work for its own sake. His name,
|
|
you understand, had not been pronounced once. He was `that man.'
|
|
The half-caste, who, as far as I could see, had conducted
|
|
a difficult trip with great prudence and pluck, was invariably
|
|
alluded to as `that scoundrel.' The `scoundrel' had reported
|
|
that the `man' had been very ill--had recovered imperfectly.
|
|
. . . The two below me moved away then a few paces,
|
|
and strolled back and forth at some little distance. I heard:
|
|
`Military post--doctor--two hundred miles--quite alone now--
|
|
unavoidable delays--nine months--no news--strange rumours.'
|
|
They approached again, just as the manager was saying, `No one,
|
|
as far as I know, unless a species of wandering trader--
|
|
a pestilential fellow, snapping ivory from the natives.'
|
|
Who was it they were talking about now? I gathered
|
|
in snatches that this was some man supposed to be in
|
|
Kurtz's district, and of whom the manager did not approve.
|
|
`We will not be free from unfair competition till one
|
|
of these fellows is hanged for an example,' he said.
|
|
`Certainly,' grunted the other; `get him hanged! Why not?
|
|
Anything--anything can be done in this country. That's what I say;
|
|
nobody here, you understand, HERE, can endanger your position.
|
|
And why? You stand the climate--you outlast them all.
|
|
The danger is in Europe; but there before I left I took care to--'
|
|
They moved off and whispered, then their voices rose again.
|
|
`The extraordinary series of delays is not my fault.
|
|
I did my best.' The fat man sighed. `Very sad.'
|
|
`And the pestiferous absurdity of his talk,' continued the other;
|
|
`he bothered me enough when he was here. "Each station
|
|
should be like a beacon on the road towards better things,
|
|
a centre for trade of course, but also for humanizing,
|
|
improving, instructing." Conceive you--that ass!
|
|
And he wants to be manager! No, it's--' Here he got choked
|
|
by excessive indignation, and I lifted my head the least bit.
|
|
I was surprised to see how near they were--right under me.
|
|
I could have spat upon their hats. They were looking on the ground,
|
|
absorbed in thought. The manager was switching his leg with
|
|
a slender twig: his sagacious relative lifted his head.
|
|
`You have been well since you came out this time?' he asked.
|
|
The other gave a start. `Who? I? Oh! Like a charm--like a charm.
|
|
But the rest--oh, my goodness! All sick. They die so quick,
|
|
too, that I haven't the time to send them out of the country--
|
|
it's incredible!' `Hm'm. Just so,' grunted the uncle.
|
|
`Ah! my boy, trust to this--I say, trust to this.'
|
|
I saw him extend his short flipper of an arm for a gesture
|
|
that took in the forest, the creek, the mud, the river--
|
|
seemed to beckon with a dishonouring flourish before the sunlit
|
|
face of the land a treacherous appeal to the lurking death,
|
|
to the hidden evil, to the profound darkness of its heart.
|
|
It was so startling that I leaped to my feet and looked
|
|
back at the edge of the forest, as though I had expected
|
|
an answer of some sort to that black display of confidence.
|
|
You know the foolish notions that come to one sometimes.
|
|
The high stillness confronted these two figures with its ominous
|
|
patience, waiting for the passing away of a fantastic invasion.
|
|
|
|
"They swore aloud together--out of sheer fright, I believe--then pretending
|
|
not to know anything of my existence, turned back to the station.
|
|
The sun was low; and leaning forward side by side, they seemed to be
|
|
tugging painfully uphill their two ridiculous shadows of unequal length,
|
|
that trailed behind them slowly over the tall grass without bending
|
|
a single blade.
|
|
|
|
"In a few days the Eldorado Expedition went into the patient
|
|
wilderness, that closed upon it as the sea closes over a diver.
|
|
Long afterwards the news came that all the donkeys were dead.
|
|
I know nothing as to the fate of the less valuable animals.
|
|
They, no doubt, like the rest of us, found what they deserved.
|
|
I did not inquire. I was then rather excited at the prospect of meeting
|
|
Kurtz very soon. When I say very soon I mean it comparatively.
|
|
It was just two months from the day we left the creek when we came
|
|
to the bank below Kurtz's station.
|
|
|
|
"Going up that river was like traveling back to the earliest beginnings
|
|
of the world, when vegetation rioted on the earth and the big trees
|
|
were kings. An empty stream, a great silence, an impenetrable forest.
|
|
The air was warm, thick, heavy, sluggish. There was no joy
|
|
in the brilliance of sunshine. The long stretches of the waterway
|
|
ran on, deserted, into the gloom of overshadowed distances. On silvery
|
|
sand-banks hippos and alligators sunned themselves side by side.
|
|
The broadening waters flowed through a mob of wooded islands;
|
|
you lost your way on that river as you would in a desert, and butted
|
|
all day long against shoals, trying to find the channel, till you
|
|
thought yourself bewitched and cut off for ever from everything you
|
|
had known once--somewhere--far away--in another existence perhaps.
|
|
There were moments when one's past came back to one, as it
|
|
will sometimes when you have not a moment to spare for yourself;
|
|
but it came in the shape of an unrestful and noisy dream,
|
|
remembered with wonder amongst the overwhelming realities
|
|
of this strange world of plants, and water, and silence.
|
|
And this stillness of life did not in the least resemble a peace.
|
|
It was the stillness of an implacable force brooding over an
|
|
inscrutable intention. It looked at you with a vengeful aspect.
|
|
I got used to it afterwards; I did not see it any more; I had no time.
|
|
I had to keep guessing at the channel; I had to discern, mostly by
|
|
inspiration, the signs of hidden banks; I watched for sunken stones;
|
|
I was learning to clap my teeth smartly before my heart flew out,
|
|
when I shaved by a fluke some infernal sly old snag that would
|
|
have ripped the life out of the tin-pot steamboat and drowned
|
|
all the pilgrims; I had to keep a lookout for the signs of dead
|
|
wood we could cut up in the night for next day's steaming.
|
|
When you have to attend to things of that sort, to the mere incidents
|
|
of the surface, the reality--the reality, I tell you--fades. The inner
|
|
truth is hidden--luckily, luckily. But I felt it all the same;
|
|
I felt often its mysterious stillness watching me at my monkey tricks,
|
|
just as it watches you fellows performing on your respective
|
|
tight-ropes for--what is it? half-a-crown a tumble--"
|
|
|
|
"Try to be civil, Marlow," growled a voice, and I knew there
|
|
was at least one listener awake besides myself.
|
|
|
|
"I beg your pardon. I forgot the heartache which makes up
|
|
the rest of the price. And indeed what does the price matter,
|
|
if the trick be well done? You do your tricks very well.
|
|
And I didn't do badly either, since I managed not to sink
|
|
that steamboat on my first trip. It's a wonder to me yet.
|
|
Imagine a blindfolded man set to drive a van over a bad road.
|
|
I sweated and shivered over that business considerably,
|
|
I can tell you. After all, for a seaman, to scrape the bottom
|
|
of the thing that's supposed to float all the time under
|
|
his care is the unpardonable sin. No one may know of it,
|
|
but you never forget the thump--eh? A blow on the very heart.
|
|
You remember it, you dream of it, you wake up at night
|
|
and think of it--years after--and go hot and cold all over.
|
|
I don't pretend to say that steamboat floated all the time.
|
|
More than once she had to wade for a bit, with twenty cannibals
|
|
splashing around and pushing. We had enlisted some of these chaps
|
|
on the way for a crew. Fine fellows--cannibals--in their place.
|
|
They were men one could work with, and I am grateful to them.
|
|
And, after all, they did not eat each other before my face:
|
|
they had brought along a provision of hippo-meat which
|
|
went rotten, and made the mystery of the wilderness stink
|
|
in my nostrils. Phoo! I can sniff it now. I had the manager
|
|
on board and three or four pilgrims with their staves--
|
|
all complete. Sometimes we came upon a station close by the bank,
|
|
clinging to the skirts of the unknown, and the white men
|
|
rushing out of a tumble-down hovel, with great gestures
|
|
of joy and surprise and welcome, seemed very strange--
|
|
had the appearance of being held there captive by a spell.
|
|
The word ivory would ring in the air for a while--and on we went
|
|
again into the silence, along empty reaches, round the still bends,
|
|
between the high walls of our winding way, reverberating in
|
|
hollow claps the ponderous beat of the stern-wheel. Trees,
|
|
trees, millions of trees, massive, immense, running up high;
|
|
and at their foot, hugging the bank against the stream,
|
|
crept the little begrimed steamboat, like a sluggish beetle
|
|
crawling on the floor of a lofty portico. It made you feel
|
|
very small, very lost, and yet it was not altogether depressing,
|
|
that feeling. After all, if you were small, the grimy
|
|
beetle crawled on--which was just what you wanted it to do.
|
|
Where the pilgrims imagined it crawled to I don't know.
|
|
To some place where they expected to get something. I bet!
|
|
For me it crawled towards Kurtz--exclusively; but when
|
|
the steam-pipes started leaking we crawled very slow.
|
|
The reaches opened before us and closed behind, as if the forest had
|
|
stepped leisurely across the water to bar the way for our return.
|
|
We penetrated deeper and deeper into the heart of darkness.
|
|
It was very quiet there. At night sometimes the roll
|
|
of drums behind the curtain of trees would run up the river
|
|
and remain sustained faintly, as if hovering in the air
|
|
high over our heads, till the first break of day.
|
|
Whether it meant war, peace, or prayer we could not tell.
|
|
The dawns were heralded by the descent of a chill stillness;
|
|
the wood-cutters slept, their fires burned low; the snapping of a twig
|
|
would make you start. Were were wanderers on a prehistoric earth,
|
|
on an earth that wore the aspect of an unknown planet.
|
|
We could have fancied ourselves the first of men taking
|
|
possession of an accursed inheritance, to be subdued
|
|
at the cost of profound anguish and of excessive toil.
|
|
But suddenly, as we struggled round a bend, there would
|
|
be a glimpse of rush walls, of peaked grass-roofs, a burst
|
|
of yells, a whirl of black limbs, a mass of hands clapping.
|
|
of feet stamping, of bodies swaying, of eyes rolling,
|
|
under the droop of heavy and motionless foliage.
|
|
The steamer toiled along slowly on the edge of a black
|
|
and incomprehensible frenzy. The prehistoric man was
|
|
cursing us, praying to us, welcoming us--who could tell?
|
|
We were cut off from the comprehension of our surroundings;
|
|
we glided past like phantoms, wondering and secretly appalled,
|
|
as sane men would be before an enthusiastic outbreak in a madhouse.
|
|
We could not understand because we were too far and could not
|
|
remember because we were travelling in the night of first ages,
|
|
of those ages that are gone, leaving hardly a sign--
|
|
and no memories.
|
|
|
|
"The earth seemed unearthly. We are accustomed to look
|
|
upon the shackled form of a conquered monster, but there--
|
|
there you could look at a thing monstrous and free.
|
|
It was unearthly, and the men were--No, they were not inhuman.
|
|
Well, you know, that was the worst of it--this suspicion
|
|
of their not being inhuman. It would come slowly to one.
|
|
They howled and leaped, and spun, and made horrid faces;
|
|
but what thrilled you was just the thought of their humanity--
|
|
like yours--the thought of your remote kinship with this
|
|
wild and passionate uproar. Ugly. Yes, it was ugly enough;
|
|
but if you were man enough you would admit to yourself
|
|
that there ywas in you just the faintest trace of a response
|
|
to the terrible frankness of that noise, a dim suspicion
|
|
of there being a meaning in it which you--you so remote from
|
|
the night of first ages--could comprehend. And why not?
|
|
The mind of man is capable of anything--because everything is in it,
|
|
all the past as well as all the future. What was there after all?
|
|
Joy, fear, sorrow, devotion, valour, rage--who can tell?--
|
|
but truth--truth stripped of its cloak of time. Let the fool
|
|
gape and shudder--the man knows, and can look on without a wink.
|
|
But he must at least be as much of a man as these on the shore.
|
|
He must meet that truth with his own true stuff--
|
|
with his own inborn strength. Principles won't do.
|
|
Acquisitions, clothes, pretty rags--rags that would fly off
|
|
at the first good shake. No; you want a deliberate belief.
|
|
An appeal to me in this fiendish row--is there? Very well;
|
|
I hear; I admit, but I have a voice, too, and for good or evil
|
|
mine is the speech that cannot be silenced. Of course, a fool,
|
|
what with sheer fright and fine sentiments, is always safe.
|
|
Who's that grunting? You wonder I didn't go ashore for a howl
|
|
and a dance? Well, no--I didn't. Fine sentiments, you say?
|
|
Fine sentiments, be hanged! I had no time. I had to mess
|
|
about with white-lead and strips of woolen blanket helping
|
|
to put bandages on those leaky steam-pipes--I tell you.
|
|
I had to watch the steering, and circumvent those snags,
|
|
and get the tin-pot along by hook or by crook. There was
|
|
surface-truth enough in these things to save a wiser man.
|
|
And between whiles I had to look after the savage who was fireman.
|
|
He was an improved specimen; he could fire up a vertical boiler.
|
|
He was there below me, and, upon my word, to look at him
|
|
was as edifying as seeing a dog in a parody of breeches
|
|
and a feather hat, walking on his hind-legs. A few months
|
|
of training had done for that really fine chap. He squinted
|
|
at the steam-gauge and at the water-gauge with an evident effort
|
|
of intrepidity--and he had filed teeth, too, the poor devil,
|
|
and the wool of his pate shaved into queer patterns,
|
|
and three ornamental scars on each of his cheeks.
|
|
He ought to have been clapping his hands and stamping his
|
|
feet on the bank, instead of which he was hard at work,
|
|
a thrall to strange witchcraft, full of improving knowledge.
|
|
He was useful because he had been instructed; and what he knew
|
|
was this--that should the water in that transparent thing disappear,
|
|
the evil spirit inside the boiler would get angry through
|
|
the greatness of his thirst, and take a terrible vengeance.
|
|
So he sweated and fired up and watched the glass fearfully
|
|
(with an impromptu charm, made of rags, tied to his arm,
|
|
and a piece of polished bone, as big as a watch, stuck flatways
|
|
through his lower lip), while the wooded banks slipped past
|
|
us slowly, the short noise was left behind, the interminable
|
|
miles of silence--and we crept on, towards Kurtz.
|
|
But the snags were thick, the water was treacherous and shallow,
|
|
the boiler seemed indeed to have a sulky devil in it,
|
|
and thus neither that fireman nor I had any time to peer
|
|
into our creepy thoughts.
|
|
|
|
"Some fifty miles below the Inner Station we came upon a hut
|
|
of reeds, an inclined and melancholy pole, with the unrecognizable
|
|
tatters of what had been a flag of some sort flying from it,
|
|
and a neatly stacked wood-pile. This was unexpected.
|
|
We came to the bank, and on the stack of firewood found
|
|
a flat piece of board with some faded pencil-writing on it.
|
|
When deciphered it said: `Wood for you. Hurry up.
|
|
Approach cautiously.' There was a signature,
|
|
but it was illegible--not Kurtz--a much longer word.
|
|
`Hurry up.' Where? Up the river? `Approach cautiously.'
|
|
We had not done so. But the warning could not have been meant
|
|
for the place where it could be only found after approach.
|
|
Something was wrong above. But what--and how much?
|
|
That was the question. We commented adversely upon
|
|
the imbecility of that telegraphic style. The bush around
|
|
said nothing, and would not let us look very far, either.
|
|
A torn curtain of red twill hung in the doorway of the hut,
|
|
and flapped sadly in our faces. The dwelling was dismantled;
|
|
but we could see a white man had lived there not very long ago.
|
|
There remained a rude table--a plank on two posts; a heap of rubbish
|
|
reposed in a dark corner, and by the door I picked up a book.
|
|
It had lost its covers, and the pages had been thumbed
|
|
into a state of extremely dirty softness; but the back
|
|
had been lovingly stitched afresh with white cotton thread,
|
|
which looked clean yet. It was an extraordinary find.
|
|
Its title was, AN INQUIRY INTO SOME POINTS OF SEAMANSHIP,
|
|
by a man Towser, Towson--some such name--Master in his
|
|
Majesty's Navy. The matter looked dreary reading enough,
|
|
with illustrative diagrams and repulsive tables of figures,
|
|
and the copy was sixty years old. I handled this amazing
|
|
antiquity with the greatest possible tenderness, lest it should
|
|
dissolve in my hands. Within, Towson or Towser was inquiring
|
|
earnestly into the breaking strain of ships' chains and tackle,
|
|
and other such matters. Not a very enthralling book;
|
|
but at the first glance you could see there a singleness
|
|
of intention, an honest concern for the right way of going
|
|
to work, which made these humble pages, thought out so many
|
|
years ago, luminous with another than a professional light.
|
|
The simple old sailor, with his talk of chains and purchases,
|
|
made me forget the jungle and the pilgrims in a delicious
|
|
sensation of having come upon something unmistakably real.
|
|
Such a book being there was wonderful enough; but still
|
|
more astounding were the notes pencilled in the margin,
|
|
and plainly referring to the text. I couldn't believe my eyes!
|
|
They were in cipher! Yes, it looked like cipher.
|
|
Fancy a man lugging with him a book of that description into this
|
|
nowhere and studying it--and making notes--in cipher at that!
|
|
It was an extravagant mystery.
|
|
|
|
"I had been dimly aware for some time of a worrying noise,
|
|
and when I lifted my eyes I saw the wood-pile was gone,
|
|
and the manager, aided by all the pilgrims, was shouting at
|
|
me from the riverside. I slipped the book into my pocket.
|
|
I assure you to leave off reading was like tearing myself away
|
|
from the shelter of an old and solid friendship.
|
|
|
|
"I started the lame engine ahead. `It must be this miserable
|
|
trader-this intruder,' exclaimed the manager, looking back
|
|
malevolently at the place we had left. `He must be English,'
|
|
I said. `It will not save him from getting into trouble
|
|
if he is not careful,' muttered the manager darkly.
|
|
I observed with assumed innocence that no man was safe from
|
|
trouble in this world.
|
|
|
|
"The current was more rapid now, the steamer seemed at her
|
|
last gasp, the stern-wheel flopped languidly, and I caught myself
|
|
listening on tiptoe for the next beat of the boat, for in sober
|
|
truth I expected the wretched thing to give up every moment.
|
|
It was like watching the last flickers of a life.
|
|
But still we crawled. Sometimes I would pick out a tree
|
|
a little way ahead to measure our progress towards Kurtz by,
|
|
but I lost it invariably before we got abreast. To keep
|
|
the eyes so long on one thing was too much for human patience.
|
|
The manager displayed a beautiful resignation. I fretted
|
|
and fumed and took to arguing with myself whether or no I
|
|
would talk openly with Kurtz; but before I could come to any
|
|
conclusion it occurred to me that my speech or my silence,
|
|
indeed any action of mine, would be a mere futility.
|
|
What did it matter what any one knew or ignored? What did it matter
|
|
who was manager? One gets sometimes such a flash of insight.
|
|
The essentials of this affair lay deep under the surface,
|
|
beyond my reach, and beyond my power of meddling.
|
|
|
|
"Towards the evening of the second day we judged ourselves
|
|
about eight miles from Kurtz's station. I wanted to push on;
|
|
but the manager looked grave, and told me the navigation up
|
|
there was so dangerous that it would be advisable, the sun being
|
|
very low already, to wait where we were till next morning.
|
|
Moreover, he pointed out that if the warning to approach
|
|
cautiously were to be followed, we must approach in daylight--
|
|
not at dusk or in the dark. This was sensible enough.
|
|
Eight miles meant nearly three hours' steaming for us, and I
|
|
could also see suspicious ripples at the upper end of the reach.
|
|
Nevertheless, I was annoyed beyond expression at the delay,
|
|
and most unreasonably, too, since one night more could not matter
|
|
much after so many months. As we had plenty of wood, and caution
|
|
was the word, I brought up in the middle of the stream. The reach
|
|
was narrow, straight, with high sides like a railway cutting.
|
|
The dusk came gliding into it long before the sun had set.
|
|
The current ran smooth and swift, but a dumb immobility sat
|
|
on the banks. The living trees, lashed together by the creepers
|
|
and every living bush of the undergrowth, might have been changed
|
|
into stone, even to the slenderest twig, to the lightest leaf.
|
|
It was not sleep--it seemed unnatural, like a state of trance.
|
|
Not the faintest sound of any kind could be heard.
|
|
You looked on amazed, and began to suspect yourself of being deaf--
|
|
then the night came suddenly, and struck you blind as well.
|
|
About three in the morning some large fish leaped,
|
|
and the loud splash made me jump as though a gun had been fired.
|
|
When the sun rose there was a white fog, very warm and clammy,
|
|
and more blinding than the night. It did not shift or drive;
|
|
it was just there, standing all round you like something solid.
|
|
At eight or nine, perhaps, it lifted as a shutter lifts.
|
|
We had a glimpse of the towering multitude of trees, of the immense
|
|
matted jungle, with the blazing little ball of the sun hanging
|
|
over it--all perfectly still--and then the white shutter came
|
|
down again, smoothly, as if sliding in greased grooves.
|
|
I ordered the chain, which we had begun to heave in, to be paid
|
|
out again. Before it stopped running with a muffled rattle,
|
|
a cry, a very loud cry, as of infinite desolation,
|
|
soared slowly in the opaque air. It ceased. A complaining
|
|
clamour, modulated in savage discords, filled our ears.
|
|
The sheer unexpectedness of it made my hair stir under my cap.
|
|
I don't know how it struck the others: to me it seemed as though
|
|
the mist itself had screamed, so suddenly, and apparently from all
|
|
sides at once, did this tumultuous and mournful uproar arise.
|
|
It culminated in a hurried outbreak of almost intolerably
|
|
excessive shrieking, which stopped short, leaving us stiffened
|
|
in a variety of silly attitudes, and obstinately listening
|
|
to the nearly as appalling and excessive silence. `Good God!
|
|
What is the meaning--' stammered at my elbow one of the pilgrims--
|
|
a little fat man, with sandy hair and red whiskers, who wore
|
|
sidespring boots, and pink pyjamas tucked into his socks.
|
|
Two others remained open-mouthed a while minute, then dashed
|
|
into the little cabin, to rush out incontinently and stand darting
|
|
scared glances, with Winchesters at `ready' in their hands.
|
|
What we could see was just the steamer we were on, her outlines
|
|
blurred as though she had been on the point of dissolving,
|
|
and a misty strip of water, perhaps two feet broad, around her--
|
|
and that was all. The rest of the world was nowhere,
|
|
as far as our eyes and ears were concerned. Just nowhere.
|
|
Gone, disappeared; swept off without leaving a whisper
|
|
or a shadow behind.
|
|
|
|
"I went forward, and ordered the chain to be hauled in short,
|
|
so as to be ready to trip the anchor and move the steamboat at once
|
|
if necessary. `Will they attack?' whispered an awed voice.
|
|
`We will be all butchered in this fog,' murmured another.
|
|
The faces twitched with the strain, the hands trembled slightly,
|
|
the eyes forgot to wink. It was very curious to see the contrast
|
|
of expressions of the white men and of the black fellows of our crew,
|
|
who were as much strangers to that part of the river as we,
|
|
though their homes were only eight hundred miles away.
|
|
The whites, of course greatly discomposed, had besides a curious
|
|
look of being painfully shocked by such an outrageous row.
|
|
The others had an alert, naturally interested expression;
|
|
but their faces were essentially quiet, even those of
|
|
the one or two who grinned as they hauled at the chain.
|
|
Several exchanged short, grunting phrases, which seemed
|
|
to settle the matter to their satisfaction. Their headman,
|
|
a young, broad-chested black, severely draped in dark-blue
|
|
fringed cloths, with fierce nostrils and his hair
|
|
all done up artfully in oily ringlets, stood near me.
|
|
`Aha!' I said, just for good fellowship's sake.
|
|
`Catch 'im,' he snapped, with a bloodshot widening of his eyes
|
|
and a flash of sharp teeth--'catch 'im. Give 'im to us.'
|
|
`To you, eh?' I asked; `what would you do with them?' `Eat 'im!'
|
|
he said curtly, and, leaning his elbow on the rail, looked out
|
|
into the fog in a dignified and profoundly pensive attitude.
|
|
I would no doubt have been properly horrified, had it not
|
|
occurred to me that he and his chaps must be very hungry:
|
|
that they must have been growing increasingly hungry for at
|
|
least this month past. They had been engaged for six months
|
|
(I don't think a single one of them had any clear idea of time,
|
|
as we at the end of countless ages have. They still belonged
|
|
to the beginnings of time--had no inherited experience to teach
|
|
them as it were), and of course, as long as there was a piece
|
|
of paper written over in accordance with some farcical law
|
|
or other made down the river, it didn't enter anybody's head
|
|
to trouble how they would live. Certainly they had brought
|
|
with them some rotten hippo-meat, which couldn't have lasted
|
|
very long, anyway, even if the pilgrims hadn't, in the midst
|
|
of a shocking hullabaloo, thrown a considerable quantity
|
|
of it overboard. It looked like a high-handed proceeding;
|
|
but it was really a case of legitimate self-defence. You
|
|
can't breathe dead hippo waking, sleeping, and eating,
|
|
and at the same time keep your precarious grip on existence.
|
|
Besides that, they had given them every week three pieces
|
|
of brass wire, each about nine inches long; and the theory
|
|
was they were to buy their provisions with that currency
|
|
in riverside villages. You can see how THAT worked.
|
|
There were either no villages, or the people were hostile,
|
|
or the director, who like the rest of us fed out of tins,
|
|
with an occasional old he-goat thrown in, didn't want
|
|
to stop the steamer for some more or less recondite reason.
|
|
So, unless they swallowed the wire itself, or made loops of it
|
|
to snare the fishes with, I don't see what good their extravagant
|
|
salary could be to them. I must say it was paid with a
|
|
regularity worthy of a large and honourable trading company.
|
|
For the rest, the only thing to eat--though it didn't look
|
|
eatable in the least--I saw in their possession was a few lumps
|
|
of some stuff like half-cooked dough, of a dirty lavender colour,
|
|
they kept wrapped in leaves, and now and then swallowed
|
|
a piece of, but so small that it seemed done more for the looks
|
|
of the thing than for any serious purpose of sustenance.
|
|
Why in the name of all the gnawing devils of hunger they didn't
|
|
go for us--they were thirty to five--and have a good tuck-in
|
|
for once, amazes me now when I think of it. They were big
|
|
powerful men, with not much capacity to weigh the consequences,
|
|
with courage, with strength, even yet, though their skins
|
|
were no longer glossy and their muscles no longer hard.
|
|
And I saw that something restraining, one of those human
|
|
secrets that baffle probability, had come into play there.
|
|
I looked at them with a swift quickening of interest--
|
|
not because it occurred to me I might be eaten by them before
|
|
very long, though I own to you that just then I perceived--
|
|
in a new light, as it were--how unwholesome the pilgrims looked,
|
|
and I hoped, yes, I positively hoped, that my aspect was not so--
|
|
what shall I say?--so--unappetizing: a touch of fantastic
|
|
vanity which fitted well with the dream-sensation that pervaded
|
|
all my days at that time. Perhaps I had a little fever, too.
|
|
One can't live with one's finger everlastingly on one's pulse.
|
|
I had often 'a little fever,' or a little touch of other things--
|
|
the playful paw-strokes of the wilderness, the preliminary trifling
|
|
before the more serious onslaught which came in due course.
|
|
Yes; I looked at them as you would on any human being,
|
|
with a curiosity of their impulses, motives, capacities,
|
|
weaknesses, when brought to the test of an inexorable
|
|
physical necessity. Restraint! What possible restraint?
|
|
Was it superstition, disgust, patience, fear--or some kind
|
|
of primitive honour? No fear can stand up to hunger, no patience
|
|
can wear it out, disgust simply does not exist where hunger is;
|
|
and as to superstition, beliefs, and what you may call principles,
|
|
they are less than chaff in a breeze. Don't you know
|
|
the devilry of lingering starvation, its exasperating torment,
|
|
its black thoughts, its sombre and brooding ferocity? Well, I do.
|
|
It takes a man all his inborn strength to fight hunger properly.
|
|
It's really easier to face bereavement, dishonour, and the perdition
|
|
of one's soul--than this kind of prolonged hunger. Sad, but true.
|
|
And these chaps, too, had no earthly reason for any kind
|
|
of scruple. Restraint! I would just as soon have expected restraint
|
|
from a hyena prowling amongst the corpses of a battlefield.
|
|
But there was the fact facing me--the fact dazzling, to be seen,
|
|
like the foam on the depths of the sea, like a ripple on an
|
|
unfathomable enigma, a mystery greater--when I thought of it--
|
|
than the curious, inexplicable note of desperate grief in this
|
|
savage clamour that had swept by us on the river-bank, behind
|
|
the blind whiteness of the fog.
|
|
|
|
"Two pilgrims were quarrelling in hurried whispers as to which bank.
|
|
`Left.' "no, no; how can you? Right, right, of course.'
|
|
`It is very serious,' said the manager's voice behind me; `I would be
|
|
desolated if anything should happen to Mr. Kurtz before we came up.'
|
|
I looked at him, and had not the slightest doubt he was sincere.
|
|
He was just the kind of man who would wish to preserve appearances.
|
|
That was his restraint. But when he muttered something about
|
|
going on at once, I did not even take the trouble to answer him.
|
|
I knew, and he knew, that it was impossible. Were we to let go our
|
|
hold of the bottom, we would be absolutely in the air--in space.
|
|
We wouldn't be able to tell where we were going to--whether up
|
|
or down stream, or across--till we fetched against one bank
|
|
or the other--and then we wouldn't know at first which it was.
|
|
Of course I made no move. I had no mind for a smash-up.
|
|
You couldn't imagine a more deadly place for a shipwreck.
|
|
Whether we drowned at once or not, we were sure to perish speedily
|
|
in one way or another. `I authorize you to take all the risks,'
|
|
he said, after a short silence. `I refuse to take any,'
|
|
I said shortly; which was just the answer he expected, though its tone
|
|
might have surprised him. `Well, I must defer to your judgment.
|
|
You are captain,' he said with marked civility. I turned my shoulder
|
|
to him in sign of my appreciation, and looked into the fog.
|
|
How long would it last? It was the most hopeless lookout.
|
|
The approach to this Kurtz grubbing for ivory in the wretched bush was
|
|
beset by as many dangers as though he had been an enchanted princess
|
|
sleeping in a fabulous castle. `Will they attack, do you think?'
|
|
asked the manager, in a confidential tone.
|
|
|
|
"I did not think they would attack, for several obvious reasons.
|
|
The thick fog was one. If they left the bank in their canoes they
|
|
would get lost in it, as we would be if we attempted to move.
|
|
Still, I had also judged the jungle of both banks quite impenetrable--
|
|
and yet eyes were in it, eyes that had seen us. The riverside
|
|
bushes were certainly very thick; but the undergrowth behind
|
|
was evidently penetrable. However, during the short lift I
|
|
had seen no canoes anywhere in the reach--certainly not abreast
|
|
of the steamer. But what made the idea of attack inconceivable
|
|
to me was the nature of the noise--of the cries we had heard.
|
|
They had not the fierce character boding immediate hostile intention.
|
|
Unexpected, wild, and violent as they had been, they had given me
|
|
an irresistible impression of sorrow. The glimpse of the steamboat
|
|
had for some reason filled those savages with unrestrained grief.
|
|
The danger, if any, I expounded, was from our proximity to a great
|
|
human passion let loose. Even extreme grief may ultimately vent
|
|
itself in violence--but more generally takes the form of apathy.
|
|
. . .
|
|
|
|
"You should have seen the pilgrims stare! They had no heart to grin,
|
|
or even to revile me: but I believe they thought me gone mad--
|
|
with fright, maybe. I delivered a regular lecture. My dear boys,
|
|
it was no good bothering. Keep a lookout? Well, you may guess I
|
|
watched the fog for the signs of lifting as a cat watches a mouse;
|
|
but for anything else our eyes were of no more use to us than
|
|
if we had been buried miles deep in a heap of cotton-wool. It
|
|
felt like it, too--choking, warm, stifling. Besides, all I said,
|
|
though it sounded extravagant, was absolutely true to fact. What we
|
|
afterwards alluded to as an attack was really an attempt at repulse.
|
|
The action was very far from being aggressive--it was not even defensive,
|
|
in the usual sense: it was undertaken under the stress of desperation,
|
|
and in its essence was purely protective.
|
|
|
|
"It developed itself, I should say, two hours after the fog lifted,
|
|
and its commencement was at a spot, roughly speaking,
|
|
about a mile and a half below Kurtz's station. We had just
|
|
floundered and flopped round a bend, when I saw an islet, a mere
|
|
grassy hummock of bright green, in the middle of the stream.
|
|
It was the ony thing of the kind; but as we opened the reach more,
|
|
I perceived it was the head of a long sand-bank, or rather of a
|
|
chain of shallow patches stretching down the middle of the river.
|
|
They were discoloured, just awash, and the whole lot was
|
|
seen just under the water, exactly as a man's backbone is
|
|
seen running down the middle of his back under the skin.
|
|
Now, as far as I did see, I could go to the right or to
|
|
the left of this. I didn't know either channel, of course.
|
|
The banks looked pretty well alike, the depth appeared the same;
|
|
but as I had been informed the station was on the west side,
|
|
I naturally headed for the western passage.
|
|
|
|
"No sooner had we fairly entered it than I became aware it was much
|
|
narrower than I had supposed. To the left of us there was the long
|
|
uninterrupted shoal, and to the right a high, steep bank heavily
|
|
overgrown with bushes. Above the bush the trees stood in serried ranks.
|
|
The twigs overhung the current thickly, and from distance to distance
|
|
a large limb of some tree projected rigidly over the stream.
|
|
It was then well on in the afternoon, the face of the forest was gloomy,
|
|
and a broad strip of shadow had already fallen on the water.
|
|
In this shadow we steamed up--very slowly, as you may imagine.
|
|
I sheered her well inshore--the water being deepest near the bank,
|
|
as the sounding-pole informed me.
|
|
|
|
"One of my hungry and forbearing friends was sounding in the bows just
|
|
below me. This steamboat was exactly like a decked scow. On the deck,
|
|
there were two little teakwood houses, with doors and windows.
|
|
The boiler was in the fore-end, and the machinery right astern.
|
|
yOver the whole there was a light roof, supported on stanchions.
|
|
The funnel projected through that roof, and in front of the funnel
|
|
a small cabin built of light planks served for a pilot-house.
|
|
It contained a couch, two camp-stools, a loaded Martini-Henry
|
|
leaning in one corner, a tiny table, and the steering-wheel.
|
|
It had a wide door in front and a broad shutter at each side.
|
|
All these were always thrown open, of course. I spent my days perched
|
|
up there on the extreme fore-end of that roof, before the door.
|
|
At night I slept, or tried to, on the couch. An athletic black belonging
|
|
to some coast tribe and educated by my poor predecessor, was the helmsman.
|
|
He sported a pair of brass earrings, wore a blue cloth wrapper
|
|
from the waist to the ankles, and thought all the world of himself.
|
|
He was the most unstable kind of fool I had ever seen.
|
|
He steered with no end of a swagger while you were by; but if he lost
|
|
sight of you, he became instantly the prey of an abject funk,
|
|
and would let that cripple of a steamboat get the upper hand of him
|
|
in a minute.
|
|
|
|
"I was looking down at the sounding-pole, and feeling
|
|
much annoyed to see at each try a little more of it stick
|
|
out of that river, when I saw my poleman give up on
|
|
the business suddenly, and stretch himself flat on the deck,
|
|
without even taking the trouble to haul his pole in.
|
|
He kept hold on it though, and it trailed in the water.
|
|
At the same time the fireman, whom I could also see below me,
|
|
sat down abruptly before his furnace and ducked his head.
|
|
I was amazed. Then I had to look at the river mighty quick,
|
|
because there was a snag in the fairway. Sticks, little sticks,
|
|
were flying about--thick: they were whizzing before my nose,
|
|
dropping below me, striking behind me against my pilot-house.
|
|
All this time the river, the shore, the woods, were very quiet--
|
|
perfectly quiet. I could only hear the heavy splashing
|
|
thump of the stern-wheel and the patter of these things.
|
|
We cleared the snag clumsily. Arrows, by Jove!
|
|
We were being shot at! I stepped in quickly to close
|
|
the shutter on the landside. That fool-helmsman, his hands
|
|
on the spokes, was lifting his knees high, stamping his feet,
|
|
champing his mouth, like a reined-in horse. Confound him!
|
|
And we were staggering within ten feet of the bank.
|
|
I had to lean right out to swing the heavy shutter, and I
|
|
saw a face amongst the leaves on the level with my own,
|
|
looking at me very fierce and steady; and then suddenly,
|
|
as though a veil had been removed from my eyes, I made out,
|
|
deep in the tangled gloom, naked breasts, arms, legs, glaring eyes--
|
|
the bush was swarming with human limbs in movement, glistening.
|
|
of bronze colour. The twigs shook, swayed, and rustled,
|
|
the arrows flew out of them, and then the shutter came to.
|
|
`Steer her straight,' I said to the helmsman. He held his
|
|
head rigid, face forward; but his eyes rolled, he kept on lifting
|
|
and setting down his feet gently, his mouth foamed a little.
|
|
`Keep quiet!' I said in a fury. I might just as well have
|
|
ordered a tree not to sway in the wind. I darted out.
|
|
Below me there was a great scuffle of feet on the iron deck;
|
|
confused exclamations; a voice screamed, `Can you turn back?'
|
|
I caught sight of a V-shaped ripple on the water ahead.
|
|
What? Another snag! A fusillade burst out under my feet.
|
|
The pilgrims had opened with their Winchesters, and were
|
|
simply squirting lead into that bush. A deuce of a lot
|
|
of smoke came up and drove slowly forward. I swore at it.
|
|
Now I couldn't see the ripple or the snag either.
|
|
I stood in the doorway, peering, and the arrows came in swarms.
|
|
They might have been poisoned, but they looked as though
|
|
they wouldn't kill a cat. The bush began to howl.
|
|
Our wood-cutters raised a warlike whoop; the report of a rifle
|
|
just at my back deafened me. I glanced over my shoulder,
|
|
and the pilot-house was yet full of noise and smoke when I made
|
|
a dash at the wheel. The fool-nigger had dropped everything,
|
|
to throw the shutter open and let off that Martini-Henry. He stood
|
|
before the wide opening, glaring, and I yelled at him to come back,
|
|
while I straightened the sudden twist out of that steamboat.
|
|
There was no room to turn even if I had wanted to, the snag
|
|
was somewhere very near ahead in that confounded smoke,
|
|
there was no time to lose, so I just crowded her into the bank--
|
|
right into the bank, where I knew the water was deep.
|
|
|
|
"We tore slowly along the overhanging bushes in a whirl of broken
|
|
twigs and flying leaves. The fusillade below stopped short,
|
|
as I had foreseen it would when the squirts got empty.
|
|
I threw my head back to a glinting whizz that traversed
|
|
the pilot-house, in at one shutter-hole and out at the other.
|
|
Looking past that mad helmsman, who was shaking the empty rifle
|
|
and yelling at the shore, I saw vague forms of men running
|
|
bent double, leaping, gliding, distinct, incomplete, evanescent.
|
|
Something big appeared in the air before the shutter, the rifle
|
|
went overboard, and the man stepped back swiftly, looked at me
|
|
over his shoulder in an extraordinary, profound, familiar manner,
|
|
and fell upon my feet. The side of his head hit the wheel twice,
|
|
and the end of what appeared a long cane clattered round and knocked
|
|
over a little camp-stool. It looked as though after wrenching that
|
|
thing from somebody ashore he had lost his balance in the effort.
|
|
The thin smoke had blown away, we were clear of the snag,
|
|
and looking ahead I could see that in another hundred yards
|
|
or so I would be free to sheer off, away from the bank;
|
|
but my feet felt so very warm and wet that I had to look down.
|
|
The man had rolled on his back and stared straight up at me;
|
|
both his hands clutched that cane. It was the shaft of a spear that,
|
|
either thrown or lunged through the opening, had caught him
|
|
in the side, just below the ribs; the blade had gone in out
|
|
of sight, after making a frightful gash; my shoes were full;
|
|
a pool of blood lay very still, gleaming dark-red under the wheel;
|
|
his eyes shone with an amazing lustre. The fusillade burst out again.
|
|
He looked at me anxiously, gripping the spear like something precious,
|
|
with an air of being afraid I would try to take it away from him.
|
|
I had to make an effort to free my eyes from his gaze and attend
|
|
to the steering. With one hand I felt above my head for the line
|
|
of the steam whistle, and jerked out screech after screech hurriedly.
|
|
The tumult of angry and warlike yells was checked instantly,
|
|
and then from the depths of the woods went out such a tremulous
|
|
and prolonged wail of mournful fear and utter despair as may be
|
|
imagined to follow the flight of the last hope from the earth.
|
|
There was a great commotion in the bush; the shower of arrows stopped,
|
|
a few dropping shots rang out sharply--then silence, in which
|
|
the languid beat of the stern-wheel came plainly to my ears.
|
|
I put the helm hard a-starboard at the moment when the pilgrim
|
|
in pink pyjamas, very hot and agitated, appeared in the doorway.
|
|
`The manager sends me--' he began in an official tone, and stopped short.
|
|
`Good God!' he said, glaring at the wounded man.
|
|
|
|
"We two whites stood over him, and his lustrous and inquiring
|
|
glance enveloped us both. I declare it looked as though he would
|
|
presently put to us some questions in an understandable language;
|
|
but he died without uttering a sound, without moving a limb,
|
|
without twitching a muscle. Only in the very last moment, as though
|
|
in response to some sign we could not see, to some whisper we could
|
|
not hear, he frowned heavily, and that frown gave to his black
|
|
death-mask an inconeivably sombre, brooding, and menacing expression.
|
|
The lustre of inquiring glance faded swiftly into vacant glassiness.
|
|
`Can you steer?' I asked the agent eagerly. He looked very dubious;
|
|
but I made a grab at his arm, and he understood at once I
|
|
meant him to steer whether or no. To tell you the truth,
|
|
I was morbidly anxious to change my shoes and socks. `He is dead,'
|
|
murmured the fellow, immensely impressed. `No doubt about it,'
|
|
said I, tugging like mad at the shoe-laces. `And by the way,
|
|
I suppose Mr. Kurtz is dead as well by this time.'
|
|
|
|
"For the moment that was the dominant thought. There was a sense
|
|
of extreme disappointment, as though I had found out I had been
|
|
striving after something altogether without a substance.
|
|
I couldn't have been more disgusted if I had travelled all
|
|
this way for the sole purpose of talking with Mr. Kurtz.
|
|
Talking with . . . I flung one shoe overboard, and became aware
|
|
that that was exactly what I had been looking forward to--
|
|
a talk with Kurtz. I made the strange discovery that I had
|
|
never imagined him as doing, you know, but as discoursing.
|
|
I didn't say to myself, `Now I will never see him,'
|
|
or `Now I will never shake him by the hand,' but, `Now I
|
|
will never hear him.' The man presented himself as a voice.
|
|
Not of course that I did not connect him with some sort of action.
|
|
Hadn't I been told in all the tones of jealousy and admiration
|
|
that he had collected, bartered, swindled, or stolen more ivory
|
|
than all the other agents together? That was not the point.
|
|
The point was in his being a gifted creature, and that of all his
|
|
gifts the one that stood out preeminently, that carried with it
|
|
a sense of real presence, was his ability to talk, his words--
|
|
the gift of expression, the bewildering, the illuminating,
|
|
the most exalted and the most contemptible, the pulsating
|
|
stream of light, or the deceitful flow from the heart of
|
|
an impenetrable darkness.
|
|
|
|
"The other shoe went flying unto the devil-god of that river.
|
|
I thought, `By Jove! it's all over. We are too late; he has vanished--
|
|
the gift has vanished, by means of some spear, arrow, or club.
|
|
I will never hear that chap speak after all'--and my sorrow
|
|
had a startling extravagance of emotion, even such as I had
|
|
noticed in the howling sorrow of these savages in the bush.
|
|
I couldn't have felt more of lonely desolation somehow, had I been
|
|
robbed of a belief or had missed my destiny in life. . . . Why
|
|
do you sigh in this beastly way, somebody? Absurd? Well, absurd.
|
|
Good Lord! mustn't a man ever--Here, give me some tobacco."
|
|
. . .
|
|
|
|
There was a pause of profound stillness, then a match flared,
|
|
and Marlow's lean face appeared, worn, hollow, with downward folds
|
|
and dropped eyelids, with an aspect of concentrated attention;
|
|
and as he took vigorous draws at his pipe, it seemed to retreat
|
|
and advance out of the night in the regular flicker of tiny flame.
|
|
The match went out.
|
|
|
|
"Absurd!" he cried. "This is the worst of trying to tell. . . . Here you
|
|
all are, each moored with two good addresses, like a hulk with two anchors,
|
|
a butcher round one corner, a policeman round another, excellent appetites,
|
|
and temperature normal--you hear--normal from year's end to year's end.
|
|
And you say, Absurd! Absurd be--exploded! Absurd! My dear boys,
|
|
what can you expect from a man who out of sheer nervousness had just
|
|
flung overboard a pair of new shoes! Now I think of it, it is amazing
|
|
I did not shed tears. I am, upon the whole, proud of my fortitude.
|
|
I was cut to the quick at the idea of having lost the inestimable
|
|
privilege of listening to the gifted Kurtz. Of course I was wrong.
|
|
The privilege was waiting for me. Oh, yes, I heard more than enough.
|
|
And I was right, too. A voice. He was very little more than a voice.
|
|
And I heard--him--it--this voice--other voices--all of them were so
|
|
little more than voices--and the memory of that time itself lingers
|
|
around me, impalpable, like a dying vibration of one immense jabber,
|
|
silly, atrocious, sordid, savage, or simply mean, without any kind of sense.
|
|
Voices, voices--even the girl herself--now--"
|
|
|
|
He was silent for a long time.
|
|
|
|
"I laid the ghost of his gifts at last with a lie,"
|
|
he began, suddenly. "Girl! What? Did I mention a girl?
|
|
Oh, she is out of it--completely. They--the women, I mean--
|
|
are out of it--should be out of it. We must help them to stay
|
|
in that beautiful world of their own, lest ours gets worse.
|
|
Oh, she had to be out of it. You should have heard
|
|
the disinterred body of Mr. Kurtz saying, `My Intended.'
|
|
You would have perceived directly then how completely she
|
|
was out of it. And the lofty frontal bone of Mr. Kurtz!
|
|
They say the hair goes on growing sometimes, but this--
|
|
ah--specimen, was impressively bald. The wilderness had
|
|
patted him on the head, and, behold, it was like a ball--
|
|
an ivory ball; it had caressed him, and--lo!--he had withered;
|
|
it had taken him, loved him, embraced him, got into his veins,
|
|
consumed his flesh, and sealed his soul to its own by the
|
|
inconceivable ceremonies of some devilish initiation. He was
|
|
its spoiled and pampered favourite. Ivory? I should think so.
|
|
Heaps of it, stacks of it. The old mud shanty was bursting with it.
|
|
You would think there was not a single tusk left either above
|
|
or below the ground in the whole country. `Mostly fossil,'
|
|
the manager had remarked, disparagingly. It was no more
|
|
fossil than I am; but they call it fossil when it is dug up.
|
|
It appears these niggers do bury the tusks sometimes--
|
|
but evidently they couldn't bury this parcel deep enough
|
|
to save the gifted Mr. Kurtz from his fate. We filled
|
|
the steamboat with it, and had to pile a lot on the deck.
|
|
Thus he could see and enjoy as long as he could see,
|
|
because the appreciation of this favour had remained
|
|
with him to the last. You should have heard him say,
|
|
`My ivory.' Oh, yes, I heard him. `My Intended, my ivory,
|
|
my station, my river, my--' everything belonged to him.
|
|
It made me hold my breath in expectation of hearing the wilderness
|
|
burst into a prodigious peal of laughter that would shake
|
|
the fixed stars in their places. Everything belonged to him--
|
|
but that was a trifle. The thing was to know what he belonged to,
|
|
how many powers of darkness claimed him for their own.
|
|
That was the reflection that made you creepy all over.
|
|
It was impossible--it was not good for one either--trying to imagine.
|
|
He had taken a high seat amongst the devils of the land--
|
|
I mean literally. You can't understand. How could you?--
|
|
with solid pavement under your feet, surrounded by kind neighbours
|
|
ready to cheer you or to fall on you, stepping delicately between
|
|
the butcher and the policeman, in the holy terror of scandal and
|
|
gallows and lunatic asylums--how can you imagine what particular
|
|
region of the first ages a man's untrammelled feet may take him
|
|
into by the way of solitude--utter solitude without a policeman--
|
|
by the way of silence--utter silence, where no warning voice
|
|
of a kind neighbour can be heard whispering of public opinion?
|
|
These little things make all the great difference.
|
|
When they are gone you must fall back upon your own
|
|
innate strength, upon your own capacity for faithfulness.
|
|
Of course you may be too much of a fool to go wrong--
|
|
too dull even to know you are being assaulted by the powers
|
|
of darkness. I take it, no fool ever made a bargain for
|
|
his soul with the devil; the fool is too much of a fool,
|
|
or the devil too much of a devil--I don't know which.
|
|
Or you may be such a thunderingly exalted creature as to be altogether
|
|
deaf and blind to anything but heavenly sights and sounds.
|
|
Then the earth for you is only a standing place--and whether
|
|
to be like this is your loss or your gain I won't pretend to say.
|
|
But most of us are neither one nor the other. The earth for us
|
|
is a place to live in, where we must put up with sights,
|
|
with sounds, with smells, too, by Jove!--breathe dead hippo,
|
|
so to speak, and not be contaminated. And there, don't you see?
|
|
Your strength comes in, the faith in your ability for
|
|
the digging of unostentatious holes to bury the stuff in--
|
|
your power of devotion, not to yourself, but to an obscure,
|
|
back-breaking business. And that's difficult enough. Mind, I am
|
|
not trying to excuse or even explain--I am trying to account
|
|
to myself for--for--Mr. Kurtz--for the shade of Mr. Kurtz.
|
|
This initiated wraith from the back of Nowhere honoured me
|
|
with its amazing confidence before it vanished altogether.
|
|
This was because it could speak English to me. The original
|
|
Kurtz had been educated partly in England, and--as he was good
|
|
enough to say himself--his sympathies were in the right place.
|
|
His mother was half-English, his father was half-French. All
|
|
Europe contributed to the making of Kurtz; and by and by I
|
|
learned that, most appropriately, the International Society
|
|
for the Suppression of Savage Customs had intrusted him
|
|
with the making of a report, for its future guidance.
|
|
And he had written it, too. I've seen it. I've read it.
|
|
It was eloquent, vibrating with eloquence, but too high-strung,
|
|
I think. Seventeen pages of close writing he had found time for!
|
|
But this must have been before his--let us say--nerves, went wrong,
|
|
and caused him to preside at certain midnight dances ending
|
|
with unspeakable rites, which--as far as I reluctantly gathered
|
|
from what I heard at various times--were offered up to him--
|
|
do you understand?--to Mr. Kurtz himself. But it was a
|
|
beautiful piece of writing. The opening paragraph, however,
|
|
in the light of later information, strikes me now as ominous.
|
|
He began with the argument that we whites, from the point
|
|
of development we had arrived at, `must necessarily appear
|
|
to them [savages] in the nature of supernatural beings--
|
|
we approach them with the might of a deity,' and so on, and so on.
|
|
`By the simple exercise of our will we can exert a power
|
|
for good practically unbounded,' etc., etc. From that point
|
|
he soared and took me with him. The peroration was magnificent,
|
|
though difficult to remember, you know. It gave me the notion
|
|
of an exotic Immensity ruled by an august Benevolence.
|
|
It made me tingle with enthusiasm. This was the unbounded
|
|
power of eloquence--of words--of burning noble words.
|
|
There were no practical hints to interrupt the magic current
|
|
of phrases, unless a kind of note at the foot of the last page,
|
|
scrawled evidently much later, in an unsteady hand, may be
|
|
regarded as the exposition of a method. It was very simple,
|
|
and at the end of that moving appeal to every altruistic
|
|
sentiment it blazed at you, luminous and terrifying, like a flash
|
|
of lightning in a serene sky: `Exterminate all the brutes!'
|
|
The curious part was that he had apparently forgotten
|
|
all about that valuable postscriptum, because, later on,
|
|
when he in a sense came to himself, he repeatedly entreated me
|
|
to take good care of `my pamphlet' (he called it), as it was
|
|
sure to have in the future a good influence upon his career.
|
|
I had full information about all these things, and, besides,
|
|
as it turned out, I was to have the care of his memory.
|
|
I've done enough for it to give me the indisputable right to lay it,
|
|
if I choose, for an everlasting rest in the dust-bin of progress,
|
|
amongst all the sweepings and, figuratively speaking, all the dead
|
|
cats of civilization. But then, you see, I can't choose.
|
|
He won't be forgotten. Whatever he was, he was not common.
|
|
He had the power to charm or frighten rudimentary souls into
|
|
an aggravated witch-dance in his honour; he could also fill
|
|
the small souls of the pilgrims with bitter misgivings:
|
|
he had one devoted friend at least, and he had conquered one
|
|
soul in the world that was neither rudimentary nor tainted
|
|
with self-seeking. No; I can't forget him, though I am not
|
|
prepared to affirm the fellow was exactly worth the life we
|
|
lost in getting to him. I missed my late helmsman awfully--
|
|
I missed him even while his body was still lying in the
|
|
pilot-house. Perhaps you will think it passing strange this
|
|
regret for a savage who was no more account than a grain
|
|
of sand in a black Sahara. Well, don't you see, he had
|
|
done something, he had steered; for months I had him at my back--
|
|
a help--an instrument. It was a kind of partnership.
|
|
He steered for me--I had to look after him, I worried about
|
|
his deficiencies, and thus a subtle bond had been created,
|
|
of which I only became aware when it was suddenly broken.
|
|
And the intimate profundity of that look he gave me when
|
|
he received his hurt remains to this day in my memory--
|
|
like a claim of distant kinship affirmed in a supreme moment.
|
|
|
|
"Poor fool! If he had only left that shutter alone.
|
|
He had no restraint, no restraint--just like Kurtz--a tree swayed
|
|
by the wind. As soon as I had put on a dry pair of slippers,
|
|
I dragged him out, after first jerking the spear out of his side,
|
|
which operation I confess I performed with my eyes shut tight.
|
|
His heels leaped together over the little doorstep; his shoulders
|
|
were pressed to my breast; I hugged him from behind desperately.
|
|
Oh! he was heavy, heavy; heavier than any man on earth,
|
|
I should imagine. Then without more ado I tipped him overboard.
|
|
The current snatched him as though he had been a wisp of grass,
|
|
and I saw the body roll over twice before I lost sight
|
|
of it for ever. All the pilgrims and the manager were then
|
|
congregated on the awning-deck about the pilot-house,
|
|
chattering at each other like a flock of excited magpies,
|
|
and there was a scandalized murmur at my heartless promptitude.
|
|
What they wanted to keep that body hanging about for I can't guess.
|
|
Embalm it, maybe. But I had also heard another, and a very ominous,
|
|
murmur on the deck below. My friends the wood-cutters
|
|
were likewise scandalized, and with a better show of reason--
|
|
though I admit that the reason itself was quite inadmissible.
|
|
Oh, quite! I had made up my mind that if my late helmsman
|
|
was to be eaten, the fishes alone should have him.
|
|
He had been a very second-rate helmsman while alive, but now
|
|
he was dead he might have become a first-class temptation,
|
|
and possibly cause some startling trouble. Besides, I was
|
|
anxious to take the wheel, the man in pink pyjamas showing
|
|
himself a hopeless duffer at the business.
|
|
|
|
"This I did directly the simple funeral was over.
|
|
We were going half-speed, keeping right in the middle
|
|
of the stream, and I listened to the talk about me.
|
|
They had given up Kurtz, they had given up the station;
|
|
Kurtz was dead, and the station had been burnt--and so on--and so on.
|
|
The red-haired pilgrim was beside himself with the thought
|
|
that at least this poor Kurtz had been properly avenged.
|
|
`Say! We must have made a glorious slaughter of them in
|
|
the bush. Eh? What do you think? Say?' He positively danced,
|
|
the bloodthirsty little gingery beggar. And he had nearly
|
|
fainted when he saw the wounded man! I could not help saying,
|
|
`You made a glorious lot of smoke, anyhow.' I had seen,
|
|
from the way the tops of the bushes rustled and flew,
|
|
that almost all the shots had gone too high. You can't hit
|
|
anything unless you take aim and fire from the shoulder;
|
|
but these chaps fired from the hip with their eyes shut.
|
|
The retreat, I maintained--and I was right--was caused by the
|
|
screeching of the steam whistle. Upon this they forgot Kurtz,
|
|
and began to howl at me with indignant protests.
|
|
|
|
"The manager stood by the wheel murmuring confidentially about
|
|
the necessity of getting well away down the river before dark at
|
|
all events, when I saw in the distance a clearing on the riverside
|
|
and the outlines of some sort of building. `What's this?'
|
|
I asked. He clapped his hands in wonder. `The station!' he cried.
|
|
I edged in at once, still going half-speed.
|
|
|
|
"Through my glasses I saw the slope of a hill interspersed
|
|
with rare trees and perfectly free from undergrowth. A long
|
|
decaying building on the summit was half buried in the high grass;
|
|
the large holes in the peaked roof gaped black from afar;
|
|
the jungle and the woods made a background. There was no enclosure
|
|
or fence of any kind; but there had been one apparently, for near
|
|
the house half-a-dozen slim posts remained in a row, roughly trimmed,
|
|
and with their upper ends ornamented with round carved balls.
|
|
The rails, or whatever there had been between, had disappeared.
|
|
Of course the forest surrounded all that. The river-bank
|
|
was clear, and on the waterside I saw a white man under a hat
|
|
like a cart-wheel beckoning persistently with his whole arm.
|
|
Examining the edge of the forest above and below, I was almost
|
|
certain I could see movements--human forms gliding here and there.
|
|
I steamed past prudently, then stopped the engines and let her drift down.
|
|
The man on the shore began to shout, urging us to land.
|
|
`We have been attacked,' screamed the manager. `I know--I know.
|
|
It's all right,' yelled back the other, as cheerful as you please.
|
|
`Come along. It's all right. I am glad.'
|
|
|
|
"His aspect reminded me of something I had seen--something funny
|
|
I had seen somewhere. As I manoeuvred to get alongside,
|
|
I was asking myself, `What does this fellow look like?'
|
|
Suddenly I got it. He looked like a harlequin.
|
|
His clothes had been made of some stuff that was brown
|
|
holland probably, but it was covered with patches all over,
|
|
with bright patches, blue, red, and yellow--patches on the back,
|
|
patches on the front, patches on elbows, on knees; coloured binding
|
|
around his jacket, scarlet edging at the bottom of his trousers;
|
|
and the sunshine made him look extremely gay and wonderfully
|
|
neat withal, because you could see how beautifully all this
|
|
patching had been done. A beardless, boyish face, very fair,
|
|
no features to speak of, nose peeling, little blue eyes,
|
|
smiles and frowns chasing each other over that open
|
|
countenance like sunshine and shadow on a wind-swept plain.
|
|
`Look out, captain!' he cried; `there's a snag lodged in here
|
|
last night.' What! Another snag? I confess I swore shamefully.
|
|
I had nearly holed my cripple, to finish off that charming trip.
|
|
The harlequin on the bank turned his little pug-nose up to me.
|
|
`You English?' he asked, all smiles. `Are you?' I shouted
|
|
from the wheel. The smiles vanished, and he shook his head
|
|
as if sorry for my disappointment. Then he brightened up.
|
|
`Never mind!' he cried encouragingly. `Are we in time?'
|
|
I asked. `He is up there,' he replied, with a toss of
|
|
the head up the hill, and becoming gloomy all of a sudden.
|
|
His face was like the autumn sky, overcast one moment and
|
|
bright the next.
|
|
|
|
"When the manager, escorted by the pilgrims, all of them armed
|
|
to the teeth, had gone to the house this chap came on board.
|
|
`I say, I don't like this. These natives are in the bush,'
|
|
I said. He assured me earnestly it was all right.
|
|
`They are simple people,' he added; `well, I am glad you came.
|
|
It took me all my time to keep them off.' `But you said it
|
|
was all right,' I cried. `Oh, they meant no harm,' he said;
|
|
and as I stared he corrected himself, `Not exactly.'
|
|
Then vivaciously, `My faith, your pilot-house wants a clean-up!'
|
|
In the next breath he advised me to keep enough steam
|
|
on the boiler to blow the whistle in case of any trouble.
|
|
`One good screech will do more for you than all your rifles.
|
|
They are simple people,' he repeated. He rattled away at such
|
|
a rate he quite overwhelmed me. He seemed to be trying to make
|
|
up for lots of silence, and actually hinted, laughing, that such
|
|
was the case. `Don't you talk with Mr. Kurtz?' I said.
|
|
`You don't talk with that man--you listen to him,' he exclaimed
|
|
with severe exaltation. `But now--' He waved his arm, and in
|
|
the twinkling of an eye was in the uttermost depths of despondency.
|
|
In a moment he came up again with a jump, possessed himself
|
|
of both my hands, shook them continuously, while he gabbled:
|
|
`Brother sailor . . . honour . . . pleasure . . . delight . . .
|
|
introduce myself . . . Russian . . . son of an arch-priest . .
|
|
. Government of Tambov . . . What? Tobacco! English tobacco;
|
|
the excellent English tobacco! Now, that's brotherly. Smoke?
|
|
Where's a sailor that does not smoke?"
|
|
|
|
"The pipe soothed him, and gradually I made out he had
|
|
run away from school, had gone to sea in a Russian ship;
|
|
ran away again; served some time in English ships; was now
|
|
reconciled with the arch-priest. He made a point of that.
|
|
`But when one is young one must see things, gather experience, ideas;
|
|
enlarge the mind.' `Here!' I interrupted. `You can never tell!
|
|
Here I met Mr. Kurtz,' he said, youthfully solemn and reproachful.
|
|
I held my tongue after that. It appears he had persuaded
|
|
a Dutch trading-house on the coast to fit him out with stores
|
|
and goods, and had started for the interior with a light heart
|
|
and no more idea of what would happen to him than a baby.
|
|
He had been wandering about that river for nearly two
|
|
years alone, cut off from everybody and everything.
|
|
`I am not so young as I look. I am twenty-five,' he said.
|
|
`At first old Van Shuyten would tell me to go to the devil,'
|
|
he narrated with keen enjoyment; `but I stuck to him,
|
|
and talked and talked, till at last he got afraid I would
|
|
talk the hind-leg off his favourite dog, so he gave me some
|
|
cheap things and a few guns, and told me he hoped he would
|
|
never see my face again. Good old Dutchman, Van Shuyten.
|
|
I've sent him one small lot of ivory a year ago, so that he can't
|
|
call me a little thief when I get back. I hope he got it.
|
|
And for the rest I don't care. I had some wood stacked for you.
|
|
That was my old house. Did you see?'
|
|
|
|
"I gave him Towson's book. He made as though he would kiss me,
|
|
but restrained himself. `The only book I had left, and I
|
|
thought I had lost it,' he said, looking at it ecstatically.
|
|
`So many accidents happen to a man going about alone, you know.
|
|
Canoes get upset sometimes--and sometimes you've got
|
|
to clear out so quick when the people get angry.'
|
|
He thumbed the pages. `You made notes in Russian?' I asked.
|
|
He nodded. `I thought they were written in cipher,' I said.
|
|
He laughed, then became serious. `I had lots of trouble to keep
|
|
these people off,' he said. `Did they want to kill you?'
|
|
I asked. `Oh, no!' he cried, and checked himself.
|
|
`Why did they attack us?' I pursued. He hesitated,
|
|
then said shamefacedly, `They don't want him to go.' `Don't they?'
|
|
I said curiously. He nodded a nod full of mystery and wisdom.
|
|
`I tell you,' he cried, `this man has enlarged my mind.'
|
|
He opened his arms wide, staring at me with his little blue
|
|
eyes that were perfectly round."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
III
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
"I looked at him, lost in astonishment. There he was before me, in motley,
|
|
as though he had absconded from a troupe of mimes, enthusiastic, fabulous.
|
|
His very existence was improbable, inexplicable, and altogether bewildering.
|
|
He was an insoluble problem. It was inconceivable how he had existed,
|
|
how he had succeeded in getting so far, how he had managed to remain--
|
|
why he did not instantly disappear. `I went a little farther,'
|
|
he said, `then still a little farther--till I had gone so far that I
|
|
don't know how I'll ever get back. Never mind. Plenty time.
|
|
I can manage. You take Kurtz away quick--quick--I tell you.'
|
|
The glamour of youth enveloped his parti-coloured rags, his destitution,
|
|
his loneliness, the essential desolation of his futile wanderings.
|
|
For months--for years--his life hadn't been worth a day's purchase;
|
|
and there he was gallantly, thoughtlessly alive, to all appearances
|
|
indestructible solely by the virtue of his few years and of his
|
|
unreflecting audacity. I was seduced into something like admiration--
|
|
like envy. Glamour urged him on, glamour kept him unscathed.
|
|
He surely wanted nothing from the wilderness but space to breathe
|
|
in and to push on through. His need was to exist, and to move onwards
|
|
at the greatest possible risk, and with a maximum of privation.
|
|
If the absolutely pure, uncalculating, unpractical spirit of adventure
|
|
had ever ruled a human being, it ruled this bepatched youth.
|
|
I almost envied him the possession of this modest and clear flame.
|
|
It seemed to have consumed all thought of self so completely,
|
|
that even while he was talking to you, you forgot that it was he--
|
|
the man before your eyes--who had gone through these things. I did not
|
|
envy him his devotion to Kurtz, though. He had not meditated over it.
|
|
It came to him, and he accepted it with a sort of eager fatalism.
|
|
I must say that to me it appeared about the most dangerous thing in every
|
|
way he had come upon so far.
|
|
|
|
"They had come together unavoidably, like two ships
|
|
becalmed near each other, and lay rubbing sides at last.
|
|
I suppose Kurtz wanted an audience, because on a certain occasion,
|
|
when encamped in the forest, they had talked all night,
|
|
or more probably Kurtz had talked. `We talked of everything,'
|
|
he said, quite transported at the recollection. `I forgot
|
|
there was such a thing as sleep. The night did not seem to
|
|
last an hour. Everything! Everything! . . . Of love, too.'
|
|
`Ah, he talked to you of love!' I said, much amused.
|
|
`It isn't what you think,' he cried, almost passionately.
|
|
`It was in general. He made me see things--things.'
|
|
|
|
"He threw his arms up. We were on deck at the time, and the headman
|
|
of my wood-cutters, lounging near by, turned upon him his heavy and
|
|
glittering eyes. I looked around, and I don't know why, but I assure
|
|
you that never, never before, did this land, this river, this jungle,
|
|
the very arch of this blazing sky, appear to me so hopeless and so dark,
|
|
so impenetrable to human thought, so pitiless to human weakness.
|
|
`And, ever since, you have been with him, of course?' I said.
|
|
|
|
"On the contrary. It appears their intercourse had been very much
|
|
broken by various causes. He had, as he informed me proudly,
|
|
managed to nurse Kurtz through two illnesses (he alluded to it as you
|
|
would to some risky feat), but as a rule Kurtz wandered alone,
|
|
far in the depths of the forest. `Very often coming to this station,
|
|
I had to wait days and days before he would turn up,' he said.
|
|
`Ah, it was worth waiting for!--sometimes.' `What was
|
|
he doing? exploring or what?' I asked. `Oh, yes, of course';
|
|
he had discovered lots of villages, a lake, too--he did not
|
|
know exactly in what direction; it was dangerous to inquire
|
|
too much--but mostly his expeditions had been for ivory.
|
|
`But he had no goods to trade with by that time,' I objected.
|
|
`There's a good lot of cartridges left even yet,'
|
|
he answered, looking away. `To speak plainly, he raided
|
|
the country,' I said. He nodded. `Not alone, surely!'
|
|
He muttered something about the villages round that lake.
|
|
`Kurtz got the tribe to follow him, did he?' I suggested.
|
|
He fidgeted a little. `They adored him,' he said. The tone of
|
|
these words was so extraordinary that I looked at him searchingly.
|
|
It was curious to see his mingled eagerness and reluctance to
|
|
speak of Kurtz. The man filled his life, occupied his thoughts,
|
|
swayed his emotions. `What can you expect?' he burst out;
|
|
`he came to them with thunder and lightning, you know--
|
|
and they had never seen anything like it--and very terrible.
|
|
He could be very terrible. You can't judge Mr. Kurtz as you would
|
|
an ordinary man. No, no, no! Now--just to give you an idea--
|
|
I don't mind telling you, he wanted to shoot me, too, one day--
|
|
but I don't judge him.' `Shoot you!' I cried `What for?'
|
|
`Well, I had a small lot of ivory the chief of that village
|
|
near my house gave me. You see I used to shoot game
|
|
for them. Well, he wanted it, and wouldn't hear reason.
|
|
He declared he would shoot me unless I gave him the ivory
|
|
and then cleared out of the country, because he could do so,
|
|
and had a fancy for it, and there was nothing on earth
|
|
to prevent him killing whom he jolly well pleased.
|
|
And it was true, too. I gave him the ivory. What did I care!
|
|
But I didn't clear out. No, no. I couldn't leave him.
|
|
I had to be careful, of course, till we got friendly
|
|
again for a time. He had his second illness then.
|
|
Afterwards I had to keep out of the way; but I didn't mind.
|
|
He was living for the most part in those villages on the lake.
|
|
When he came down to the river, sometimes he would take to me,
|
|
and sometimes it was better for me to be careful. This man suffered
|
|
too much. He hated all this, and somehow he couldn't get away.
|
|
When I had a chance I begged him to try and leave while there
|
|
was time; I offered to go back with him. And he would say yes,
|
|
and then he would remain; go off on another ivory hunt;
|
|
disappear for weeks; forget himself amongst these people--
|
|
forget himself--you know.' `Why! he's mad,' I said.
|
|
He protested indignantly. Mr. Kurtz couldn't be mad.
|
|
If I had heard him talk, only two days ago, I wouldn't dare
|
|
hint at such a thing. . . . I had taken up my binoculars
|
|
while we talked, and was looking at the shore, sweeping the limit
|
|
of the forest at each side and at the back of the house.
|
|
The consciousness of there being people in that bush, so silent,
|
|
so quiet--as silent and quiet as the ruined house on the hill--
|
|
made me uneasy. There was no sign on the face of nature
|
|
of this amazing tale that was not so much told as suggested
|
|
to me in desolate exclamations, completed by shrugs,
|
|
in interrupted phrases, in hints ending in deep sighs.
|
|
The woods were unmoved, like a mask--heavy, like the closed door
|
|
of a prison--they looked with their air of hidden knowledge,
|
|
of patient expectation, of unapproachable silence.
|
|
The Russian was explaining to me that it was only lately
|
|
that Mr. Kurtz had come down to the river, bringing along
|
|
with him all the fighting men of that lake tribe. He had been
|
|
absent for several months--getting himself adored, I suppose--
|
|
and had come down unexpectedly, with the intention to all appearance
|
|
of making a raid either across the river or down stream.
|
|
Evidently the appetite for more ivory had got the better of the--
|
|
what shall I say?--less material aspirations. However he had
|
|
got much worse suddenly. `I heard he was lying helpless,
|
|
and so I came up--took my chance,' said the Russian.
|
|
`Oh, he is bad, very bad.' I directed my glass to the house.
|
|
There were no signs of life, but there was the ruined roof,
|
|
the long mud wall peeping above the grass, with three
|
|
little square window-holes, no two of the same size;
|
|
all this brought within reach of my hand, as it were.
|
|
And then I made a brusque movement, and one of the remaining
|
|
posts of that vanished fence leaped up in the field of my glass.
|
|
You remember I told you I had been struck at the distance by certain
|
|
attempts at ornamentation, rather remarkable in the ruinous aspect
|
|
of the place. Now I had suddenly a nearer view, and its first
|
|
result was to make me throw my head back as if before a blow.
|
|
Then I went carefully from post to post with my glass, and I saw
|
|
my mistake. These round knobs were not ornamental but symbolic;
|
|
they were expressive and puzzling, striking and disturbing--
|
|
food for thought and also for vultures if there had been
|
|
any looking down from the sky; but at all events for such
|
|
ants as were industrious enough to ascend the pole.
|
|
They would have been even more impressive, those heads on
|
|
the stakes, if their faces had not been turned to the house.
|
|
Only one, the first I had made out, was facing my way.
|
|
I was not so shocked as you may think. The start back I
|
|
had given was really nothing but a movement of surprise.
|
|
I had expected to see a knob of wood there, you know.
|
|
I returned deliberately to the first I had seen--and there
|
|
it was, black, dried, sunken, with closed eyelids--a head
|
|
that seemed to sleep at the top of that pole, and, with the
|
|
shrunken dry lips showing a narrow white line of the teeth,
|
|
was smiling, too, smiling continuously at some endless and jocose
|
|
dream of that eternal slumber.
|
|
|
|
"I am not disclosing any trade secrets. In fact, the manager said
|
|
afterwards that Mr. Kurtz's methods had ruined the district.
|
|
I have no opinion on that point, but I want you clearly to understand
|
|
that there was nothing exactly profitable in these heads being there.
|
|
They only showed that Mr. Kurtz lacked restraint in the gratification
|
|
of his various lusts, that there was something wanting in him--
|
|
some small matter which, when the pressing need arose,
|
|
could not be found under his magnificent eloquence.
|
|
Whether he knew of this deficiency himself I can't say.
|
|
I think the knowledge came to him at last--only at the very last.
|
|
But the wilderness had found him out early, and had taken on him
|
|
a terrible vengeance for the fantastic invasion. I think it
|
|
had whispered to him things about himself which he did not know,
|
|
things of which he had no conception till he took counsel with this
|
|
great solitude--and the whisper had proved irresistibly fascinating.
|
|
It echoed loudly within him because he was hollow at the core.
|
|
. . . I put down the glass, and the head that had appeared near
|
|
enough to be spoken to seemed at once to have leaped away from me
|
|
into inaccessible distance.
|
|
|
|
"The admirer of Mr. Kurtz was a bit crestfallen. In a hurried,
|
|
indistinct voice he began to assure me he had not dared to
|
|
take these--say, symbols--down. He was not afraid of the natives;
|
|
they would not stir till Mr. Kurtz gave the word. His ascendancy
|
|
was extraordinary. The camps of these people surrounded the place,
|
|
and the chiefs came every day to see him. They would crawl.
|
|
. . . `I don't want to know anything of the ceremonies used
|
|
when approaching Mr. Kurtz,' I shouted. Curious, this feeling
|
|
that came over me that such details would be more intolerable
|
|
than those heads drying on the stakes under Mr. Kurtz's windows.
|
|
After all, that was only a savage sight, while I seemed at one bound
|
|
to have been transported into some lightless region of subtle horrors,
|
|
where pure, uncomplicated savagery was a positive relief,
|
|
being something that had a right to exist--obviously--in the sunshine.
|
|
The young man looked at me with surprise. I suppose it
|
|
did not occur to him that Mr. Kurtz was no idol of mine.
|
|
He forgot I hadn't heard any of these splendid monologues on,
|
|
what was it? on love, justice, conduct of life--or what not.
|
|
If it had come to crawling before Mr. Kurtz, he crawled as much as the
|
|
veriest savage of them all. I had no idea of the conditions, he said:
|
|
these heads were the heads of rebels. I shocked him excessively
|
|
by laughing. Rebels! What would be the next definition I was to hear?
|
|
There had been enemies, criminals, workers--and these were rebels.
|
|
Those rebellious heads looked very subdued to me on their sticks.
|
|
`You don't know how such a life tries a man like Kurtz,'
|
|
cried Kurtz's last disciple. `Well, and you?' I said.
|
|
`I! I! I am a simple man. I have no great thoughts.
|
|
I want nothing from anybody. How can you compare me to . . . ?'
|
|
His feelings were too much for speech, and suddenly he broke down.
|
|
`I don't understand,' he groaned. `I've been doing my best
|
|
to keep him alive, and that's enough. I had no hand in all this.
|
|
I have no abilities. There hasn't been a drop of medicine or a mouthful
|
|
of invalid food for months here. He was shamefully abandoned.
|
|
A man like this, with such ideas. Shamefully! Shamefully! I--I--
|
|
haven't slept for the last ten nights . . .'
|
|
|
|
"His voice lost itself in the calm of the evening. The long shadows
|
|
of the forest had slipped downhill while we talked, had gone far
|
|
beyond the ruined hovel, beyond the symbolic row of stakes.
|
|
All this was in the gloom, while we down there were yet in the sunshine,
|
|
and the stretch of the river abreast of the clearing glittered
|
|
in a still and dazzling splendour, with a murky and overshadowed
|
|
bend above and below. Not a living soul was seen on the shore.
|
|
The bushes did not rustle.
|
|
|
|
"Suddenly round the corner of the house a group of men appeared, as though
|
|
they had come up from the ground. They waded waist-deep in the grass,
|
|
in a compact body, bearing an improvised stretcher in their midst.
|
|
Instantly, in the emptiness of the landscape, a cry arose whose
|
|
shrillness pierced the still air like a sharp arrow flying straight
|
|
to the very heart of the land; and, as if by enchantment, streams of
|
|
human beings--of naked human beings--with spears in their hands,
|
|
with bows, with shields, with wild glances and savage movements,
|
|
were poured into the clearing by the dark-faced and pensive forest.
|
|
The bushes shook, the grass swayed for a time, and then everything
|
|
stood still in attentive immobility.
|
|
|
|
"`Now, if he does not say the right thing to them we are all
|
|
done for,' said the Russian at my elbow. The knot of men
|
|
with the stretcher had stopped, too, halfway to the steamer,
|
|
as if petrified. I saw the man on the stretcher sit up,
|
|
lank and with an uplifted arm, above the shoulders of the bearers.
|
|
`Let us hope that the man who can talk so well of love in general
|
|
will find some particular reason to spare us this time,' I said.
|
|
I resented bitterly the absurd danger of our situation,
|
|
as if to be at the mercy of that atrocious phantom had
|
|
been a dishonouring necessity. I could not hear a sound,
|
|
but through my glasses I saw the thin arm extended commandingly,
|
|
the lower jaw moving, the eyes of that apparition shining
|
|
darkly far in its bony head that nodded with grotesque jerks.
|
|
Kurtz--Kurtz--that means short in German--don't it?
|
|
Well, the name was as true as everything else in his life--
|
|
and death. He looked at least seven feet long.
|
|
His covering had fallen off, and his body emerged from it
|
|
pitiful and appalling as from a winding-sheet. I could see
|
|
the cage of his ribs all astir, the bones of his arm waving.
|
|
It was as though an animated image of death carved out of old
|
|
ivory had been shaking its hand with menaces at a motionless
|
|
crowd of men made of dark and glittering bronze. I saw him
|
|
open his mouth wide--it gave him a weirdly voracious aspect,
|
|
as though he had wanted to swallow all the air, all the earth,
|
|
all the men before him. A deep voice reached me faintly.
|
|
He must have been shouting. He fell back suddenly.
|
|
The stretcher shook as the bearers staggered forward again,
|
|
and almost at the same time I noticed that the crowd of savages
|
|
was vanishing without any perceptible movement of retreat,
|
|
as if the forest that had ejected these beings so suddenly had
|
|
drawn them in again as the breath is drawn in a long aspiration.
|
|
|
|
"Some of the pilgrims behind the stretcher carried his arms--
|
|
two shot-guns, a heavy rifle, and a light revolver-carbine--
|
|
the thunderbolts of that pitiful Jupiter. The manager bent over him
|
|
murmuring as he walked beside his head. They laid him down in one
|
|
of the little cabins--just a room for a bed place and a camp-stool
|
|
or two, you know. We had brought his belated correspondence,
|
|
and a lot of torn envelopes and open letters littered his bed.
|
|
His hand roamed feebly amongst these papers. I was struck by
|
|
the fire of his eyes and the composed languor of his expression.
|
|
It was not so much the exhaustion of disease. He did not seem in pain.
|
|
This shadow looked satiated and calm, as though for the moment it
|
|
had had its fill of all the emotions.
|
|
|
|
"He rustled one of the letters, and looking straight in my face said,
|
|
`I am glad.' Somebody had been writing to him about me.
|
|
These special recommendations were turning up again.
|
|
The volume of tone he emitted without effort, almost without
|
|
the trouble of moving his lips, amazed me. A voice! a voice!
|
|
It was grave, profound, vibrating, while the man did not seem
|
|
capable of a whisper. However, he had enough strength in him--
|
|
factitious no doubt--to very nearly make an end of us,
|
|
as you shall hear directly.
|
|
|
|
"The manager appeared silently in the doorway; I stepped
|
|
out at once and he drew the curtain after me. The Russian,
|
|
eyed curiously by the pilgrims, was staring at the shore.
|
|
I followed the direction of his glance.
|
|
|
|
"Dark human shapes could be made out in the distance,
|
|
flitting indistinctly against the gloomy border of the forest,
|
|
and near the river two bronze figures, leaning on tall spears,
|
|
stood in the sunlight under fantastic head-dresses of
|
|
spotted skins, warlike and still in statuesque repose.
|
|
And from right to left along the lighted shore moved a wild
|
|
and gorgeous apparition of a woman.
|
|
|
|
"She walked with measured steps, draped in striped and
|
|
fringed cloths, treading the earth proudly, with a slight jingle
|
|
and flash of barbarous ornaments. She carried her head high;
|
|
her hair was done in the shape of a helmet; she had brass
|
|
leggings to the knee, brass wire gauntlets to the elbow,
|
|
a crimson spot on her tawny cheek, innumerable necklaces of glass
|
|
beads on her neck; bizarre things, charms, gifts of witch-men,
|
|
that hung about her, glittered and trembled at every step.
|
|
She must have had the value of several elephant tusks upon her.
|
|
She was savage and superb, wild-eyed and magnificent;
|
|
there was something ominous and stately in her deliberate progress.
|
|
And in the hush that had fallen suddenly upon the whole
|
|
sorrowful land, the immense wilderness, the colossal body
|
|
of the fecund and mysterious life seemed to look at her,
|
|
pensive, as though it had been looking at the image of its own
|
|
tenebrous and passionate soul.
|
|
|
|
"She came abreast of the steamer, stood still, and faced us.
|
|
Her long shadow fell to the water's edge. Her face had a tragic
|
|
and fierce aspect of wild sorrow and of dumb pain mingled
|
|
with the fear of some struggling, half-shaped resolve.
|
|
She stood looking at us without a stir, and like the wilderness
|
|
itself, with an air of brooding over an inscrutable purpose.
|
|
A whole minute passed, and then she made a step forward.
|
|
There was a low jingle, a glint of yellow metal, a sway of
|
|
fringed draperies, and she stopped as if her heart had failed her.
|
|
The young fellow by my side growled. The pilgrims murmured
|
|
at my back. She looked at us all as if her life had depended
|
|
upon the unswerving steadiness of her glance. Suddenly she
|
|
opened her bared arms and threw them up rigid above her head,
|
|
as though in an uncontrollable desire to touch the sky, and at
|
|
the same time the swift shadows darted out on the earth, swept around
|
|
on the river, gathering the steamer into a shadowy embrace.
|
|
A formidable silence hung over the scene.
|
|
|
|
"She turned away slowly, walked on, following the bank, and passed
|
|
into the bushes to the left. Once only her eyes gleamed back at us
|
|
in the dusk of the thickets before she disappeared.
|
|
|
|
"`If she had offered to come aboard I really think I would have tried
|
|
to shoot her,' said the man of patches, nervously. `I have been risking
|
|
my life every day for the last fortnight to keep her out of the house.
|
|
She got in one day and kicked up a row about those miserable rags I
|
|
picked up in the storeroom to mend my clothes with. I wasn't decent.
|
|
At least it must have been that, for she talked like a fury to Kurtz
|
|
for an hour, pointing at me now and then. I don't understand the dialect
|
|
of this tribe. Luckily for me, I fancy Kurtz felt too ill that day
|
|
to care, or there would have been mischief. I don't understand.
|
|
. . . No--it's too much for me. Ah, well, it's all over now.'
|
|
|
|
"At this moment I heard Kurtz's deep voice behind the curtain:
|
|
`Save me!--save the ivory, you mean. Don't tell me.
|
|
Save ME! Why, I've had to save you. You are interrupting my
|
|
plans now. Sick! Sick! Not so sick as you would like to believe.
|
|
Never mind. I'll carry my ideas out yet--I will return.
|
|
I'll show you what can be done. You with your little
|
|
peddling notions--you are interfering with me. I will return.
|
|
I. . . .'
|
|
|
|
"The manager came out. He did me the honour to take me
|
|
under the arm and lead me aside. `He is very low, very low,'
|
|
he said. He considered it necessary to sigh, but neglected
|
|
to be consistently sorrowful. `We have done all we could
|
|
for him--haven't we? But there is no disguising the fact,
|
|
Mr. Kurtz has done more harm than good to the Company.
|
|
He did not see the time was not ripe for vigorous action.
|
|
Cautiously, cautiously--that's my principle.
|
|
We must be cautious yet. The district is closed to us for
|
|
a time. Deplorable! Upon the whole, the trade will suffer.
|
|
I don't deny there is a remarkable quantity of ivory--mostly fossil.
|
|
We must save it, at all events--but look how precarious
|
|
the position is--and why? Because the method is unsound.'
|
|
`Do you,' said I, looking at the shore, `call it "unsound method?"'
|
|
`Without doubt,' he exclaimed hotly. `Don't you?' . . . `No
|
|
method at all,' I murmured after a while. `Exactly,' he exulted.
|
|
`I anticipated this. Shows a complete want of judgment.
|
|
It is my duty to point it out in the proper quarter.' `Oh,' said I,
|
|
`that fellow--what's his name?--the brickmaker, will make
|
|
a readable report for you.' He appeared confounded for a moment.
|
|
It seemed to me I had never breathed an atmosphere so vile,
|
|
and I turned mentally to Kurtz for relief--positively for relief.
|
|
`Nevertheless I think Mr. Kurtz is a remarkable man,'
|
|
I said with emphasis. He started, dropped on me a heavy glance,
|
|
said very quietly, `he WAS,' and turned his back on me.
|
|
My hour of favour was over; I found myself lumped along with Kurtz
|
|
as a partisan of methods for which the time was not ripe:
|
|
I was unsound! Ah! but it was something to have at least
|
|
a choice of nightmares.
|
|
|
|
"I had turned to the wilderness really, not to Mr. Kurtz, who,
|
|
I was ready to admit, was as good as buried. And for a moment
|
|
it seemed to me as if I also were buried in a vast grave full
|
|
of unspeakable secrets. I felt an intolerable weight oppressing
|
|
my breast, the smell of the damp earth, the unseen presence
|
|
of victorious corruption, the darkness of an impenetrable night.
|
|
. . . The Russian tapped me on the shoulder. I heard him mumbling
|
|
and stammering something about `brother seaman--couldn't conceal--
|
|
knowledge of matters that would affect Mr. Kurtz's reputation.'
|
|
I waited. For him evidently Mr. Kurtz was not in his grave;
|
|
I suspect that for him Mr. Kurtz was one of the immortals.
|
|
`Well!' said I at last, `speak out. As it happens, I am
|
|
Mr. Kurtz's friend--in a way.'
|
|
|
|
"He stated with a good deal of formality that had we not been `of
|
|
the same profession,' he would have kept the matter to himself
|
|
without regard to consequences. `He suspected there was an active
|
|
ill-will towards him on the part of these white men that--'
|
|
`You are right,' I said, remembering a certain conversation I
|
|
had overheard. `The manager thinks you ought to be hanged.'
|
|
He showed a concern at this intelligence which amused me at first.
|
|
`I had better get out of the way quietly,' he said earnestly.
|
|
`I can do no more for Kurtz now, and they would soon find some excuse.
|
|
What's to stop them? There's a military post three hundred miles
|
|
from here.' `Well, upon my word,' said I, `perhaps you had
|
|
better go if you have any friends amongst the savages near by.'
|
|
`Plenty,' he said. `They are simple people--and I want nothing,
|
|
you know.' He stood biting his lip, then: `I don't want any harm
|
|
to happen to these whites here, but of course I was thinking of
|
|
Mr. Kurtz's reputation--but you are a brother seaman and--' `All right,'
|
|
said I, after a time. `Mr. Kurtz's reputation is safe with me.'
|
|
I did not know how truly I spoke.
|
|
|
|
"He informed me, lowering his voice, that it was Kurtz
|
|
who had ordered the attack to be made on the steamer.
|
|
`He hated sometimes the idea of being taken away--and then again.
|
|
. . . But I don't understand these matters. I am a simple man.
|
|
He thought it would scare you away--that you would
|
|
give it up, thinking him dead. I could not stop him.
|
|
Oh, I had an awful time of it this last month.' `Very well,'
|
|
I said. `He is all right now.' `Ye-e-es,' he muttered,
|
|
not very convinced apparently. `Thanks,' said I; `I shall
|
|
keep my eyes open.' `But quiet-eh?' he urged anxiously.
|
|
`It would be awful for his reputation if anybody here--'
|
|
I promised a complete discretion with great gravity.
|
|
`I have a canoe and three black fellows waiting not very far.
|
|
I am off. Could you give me a few Martini-Henry cartridges?'
|
|
I could, and did, with proper secrecy. He helped himself,
|
|
with a wink at me, to a handful of my tobacco.
|
|
`Between sailors--you know--good English tobacco.'
|
|
At the door of the pilot-house he turned round--`I say,
|
|
haven't you a pair of shoes you could spare?' He raised one leg.
|
|
`Look.' The soles were tied with knotted strings sandalwise
|
|
under his bare feet. I rooted out an old pair, at which he
|
|
looked with admiration before tucking it under his left arm.
|
|
One of his pockets (bright red) was bulging with cartridges,
|
|
from the other (dark blue) peeped `Towson's Inquiry,' etc., etc.
|
|
He seemed to think himself excellently well equipped for a renewed
|
|
encounter with the wilderness. `Ah! I'll never, never meet
|
|
such a man again. You ought to have heard him recite poetry--
|
|
his own, too, it was, he told me. Poetry!' He rolled his eyes
|
|
at the recollection of these delights. `Oh, he enlarged my mind!'
|
|
`Good-bye,' said I. He shook hands and vanished in the night.
|
|
Sometimes I ask myself whether I had ever really seen him--
|
|
whether it was possible to meet such a phenomenon! . . .
|
|
|
|
"When I woke up shortly after midnight his warning came to my mind
|
|
with its hint of danger that seemed, in the starred darkness,
|
|
real enough to make me get up for the purpose of having a look round.
|
|
On the hill a big fire burned, illuminating fitfully a crooked corner
|
|
of the station-house. One of the agents with a picket of a few of
|
|
our blacks, armed for the purpose, was keeping guard over the ivory;
|
|
but deep within the forest, red gleams that wavered, that seemed
|
|
to sink and rise from the ground amongst confused columnar shapes
|
|
of intense blackness, showed the exact position of the camp
|
|
where Mr. Kurtz's adorers were keeping their uneasy vigil.
|
|
The monotonous beating of a big drum filled the air with muffled shocks
|
|
and a lingering vibration. A steady droning sound of many men chanting
|
|
each to himself some weird incantation came out from the black,
|
|
flat wall of the woods as the humming of bees comes out of a hive,
|
|
and had a strange narcotic effect upon my half-awake senses.
|
|
I believe I dozed off leaning over the rail, till an abrupt burst
|
|
of yells, an overwhelming outbreak of a pent-up and mysterious frenzy,
|
|
woke me up in a bewildered wonder. It was cut short all at once,
|
|
and the low droning went on with an effect of audible and
|
|
soothing silence. I glanced casually into the little cabin.
|
|
A light was burning within, but Mr. Kurtz was not there.
|
|
|
|
"I think I would have raised an outcry if I had believed my eyes.
|
|
But I didn't believe them at first--the thing seemed so impossible.
|
|
The fact is I was completely unnerved by a sheer blank fright,
|
|
pure abstract terror, unconnected with any distinct shape
|
|
of physical danger. What made this emotion so overpowering was--
|
|
how shall I define it?--the moral shock I received,
|
|
as if something altogether monstrous, intolerable to thought
|
|
and odious to the soul, had been thrust upon me unexpectedly.
|
|
This lasted of course the merest fraction of a second, and then
|
|
the usual sense of commonplace, deadly danger, the possibility
|
|
of a sudden onslaught and massacre, or something of the kind,
|
|
which I saw impending, was positively welcome and composing.
|
|
It pacified me, in fact, so much that I did not raise an alarm.
|
|
|
|
"There was an agent buttoned up inside an ulster and sleeping on a chair
|
|
on deck within three feet of me. The yells had not awakened him;
|
|
he snored very slightly; I left him to his slumbers and leaped ashore.
|
|
I did not betray Mr. Kurtz--it was ordered I should never betray him--
|
|
it was written I should be loyal to the nightmare of my choice.
|
|
I was anxious to deal with this shadow by myself alone--and to this day
|
|
I don't know why I was so jealous of sharing with any one the peculiar
|
|
blackness of that experience.
|
|
|
|
"As soon as I got on the bank I saw a trail--a broad trail through
|
|
the grass. I remember the exultation with which I said to myself,
|
|
`He can't walk--he is crawling on all-fours--I've got him.'
|
|
The grass was wet with dew. I strode rapidly with clenched fists.
|
|
I fancy I had some vague notion of falling upon him and giving
|
|
him a drubbing. I don't know. I had some imbecile thoughts.
|
|
The knitting old woman with the cat obtruded herself upon my memory
|
|
as a most improper person to be sitting at the other end of such
|
|
an affair. I saw a row of pilgrims squirting lead in the air
|
|
out of Winchesters held to the hip. I thought I would never get
|
|
back to the steamer, and imagined myself living alone and unarmed
|
|
in the woods to an advanced age. Such silly things--you know.
|
|
And I remember I confounded the beat of the drum with the beating
|
|
of my heart, and was pleased at its calm regularity.
|
|
|
|
"I kept to the track though--then stopped to listen.
|
|
The night was very clear; a dark blue space, sparkling with
|
|
dew and starlight, in which black things stood very still.
|
|
I thought I could see a kind of motion ahead of me.
|
|
I was strangely cocksure of everything that night.
|
|
I actually left the track and ran in a wide semicircle (I verily
|
|
believe chuckling to myself) so as to get in front of that stir,
|
|
of that motion I had seen--if indeed I had seen anything.
|
|
I was circumventing Kurtz as though it had been a boyish game.
|
|
|
|
"I came upon him, and, if he had not heard me coming,
|
|
I would have fallen over him, too, but he got up in time.
|
|
He rose, unsteady, long, pale, indistinct, like a vapour exhaled
|
|
by the earth, and swayed slightly, misty and silent before me;
|
|
while at my back the fires loomed between the trees,
|
|
and the murmur of many voices issued from the forest.
|
|
I had cut him off cleverly; but when actually confronting him I seemed
|
|
to come to my senses, I saw the danger in its right proportion.
|
|
It was by no means over yet. Suppose he began to shout?
|
|
Though he could hardly stand, there was still plenty
|
|
of vigour in his voice. `Go away--hide yourself,' he said,
|
|
in that profound tone. It was very awful. I glanced back.
|
|
We were within thirty yards from the nearest fire.
|
|
A black figure stood up, strode on long black legs, waving long
|
|
black arms, across the glow. It had horns--antelope horns,
|
|
I think--on its head. Some sorcerer, some witch-man, no doubt:
|
|
it looked fiendlike enough. `Do you know what you are doing?'
|
|
I whispered. `Perfectly,' he answered, raising his voice
|
|
for that single word: it sounded to me far off and yet loud,
|
|
like a hail through a speaking-trumpet. `If he makes a row we
|
|
are lost,' I thought to myself. This clearly was not a case
|
|
for fisticuffs, even apart from the very natural aversion I
|
|
had to beat that Shadow--this wandering and tormented thing.
|
|
`You will be lost,' I said--'utterly lost.'
|
|
One gets sometimes such a flash of inspiration, you know.
|
|
I did say the right thing, though indeed he could not have
|
|
been more irretrievably lost than he was at this very moment,
|
|
when the foundations of our intimacy were being laid--to endure--
|
|
to endure--even to the end--even beyond.
|
|
|
|
"`I had immense plans,' he muttered irresolutely.
|
|
`Yes,' said I; `but if you try to shout I'll smash your
|
|
head with--' There was not a stick or a stone near.
|
|
`I will throttle you for good,' I corrected myself.
|
|
`I was on the threshold of great things,' he pleaded, in a voice
|
|
of longing, with a wistfulness of tone that made my blood run cold.
|
|
`And now for this stupid scoundrel--' `Your success in Europe
|
|
is assured in any case,' I affirmed steadily. I did not want
|
|
to have the throttling of him, you understand--and indeed it
|
|
would have been very little use for any practical purpose.
|
|
I tried to break the spell--the heavy, mute spell of the wilderness--
|
|
that seemed to draw him to its pitiless breast by the awakening
|
|
of forgotten and brutal instincts, by the memory of gratified
|
|
and monstrous passions. This alone, I was convinced,
|
|
had driven him out to the edge of the forest, to the bush,
|
|
towards the gleam of fires, the throb of drums, the drone
|
|
of weird incantations; this alone had beguiled his unlawful soul
|
|
beyond the bounds of permitted aspirations. And, don't you see,
|
|
the terror of the position was not in being knocked on the head--
|
|
though I had a very lively sense of that danger, too--but in this,
|
|
that I had to deal with a being to whom I could not appeal in
|
|
the name of anything high or low. I had, even like the niggers,
|
|
to invoke him--himself--his own exalted and incredible degradation.
|
|
There was nothing either above or below him, and I knew it.
|
|
He had kicked himself loose of the earth. Confound the man!
|
|
he had kicked the very earth to pieces. He was alone,
|
|
and I before him did not know whether I stood on the ground
|
|
or floated in the air. I've been telling you what we said--
|
|
repeating the phrases we pronounced--but what's the good?
|
|
They were common everyday words--the familiar, vague sounds
|
|
exchanged on every waking day of life. But what of that?
|
|
They had behind them, to my mind, the terrific suggestiveness
|
|
of words heard in dreams, of phrases spoken in nightmares.
|
|
Soul! If anybody ever struggled with a soul, I am the man.
|
|
And I wasn't arguing with a lunatic either. Believe me or not,
|
|
his intelligence was perfectly clear--concentrated, it is true,
|
|
upon himself with horrible intensity, yet clear; and therein
|
|
was my only chance--barring, of course, the killing him there
|
|
and then, which wasn't so good, on account of unavoidable noise.
|
|
But his soul was mad. Being alone in the wilderness, it had looked
|
|
within itself, and, by heavens! I tell you, it had gone mad.
|
|
I had--for my sins, I suppose--to go through the ordeal of looking
|
|
into it myself. No eloquence could have been so withering
|
|
to one's belief in mankind as his final burst of sincerity.
|
|
He struggled with himself, too. I saw it--I heard it.
|
|
I saw the inconceivable mystery of a soul that knew no restraint,
|
|
no faith, and no fear, yet struggling blindly with itself.
|
|
I kept my head pretty well; but when I had him at last stretched
|
|
on the couch, I wiped my forehead, while my legs shook under me
|
|
as though I had carried half a ton on my back down that hill.
|
|
And yet I had only supported him, his bony arm clasped round
|
|
my neck--and he was not much heavier than a child.
|
|
|
|
"When next day we left at noon, the crowd, of whose presence behind
|
|
the curtain of trees I had been acutely conscious all the time,
|
|
flowed out of the woods again, filled the clearing, covered the slope
|
|
with a mass of naked, breathing, quivering, bronze bodies.
|
|
I steamed up a bit, then swung down stream, and two thousand eyes followed
|
|
the evolutions of the splashing, thumping, fierce river-demon beating
|
|
the water with its terrible tail and breathing black smoke into the air.
|
|
In front of the first rank, along the river, three men, plastered with
|
|
bright red earth from head to foot, strutted to and fro restlessly.
|
|
When we came abreast again, they faced the river, stamped their feet,
|
|
nodded their horned heads, swayed their scarlet bodies; they shook
|
|
towards the fierce river-demon a bunch of black feathers, a mangy skin
|
|
with a pendent tail--something that looked a dried gourd; they shouted
|
|
periodically together strings of amazing words that resembled no sounds
|
|
of human language; and the deep murmurs of the crowd, interrupted suddenly,
|
|
were like the responses of some satanic litany.
|
|
|
|
"We had carried Kurtz into the pilot-house: there was more air there.
|
|
Lying on the couch, he stared through the open shutter.
|
|
There was an eddy in the mass of human bodies, and the woman
|
|
with helmeted head and tawny cheeks rushed out to the very brink
|
|
of the stream. She put out her hands, shouted something,
|
|
and all that wild mob took up the shout in a roaring chorus
|
|
of articulated, rapid, breathless utterance.
|
|
|
|
"`Do you understand this?' I asked.
|
|
|
|
"He kept on looking out past me with fiery, longing eyes, with a
|
|
mingled expression of wistfulness and hate. He made no answer,
|
|
but I saw a smile, a smile of indefinable meaning, appear on
|
|
his colourless lips that a moment after twitched convulsively.
|
|
`Do I not?' he said slowly, gasping, as if the words had been torn
|
|
out of him by a supernatural power.
|
|
|
|
"I pulled the string of the whistle, and I did this because I
|
|
saw the pilgrims on deck getting out their rifles with an air
|
|
of anticipating a jolly lark. At the sudden screech there was
|
|
a movement of abject terror through that wedged mass of bodies.
|
|
`Don't! don't you frighten them away,' cried some one on
|
|
deck disconsolately. I pulled the string time after time.
|
|
They broke and ran, they leaped, they crouched, they swerved,
|
|
they dodged the flying terror of the sound. The three red
|
|
chaps had fallen flat, face down on the shore, as though they
|
|
had been shot dead. Only the barbarous and superb woman did
|
|
not so much as flinch, and stretched tragically her bare arms
|
|
after us over the sombre and glittering river.
|
|
|
|
"And then that imbecile crowd down on the deck started their little fun,
|
|
and I could see nothing more for smoke.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"The brown current ran swiftly out of the heart of darkness,
|
|
bearing us down towards the sea with twice the speed of our
|
|
upward progress; and Kurtz's life was running swiftly, too, ebbing,
|
|
ebbing out of his heart into the sea of inexorable time.
|
|
The manager was very placid, he had no vital anxieties now,
|
|
he took us both in with a comprehensive and satisfied glance:
|
|
the `affair' had come off as well as could be wished.
|
|
I saw the time approaching when I would be left alone of
|
|
the party of `unsound method.' The pilgrims looked upon me
|
|
with disfavour. I was, so to speak, numbered with the dead.
|
|
It is strange how I accepted this unforeseen partnership,
|
|
this choice of nightmares forced upon me in the tenebrous land
|
|
invaded by these mean and greedy phantoms.
|
|
|
|
"Kurtz discoursed. A voice! a voice! It rang deep to the very last.
|
|
It survived his strength to hide in the magnificent folds of eloquence
|
|
the barren darkness of his heart. Oh, he struggled! he struggled!
|
|
The wastes of his weary brain were haunted by shadowy images now--images of
|
|
wealth and fame revolving obsequiously round his unextinguishable gift
|
|
of noble and lofty expression. My Intended, my station, my career, my ideas--
|
|
these were the subjects for the occasional utterances of elevated sentiments.
|
|
The shade of the original Kurtz frequented the bedside of the hollow sham,
|
|
whose fate it was to be buried presently in the mould of primeval earth.
|
|
But both the diabolic love and the unearthly hate of the mysteries
|
|
it had penetrated fought for the possession of that soul satiated
|
|
with primitive emotions, avid of lying fame, of sham distinction,
|
|
of all the appearances of success and power.
|
|
|
|
"Sometimes he was contemptibly childish. He desired to have
|
|
kings meet him at railway-stations on his return from some
|
|
ghastly Nowhere, where he intended to accomplish great things.
|
|
`You show them you have in you something that is really profitable,
|
|
and then there will be no limits to the recognition of your ability,'
|
|
he would say. `Of course you must take care of the motives--
|
|
right motives--always.' The long reaches that were like one
|
|
and the same reach, monotonous bends that were exactly alike,
|
|
slipped past the steamer with their multitude of secular trees
|
|
looking patiently after this grimy fragment of another world,
|
|
the forerunner of change, of conquest, of trade, of massacres,
|
|
of blessings. I looked ahead--piloting. `Close the shutter,'
|
|
said Kurtz suddenly one day; `I can't bear to look at this.'
|
|
I did so. There was a silence. `Oh, but I will wring your
|
|
heart yet!' he cried at the invisible wilderness.
|
|
|
|
"We broke down--as I had expected--and had to lie up for repairs at the head
|
|
of an island. This delay was the first thing that shook Kurtz's confidence.
|
|
One morning he gave me a packet of papers and a photograph--
|
|
the lot tied together with a shoe-string. `Keep this for me,' he said.
|
|
`This noxious fool' (meaning the manager) `is capable of prying
|
|
into my boxes when I am not looking.' In the afternoon I saw him.
|
|
He was lying on his back with closed eyes, and I withdrew quietly,
|
|
but I heard him mutter, `Live rightly, die, die . . .' I listened.
|
|
There was nothing more. Was he rehearsing some speech in his sleep,
|
|
or was it a fragment of a phrase from some newspaper article?
|
|
He had been writing for the papers and meant to do so again,
|
|
`for the furthering of my ideas. It's a duty.'
|
|
|
|
"His was an impenetrable darkness. I looked at him as you peer
|
|
down at a man who is lying at the bottom of a precipice where the sun
|
|
never shines. But I had not much time to give him, because I was
|
|
helping the engine-driver to take to pieces the leaky cylinders,
|
|
to straighten a bent connecting-rod, and in other such matters.
|
|
I lived in an infernal mess of rust, filings, nuts, bolts, spanners,
|
|
hammers, ratchet-drills--things I abominate, because I don't get
|
|
on with them. I tended the little forge we fortunately had aboard;
|
|
I toiled wearily in a wretched scrap-heap--unless I had the shakes
|
|
too bad to stand.
|
|
|
|
"One evening coming in with a candle I was startled to hear him say
|
|
a little tremulously, `I am lying here in the dark waiting for death.'
|
|
The light was within a foot of his eyes. I forced myself to murmur,
|
|
`Oh, nonsense!' and stood over him as if transfixed.
|
|
|
|
"Anything approaching the change that came over his features I have
|
|
never seen before, and hope never to see again. Oh, I wasn't touched.
|
|
I was fascinated. It was as though a veil had been rent.
|
|
I saw on that ivory face the expression of sombre pride,
|
|
of ruthless power, of craven terror--of an intense and hopeless despair.
|
|
Did he live his life again in every detail of desire, temptation,
|
|
and surrender during that supreme moment of complete knowledge?
|
|
He cried in a whisper at some image, at some vision--he cried out twice,
|
|
a cry that was no more than a breath:
|
|
|
|
"`The horror! The horror!'
|
|
|
|
"I blew the candle out and left the cabin. The pilgrims were dining
|
|
in the mess-room, and I took my place opposite the manager, who lifted
|
|
his eyes to give me a questioning glance, which I successfully ignored.
|
|
He leaned back, serene, with that peculiar smile of his sealing
|
|
the unexpressed depths of his meanness. A continuous shower of small
|
|
flies streamed upon the lamp, upon the cloth, upon our hands and faces.
|
|
Suddenly the manager's boy put his insolent black head in the doorway,
|
|
and said in a tone of scathing contempt:
|
|
|
|
"`Mistah Kurtz--he dead.'
|
|
|
|
"All the pilgrims rushed out to see. I remained, and went on with my dinner.
|
|
I believe I was considered brutally callous. However, I did not eat much.
|
|
There was a lamp in there--light, don't you know--and outside it was
|
|
so beastly, beastly dark. I went no more near the remarkable man who had
|
|
pronounced a judgment upon the adventures of his soul on this earth.
|
|
The voice was gone. What else had been there? But I am of course aware
|
|
that next day the pilgrims buried something in a muddy hole.
|
|
|
|
"And then they very nearly buried me.
|
|
|
|
"However, as you see, I did not go to join Kurtz there and then.
|
|
I did not. I remained to dream the nightmare out to the end, and to show
|
|
my loyalty to Kurtz once more. Destiny. My destiny! Droll thing life is--
|
|
that mysterious arrangement of merciless logic for a futile purpose.
|
|
The most you can hope from it is some knowledge of yourself--that comes
|
|
too late--a crop of unextinguishable regrets. I have wrestled with death.
|
|
It is the most unexciting contest you can imagine. It takes place
|
|
in an impalpable greyness, with nothing underfoot, with nothing around,
|
|
without spectators, without clamour, without glory, without the great desire
|
|
of victory, without the great fear of defeat, in a sickly atmosphere
|
|
of tepid scepticism, without much belief in your own right, and still
|
|
less in that of your adversary. If such is the form of ultimate wisdom,
|
|
then life is a greater riddle than some of us think it to be.
|
|
I was within a hair's breadth of the last opportunity for pronouncement,
|
|
and I found with humiliation that probably I would have nothing to say.
|
|
This is the reason why I affirm that Kurtz was a remarkable man.
|
|
He had something to say. He said it. Since I had peeped over the edge
|
|
myself, I understand better the meaning of his stare, that could not see
|
|
the flame of the candle, but was wide enough to embrace the whole universe,
|
|
piercing enough to penetrate all the hearts that beat in the darkness.
|
|
He had summed up--he had judged. `The horror!' He was a remarkable man.
|
|
After all, this was the expression of some sort of belief; it had candour,
|
|
it had conviction, it had a vibrating note of revolt in its whisper,
|
|
it had the appalling face of a glimpsed truth--the strange commingling
|
|
of desire and hate. And it is not my own extremity I remember best--
|
|
a vision of greyness without form filled with physical pain,
|
|
and a careless contempt for the evanescence of all things--even of this
|
|
pain itself. No! It is his extremity that I seem to have lived through.
|
|
True, he had made that last stride, he had stepped over the edge,
|
|
while I had been permitted to draw back my hesitating foot.
|
|
And perhaps in this is the whole difference; perhaps all the wisdom,
|
|
and all truth, and all sincerity, are just compressed into that
|
|
inappreciable moment of time in which we step over the threshold
|
|
of the invisible. Perhaps! I like to think my summing-up would not
|
|
have been a word of careless contempt. Better his cry--much better.
|
|
It was an affirmation, a moral victory paid for by innumerable defeats,
|
|
by abominable terrors, by abominable satisfactions. But it was a victory!
|
|
That is why I have remained loyal to Kurtz to the last, and even beyond,
|
|
when a long time after I heard once more, not his own voice, but the echo
|
|
of his magnificent eloquence thrown to me from a soul as translucently
|
|
pure as a cliff of crystal.
|
|
|
|
"No, they did not bury me, though there is a period of time which I
|
|
remember mistily, with a shuddering wonder, like a passage through
|
|
some inconceivable world that had no hope in it and no desire.
|
|
I found myself back in the sepulchral city resenting the sight
|
|
of people hurrying through the streets to filch a little money
|
|
from each other, to devour their infamous cookery, to gulp their
|
|
unwholesome beer, to dream their insignificant and silly dreams.
|
|
They trespassed upon my thoughts. They were intruders whose
|
|
knowledge of life was to me an irritating pretence, because I
|
|
felt so sure they could not possibly know the things I knew.
|
|
Their bearing, which was simply the bearing of commonplace
|
|
individuals going about their business in the assurance of
|
|
perfect safety, was offensive to me like the outrageous flauntings
|
|
of folly in the face of a danger it is unable to comprehend.
|
|
I had no particular desire to enlighten them, but I had some
|
|
difficulty in restraining myself from laughing in their faces
|
|
so full of stupid importance. I dareway I was not very well
|
|
at that time. I tottered about the streets--there were
|
|
various affairs to settle--grinning bitterly at perfectly
|
|
respectable persons. I admit my behaviour was inexcusable,
|
|
but then my temperature was seldom normal in these days.
|
|
My dear aunt's endeavours to `nurse up my strength'
|
|
seemed altogether beside the mark. It was not my strength
|
|
that wanted nursing, it was my imagination that wanted soothing.
|
|
I kept the bundle of papers given me by Kurtz, not knowing
|
|
exactly what to do with it. His mother had died lately,
|
|
watched over, as I was told, by his Intended. A clean-shaved man,
|
|
with an official manner and wearing gold-rimmed spectacles,
|
|
called on me one day and made inquiries, at first circuitous,
|
|
afterwards suavely pressing, about what he was pleased to
|
|
denominate certain `documents.' I was not surprised, because I
|
|
had had two rows with the manager on the subject out there.
|
|
I had refused to give up the smallest scrap out of that package,
|
|
and I took the same attitude with the spectacled man.
|
|
He became darkly menacing at last, and with much heat argued that
|
|
the Company had the right to every bit of information about its
|
|
`territories.' And said he, `Mr. Kurtz's knowledge of unexplored
|
|
regions must have been necessarily extensive and peculiar--
|
|
owing to his great abilities and to the deplorable circumstances
|
|
in which he had been placed: therefore--' I assured him
|
|
Mr. Kurtz's knowledge, however extensive, did not bear upon
|
|
the problems of commerce or administration. He invoked then the name
|
|
of science. `It would be an incalculable loss if,' etc., etc.
|
|
I offered him the report on the `Suppression of Savage Customs,'
|
|
with the postscriptum torn off. He took it up eagerly,
|
|
but ended by sniffing at it with an air of contempt.
|
|
`This is not what we had a right to expect,' he remarked.
|
|
`Expect nothing else,' I said. `There are only private letters.'
|
|
He withdrew upon some threat of legal proceedings, and I saw him
|
|
no more; but another fellow, calling himself Kurtz's cousin,
|
|
appeared two days later, and was anxious to hear all the details
|
|
about his dear relative's last moments. Incidentally he gave me
|
|
to understand that Kurtz had been essentially a great musician.
|
|
`There was the making of an immense success,' said the man,
|
|
who was an organist, I believe, with lank grey hair flowing over
|
|
a greasy coat-collar. I had no reason to doubt his statement;
|
|
and to this day I am unable to say what was Kurtz's profession,
|
|
whether he ever had any--which was the greatest of his talents.
|
|
I had taken him for a painter who wrote for the papers,
|
|
or else for a journalist who could paint--but even the cousin
|
|
(who took snuff during the interview) could not tell me what
|
|
he had been--exactly. He was a universal genius--on that point
|
|
I agreed with the old chap, who thereupon blew his nose noisily
|
|
into a large cotton handkerchief and withdrew in senile agitation,
|
|
bearing off some family letters and memoranda without importance.
|
|
Ultimately a journalist anxious to know something of the fate
|
|
of his `dear colleague' turned up. This visitor informed me Kurtz's
|
|
proper sphere ought to have been politics `on the popular side.'
|
|
He had furry straight eyebrows, bristly hair cropped short,
|
|
an eyeglass on a broad ribbon, and, becoming expansive,
|
|
confessed his opinion that Kurtz really couldn't write
|
|
a bit--'but heavens! how that man could talk. He electrified
|
|
large meetings. He had faith--don't you see?--he had the faith.
|
|
He could get himself to believe anything--anything.
|
|
He would have been a splendid leader of an extreme party.'
|
|
`What party?' I asked. `Any party,' answered the other.
|
|
`He was an--an--extremist.' Did I not think so? I assented.
|
|
Did I know, he asked, with a sudden flash of curiosity,
|
|
`what it was that had induced him to go out there?'
|
|
`Yes,' said I, and forthwith handed him the famous Report
|
|
for publication, if he thought fit. He glanced through
|
|
it hurriedly, mumbling all the time, judged `it would do,'
|
|
and took himself off with this plunder.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Thus I was left at last with a slim packet of letters
|
|
and the girl's portrait. She struck me as beautiful--
|
|
I mean she had a beautiful expression. I know that the sunlight
|
|
ycan be made to lie, too, yet one felt that no manipulation
|
|
of light and pose could have conveyed the delicate shade
|
|
of truthfulness upon those features. She seemed ready
|
|
to listen without mental reservation, without suspicion,
|
|
without a thought for herself. I concluded I would go
|
|
and give her back her portrait and those letters myself.
|
|
Curiosity? Yes; and also some other feeling perhaps.
|
|
All that had been Kurtz's had passed out of my hands:
|
|
his soul, his body, his station, his plans, his ivory,
|
|
his career. There remained only his memory and his Intended--
|
|
and I wanted to give that up, too, to the past, in a way--
|
|
to surrender personally all that remained of him with me
|
|
to that oblivion which is the last word of our common fate.
|
|
I don't defend myself. I had no clear perception of what it was I
|
|
really wanted. Perhaps it was an impulse of unconscious loyalty,
|
|
or the fulfilment of one of those ironic necessities that lurk
|
|
in the facts of human existence. I don't know. I can't tell.
|
|
But I went.
|
|
|
|
"I thought his memory was like the other memories of the dead
|
|
that accumulate in every man's life--a vague impress on the brain
|
|
of shadows that had fallen on it in their swift and final passage;
|
|
but before the high and ponderous door, between the tall
|
|
houses of a street as still and decorous as a well-kept
|
|
alley in a cemetery, I had a vision of him on the stretcher,
|
|
opening his mouth voraciously, as if to devour all the earth
|
|
with all its mankind. He lived then before me; he lived as much
|
|
as he had ever lived--a shadow insatiable of splendid appearances,
|
|
of frightful realities; a shadow darker than the shadow of the night,
|
|
and draped nobly in the folds of a gorgeous eloquence.
|
|
The vision seemed to enter the house with me--the stretcher,
|
|
the phantom-bearers, the wild crowd of obedient worshippers,
|
|
the gloom of the forests, the glitter of the reach between
|
|
the murky bends, the beat of the drum, regular and muffled
|
|
like the beating of a heart--the heart of a conquering darkness.
|
|
It was a moment of triumph for the wilderness, an invading
|
|
and vengeful rush which, it seemed to me, I would have
|
|
to keep back alone for the salvation of another soul.
|
|
And the memory of what I had heard him say afar there,
|
|
with the horned shapes stirring at my back, in the glow of fires,
|
|
within the patient woods, those broken phrases came back to me,
|
|
were heard again in their ominous and terrifying simplicity.
|
|
I remembered his abject pleading, his abject threats,
|
|
the colossal scale of his vile desires, the meanness, the torment,
|
|
the tempestuous anguish of his soul. And later on I seemed to see
|
|
his collected languid manner, when he said one day, `This lot
|
|
of ivory now is really mine. The Company did not pay for it.
|
|
I collected it myself at a very great personal risk.
|
|
I am afraid they will try to claim it as theirs though.
|
|
H'm. It is a difficult case. What do you think I ought
|
|
to do--resist? Eh? I want no more than justice.'
|
|
. . . He wanted no more than justice--no more than justice.
|
|
I rang the bell before a mahogany door on the first floor,
|
|
and while I waited he seemed to stare at me out of the glassy panel--
|
|
stare with that wide and immense stare embracing, condemning,
|
|
loathing all the universe. I seemed to hear the whispered cry,
|
|
"The horror! The horror!"
|
|
|
|
"The dusk was falling. I had to wait in a lofty drawing-room
|
|
with three long windows from floor to ceiling that were
|
|
like three luminous and bedraped columns. The bent gilt
|
|
legs and backs of the furniture shone in indistinct curves.
|
|
The tall marble fireplace had a cold and monumental whiteness.
|
|
A grand piano stood massively in a corner; with dark gleams
|
|
on the flat surfaces like a sombre and polished sarcophagus.
|
|
A high door opened--closed. I rose.
|
|
|
|
"She came forward, all in black, with a pale head, floating towards
|
|
me in the dusk. She was in mourning. It was more than a year
|
|
since his death, more than a year since the news came;
|
|
she seemed as though she would remember and mourn forever.
|
|
She took both my hands in hers and murmured, `I had heard you
|
|
were coming.' I noticed she was not very young--I mean not girlish.
|
|
She had a mature capacity for fidelity, for belief, for suffering.
|
|
The room seemed to have grown darker, as if all the sad light
|
|
of the cloudy evening had taken refuge on her forehead.
|
|
This fair hair, this pale visage, this pure brow, seemed surrounded
|
|
by an ashy halo from which the dark eyes looked out at me.
|
|
Their glance was guileless, profound, confident, and trustful.
|
|
She carried her sorrowful head as though she were proud
|
|
of that sorrow, as though she would say, `I--I alone know
|
|
how to mourn for him as he deserves.' But while we were still
|
|
shaking hands, such a look of awful desolation came upon her face
|
|
that I perceived she was one of those creatures that are not
|
|
the playthings of Time. For her he had died only yesterday.
|
|
And, by Jove! the impression was so powerful that for me, too,
|
|
he seemed to have died only yesterday--nay, this very minute.
|
|
I saw her and him in the same instant of time--his death and
|
|
her sorrow--I saw her sorrow in the very moment of his death.
|
|
Do you understand? I saw them together--I heard them together.
|
|
She had said, with a deep catch of the breath, `I have survived'
|
|
while my strained ears seemed to hear distinctly, mingled with
|
|
her tone of despairing regret, the summing up whisper of his
|
|
eternal condemnation. I asked myself what I was doing there,
|
|
with a sensation of panic in my heart as though I had
|
|
blundered into a place of cruel and absurd mysteries not fit
|
|
for a human being to behold. She motioned me to a chair.
|
|
We sat down. I laid the packet gently on the little table,
|
|
and she put her hand over it. . . . `You knew him well,'
|
|
she murmured, after a moment of mourning silence.
|
|
|
|
"`Intimacy grows quickly out there,' I said. `I knew him as well as it
|
|
is possible for one man to know another.'
|
|
|
|
"`And you admired him,' she said. `It was impossible to know him
|
|
and not to admire him. Was it?'
|
|
|
|
"`He was a remarkable man,' I said, unsteadily. Then before the appealing
|
|
fixity of her gaze, that seemed to watch for more words on my lips, I went on,
|
|
`It was impossible not to--'
|
|
|
|
"`Love him,' she finished eagerly, silencing me into an appalled dumbness.
|
|
`How true! how true! But when you think that no one knew him so well as I!
|
|
I had all his noble confidence. I knew him best.'
|
|
|
|
"`You knew him best,' I repeated. And perhaps she did.
|
|
But with every word spoken the room was growing darker,
|
|
and only her forehead, smooth and white, remained illumined
|
|
by the inextinguishable light of belief and love.
|
|
|
|
"`You were his friend,' she went on. `His friend,' she repeated,
|
|
a little louder. `You must have been, if he had given you this,
|
|
and sent you to me. I feel I can speak to you--and oh!
|
|
I must speak. I want you--you who have heard his last words--
|
|
to know I have been worthy of him. . . . It is not pride. . . . Yes!
|
|
I am proud to know I understood him better than any one on earth--
|
|
he told me so himself. And since his mother died I have had no one--
|
|
no one--to--to--'
|
|
|
|
"I listened. The darkness deepened. I was not even sure
|
|
whether he had given me the right bundle. I rather suspect
|
|
he wanted me to take care of another batch of his papers which,
|
|
after his death, I saw the manager examining under the lamp.
|
|
And the girl talked, easing her pain in the certitude of my sympathy;
|
|
she talked as thirsty men drink. I had heard that her
|
|
engagement with Kurtz had been disapproved by her people.
|
|
He wasn't rich enough or something. And indeed I don't
|
|
know whether he had not been a pauper all his life.
|
|
He had given me some reason to infer that it was his impatience
|
|
of comparative poverty that drove him out there.
|
|
|
|
"`. . . Who was not his friend who had heard him speak once?'
|
|
she was saying. `He drew men towards him by what was best in them.'
|
|
She looked at me with intensity. `It is the gift of the great,'
|
|
she went on, and the sound of her low voice seemed to have
|
|
the accompaniment of all the other sounds, full of mystery,
|
|
desolation, and sorrow, I had ever heard--the ripple of the river,
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|
the soughing of the trees swayed by the wind, the murmurs of the crowds,
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the faint ring of incomprehensible words cried from afar, the whisper
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of a voice speaking from beyond the threshold of an eternal darkness.
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`But you have heard him! You know!' she cried.
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"`Yes, I know,' I said with something like despair in my heart,
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but bowing my head before the faith that was in her, before that great
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and saving illusion that shone with an unearthly glow in the darkness,
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in the triumphant darkness from which I could not have defended her--
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from which I could not even defend myself.
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"`What a loss to me--to us!'--she corrected herself with
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beautiful generosity; then added in a murmur, `To the world.'
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By the last gleams of twilight I could see the glitter of her eyes,
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full of tears--of tears that would not fall.
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"`I have been very happy--very fortunate--very proud,'
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she went on. `Too fortunate. Too happy for a little while.
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And now I am unhappy for--for life.'
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"She stood up; her fair hair seemed to catch all the remaining light
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in a glimmer of gold. I rose, too.
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"`And of all this,' she went on mournfully, `of all
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his promise, and of all his greatness, of his generous mind,
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of his noble heart, nothing remains--nothing but a memory.
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You and I--'
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"`We shall always remember him,' I said hastily.
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"`No!' she cried. `It is impossible that all this should be lost--
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that such a life should be sacrificed to leave nothing--but sorrow.
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You know what vast plans he had. I knew of them, too--I could not
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perhaps understand--but others knew of them. Something must remain.
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His words, at least, have not died.'
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"`His words will remain,' I said.
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"`And his example,' she whispered to herself. `Men looked up to him--
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his goodness shone in every act. His example--'
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"`True,' I said; `his example, too. Yes, his example.
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I forgot that.'
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"But I do not. I cannot--I cannot believe--not yet.
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I cannot believe that I shall never see him again, that nobody
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will see him again, never, never, never.'
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"She put out her arms as if after a retreating figure, stretching them
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back and with clasped pale hands across the fading and narrow sheen
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of the window. Never see him! I saw him clearly enough then.
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I shall see this eloquent phantom as long as I live, and I shall see her,
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too, a tragic and familiar Shade, resembling in this gesture another one,
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tragic also, and bedecked with powerless charms, stretching bare brown
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arms over the glitter of the infernal stream, the stream of darkness.
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She said suddenly very low, `He died as he lived.'
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"`His end,' said I, with dull anger stirring in me, `was in every
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way worthy of his life.'
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"`And I was not with him,' she murmured. My anger subsided
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before a feeling of infinite pity.
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"`Everything that could be done--' I mumbled.
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"`Ah, but I believed in him more than any one on earth--more than
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his own mother, more than--himself. He needed me! Me! I would
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have treasured every sigh, every word, every sign, every glance.'
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"I felt like a chill grip on my chest. `Don't,' I said,
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in a muffled voice.
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"`Forgive me. I--I have mourned so long in silence--in silence.
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. . . You were with him--to the last? I think of his loneliness.
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Nobody near to understand him as I would have understood.
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Perhaps no one to hear. . . .'
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"`To the very end,' I said, shakily. `I heard his very last words.
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. . .' I stopped in a fright.
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"`Repeat them,' she murmured in a heart-broken tone.
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`I want--I want--something--something--to--to live with.'
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"I was on the point of crying at her, `Don't you hear them?'
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The dusk was repeating them in a persistent whisper all around us,
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in a whisper that seemed to swell menacingly like the first whisper
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of a rising wind. `The horror! The horror!'
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"`His last word--to live with,' she insisted. `Don't you understand I
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loved him--I loved him--I loved him!'
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"I pulled myself together and spoke slowly.
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"`The last word he pronounced was--your name.'
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"I heard a light sigh and then my heart stood still,
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stopped dead short by an exulting and terrible cry,
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by the cry of inconceivable triumph and of unspeakable pain.
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`I knew it--I was sure!' . . . She knew. She was sure.
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I heard her weeping; she had hidden her face in her hands.
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It seemed to me that the house would collapse before I
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could escape, that the heavens would fall upon my head.
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But nothing happened. The heavens do not fall for such a trifle.
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Would they have fallen, I wonder, if I had rendered Kurtz
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that justice which was his due? Hadn't he said he wanted
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only justice? But I couldn't. I could not tell her.
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It would have been too dark--too dark altogether.
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. . ."
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Marlow ceased, and sat apart, indistinct and silent,
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in the pose of a meditating Buddha. Nobody moved for a time.
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"We have lost the first of the ebb," said the Director suddenly.
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I raised my head. The offing was barred by a black bank
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of clouds, and the tranquil waterway leading to the uttermost
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ends of the earth flowed sombre under an overcast sky--
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seemed to lead into the heart of an immense darkness.
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End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Heart of Darkness
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