—1900—OR, THE LAST PRESIDENT
—1900—
OR,
THE LAST PRESIDENT
BY
INGERSOLL LOCKWOOD,
Of the New York Bar.
Copyright, 1896, by INGERSOLL LOCKWOOD.
The Trade Supplied by
THE AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY,
New York.
The Chicago Platform assumes, in fact, the form of a
revolutionary propaganda. It embodies a menace of national
disintegration and destruction.
GARRET A. HOBART.
CHAPTER I.
That was a terrible night for the great City of New York—the night of
Tuesday, November 3rd, 1896. The city staggered under the blow like a
huge ocean liner which plunges, full speed, with terrific crash into a
mighty iceberg, and recoils shattered and trembling like an aspen.
The people were gathered, light-hearted and confident, at the evening
meal, when the news burst upon them. It was like a thunder bolt out of
an azure sky: “Altgeld holds Illinois hard and fast in the Democratic
line. This elects Bryan President of the United States!”
Strange to say, the people in the upper portion of the city made no
movement to rush out of their houses and collect in the public squares,
although the night was clear and beautiful. They sat as if paralyzed
with a nameless dread, and when they conversed it was with bated breath
and throbbing hearts.
In less than half an hour, mounted policemen dashed through the streets
calling out: “Keep within your houses; close your doors and barricade
them. The entire East side is in a state of uproar. Mobs of vast size
are organizing under the lead of Anarchists and Socialists, and threaten
to plunder and despoil the houses of the rich who have wronged and
oppressed them for so many years. Keep within doors. Extinguish all
lights.”
Happily, Governor Morton was in town, and although a deeper pallor
overcame the ashen hue of age as he spoke, yet there was no tremor in
his voice: “Let the Seventh, Twenty-second and Seventy-first regiments
be ordered under arms.” In a few moments hundreds of messengers could be
heard racing through the silent streets, summoning the members of these
regiments to their Armories.
Slowly, but with astonishing nerve and steadiness, the mobs pushed the
police northward, and although the force stood the onslaught with
magnificent courage, yet beaten back, the dark masses of infuriated
beings surged up again with renewed fury and strength. Will the troops
be in time to save the city? was the whispered inquiry among the knots
of police officials who were directing the movements of their men.
About nine o’clock, with deafening outcries, the mob, like a four-headed
monster breathing fire and flame, raced, tore, burst, raged into Union
Square.
The police force was exhausted, but their front was still like a wall of
stone, save that it was movable. The mob crowded it steadily to the
north, while the air quivered and was rent with mad vociferations of the
victors: “Bryan is elected! Bryan is elected! Our day has come at last.
Down with our oppressors! Death to the rich man! Death to the gold bugs!
Death to the capitalists! Give us back the money you have ground out of
us. Give us back the marrow of our bones which you have used to grease
the wheels of your chariots.”
The police force was now almost helpless. The men still used their
sticks, but the blows were ineffectual, and only served to increase the
rage of the vast hordes now advancing upon Madison Square.
The Fifth Avenue Hotel will be the first to feel the fury of the mob.
Would the troops be in time to save it?
A half cheer, a half cry of joy goes up. It is inarticulate. Men draw a
long breath; women drop upon their knees and strain their eyes; they can
hear something, but they cannot see as yet, for the gas houses and
electric plants had been destroyed by the mob early in the evening. They
preferred to fight in the dark, or by the flames of rich men’s abodes.
Again a cheer goes up, louder and clearer this time, followed by cries
of “They’re coming, they’re coming.”
Yes, they were coming—the Twenty-second down Broadway, the Seventh down
Madison avenue, both on the double quick.
In a moment or so there were a few bugle calls, and a few spoken
commands rang out clear and sharp; and then the two regiments stretched
across the entire square, literally from wall to wall, in line of
battle. The mob was upon them. Would this slender line of troops, could
it hold such a mighty mass of men in check?
The answer was a deafening discharge of firearms, a terrific crack, such
as some thunder bolts make when they explode. A wall of fire blazed
across the Square. Again and again it blazed forth. The mob halted,
stood fast, wavered, fell back, advanced again. At that moment there
came a rattle as of huge knives in the distance. It was the gallant
Seventy-first charging up Twenty-third street, and taking the mob on the
flank. They came on like a wall of iron, bristling with blades of steel.
There were no outcries, no cheers from the regiment. It dealt out death
in silence, save when two bayonets crossed and clashed in bearing down
some doubly-vigorous foe.
As the bells rang out midnight, the last remnants of the mob were driven
to cover, but the wheels of the dead wagons rattled till daybreak.
And then the aged Governor, in response to the Mayor’s “Thank God, we’ve
saved the city!” made answer:
“Aye, but the Republic——.”
CHAPTER II.
Great as has been the world’s wonder at the uprising of Mr. Bryan’s
“struggling masses” in the city by the sea, and the narrow escape of its
magnificent homes from fire and brand, yet greater still was the
wonderment when the news was flashed across the land that Chicago did
not stand in need of a single Federal soldier.
“Chicago is mad, but it is the madness of joy. Chicago is in the hands
of a mob, but it is a mob made up of her own people—noisy, rude and
boisterous, the natural exultation of a suddenly enfranchised class; but
bent on no other mischief than glorying over the villainous and
self-seeking souls who have ground the faces of the poor and turned the
pitiless screw of social and political power into the hearts of the
‘common people’ until its last thread had been reached, and despair
pressed its lupine visage hard against the door of the laboring man.”
And yet, at this moment when the night air quivered with the mad
vociferations of the “common people,” that the Lord had been good to
them; that the wicked money-changers had been driven from the temple,
that the stony-hearted usurers were beaten at last, that the “People’s
William” was at the helm now, that peace and plenty would in a few moons
come back to the poor man’s cottage, that Silver was King, aye, King at
last, the world still went wondering why red-eyed anarchy, as she stood
in Haymarket Square, with thin arms aloft, with wild mien and wilder
gesticulation, drew no bomb of dynamite from her bosom, to hurl at the
hated minions of the law who were silent spectators of this delirium of
popular joy.
Why was it thus? Look and you shall know why white robed peace kept step
with this turbulent band and turned its thought from red handed pillage.
He was there. The master spirit to hold them in leash. He, and he alone,
had lifted Bryan to his great eminence. Without these twenty-four
electoral votes, Bryan had been doomed, hopelessly doomed. He, and he
alone, held the great Commonwealth of the West hard and fast in the
Democratic line; hence he came as conqueror, as King-maker, and the very
walls of the sky-touching edifices trembled as he was dragged through
the crowded streets by this orderly mob, and ten times ten thousand of
his creatures bellowed his name and shook their hats aloft in mad
exultation:
“You’re our Saviour, you’ve cleaned the Temple of Liberty of its foul
horde of usurers. We salute you. We call you King-maker. Bryan shall
call you Master too. You shall have your reward. You shall stand behind
the throne. Your wisdom shall make us whole. You shall purge the land of
this unlawful crowd of money-lenders. You shall save the Republic. You
are greater than Washington. You’re a better friend of ours than
Lincoln. You’ll do more for us than Grant. We’re your slaves. We salute
you. We thank you. We bless you. Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!”
But yet this vast throng of tamed monsters, this mighty mob of
momentarily good-natured haters of established order, broke away from
the master’s control for a few brief moments, and dipped their hands in
the enemy’s blood. The deed was swift as it was terrible. There were but
four of them, unarmed, on pleasure bent. At sight of these men, a
thousand throats belched out a deep and awful growl of hatred. They were
brave men, and backed against the wall to die like brave men, stricken
down, beaten, torn, trampled, dragged, it was quick work. They had faced
howling savages in the far West, painted monsters in human form, but
never had they heard such yells leave the throats of men; and so they
died, four brave men, clad in the blue livery of the Republic, whose
only crime was that some months back, against the solemn protest of the
Master, their comrades had set foot on the soil of the commonwealth, and
saved the Metropolis of the West from the hands of this same mob.
And so Chicago celebrated the election of the new President who was to
free the land from the grasp of the money-lenders, and undo the bad
business of years of unholy union between barterers and sellers of human
toil and the law makers of the land.
Throughout the length and breadth of the South, and beyond the Great
Divide, the news struck hamlet and village like the glad tidings of a
new evangel, almost as potent for human happiness as the heavenly
message of two thousand years ago. Bells rang out in joyful acclaim, and
the very stars trembled at the telling, and the telling over and over of
what had been done for the poor man by his brethren of the North, and
around the blazing pine knots of the Southern cabin and in front of the
mining camp fires of the Far West, the cry went up: “Silver is King!
Silver is King!” Black palms and white were clasped in this strange
love-feast, and the dark skinned grand child no longer felt the sting of
the lash on his sire’s shoulder. All was peace and good will, for the
people were at last victorious over their enemies who had taxed and
tithed them into a very living death. Now the laborer would not only be
worthy of his hire, but it would be paid to him in a people’s dollar,
for the people’s good, and now the rich man’s coffers would be made to
yield up their ill-gotten gain, and the sun would look upon this broad
and fair land, and find no man without a market for the product of his
labors. Henceforth, the rich man should, as was right and proper, pay a
royal sum for the privilege of his happiness, and take the nation’s
taxes on his broad shoulders, where they belong.
CHAPTER III.
The pens of many writers would not suffice to describe with anything
like historical fullness and precision, the wild scenes of excitement
which, on the morning after election day, burst forth on the floors of
the various exchanges throughout the Union. The larger and more
important the money centre, the deeper, blacker and heavier the despair
which sank upon them after the violent ebullitions of protest, defiance
and execration had subsided. With some, it seemed that visions of their
swift but sure impoverishment only served to transform the dark and
dismal drama of revolution and disintegration into a side-splitting
farce, and they greeted the prospective loss of their millions with loud
guffaws and indescribable antics of horseplay and unseemly mirth.
As the day wore on, the news became worse and worse. It was only too
apparent that the House of Representatives of the Fifty-fifth Congress
would be controlled by the combined vote of the Populists and Free
Silver men, while the wild joy with which the entire South welcomed the
election of Bryan and Sewall left little doubt in the minds of the
Northern people that the Southern Senators would, to a man, range
themselves on the Administration side of the great conflict into which
the Republic was soon to be precipitated. Add to these the twenty
Senators of the Free Silver States of the North, and the new President
would have the Congress of the Republic at his back. There would be
nothing to stand between him and the realization of those schemes which
an exuberant fancy, untamed by the hand of experience, and scornful of
the leading-strings of wisdom, can conjure up.
Did we say nothing? Nay, not so; for the Supreme Court was still there.
And yet Justice Field had come fully up to the eightieth milestone in
the journey of life and Justice Gray was nearly seventy, while one or
two other members of this High Court of Judicature held to their lives
with feeble grasp. Even in due and orderly course of events, why might
there not come vacancies and then?…
In spite of the nameless dread that rested upon so many of our people,
and chilled the very blood of the country’s industries, the new year ’97
came hopefully, serenely, almost defiantly in. There was an
indescribable something in the air, a spirit of political devil-me-care,
a feeling that the old order had passed away and that the Republic had
entered into the womb of Time and been born again. This sentiment began
to give outward and visible signs of its existence and growth in the
remote agricultural districts of the South and Far West. They threw
aside their working implements, loitered about, gathered in groups and
the words Washington, White House, Silver, Bryan, Offices, Two for One,
the South’s Day, Reign of the Common People, Taxes, Incomes, Year of
Jubilee, Free Coinage, Wall Street, Altgeld, Tillman, Peffer, Coxey,
were whispered in a mysterious way with head noddings and pursing up of
mouths.
As January wore away and February, slipping by, brought Bryan’s
Inauguration nearer and nearer, the groups melted into groups, and it
was only too apparent that from a dozen different points in the South
and North West “Coxey Armies” were forming for an advance on Washington.
In some instances they were well clad and well provisioned; in others,
they were little better than great bands of hungry and restless men,
demoralized by idleness and wrought up to a strange degree of mental
excitement by the extravagant harangues of their leaders, who were
animated with but one thought, namely, to make use of these vast crowds
of Silver Pilgrims, as they called themselves, to back up their claims
for public office.
These crowds of deluded people were well named “Silver Pilgrims,” for
hundreds of them carried in hempen bags, pieces of silverware, in
ninety-nine cases of a hundred, plated stuff of little value, which
unscrupulous dealers and peddlers had palmed off upon them as sterling,
with the promises that once in Washington, the United States Mint would
coin their metal into “Bryan Dollars” giving “two for one” in payment
for it.
While these motley “armies” marched upon the capitol of the Republic,
the railway trains night and day brought vast crowds of “new men,”
politicians of low degree, men out of employment, drunken and
disgruntled mechanics, farmer’s sons, to seek their fortunes under the
Reign of the People, heelers and hangers-on of ward bosses, old men who
had not tasted office for thirty years and more, all inspired by Mr.
Bryan’s declaration that “The American people are not in favor of life
tenure in the Civil Service, that a permanent office holding class is
not in harmony with our institutions, that a fixed term in appointive
offices would open the public service to a larger number of citizens,
without impairing its efficiency,” all bearing new besoms in their hands
or across their shoulders, each and every one of them supremely
confident that in the distribution of the spoils something would surely
fall to his share, since they were the “Common People” who were so dear
to Mr. Bryan, and who had made him President in the very face of the
prodigious opposition of the rich men, whose coffers had been thrown
wide open all to no purpose, and in spite too of the satanic and truly
devilish power of that hell upon earth known as Wall Street, which had
sweated gold in vain in its desperate efforts to fasten the chains of
trusts and the claws of soulless monsters known as corporations upon
these very “Common People,” soon to march in triumph before the silver
chariot of the young Conqueror from the West.
CHAPTER IV.
There had been a strange prophecy put forth by some one, and it had made
its way into the daily journals, and had been laughingly or seriously
commented upon, according to the political tone of the paper, or the
passing humor of the writer, that the 4th of March, 1897, would never
dawn upon the American people. There was something very curious and
uncanny about the prediction, and what actually happened was not
qualified to loosen the fearful tension of public anxiety, for the day
literally and truly never dawned upon the City of Washington, and well
deserves its historical name, the “Dawnless Day.” At six o’clock, the
hour of daybreak, such an impenetrable pall of clouds overhung the city
that there came no signs of day. The gathering crowds could plainly hear
the plaintive cries and lamentations put up in the negro quarters of the
city. Not until nearly nine o’clock did the light cease to “shine in
darkness” and the darkness begin to comprehend it.
But although it was a cheerless gray day, even at high noon, its
heaviness set no weight upon the spirits of the jubilant tens of
thousands which completely filled the city and its public parks, and ran
over into camps and hastily improvised shelters outside the city limits.
Not until the day previous had the President announced the names of
those selected for his Cabinet. The South and Far West were fairly
beside themselves with joy, for there had been from their standpoint
ugly rumors abroad for several days. It had even been hinted that Bryan
had surrendered to the “money-changers,” and that the selection of his
constitutional advisers would prove him recreant to the glorious cause
of popular government, and that the Reign of the Common People would
remain but a dream of the “struggling masses.”
But these apprehensions were short lived. The young President stood firm
and fast on the platform of the parties which had raised him to his
proud eminence. And what better proof of his thorough belief in himself
and in his mission could he have given than the following:
Secretary of State—William M. Stewart, of Nevada.
Secretary of Treasury—Richard P. Bland, of Missouri.
Secretary of War—John P. Altgeld, of Illinois.
Attorney General—Roger Q. Mills, of Texas.
Postmaster General—Henry George, of New York.
Secretary Navy—John Gary Evans, of South Carolina.
Secretary Interior—William A. Peffer, of Kansas.
Secretary Agriculture—Lafe Pence, of Colorado.
The first thing that flashed across the minds of many upon glancing over
this list of names was the omission therefrom of Tillman’s. What did it
mean? Could the young President have quarreled with his best friend, his
most powerful coadjutor? But the wiser ones only shook their heads and
made answer that it was Tillman’s hand that filled the blank for
Secretary of the Navy, left there by the new ruler after the people’s
own heart. Evans was but a creation of this great Commoner of the South,
an image graven with his hands.
The inaugural address was not a disappointment to those who had come to
hear it. It was like the man who delivered it—bold, outspoken,
unmistakable in its terms, promising much, impatient of precedent,
reckless of result; a double confirmation that this was to be the Reign
of the Common People, that much should be unmade and much made over, and
no matter how the rich man might cry out in anger or amazement, the
nation must march on to the fulfillment of a higher and nobler mission
than the impoverishment and degradation of the millions for the
enrichment and elevation of the few.
Scarcely had the young President—his large eyes filled with a strange
light, and his smooth, hairless visage radiant as a cloudless sky, his
wife’s arm twined around his, and their hands linked in those of their
children—passed within the lofty portal of the White House, than he
threw himself into a chair, and seizing a sheet of official paper penned
the following order, and directed its immediate promulgation:
EXECUTIVE MANSION, WASHINGTON, D. C., March 4th, 1897.
Executive Order No. 1.
In order that there may be immediate relief in the terrible financial
depression now weighing upon our beloved country, consequent upon and
resulting from the unlawful combination of capitalists and money-lenders
both in this Republic and in England, and that the ruinous and
inevitable progress toward a universal gold standard may be stayed, the
President orders and directs the immediate abandonment of the so-called
“gold reserve,” and that on and after the promulgation of this order,
the gold and silver standard of the Constitution be resumed and strictly
maintained in all the business transactions of the Government.
It was two o’clock in the afternoon when news of this now world-famous
Executive Order was flashed into the great banking centres of the
country. Its effect in Wall street beggars description. On the floor of
the Stock Exchange men yelled and shrieked like painted savages, and, in
their mad struggles, tore and trampled each other. Many dropped in
fainting fits, or fell exhausted from their wild and senseless efforts
to say what none would listen to. Ashen pallor crept over the faces of
some, while the blood threatened to burst the swollen arteries that
spread in purple network over the brows of others. When silence came at
last, it was a silence broken by sobs and groans. Some wept, while
others stood dumb-stricken as if it was all a bad dream, and they were
awaiting the return of their poor distraught senses to set them right
again. Ambulances were hastily summoned and fainting and exhausted forms
were borne through hushed and whispering masses wedged into Wall street,
to be whirled away uptown to their residences, there to come into full
possession of their senses only to cry out in their anguish that ruin,
black ruin, stared them in the face if this news from Washington should
prove true.
CHAPTER V.
By proclamation bearing date the 5th day of March 1897, the President
summoned both houses of Congress to convene in extraordinary session
“for the consideration of the general welfare of the United States, and
to take such action as might seem necessary and expedient to them on
certain measures which he should recommend to their consideration,
measures of vital import to the welfare and happiness of the people, if
not to the very existence of the Union and the continuance of their
enjoyment of the liberties achieved by the fathers of the Republic.”
While awaiting the day set for the coming together of the Congress, the
“Great Friend of the Common People” came suddenly face to face with the
first serious business of his Administration. Fifty thousand people
tramped the streets of Washington without bread or shelter. Many had
come in quest of office, lured on by the solemn pronouncement of their
candidate that there should be at once a clean sweep of these barnacles
of the ship of State and so complete had been their confidence in their
glorious young captain, that they had literally failed to provide
themselves with either “purse or script or shoes,” and now stood hungry
and footsore at his gate, begging for a crust of bread. But most of
those making up this vast multitude were “the unarmed warriors of
peaceful armies” like the one once led by the redoubtable Coxey, decoyed
from farm and hamlet and plantation by some nameless longing to “go
forth” to stand in the presence of this new Savior of Society, whose
advent to power was to bring them “double pay” for all their toil. While
on the march all had gone well, for their brethren had opened their
hearts and their houses as these “unarmed warriors” had marched with
flying banners and loud huzzas through the various towns on the route.
But now the holiday was over, they were far from their homes, they were
in danger of perishing from hunger. What was to be done? “They are our
people,” said the President, “their love of country has undone them; the
nation must not let them suffer, for they are its hope and its shield in
the hour of war, and its glory and its refuge in times of peace. They
are the common people for whose benefit this Republic was established.
The Kings of the earth may desert them; I never shall.” The Secretary of
War was directed to establish camps in the parks and suburbs of the city
and to issue rations and blankets to these luckless wanderers until the
Government could provide for their transportation back to their homes.
On Monday, March 15th, the President received the usual notification
from both houses of Congress, that they had organized and were ready for
the consideration of such measures as he might choose to recommend for
their action.
The first act to pass both houses and receive the signature of the
President, was an Act repealing the Act of 1873, and opening the mints
of the United States to the free coinage of silver at the ratio of
sixteen to one, with gold, and establishing branch mints in the cities
of Denver, Omaha, Chicago, Kansas City, Spokane, Los Angeles, Charleston
and Mobile.
The announcement that reparation had thus been made to the people for
the “Crime of 1873” was received with loud cheering on the floors and in
the galleries of both houses.
And the Great North heard these cheers and trembled.
The next measure of great public import brought before the House was an
act to provide additional revenue by levying a tax upon the incomes,
substantially on the lines laid down by the legislation of 1894. The
Republican Senators strove to make some show of resistance to this
measure, but so solid were the administration ranks, that they only
succeeded in delaying it for a few weeks. This first skirmish with the
enemy, however, brought the President and his followers to a realizing
sense that not only must the Senate be shorn of its power to block the
“new movement of regeneration and reform” by the adoption of rules
cutting off prolonged debate, but that the “new dispensation” must at
once proceed to increase its senatorial representation, for who could
tell what moment some one of the Northern Silver States might not slip
away from its allegiance to the “Friend of the Common People.”
The introduction of a bill repealing the various Civil Service acts
passed for the alleged purpose of “regulating and improving the Civil
Service of the United States,” and of another repealing the various acts
establishing National Banks, and substituting United States notes for
all national bank notes based upon interest bearing bonds, opened the
eyes of the Republican opposition to the fact that the President and his
party were possessed of the courage of their convictions, and were
determined, come good report or evil report, to wipe all conflicting
legislation from the statute books. The battle in the Senate now took on
a spirit of extreme acrimony; scenes not witnessed since the days of
Slavery, were of daily occurrence on the floors of both the House and
the Senate. Threats of secession came openly from the North only to be
met with the jeers and laughter of the silver and populist members.
“We’re in the saddle at last,” exclaimed a Southern member, “and we
intend to ride on to victory!”
The introduction of bills for the admission of New Mexico and Arizona,
and for the division of Texas into two States to be called East Texas
and West Texas, although each of these measures was strictly within the
letter of the Constitution, fell among the members of the Republican
opposition like a torch in a house of tinder. There was fire at once,
and the blaze of party spirit leapt to such dangerous heights that the
whole nation looked on in consternation. Was the Union about to go up in
a great conflagration and leave behind it but the ashes and charred
pedestals of its greatness?
“We are the people” wrote the President in lines of dignity and
calmness. “We are the people and what we do, we do under the holy
sanction of law, and there is no one so powerful or so bold as to dare
to say we do not do well in lifting off the nation’s shoulders the
grievous and unlawful burdens which preceding Congresses have placed
upon them.”
And so the “Long Session” of the fifty-fifth Congress was entered upon,
fated to last through summer heat and autumn chill, and until winter
came again and the Constitution itself set limits to its lasting. And
when that day came, and its speaker, amid a wild tumult of cheers, arose
to declare it ended not by their will, but by the law of the land, he
said: “The glorious revolution is in its brightest bud. Since the
President called upon us to convene in last March, we have with the
strong blade of public indignation, and with a full sense of our
responsibility, erased from the statute books the marks of our country’s
shame and our people’s subjugation. Liberty can not die. There remains
much to be done in the way of building up. Let us take heart and push
on. On Monday, the regular session of this Congress will begin. We must
greet our loved ones from the distance. We have no time to go home and
embrace them.”
CHAPTER VI.
When a Republican member of the House arose to move the usual
adjournment for the holidays, there was a storm of hisses and cries of
“No, no!”
Said the leader of the House, amid deafening plaudits: “We are the
servants of the people. Our work is not yet complete. There must be no
play for us while coal barons stand with their feet on the ashes of the
poor man’s hearthstone, and weeds and thorns cumber the fields of the
farmer for lack of money to buy seed and implements. There must be no
play for us while railway magnates press from the pockets of the
laboring man six and eight per cent. return on thrice watered stocks,
and rapacious landlords, enriched by inheritance, grind the faces of the
poor. There must be no play for us while enemies of the human kind are,
by means of trust and combination and ‘corners,’ engaged in drawing
their unholy millions from the very life-blood of the nation, paralyzing
its best efforts and setting the blight of intemperance and indifference
upon it, by making life but one long struggle for existence, without a
gleam of rest and comfort in old age. No, Mr. Speaker, we must not
adjourn, but by our efforts in these halls of legislation let the nation
know that we are at work for its emancipation, and by these means let
the monopolists and money-changers be brought to a realizing sense that
the Reign of the Common People has really been entered upon, and then
the bells will ring out a happier, gladder New Year than has ever dawned
upon this Republic.”
The opposition fairly quailed before the vigor and earnestness of the
“new dispensation.” There were soon before the House and pressed well on
toward final passage a number of important measures calculated to awaken
an intense feeling of enthusiasm among the working classes. Among these
was an Act establishing a Loan Commission for the loaning of certain
moneys of the United States to Farmers and Planters without interest; an
Act for the establishment of a permanent Department of Public Works, its
head to be styled Secretary of Public Works, rank as a cabinet officer,
and supervise the expenditure of all public moneys for the construction
of public buildings and the improvement of rivers and harbors; an Act
making it a felony, punishable with imprisonment for life, for any
citizen or combination of citizens to enter into any trust or agreement
to stifle, suppress or in any way interfere with full, open and fair
competition in trade and manufacture among the States, or to make use of
any inter-State railroads, waterways or canals for the transportation of
any food products or goods, wares or merchandise which may have been
“cornered,” stored or withheld with a view to enhance the value thereof;
and, most important of all, a preliminary Act having for its object the
appointment of Commissioners for the purchase by the Federal Government
of all inter-State railway and telegraph lines, and in the meantime the
strict regulation of all fares and charges by a Government Commission,
from whose established schedules there shall be no appeal.
On Washington’s Birthday the President issued an Address of
Congratulation to the People of the United States, from which the
following is extracted:
“The malicious prognostications of our political opponents have proven
themselves to be but empty sound and fury. Although not quite one year
has elapsed since I, agreeable to your mandate, restored to you the
money of the Constitution, yet from every section of our Union comes the
glad tidings of renewed activity and prosperity. The workingman no
longer sits cold and hungry beside a cheerless hearthstone; the farmer
has taken heart and resumed work; the wheels of the factory are in
motion again; the shops and stores of the legitimate dealer and trader
are full of bustle and action. There is content everywhere, save in the
counting-room of the money-changer, for which thank God and the common
people of this Republic. The free coinage of that metal which the
Creator, in His wisdom, stored with so lavish a hand in the subterranean
vaults of our glorious mountain ranges, has proven a rich and manifold
blessing for our people. It is in every sense of the word the ‘people’s
money,’ and already the envious world looks on in amazement that we have
shown our ability to do without ‘foreign cooperation.’ The Congress of
our Republic has been in almost continuous session since I took my oath
of office, and the administration members deserve your deepest and most
heartfelt gratitude. They are rearing for themselves a monument more
lasting than chiseled bronze or polished monolith. They knew no rest,
they asked for no respite from their labors until, at my earnest
request, they adjourned over to join their fellow citizens in the
observance of this sacred anniversary.
“Fellow citizens, remember the bonds which a wicked and selfish class of
usurers and speculators fastened upon you, and on this anniversary of
the birth of the Father of our Country, let us renew our pledges to undo
completely and absolutely their infamous work, and in public assembly
and family circle, let us by new vows confirm our love of right and
justice, so that the great gain may not slip away from us, but go on
increasing so long as the statute books contain a single trace of the
record of our enslavement. As for me, I have but one ambition, and that
is to deserve so well of you that when you come to write my epitaph, you
set beneath my name the single line:
“Here lies a Friend of the Common People.”
CHAPTER VII.
This first year of the Silver Administration was scarcely rounded up,
ere there began to be ugly rumors that the Government was no longer able
to hold the white metal at a parity with gold. “It is the work of Wall
Street,” cried the friends of the President, but wiser heads were shaken
in contradiction, for they had watched the sowing of the wind of
unreason, and knew only too well that the whirlwind of folly must be
reaped in due season.
The country had been literally submerged by a silver flood which had
poured its argent waves into every nook and cranny of the Republic,
stimulating human endeavor to most unnatural and harmful vigor. Mad
speculation stalked over the land. People sold what they should have
clung to, and bought what they did not need. Manufacturers heaped up
goods for which there was no demand, and farmers ploughed where they had
not drained and drained, where they were never fated to plough. The
small dealer enlarged his business with more haste than judgment, and
the widow drew her mite from the bank of savings to buy land on which
she was destined never to set foot. The spirit of greed and gain lodged
in every mind, and the “Common People” with a mad eagerness loosened the
strings of their leather purses to cast their hard-earned savings into
wild schemes of profit. Every scrap and bit of the white metal that they
could lay their hands upon, spoons hallowed by the touch of lips long
since closed in death, and cups and tankards from which grand sires had
drunken were bundled away to the mints to be coined into “people’s
dollars.”
At the very first rumor of the slipping away of this trusted coin from
its parity with gold, there was a fearful awakening, like the start and
the gasp of the miser who sees his horded treasure melting away from
before his eyes, and he not able to reach out and stay its going.
Protest and expostulation first, then came groans and prayers, from
which there was an easy road to curses. The working man threw off his
cap and apron to rush upon the public square, and demand his rights.
Mobs ran together, processions formed, deputations hurried off to
Washington, not on foot like the Coxey Army, but on the swift wings of
the Limited Express.
The “common people” were admitted to the bar of the house, their plaints
patiently listened to, and reparation promised. Bills for increased
revenue were hurriedly introduced, and new taxes were loaded upon the
broad shoulders of the millionaires of the nation;—taxes on checks,
taxes on certificates of incorporation, taxes on deeds and mortgages,
taxes on pleasure yachts, taxes on private parks and plaisances, taxes
on wills of all property above $5,000 in value, taxes on all gifts of
realty for and in consideration of natural love and affection, taxes on
all passage tickets to foreign lands, and double taxes on the estates of
all absentees on and after the lapse of six months.
There was a doubling up too of the tariff on all important luxuries, for
as was said on the floor of Congress, “if the silks and satins of
American looms and the wines and tobacco of native growth, are not good
enough for ‘my Lord of Wall Street,’ let him pay the difference and
thank heaven that he can get them at that price.”
To quiet the murmurs of the good people of the land, additional millions
were placed to the credit of the Department of Public Works, and harbors
were dredged out in one month only to fill up in the next, and new
systems of improvement of interstate waterways were entered upon on a
scale of magnitude hitherto undreamt of. The Commissioners for the
distribution of public moneys to farmers so impoverished as to be unable
to work their lands, were kept busy in placing “Peffer Loans” where the
need of them seemed to be the greatest, and to put a stop to the
“nefarious doings of money-changers and traders in the misfortunes of
the people,” a statute was enacted making it a felony punishable with
imprisonment for life, for any person or corporate body to buy and sell
government bonds or public funds, or deal in them with a view to draw
gain or profit from their rise and fall in value.
But try never so hard, the Government found itself powerless to check
the slow but steady decline in value of the people’s dollar. By
midsummer, it had fallen to forty-three cents, and ere the fair
Northland had wrapped itself, like a scornful beauty, in its Autumn
mantle of gold, the fondly trusted coin had sunk to exactly one-third of
the value of a standard gold dollar. People carried baskets in their
arms, filled with the now discredited coin, when they went abroad to pay
a debt or make purchase of the necessaries of life. Huge sacks of the
white metal were flung at the door of the mortgagee when discharge was
sought for a few thousand dollars. Men servants accompanied their
mistresses upon shopping tours to carry the necessary funds, and leather
pockets took the place of the old time muslin ones in male habiliments,
least the weight of the fifteen coins required to make up a five dollar
gold piece should tear the thin stuff and spill a dollar at every step.
All day long in the large cities, huge trucks loaded with sacks of the
coin rolled and rumbled over the pavement in the adjustment of the
business balances of the day. The tradesman who called for his bill was
met at the door with a coal scuttle or a nail keg filled with the
needful amount, and on pay day, the working man took his eldest boy with
him to “tote the stuff home” while he carried the usual bundle of
firewood. And strange to say, this dollar, once so beloved by the
“common people,” parted with its very nature of riches and lay in heaps
unnoticed and unheeded on shelf or table, until occasion arose to pay it
out which was done with a careless and contemptuous toss as if it were
the iron money of the ancient Spartans, and Holy Writ for once at least,
was disproven and discredited for the thief showed not the slightest
inclination to “break in and steal” where these treasures had been laid
up on earth, although the discs of white metal might lie in full view on
the table, like so many pewter platters or pieces of tinware. Men let
debts run, rather than call for them, and barter and exchange came into
vogue again, the good housewife calling on her neighbor for a loan of
flour or meal, promising to return the same in sugar or dried fruit
whenever the need might arise.
And still the once magic discs of silver slipped slowly and silently
downward, and ever downward in value and good name, until it almost
seemed as if the people hated the very name of silver.
CHAPTER VIII.
The “Fateful year of ’99” upon its coming in, found the Republic of
Washington in dire and dangerous straits. The commercial and industrial
boom had spent its force, and now the frightful evils of a debased
currency, coupled with demoralizing effects of rampant paternalism, were
gradually strangling the land to death. Capital, ever timid and
distrustful in such times, hid itself in safe deposit vaults, or fled to
Europe. Labor, although really hard pressed and lacking the very
necessities of life, was loudmouthed and defiant. Socialism and
Anarchism found willing ears into which to pour their burning words of
hatred and malevolence, and the consequence was that serious rioting
broke out in the larger cities of the North, often taxing the capacities
of the local authorities to the utmost.
It was bruited abroad that violent dissensions had arisen in the
Cabinet, the young President giving signs of a marked change of mind,
and like many a man who has appealed to the darker passions of the human
heart, he seemed almost ready to exclaim: “I stand alone. The spirits I
have called up are no longer obedient to me. My country, oh, my country,
how willingly would I give my life for thee, if by such a sacrifice I
could restore thee to thy old time prosperity.”
For the first he began to realize what an intense spirit of sectionalism
had entered into this “revolutionary propaganda.” He spoke of his fears
to none save to his wise and prudent helpmate.
“I trust you, beloved,” she whispered, as she pressed the broad, strong
hands that held her enclasped.
“Ay, dear one, but does my country?” came in almost a groan from the
lips of the youthful ruler.
Most evident was it, that thus far the South had been the great gainer
in this struggle for power. She had increased her strength in the Senate
by six votes; she had regained her old time prestige in the House; one
of her most trusted sons was in the Speaker’s chair, while another
brilliant Southron led the administration forces on the floor. Born as
she was for the brilliant exercise of intellectual vigor, the South was
of that strain of blood which knows how to wear the kingly graces of
power so as best to impress the “common people.” Many of the men of the
North had been charmed and fascinated by this natural pomp and inborn
demeanor of greatness and had yielded to it.
Not a month had gone by that this now dominant section had not made some
new demand upon the country at large. Early in the session, at its
request, the internal revenue tax which had rested so long upon the
tobacco crop of the South, and poured so many millions of revenue into
the national treasury, was wiped from the statute books with but a
feeble protest from the North.
But now the country was thrown into a state bordering upon frenzy by a
new demand, which, although couched in calm and decorous terms, nay,
almost in the guise of a petition for long-delayed justice to
hard-pressed and suffering brethren, had about it a suppressed, yet
unmistakable tone of conscious power and imperiousness which well became
the leader who spoke for “that glorious Southland to which this Union
owes so much of its greatness and its prestige.”
Said he: “Mr. Speaker, for nearly thirty years our people, although left
impoverished by the conflict of the states, have given of their
substance to salve the wounds and make green the old age of the men who
conquered us. We have paid this heavy tax, this fearful blood money
unmurmuringly. You have forgiven us for our bold strike for liberty that
God willed should not succeed. You have given us back our rights, opened
the doors of these sacred halls to us, called us your brothers, but
unlike noble Germany who was content to exact a lump sum from “la belle
France,” and then bid her go in peace and freedom from all further
exactions, you have for nearly thirty years laid this humiliating war
tax upon us, and thus forced us year in and year out to kiss the very
hand that smote us. Are we human that we now cry out against it? Are we
men that we feel no tingle in our veins after these long years of
punishment for no greater crime than that we loved liberty better than
the bonds of a confederation laid upon us by our fathers? We appeal to
you as our brothers and our countrymen. Lift this infamous tax from our
land, than which your great North is ten thousand times richer. Do one
of two things: Either take our aged and decrepit soldiers by the hand
and bless their last days with pensions from the treasury of our common
country, for they were only wrong in that their cause failed, or remove
this hated tax and make such restitution of this blood money as shall
seem just and equitable to your soberer and better judgment.”
To say that this speech, of which the foregoing is but a brief extract,
threw both Houses of Congress into most violent disorder, but faintly
describes its effect. Cries of treason! treason! went up; blows were
exchanged and hand to hand struggles took place in the galleries,
followed by the flash of the dread bowie and the crack of the ready
pistol. The Republic was shaken to its very foundations. Throughout the
North there was but a repetition of the scenes that followed the firing
upon Sumter. Public meetings were held, and resolutions passed calling
upon the Government to concentrate troops in and about Washington, and
prepare for the suppression of a second Rebellion.
But gradually this outbreak of popular indignation lost some of its
strength and virulence, for it was easy to comprehend that nothing would
be gained at this stage of the matter by meeting a violent and unlawful
demand with violence and unwise counsels. Besides, what was it any way
but the idle threat of a certain clique of unscrupulous politicians?
The Republic stood upon too firm a foundation to be shaken by mere
appeals to the passions of the hour. To commit treason against our
country called for an overt act. What had it to dread from the mere
oratorical flash of a passing storm of feeling?
It is hard to say what the young President thought of these scenes in
Congress. So pale had he grown of late that a little more of pallor
would pass unnoted, but those who were wont to look upon his face in
these troublous times report that in the short space of a few days the
lines in his countenance deepened perceptibly, and that a firmer and
stronger expression of will-power lurked in the corners of his wide
mouth, overhung his square and massive chin, and accentuated the
vibrations of his wide-opened nostrils. He was under a terrible strain.
When he had caught up the sceptre of power, it seemed a mere bauble in
his strong grasp, but now it had grown strangely heavy, and there was a
mysterious pricking at his brow, as if that crown of thorns which he had
not willed should be set upon the heads of others, were being pressed
down with cruel hands upon his own.
CHAPTER IX.
When the last embers of the great conflagration of the Rebellion had
been smothered out with tears for the Lost Cause, a prophecy had gone up
that the mighty North, rich with a hundred great cities, and strong in
the conscious power of its wide empire, would be the next to raise the
standard of rebellion against the Federal Government. But that prophet
was without honor in his own land, and none had paid heed to his
seemingly wild words.
Yet now, this same mighty North sat there in her grief and anxiety, with
her face turned Southward, and her ear strained to catch the whispers
that were in the air. Had not the sceptre of power passed from her hand
forever? Was not the Revolution complete? Were not the Populists and
their allies firmly seated in the Halls of Congress? Had not the Supreme
Court been rendered powerless for good by packing it with the most
uncompromising adherents of the new political faith? Had not the very
nature of the Federal Government undergone a change: Was not Paternalism
rampant? Was not Socialism on the increase? Were there not everywhere
evidences of an intense hatred of the North and a firm determination to
throw the whole burden of taxation upon the shoulders of the rich man,
in order that the surplus revenues of the Government might be
distributed among those who constitute the “common people?” How could
this section of the Union ever hope to make head against the South,
united, as it now was, with the rapidly growing States of the Northwest?
Could the magnificent cities of the North content themselves to march at
the tail of Tillman’s and Peffer’s chariots? Had not the South a firm
hold of the Senate? Where was there a ray of hope that the North could
ever again regain its lost power, and could it for a single moment think
of entrusting its vast interests to the hands of a people differing with
them on every important question of statecraft, pledged to a policy that
could not be otherwise than ruinous to the welfare of the grand
commonwealths of the Middle and Eastern sections of the Union and their
sister States this side of the Mississippi? It were madness to think of
it. The plunge must be taken, the declaration must be made. There was no
other alternative, save abject submission to the chieftains of the new
dispensation, and the complete transformation of that vast social and
political system vaguely called the North.
But this revolution within a revolution would be a bloodless one, for
there could be no thought of coercion, no serious notion of checking
such a mighty movement. It would be in reality the true Republic purging
itself of a dangerous malady, sloughing off a diseased and gangrened
member; no more, no less.
Already this mighty movement of withdrawals from the Witenagemote of the
Union was in the air. People spoke of it in a whisper, or with bated
breath; but as they turned it over and over in their minds, it took on
shape and form and force, till at last it burst into life and action
like Minerva from Jupiter’s brain—full-fledged, full-armed, full-voiced
and full-hearted.
Really, why would it not be all for the best that this mighty empire,
rapidly growing so vast and unwieldy as to be only with the greatest
difficulty governable from a single centre, should be split into three
parts, Eastern, Southern and Western, now that it may be done without
dangerous jar or friction? The three republics could be federated for
purposes offensive and defensive, and until these great and radical
changes could be brought about there would be no great difficulty in
devising “living terms,” for immediately upon the Declaration of
Dissolution, each State would become repossessed of the sovereign powers
which it had delegated to the Federal Government.
Meanwhile the “Fateful year ’99” went onward toward its close. The whole
land seemed stricken with paralysis, so far as the various industries
were concerned, but, as it is wont to be in such times, men’s minds were
supernaturally active. The days were passed in the reading of public
prints, or in passing in review the weighty events of the hour. The
North was only waiting for an opportunity to act.
But the question that perplexed the wisest heads was: How and when shall
the Declaration of Dissolution be made, and how soon thereafter shall
the North and the States in sympathy with her withdraw from the Union,
and declare to the world their intention to set up a republic of their
own, with the mighty metropolis of New York as its social, political and
commercial centre and capital?
As it came to pass, the North had not long to wait. The Fifty-sixth
Congress soon to convene in regular session in the city of Washington,
was even more Populistic and Socialistic than its famous predecessor,
which had wrought such wonderful changes in the law of the land, showing
no respect for precedent, no reverence for the old order of things.
Hence all eyes were fixed upon the capital of the nation, all roads were
untrodden, save those which led to Washington.
CHAPTER X.
Again Congress had refused to adjourn over for the holidays. The leaders
of the Administration forces were unwilling to close their eyes, even
for needful sleep, and went about pale and haggard, startled at every
word and gesture of the opposition, like true conspirators, as they
were, for the Federal troops had been almost to a man quietly removed
from the Capital and its vicinage, lest the President in a moment of
weakness, might do or suffer to be done some act unfriendly to the Reign
of the Common People.
Strange as it may seem, there had been very little note taken by the
country at large of the introduction at the opening of the session of an
Act to extend the Pension System of the United States to the Soldiers of
the Confederate Armies, and for covering back into the various
treasuries of certain States of the Union, such portions of internal
revenue taxes collected since the readmission of said states to the
Federal Congress, as may be determined by Commissioners duly appointed
under said Act.
Was it the calm of despair, the stolidity of desperation, or the cool
and restrained energy of a noble and refined courage?
The introduction of the Act, however, had one effect; it set in motion
toward the National capital, mighty streams of humanity—not of wild-eyed
fanatics or unshaven and unkempt politicasters and bezonians—but of
soberly-clad citizens with a business-like air about them, evidently men
who knew how to earn more than enough for a living, men who paid their
taxes and had a right to take a look at the public servants, if desire
so moved them. But very plain was it that the mightier stream flowed in
from the South, and those who remembered the Capital in antebellum days,
smiled at the old familiar sight, the clean-shaven faces, the long hair
thrown carelessly back under the broad brim felts, the half unbuttoned
waistcoats and turn down collars, the small feet and neatly fitting
boots, the springy loping pace, the soft negroese intonation, the long
fragrant cheroot.
It was easy to pick out the man from the Northland, well clad and
well-groomed, as careful of his linen as a woman, prim and trim,
disdainful of the picturesque felts, ever crowned with the ceremonious
derby, the man of affairs, taking a business-like view of life, but
wearing for the nonce a worried look and drawing ever and anon a deep
breath.
The black man, ever at the heels of his white brother, set to rule over
him by an inscrutable decree of nature, came forth too in thousands,
chatting and laughing gayly, careless of the why or wherefore of his
white brother’s deep concern, and powerless to comprehend it had he so
desired. Every hour now added to the throng. The broad avenues were none
too broad. The excitement increased. Men talked louder and louder, women
and children disappeared almost completely from the streets. The
“Southern element” drew more and more apart in knots and groups by
itself. Men threw themselves upon their beds to catch a few hours sleep,
but without undressing, as if they were expecting the happening of some
portentous event at any moment, the event of their lives, and dreaded
the thought of being a moment late.
If all went well, the bill would come up for final passage on Saturday,
the 30th day of the month, but so fierce was the battle raged against
it, and so frequent the interruptions by the contumacy both of members
and of the various cliques crowding the galleries to suffocation, that
little or no progress could be made.
The leaders of the administration forces saw midnight drawing near with
no prospect of attaining their object before the coming in of Sunday on
which the House had never been known to sit. An adjournment over to
Monday of the New Year might be fatal, for who could tell what
unforeseen force might not break up their solid ranks and throw them
into confusion. They must rise equal to the occasion. A motion was made
to suspend the rules, and to remain in continuous session until the
business before the House was completed. Cries of “Unprecedented!”
“Revolutionary!” “Monstrous!” came from the opposition, but all to no
purpose; the House settled down to its work with such a grim
determination to conquer that the Republican minority fairly quailed
before it. Food and drink were brought to the members in their seats;
they ate, drank and slept at their posts, like soldiers determined not
to be ambushed or stampeded.
It was a strange sight, and yet an impressive one withal—a great party
struggling for long deferred rights—freemen jealous of their liberties,
bound together with the steel hooks of determination that only death
might break asunder.
Sunday came in at last, and still the struggle went on. “The people know
no days when their liberties are at stake,” cried the leader of the
House. “The Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sabbath.”
Many of the speeches delivered on that famous Sunday sounded more like
the lamentations of a Jeremiah, the earnest and burning utterances of a
Paul, or the scholarly and well-rounded periods of an Apollos. The weary
hours were lightened by the singing of hymns by the Southern members,
most of them good methodists, in which their friends and sympathizers in
the galleries joined full throated and fuller hearted; while at times,
clear, resonant and in perfect unison, the voices of the staunch men of
the North broke in and drowned out the religious song with the majestic
and soul-stirring measures of “John Brown’s Body,” the “Glory, Glory
Halleluiah” of which seemed to hush the tumult of the Chamber like a
weird chant of some invisible chorus breaking in upon the fierce rioting
of a Belshazzar’s feast.
Somewhat after eleven o’clock, an ominous silence sank upon the opposing
camps, the Republican leaders could be seen conferring together
nervously. It was a sacred hour of night, thrice sacred for the great
Republic. Not only a New Year, but a New Century was about to break upon
the world. A strange hush crept over the turbulent House, and its still
more turbulent galleries.
The Republican leader rose to his feet. His voice sounded cold and
hollow. Strong men shivered as they listened. “Mr. Speaker: We have done
our duty to our country; we have nothing more to say, no more blows to
strike. We cannot stand here within the sacred precincts of this
Chamber, and see our rights as freemen trampled beneath the feet of the
majority. We have striven to prevent the downfall of the Republic, like
men sworn to battle against wrong and tyranny, but there comes a time
when blank despair seizes upon the hearts of those who struggle against
overwhelming odds. That hour has sounded for us. We believe our people,
the great and generous people of the North, will cry unto us: Well done,
good and faithful servants. If we do wrong, let them condemn us. We,
every man of us, Mr. Speaker, have but this moment sworn not to stand
within this Chamber and witness the passage of this act. Therefore we
go——”
“Not so, my countrymen,” cried a clear metallic far-reaching voice that
sounded through the Chamber with an almost supernatural ring in it. In
an instant, every head was turned and a thousand voices burst out with
suppressed force:
“The President! The President!”
In truth, it was he, standing at the bar of the House, wearing the
visage of death rather than of life. The next instant the House and
galleries burst into a deafening clamor which rolled up and back in
mighty waves that shook the very walls. There was no stilling it. Again
and again it burst forth, the mingling of ten thousand words, howling,
rumbling and groaning like the warring elements of nature. Several times
the President stretched forth his great white hands appealing for
silence, while the dew of mingled dread and anguish beaded on his brow
and trickled down his cheeks in liquid supplication that his people
might either slay him or listen to him. The tumult stilled its fury for
a moment, and he could be heard saying brokenly:
“My countrymen, oh, my countrymen——”
But the quick sharp sound of the gavel cut him short.
“The President must withdraw,” said the Speaker, calmly and coldly, “his
presence here is a menace to our free deliberation.”
Again the tumult set up its deafening roar, while a look of almost
horror overspread the countenance of the Chief Magistrate.
Once more his great white hands went heavenward, pleading for silence
with such a mute majesty of supplication, that silence fell upon the
immense assemblage, and his lips moved not in vain.
“Gentlemen of the House of Representatives, I stand here upon my just
and lawful right as President of the Republic, to give you ‘information
of the state of the Union.’ I have summoned the Honorable the Senate, to
meet me in this Chamber. I call upon you to calm your passions, and give
ear to me as your oath of office sets the sacred obligation upon you.”
There was a tone of godlike authority in these few words, almost divine
enough to make the winds obey and still the tempestuous sea. In deepest
silence, and with a certain show of rude and native grandeur of bearing,
the Senators made their entrance into the Chamber, the members of the
House rising, and the Speaker advancing to meet the Vice-President.
The spectacle was grand and moving. Tears gathered in eyes long unused
to them, and at an almost imperceptible nod of the President’s head, the
Chaplain raised his voice in prayer. He prayed in accents that were so
gentle and so persuasive, they must have turned the hardest heart to
blessed thoughts of peace and love and fraternity and union. And then
again all eyes were fixed with intensest strain upon the face of the
President.
“Gentlemen of the House of Representatives, this measure upon which you
are now deliberating”——
With a sudden blow that startled every living soul within its hearing,
the Speaker’s gavel fell. “The President,” said he with a superb dignity
that called down from the galleries a burst of deafening applause, “must
not make reference to pending legislation. The Constitution guarantees
him the right ‘from time to time to give to the Congress information of
the Union.’ He must keep himself strictly within the lines of this
Constitutional limit, or withdraw from the bar of the House.”
A deadly pallor overspread the face of the Chief Magistrate till it
seemed he must sink then and there into that sleep which knows no
awakening, but he gasped, he leaned forward, he raised his hand again
imploringly, and as he did so, the bells of the city began to toll the
hour of midnight.
The New Year, the New Century was born, but with the last stroke, a
fearful and thunderous discharge as of a thousand monster pieces of
artillery, shook the Capitol to its very foundations, making the
stoutest hearts stand still, and blanching cheeks that had never known
the coward color. The dome of the Capitol had been destroyed by
dynamite.
In a few moments, when it was seen that the Chamber had suffered no
harm, the leader of the House moved the final passage of the Act. The
President was led away, and the Republican Senators and Representatives
passed slowly out of the disfigured Capitol, while the tellers prepared
to take the vote of the House. The bells were ringing a glad welcome to
the New Century, but a solemn tolling would have been a fitter thing,
for the Republic of Washington was no more. It had died so peacefully,
that the world could not believe the tidings of its passing away. As the dawn broke cold and gray, and its first dim light fell upon that
shattered dome, glorious even in its ruins, a single human eye, filled
with a gleam of devilish joy, looked up at it long and steadily, and
then its owner was caught up and lost in the surging mass of humanity
that held the Capitol girt round and round.
————————————————————————
Travels and Adventures of Little Baron Trump and His Wonderful Dog Bulger
TRAVELS AND ADVENTURES
OF
LITTLE BARON TRUMP
AND
HIS WONDERFUL DOG BULGER
by
INGERSOLL LOCKWOOD
Illustrated by George Wharton Edwards
Boston 1890
Lee and Shepard Publishers
10 Milk Street Next “Old South Meeting House”
New York Charles T. Dillingham
718 and 720 Broadway
Copyright, 1889,
By
Ingersoll Lockwood.
TO
MASTER EDWARD GOLD JOHNES
ONE OF
LITTLE BARON TRUMP’S
EARLIEST ADMIRERS
THIS BOOK IS GRATEFULLY INSCRIBED.
————————————————————————
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.
PAGE.
Brief Account of the Little Baron’s Famous Ancestor, the “Armless
Knight,” 7
CHAPTER II.
Something about the Elder Baron, the Little Baron’s Father—How
the Elder Baron made the Ascent of the Mountains of the
Moon—Wonderful Escape of the Elder Baron and Baroness from the
Impenetrable Fog, 12
CHAPTER III.
Birth of Bulger and the Little Baron in the Land of the Melodious
Sneezers—How the Little Baron was Rescued from Death by His
Faithful Bulger—The Elder Baron’s Return to Europe—His Trouble
with the Little Baron’s Tutors, 19
CHAPTER IV.
How the Elder Baron and Baroness, the Household Servants, and the
Horses and Cattle, of the Baronial Estates, all lost Flesh in
consequence of the Elder Baron’s Worrying about the Investment
of the Little Baron’s Fortune—How the Little Baron Solved the
Problem—How the Elder Baron Objected to the Little Baron’s
setting out on His Travels—Steps taken by the Little Baron to
Overcome this Opposition, 30
CHAPTER V.
The Little Baron’s First Voyage to Southern Seas, with a Brief
Account of how He Triumphed over the Terrors of Port No Man’s
Port and Rescued his Vessel from the Terrible Calm—His and
Bulger’s Wonderful Experience with that Strange Folk, the Wind
Eaters—Their Attempt to Slay Him; and, Bulger’s timely Arrival, 39
CHAPTER VI.
The Elder Baron’s Gift of a Copy of a Roman Newspaper—The Strange
Story it contained—How the Little Baron, upon reading it, was
moved to set sail in Search of the Sculptors’ Isle—His Sojourn
in the Land of the Slow Movers—Its Effect upon Little Baron—His
narrow escape from becoming a Slow Mover Himself, 103
CHAPTER VII.
Journey of Bulger and the Little Baron to Central Asia—Benè-agâ,
the Blind Guide—Their Passage through the Great Gloomy Forest
and their Perilous Flight down the Rocky Steps of
Bōga-Drappa—Adventures among the Umi-Lobas or Man-Hoppers, in
the Dominion of King Gâ-roo, 136
CHAPTER VIII.
Visit of the Little Baron to Neptune’s Caldron—How a Fearful
Storm drove them on the Coast of China—His and Bulger’s
Adventures in the Kingdom of the Sun, including an account of
Bulger’s Arrest and Trial—Although defended by the Little
Baron, he is sentenced to Death, 210
CHAPTER IX.
How the Little Baron again left Home contrary to Bulger’s
Advice—Some Account of the Awful Storm which cast them on the
Island of Gô-gû-lâh—Adventures among the Roundbodies who
inhabited it—Marriage of the Little Baron to Princess Rōlâ-Bōlâ
Utterly Incredible Manner in which the Little Baron and Bulger
made their Escape from the Domain of King Bô-gôô-gôô, 260
TRAVELS AND ADVENTURES
OF
LITTLE BARON TRUMP
AND
HIS WONDERFUL DOG BULGER.
CHAPTER I.
Short account of one of the little Baron’s most celebrated ancestors,
called “The Armless Knight.” His wonderful strength and bravery. How
he followed Cœur de Lion to the Orient. His brilliant exploits on
the battle-field, under the walls of Joppa. His marriage in the
presence of Saladin and Cœur de Lion.
[Illustration: SWORD STIRRUPS OF MY ANCESTOR, THE FAMOUS ARMLESS
KNIGHT.]
I come from one of the most ancient and honorable families of North
Germany—famous for its valor and love of adventure.
One of my ancestors, when just entering the twenties heard at his
father’s table one morning, that England’s great King Cœur de Lion was
about to lead an army against the infidels.
“Gracious parent,” cried the young man starting up from his seat, his
eyes on fire, his cheeks ablaze, “May I join the Crusaders and aid in
the destruction of the enemies of our holy religion?” “Alas, poor boy!”
replied his father, casting a pitying glance at the youth, who, through
some strange freak of nature had been born armless, “thou wert not
intended for terrible conflicts such as await our cousin Cœur de Lion.
Thou lackest every means of wielding the battle sword, of couching the
lance. ’Twould be murder to set thy defenceless body before the uplifted
cimeter of the merciless Moslem! My dear son, banish such thoughts from
thy mind and turn thee to poesy and philosophy, thou shalt add new
lustre to our family name by thy learning.” “Nay gracious parent, hear
me!” urged the youth with eloquent eye: “true, nature has denied me
arms, but she has not been so cruel as might be supposed for, as
compensation, she has given a giant’s strength to my lower limbs. Dost
not remember how last month, I slew a wild boar with one blow from the
heel of my hunting-boot?” “I do,” answered the grim old Baron with a
smile, “but—” “Pardon my interruption noble father” came from the young
man, “I shall go into battle doubly armed, for to each stirrup shall I
affix a sword and woe betide the Mussulman who dares meet me on the
battle-field.”
“Go then my son!” cried the old Baron as the tears trickled down his
battle-scarred cheeks, “go, join our royal cousin Cœur de Lion and if
thou, armless, canst withstand the fury of the infidel, another glory
will be added to the name of Trump, and in this ancestral hall shall
hang a portrait of the ‘Armless Knight,’ upon which for all time the
lovers of valiant deeds shall rest their wondering eyes.”
The joy of my young ancestor knew no bounds.
Scarcely staying to make needful preparations for his journey, with a
handful of trusty retainers, he rode from the castle yard amid the
plaudits of thousands of fair women who had gathered from the
neighboring city to wish God speed to the “Armless Knight.”
’Twas not until the famous battle under the walls of Joppa that my
ancestor had an opportunity to give an exhibition of his bravery, his
extraordinary strength, and the resistless fury of his onslaughts.
Not one, not five, not ten common soldiers dared face the “Armless
Knight.”
Whole squadrons recoiled in terror before this mysterious avenger of the
wrongs of Christendom, who, without hands, struck down the Moslem
warriors, as the grain falls before the blast.
Again and again, Saladin sent the flower of his men against the “Armless
Knight,” whose strength and valor had already made his name a terror to
the superstitious soldiery. Little realizing the terrible fate awaiting
him, the Moslem warrior would rush upon my ancestor with uplifted
cimeter, when with one blow of his sword-armed stirrup the “Armless
Knight” would cleave the breast of his foeman’s horse, and then trample
the infidel to death as he rolled upon the ground.
It was now high noon.
Upon an eminence, Saladin, watching the tide of battle, saw with anxious
eye the appalling slaughter of the very flower of his army.
Already the name, rank, and nationality of my young ancestor had been
made known to the Moslem leader.
“La, il la! Mahomed ul Becullah!” he cried, stroking his beard. “Blessed
is the man who can call that Christian warrior his son! How many of the
Prophet’s children has he slain this day?”
“Six hundred and fifty-nine!” was the answer given.
“Six hundred and fifty-nine,” echoed Saladin, “and it is but noonday!”
When nightfall came the number had been increased to one thousand and
seven.
Upon hearing of the terrible day’s work of the “Armless Knight,”
Saladin’s great heart bled, and yet he could not withhold his admiration
for such wondrous skill and bravery.
“Go!” cried the magnanimous infidel Chieftain, “go, take from my
household that beauteous slave Kohilât, her with orbs of lustrous black,
the very blossom of grace and flower of queenly beauty. Lead her to the
“Armless Knight,” with royal greeting from Saladin; his valor makes him
my brother, Giaour though he be! Away!”
When the beautiful Kohilât was led into the presence of my young
ancestor, and the announcement made to him that Saladin had sent her as
a present to him, the “Armless Knight,” with royal greeting as a token
of his respect for one so young, and yet so valiant, the first thought
of the Christian youth was to wave her indignantly from his presence.
At that moment, however, Kohilât raised her large and lustrous eyes, and
fixed them full upon the young man’s face.
It was more than human heart could stand.
Motioning her retinue to leave his tent, he advanced to her side, with
respectful mien, and said:
“Kohilât, a strange fate has sent thee to me. The messenger of the great
Saladin imparts to me knowledge of thy goodness, thy amiability, and thy
gifted mind, which holds within its store most delightful imagery and
useful knowledge as well. He informs me that thou standest in the direct
line of descent from that famed princess of your land, Scheherezada, who
for a thousand and one nights held the thoughts of the Sultan of the
Indies so enthralled by the play of her brilliant fancy, as to turn him
aside from his terrible project of vengeance. Dost think, Kohilât, that
thou canst forget thy false god and love only the true one?”
“Ay, my lord,” murmured the gentle Kohilât, “if such be my lord’s
pleasure.”
A smile spread over the handsome face of my young ancestor. He would
fain have met with more resistance in converting the fair infidel to the
true faith, but though he searched that beautiful face long and closely
for any sign of subtility, yet saw he none.
“’Tis well, Kohilât,” he continued, “and now answer me, and speak from
thy heart. Art thou willing to become my wife, according to the rites of
the Christian church and the laws of my native land?”
Again the beautiful Kohilât replied:
“Ay, my lord; if such be thy pleasure.”
The following day a truce was proclaimed, and in the presence of the two
great leaders of the opposing armies, Cœur de Lion and Saladin, both
surrounded by the most glorious retinue, my young ancestor and the
princess Kohilât were joined together as man and wife by the royal
confessor, the “Armless Knight” towering above the surrounding multitude
in his glittering coat of mail like a column of burnished silver. When
he advanced to meet his dark-eyed bride, with the marriage ring held
between his lips, a mighty shout went up from both armies.
Saladin stroked his beard. Cœur de Lion made the sign of the cross. In a
short half hour the leaders had returned to their camps, and war had
resumed its awful work of destruction.
To this union of my renowned ancestor, the “Armless Knight,” with the
Moslem maid, I attribute my possession of an almost Oriental exuberance
of fancy.
[Illustration: PORTRAIT OF MY FAMOUS ANCESTOR, THE “ARMLESS KNIGHT,”
WITH HIS MARRIAGE RING BETWEEN HIS LIPS.]
CHAPTER II.
The elder Baron uncertain as to the exact locality of my birth.
Reasons why will be given later. My parents traveling in Africa at
this time. The elder Baron’s remarkable ascent of the Mountains of
the Moon. Miraculous escape from the impenetrable fog. How
accomplished. In the land of the Melodious Sneezers. All that
happened there. How the King of the Melodious Sneezers conducted my
parents in great honor to his palace, and how they were treated by
him.
[Illustration: THE MUZZLED MULES]
While it lies within my power to gratify the curiosity of my readers as
to what part of the world it was in which I first saw darkness—for I was
born in the night—yet, as to the nature of the immediate spot on which I
was born, unfortunately I am able to do more than repeat my father’s
words when questioned as to this point.
“My son, if I were on my death-bed I could only say that thou wert
either born in the centre in a great lake, on an island, upon a
peninsula or on the top of a very high mountain, as I have often
explained to thee.”
Let it suffice, then, gentle reader, for the present, for me to inform
you that at the time of my birth, my parents were traveling in Africa;
that my father had just successfully accomplished one of the most
wonderful feats in mountain climbing, namely, the ascent of the loftiest
peak of the Mountains of the Moon; that his guides had abandoned him
upon his reaching a particularly dangerous spot in the ascent; but that
he had pushed forward without them, and reached the summit after several
days of terrible privation, suffering both hunger and thirst,—it being a
peculiarity of the atmosphere after passing a certain height that the
muscles of the face and throat became paralyzed and the unfortunate
traveler either perishes from hunger or thirst while in the very
presence of delicious fruit and cool, limpid water.
Upon rejoining my mother, who had accompanied him as far up the mountain
side as the best-trained and most surefooted mules could find a
foot-hold, they proceeded to make their way, as they supposed, to the
valley from which they had first set out.
An impenetrable fog now shut them in and they soon found themselves
hopelessly and helplessly wandering about.
On the morning of the third day the fog had even increased in thickness,
closing around them like a pall, almost shutting out the light of day.
While groping about my father had come into contact with the two beasts
of burden which had served him in the easier parts of the ascent. They
were quietly and unconcernedly browsing upon the sweet and tender shrubs
which grew on the mountain side.
Suddenly an idea came to my father. It was born of that desperation
which makes a man think long and hard before lying down to die.
It was thus he reasoned: If these animals are permitted to eat their
fill whenever their appetites demand, they will be quite willing to stay
where they are, especially when they find themselves surrounded by such
excellent pastures, and, in addition thereto, quite relieved from all
toil. Let them, however, feel the pangs of hunger, or better yet,
starvation’s tooth at their vitals and their thoughts will at once
revert to their homes, their masters, their feeding-troughs and they
will lose no time in setting out for the village where they belong. With
the energy of despair, my father hurriedly bound a piece of canvass over
their mouths so that they could neither graze nor drink and awaited the
results of his experiment, with bated breath, for the tears and groans
of my poor mother, whose strength was fast ebbing away, smote him to the
very soul.
After a few hours the animals rose to their feet and became very
restive, and in another hour their hunger had so increased that they
were making frantic efforts to feed, as my father could easily tell from
the jerking of the line which he had been careful to attach to their
headstalls.
After the fourth hour there was a long silence, during which the animals
seemed to be deliberating as to what course they should pursue.
The fifth hour came.
My mother had sunk to rest, weak and weary, in my father’s arms.
Suddenly there was a tightening of the guiding lines. Gently my father
aroused his sleeping mate, whispering a few words of comfort.
Again the lines tightened.
My parents were now on their feet, peering into the depths of the
impenetrable fog which shrouded them about and made them even invisible
to each other.
Hist! the animals move again! with a sudden impulse, as if their minds
had at last solved the problem which had been bewildering them for
several hours, the beasts, with violent snortings turned from the spot,
pushing through the shrubbery and causing my parents to face quite
about.
Evidently there was a complete accord between the conclusions reached by
their intelligence or instinct, for not once did they pull apart or come
to a halt, except when restrained by my father. And thus my dear parents
were saved! All that day and part of the next did they pursue their
dreary way. The fog at last lifted, and it was at once apparent to my
father that, although the animals were guiding them towards human
habitations, yet it was not the land he had quitted upon starting out
upon the journey to the mountain peak. The path now became so plainly
visible that my father removed the improvised muzzles from the two
animals and allowed them to satisfy their hunger, which they proceeded
to do with the keenest relish. So worn out was my mother that she sank
helpless to the ground. Refreshing her with a draught of spring-water
and the juice of some wild grapes, my father hastily prepared a bed of
soft foliage, upon which they were both glad to throw themselves after
their long and weary tramp.
They had soon fallen into a deep and most delightful sleep. How long
they lay on their leafy bed, wrapt in their refreshing slumber, they
knew not.
It certainly was for many a long hour; for when they awoke, hunger was
gnawing at their stomachs. Fain would they have at once proceeded to
gather fruit, had not their ears been suddenly saluted with most
extraordinary noises. They rubbed their eyes and looked about and at
each other, deeming themselves the sport of some merry jack-a-dreamer.
But, no; they were wide awake and in full possession of their senses.
Again the strange sounds are heard and this time they are nearer and
clearer.
There is a rise and a fall, a swelling out and then a dying away.
The sounds are jerky and snappy like and there is a singular music in
them.
Nearer and still nearer they come. Louder and still louder they grow.
“Wild beasts?” whispered my mother half inquiringly.
“Nay!” falls from my father’s lips. “Not unless human beings may be so
wild as to merit the name of beasts.”
“Hark again!” murmured my mother.
There was no mistaking the sounds any longer, for, like a chorus of many
voices, shrill and piping, deep and grumbling, soft and musical, harsh
and guttural, yet all in a sort of rude and wild harmony, mingling in
one mighty strain, now low and scarcely audible and now breaking out
with a fierce and seemingly threatening vigor, the singers, chanters,
howlers or what they might be, rushed into the valley below us in a wild
and yet half regulated disorder.
They were human beings in savage garb, with painted faces and clubs
swung lightly across their shoulders. Whether pausing or advancing they
still kept up their wild and mysterious chant, choppy, jerky and snappy
for all the world like a thousand people who had just drawn plentifully
from a thousand snuff boxes.
“Save me, husband!” cried my mother with pallid face. “We shall be put
to some awful torture by these wild children of the forest.” A smile so
gentle, and yet so calm, that it could not fail to be reassuring spread
over my father’s features.
“Never fear!” said he, “I know them, I’ve been seeking them! What has
been denied many a traveler stronger and bolder than I, has been
accorded to a member of the Trump family in the most miraculous manner.
When we return to Europe every Monarch, every learned society, will
hasten to bind a medal on my breast, for, dear wife, your husband is the
first white man to enter the land of the—”
“The—?” echoed my mother leaning forward and grasping her husband’s arm.
“Melodious Sneezers!”
“Melodious Sneezers?” repeated my mother with wide-opened eye, and
amusement seated in every feature.
“Melo—”
But she could get no further. To my father’s infinite amusement, she
fell a-sneezing most violently. In such rapid succession did the sneezes
flow that it sounded exactly like a diminutive engine under full
headway.
At last the fit seemed to have passed. “Melo—” but in vain; she could
not reach the second syllable.
And now, in his turn, my father started off, slow at first but going
faster and faster.
Strange to say their sneezing soon began to catch the ways of the
country and blended thoroughly, keeping time in spite of their efforts
to check it.
“Know then, dear wife,” cried my father pantingly when his fit was over,
“that those strange people stretched on the greensward below are the
“Melodious Sneezers;” that they are not only perfectly harmless, but
gentle, kind and peaceable to an astonishing degree. Fear them not!
Their clubs are only for game.” “But why—?” asked my mother warily lest
another fit should take her.
“I understand thee,” was the reply. “Listen. Know, that in this valley
and in the greater ones below, the air is always filled with myriads
upon myriads of insects of infinitesimal size; only the strongest
microscope can give proof to your sight of their actual existence. For
countless generations, these peaceable barbarians here have been
subjected to the tickling sensations which you and I have—”
Again my poor parent fell a-sneezing in regular and musical cadences, up
and down, deep and shrill, now fast and faster, now slow and slower
until silence reigned again.
“Just experienced,” resumed my father, “until it has rendered the effort
of sneezing quite as easy as breathing, and taking advantage of results
which they soon discerned could not be avoided, these children of nature
were not slow to lay aside their usual speech and literally talk by
sneezes!”
“With them, a sneeze is capable of so many intonations, so many
inflections, that they find no difficulty in expressing all the
necessary feelings and sensations,—at least necessary for them in their
simple lives, as you shall see later on.”
Fain would my poor mother here express her passing wonder but she dare
not open her mouth. “Come, dearest mate,” cried my father gayly.
“Courage! Let us descend into this beautiful valley, for as yet we are
only standing upon the borders of the “Land of the Melodious Sneezers”
called in their soft and musical tongue Lâ-aah-chew-lâ.”
The pronunciation of this word again threw my poor parents into a
perfect whirlwind of sneezes; but nothing daunted, they advanced to meet
the natives, who at first sight fell prostrate on their faces and for
several moments kept up a low plaintive hum of sneezes, with their noses
thrust into the grass.
By degrees however, my father succeeding in convincing them that he was
quite as peaceably inclined as they were.
Whereupon the Melodious Sneezers performed a most singular and withal
pleasing dance of joy, their feet keeping perfect time with their chorus
of sneezing.
As my father afterwards learned, the dance was to express their intense
gratitude to the “white spirits” for not having eaten them alive.
The march homeward was now entered upon, my father walking hand in hand
with the King Chew-chew-lô, and my mother escorted by a score or more of
his wives, the favorite of the royal house being named Chew-lâ-â-â-â-â
and each successive one according as she occupied a less lofty place in
the King’s affections having a shorter name until at last Chew-lâ
signified little better than a mere serving maid.
My father found that the villages of the Melodious Sneezers, on account
of the frequency and the violence of inundations from the network of
rivers which completely shut in their land, consisted of houses or
habitations built in the trees or upon lofty piles.
He and my mother were lodged in one of the most commodious of the royal
dwellings and so many slaves and attendants were assigned to care for
their wants that there was little or no room to move about.
To their great sorrow, my father proceeded to dismiss several hundred in
order that he might get close enough to my mother to converse without
holloaing and then sent word to King Chew-chew-lô that both he and my
mother would need at least a week of perfect rest and quiet to regain
their health and strength after their terrible sufferings on the slopes
of the Mountains of the Moon.
CHAPTER III.
My birth. The elder Baron reads my horoscope. Birth of Bulger. The
elder Baron puts on mud-shoes and goes out for a walk. What he
discovers. My wonderful precocity. My love for Bulger. My terrible
fall into the lake of mud. How the Melodious Sneezers in their
mud-shoes attempted to rescue me. Their failure. Bulger comes to
their assistance. How I was dug out and restored to my mother.
Remarkable effect of the warm mud on my head and brain. The
Melodious Sneezers are afraid of me. My fondness for arithmetic and
languages. Our farewell to the Melodious Sneezers, and return home.
How I discharged my tutors, and how the elder Baron forced them to
pay for the instruction I had given them.
[Illustration: BULGER WITH HIS MUD SHOES ON.]
At this point my hand trembles and the ink flows unsteadily from my pen.
I am about to record certain events which, I feel assured the reader
will agree with me in considering to be the most interesting of my
strange and varied life. Possibly I should say interesting to me; for,
gentle reader, one of these “certain events” above referred to is a no
less important occurrence than my birth into this grand and beautiful
world—a world which has proven to be full of wonderful things and of
more wonderful beings, as you shall see as I go on with my story.
I was born in midsummer. It was the night season.
Ten thousand stars twinkled over the cradle of that wretched, little,
helpless, lump of clay; but brighter than all, like a crimson torch
flaming in the skies, Sirius, the dog star, shone down upon me!
My father looked up at the heavens and smiling, murmured: “Little
stranger, thou shalt ever be a lover of dogs. Thy smile shall be joy to
them, thy words music and in some four-footed beast of their race shalt
thou find thy best, thy faithfulest, thy truest friend.”
As if to set the very stamp of truth upon my father’s words at that very
instant a cry of a mother dog was heard in an adjoining room and one of
the Royal household Chew-lâ-â came running into my presence with a
basket of tiny puppies. My father laughingly seized the wicker cradle of
this newly arrived family and holding it up to me, cried out:
“Choose, little baron, choose thee a friend and companion.” I put out my
tiny baby hand and it rested upon one with a particularly large head.
“Ha! ha!” laughed my father, “thou hast well chosen, little baron, for
him thou hast chosen hath so much brain that his head doth fairly bulge
with it.”
And when my infant tongue came to wrestle with that word, it was twisted
into “Bulger.” And thus it was that Bulger and I started out on life’s
journey at almost the same moment! Upon the following day my father made
discovery that the waters had begun to recede in the night, and as he
looked down from our lofty dwelling, he saw that it now stood apparently
in the centre of quite an extensive island. After breakfast, in
accordance with the custom of the country, my father put on a pair of
King Chew-chew-lô’s wooden shoes which were worn by all of the Melodious
Sneezers when attempting to move about on the surface of the soft mud
occasioned by the inundation.
These wooden shoes are extremely light although quite as long and as
broad as snow shoes. The soles being polished, the wearer is enabled to
glide over the mud which, from the nature of the soil is very oily, with
the same rapidity as a runner upon snow shoes.
After an excursion of several hours up hill and down dale my father
returned with this piece of strange intelligence, namely, that their
habitation had undoubtedly, prior to the falling of the waters been
situated in a lake; but that by degrees, as the waters had receded, an
island had been formed, which somewhat later had been transformed into a
peninsula, which in its turn by a still further sinking of the waters,
had been changed into the crown of a mountain with gently sloping sides
so that, as he reported to my mother, to his dying day it would be
impossible for him to say whether his son had been born in a lake, on an
island, upon a peninsula or on a mountain top, a fact which pained him
extremely, for, like all the members of his family, he took the greatest
pride in recording important events with scrupulous exactitude, even to
the smallest detail.
Unlike most babes, who seem content to pass the first half year or so of
their lives eating, sleeping and crying, I from the very outset
displayed a most astonishing precocity.
When only a few weeks old, although I could not talk, yet I had learned
to whistle for Bulger, whose development in mind and body seemed to keep
even pace with mine and who passed most of his time looking up into my
childish face with an expression which meant only too plainly:
“Oh, I shall be so glad when that little tongue is unloosed so that you
may call me Bulger and bid me do your will.”
Nor had he long to wait.
The one thing, which, at this early period of my life gave me most joy,
was the sunlight.
Within doors, I was fretful, peevish, irritable, but once out in the
open air, my whole nature changed. I drank in the soft, balmy atmosphere
with a vigor and a satisfaction that delighted my father. My face
brightened, my eyes traveled from valley to hill, from mountain-top to
sky.
Into such an ecstacy of pleasure did this sight of the great world throw
me, that my mother became anxious lest it presaged some great evil that
was to happen unto me.
But the stately Baron only smiled. “Fear nothing, wife, it only means
that within that little head dwells a most wonderfully active mind for a
child of its months.”
Whenever Bulger heard his little master crying out in joyful tones at
sight of the beautiful world, he was sure to be seized with a fit of
violent barking, during which he sprang around about me with the wildest
and most extravagant manifestations of sympathy.
Without a doubt, there was a wonderful bond of affection between us.
To my mother’s-I had almost said horror, I, one day while she was
walking with me in her arms, upon the broad veranda, which encircled
Chewchewlô’s palaces, attempted to throw myself from her arms, crying
out in German: Los! Los! (Let me go! Let me go!) I was but two months
old and the loud and vigorous tone in which I pronounced this first word
which I had spoken in my mother’s tongue fairly startled her.
I had, up to that time, apparently been more interested in the soft and
musical language of my royal nurse, Chewlâ, in which I could make myself
understood very easily. About this time an accident happened to me
which, although it did not bring about, it greatly hastened the release
from parently restraint, so ardently desired, both by Bulger and by me,
for from my very entrance into this world something told me that I
should be a famous child, not a mere, precocious youth who is made use
of by his parents at social gatherings to bore people already in poor
spirits, by mounting upon chair or table and declaiming verses,
parrotlike, with half a dozen woodeny, jerky gestures; but a genuine
hero, a real traveler, not afraid to brave a tempest, face a wild beast
or bully a barbarous people into doing as he wanted them to do.
It was my mother’s custom in the cool of the day to sit with me on the
broad veranda while she darned my father’s stockings; for, although of
gentle birth, she had been so accustomed when a girl to exercise German
thrift in all things that now, even though she had become the wife of a
real baron, she could not forego the pleasure of doing things in those
good old ways.
And thus she saved my father many a pfennig which the good man bestowed
upon the worthy poor and went down to the grave loaded with their
blessings.
At such a time it was that a sudden fit of sneezing seized my mother and
to her unspeakable horror she let me slip from her arms. Down, down I
fell, striking in the soft mud and disappearing from sight.
The poor woman dropped to the floor like lead.
The stately baron rose to his feet and the color fled from his manly
cheek.
But Chew-chew-lô, who fortunately was paying a visit to my father, only
smiled.
“Unfeeling barbarian!” roared the great baron, “hast no respect for a
father’s tears, a mother’s anguish? Out upon thee! Would to heaven I had
never entered thy domain!” Chew-chew-lô spake not a word. Turning with
imperious mien and right royal manner towards a crowd of retainers, he
waved his hand.
Quicker than thought the band of Melodious Sneezers sprang to their
wooden shoes.
Away, away, they darted like black bats on the wing.
The baron saw that in his terrible grief he had let his better judgment
slip away, and with pallid face and bended head stood supporting the
fainting form of his wife.
He felt, he knew, that his presence among the Melodious Sneezers at this
moment would only disconcert them, impede their progress, and possibly
so confuse them that all their efforts might be in vain. They, from
their childhood, were so accustomed to wear those huge wooden shoes, to
move about on the surface of this treacherous mud, that if it were
possible for human hands to restore his son to his arms, theirs would do
it.
And so he spoke a few words of encouragement in my mother’s ear, and
continued to stand like a statue, with his gaze riveted upon the long
files of Melodious Sneezers, as they wound around the crest of the
mountain to gain the spot where, as they judged, I had disappeared.
Armed with their light, broad, wooden shovels, their dusky arms rose and
fell with wonderful precision and regularity, keeping time with the
musical notes of their sneezing; now soft and low, now breaking out into
a wild and galloping measure.
Down! Down! Down!
[Illustration: THREE PORTRAITS SHOWING THE WONDERFUL GROWTH OF MY
BRAIN.]
And yet they delved in vain!
No sign of me was there to gladden the hearts of my poor, grief-stricken
parents.
But hark!
What is that shrill cry?
It is not human!
No; for it is Bulger’s bark, or rather it is Bulger’s yelp.
He had been watching the band of Melodious Sneezers, as their white
shovels rose and fell all in vain, with his head thrust through the
railings of the veranda.
No one was there with mind and heart enough to catch the meaning of that
poor yelp.
Chew-chew-lô saw that his men were standing, leaning on their shovels,
with looks of doubt and hesitation in their eyes.
The King was silent.
It was the great baron who spoke:
“Oh, let them not give o’er! My life, my wealth, my all, are thine,
good, kind Chew-Chew——”
A fit of sneezing cut short his appeal.
Again Bulger’s cry was raised, and this time the King heeded it.
An attendant saw the royal nod, and hastening to bind broad wooden cups
upon the dog’s feet, he was turned loose upon the surface of the mud.
What is man, with his boasted intelligence?
They were ten paces or more distant from the point where I had
disappeared.
Yelping, barking, and whining by turns, my dear Bulger hurried to the
spot where his unerring scent told him that his beloved little master
had gone down.
Again the band of Melodious Sneezers set to work with renewed vigor,
their white shovels flashing with strange effect against the inky
blackness of the mud.
Bulger encouraged them with loud and joyful barkings.
Suddenly a clear, ringing, melodious “chew” rent the air.
They had caught sight of me!
With rare foresight for one of my months, I had closed my nostrils with
one hand before reaching the mud, and had thus saved my lungs from
filling up.
But how useless would have been this precaution, had not my faithful
Bulger come to my rescue!
His joy now knew no bounds.
I thought that I caught a glimpse of a smile on the old baron’s
tear-stained cheek, as his boy was borne to the veranda, more like an
animated lump of earth than aught else, for the air had revived me. My
eyes were not only wide open, but they were the only clean place on my
whole body.
Utterly regardless of my filthy condition, my fond mother clasped me
convulsively to her breast, and I verily believe that she would have
pressed her lips upon my mud-covered head and face, had she not seen the
baron’s broad palm held in suspicious proximity, while her mother’s
heart was emptying itself out in words. A few basins of warm water, and
I was myself again.
No, I was never myself again. My bath in the warm mud of Lâ-aah-chew-lâ
effected a most remarkable change in me; it checked the growth of my
body and turned all my strength upwards into my head and brain.
In one short month my head almost doubled in size.
My baby face and expression were gone!
And ere another moon had filled her horns I had grown to be a living
wonder!
Not only was the size of my head something remarkable, but from my eyes
beamed an astonishing intelligence.
The poor women of Lâ-aah-chew-lâ Land crouched in front of me as if I
were a being from another world and then tapping their foreheads they
approached my mother and whispered:
“Most gracious Chew-lâ-â-â-â-â-â the Great Spirit has made a mistake and
put two souls in there instead of one!”
And then they bent their graceful bodies till their foreheads touched my
mother’s feet and withdrew, going out backwards like the best regulated
court ladies, each leveling her finger at me and opening wide her eyes
as she disappeared through the door.
The whole scene was so grotesque that I burst out into a shout of
laughter.
Upon hearing which, the poor creatures tumbled headlong over each other
in their mad efforts to get outside of the house, shrieking at the top
of their voices:
“Save us! save us! He will bewitch us!”
“Little Baron!” said my father in a tone of mock anger, “you should not
have frightened the ladies of King Chew-chew-lô’s Court!”
Chew-pâ! Chew-pâ! (Idiots! Idiots!) I replied, looking up from my slate
upon which I was working out an example in arithmetic, for I was very
fond of figures.
In fact, my father had already taught me addition by showing me how to
trade off worthless glass beads for valuable ivory, and division, by
taking away ninety cents from every dollar I made. Long before I could
read or write, I knew the letters of several languages by name, and
could spell any word which had no silent letter in it. No one took more
delight in my wonderful accomplishments than Bulger.
He seemed to know instinctively that his little master was no ordinary
being and respected him accordingly. We now bade adieu to the Land of
Lâ-aah-chew-lâ and the Melodious Sneezers.
King Chew-chew-lô with a mighty band of retainers accompanied us to his
frontier, making the forests resound with their melodious
chew-chew-a-ing. Standing on the old baron’s shoulders, I waved them a
last goodbye to which they answered with such a perfect whirlwind of
Chew-chew-â’s that Bulger fairly howled with delight.
Any special honor paid to his master was always a personal matter to
him. The elder baron had intended to penetrate still further into the
heart of Africa; but the fact is, that the continual growth of my mind
was so wonderful that it engrossed his attention from morn till night.
He endeavored to hide this from me; but all to no purpose.
Before I was two years old my brain had grown so heavy that my mother
was obliged to sew pieces of lead in the soles of my shoes to keep me
right end upwards, and yet, in spite of this precaution, I was often
found standing upon my head working out difficult mathematical problems
by making use of my toes, as the Chinese do their counting machines.
The first thing which my father did upon reaching home was to take me to
a phrenologist in order to have a chart made of my head.
The examination lasted a month.
At length, upon the completion of the chart, it was found that I
possessed thirty-two distinct bumps.
Well-developed ones, too!
It was, therefore, at once determined to engage thirty-two learned
tutors, each tutor to have charge of a separate bump and to do his
utmost to enlarge it even if it grew to be a horn.
My father was resolved to leave nothing undone in order to develop my
mental powers to the utmost limit. I said nothing either for or against
the scheme.
In one short year I had learned all that the thirty-two tutors could
teach me, and, what is more, I had taught each one of them fifty things
which he had not known before, and which I had learned while traveling
in foreign lands with my parents.
One fine morning to the great surprise of my thirty-two tutors I
discharged the whole of them.
The elder baron at my suggestion now sent a bill to each tutor for
services rendered him by me.
Each tutor refused to pay.
The elder baron, at my suggestion, now caused legal process to be served
upon each one of them.
The court upon hearing my testimony rendered an opinion which covered
five thousand pages of legal cap paper and required a whole week to
read, in which they held that each thing which I had taught to each one
of my thirty-two tutors was so remarkably strange and peculiar that in
the eye of the law it was worth at least one hundred dollars. That made
the bill of each tutor amount to five thousand dollars, or one hundred
and sixty thousand dollars in all.
The court then adjourned for a year, all three judges being so worn out
mentally and physically as to need a twelve months’ rest before taking
up any other business.
[Illustration: THE THREE WEARY JUDGES AS THEY APPEARED AT THE CLOSE OF
MY SUIT AGAINST MY TUTORS.]
CHAPTER IV.
How the elder Baron lost flesh worrying about the investment of my
money. Effect of his anxiety on the rest of the household. I take
the matter in hand and devise ways to increase my fortune. I become
extremely wealthy. When eight years of age I am seized with an
uncontrollable desire to visit far-away lands, and begin to pack up.
The elder Baron objects. How I set to work to get his consent. Wild
doings of my playfellows. How we stormed the castle, broke up the
hawking, ruined the fox hunt, summoned the ten doctors, and set fire
to the neighboring fields. The elder Baron grows weary of my doings
and consents to let me go. My delight and Bulger’s joy.
[Illustration: THE ELDER BARON AND BARONESS GREW VERY THIN.]
The question which now occupied my father’s mind to the exclusion of all
other thoughts was how to invest this large sum of money, so that upon
my attaining my twenty-first year I would be provided with a
sufficiently large income to live as a baron should—particularly when he
belonged to so famous a family as ours.
The fact of the matter is, my father permitted this question to prey
upon his peace of mind to such an extent that he lost flesh perceptibly.
My mother, too, seeing his lamentable condition began to fret and worry
to such a degree, that she likewise became greatly emaciated. With their
loss of flesh naturally their appetites dwindled and little or no food
was provided; or, anyway, no more than was just sufficient to satisfy
Bulger’s and my wants.
Whereupon the servants began to lose flesh, both the indoor and outdoor
ones; and in their desperate attempt to keep body and soul together, the
horses and cattle were fed upon short rations, and the consequence was,
they, too, soon began to fall away.
So it grew to be quite a serious sight to see my poor father and mother
reduced to mere skin and bones, driven about the country by mere shadows
for coachman and footman, and drawn by four horses whose bones fairly
rattled under their skins when they were coaxed or beaten into a lazy
trot.
Bulger and I alone retained our plumpness and good spirits. At length I
determined to interfere and put a speedy end to this deplorable state of
affairs. I exacted from the elder baron a solemn promise that he would
follow my directions to the letter and not raise any objections, no
matter how wild or unreasonable they might appear to him, or to my
mother.
[Illustration: OUR FAMILY COACHMAN BECOMES NOTHING BUT SKIN AND BONE.]
Then bidding him to partake of some good, succulent food, retire early
and get a nice long sleep, I saluted him respectfully and said:
“Baron, until to-morrow morning!”
I had scarcely finished my breakfast when my door opened and the elder
baron walked into the room.
He looked much refreshed. The color had returned to his cheek, the gleam
to his eye.
He was already a different man.
“Here, gracious Sir,” I began, handing him a parchment roll, “is a list
of all the best known almanac makers in our land. Have interviews with
them at once and purchase from them the right to furnish weather
prognostications for the coming year!”
The elder baron began to expostulate. “Baron!” I remarked sternly,
raising my hand, “a true Knight has but one word to give!”
He was silent and motioned me to continue.
I did so as follows:
“Respected parent, when you have secured this right from each of them,
return to me.”
In a few days my father had accomplished his mission.
He entered my room and put into my hands the needful concessions from
every noted almanac maker in the land.
Again I bade him refresh himself thoroughly, get a good night’s rest and
see me in the morning.
As Bulger and I were returning from breakfast the elder baron presented
himself at the door of my apartments.
He looked strong and well. His face had filled out again and his step
had recovered its old-time elasticity.
Again I placed a roll of parchment in his hands, and said to him:
“Scatter the contents of that parchment evenly and plentifully
throughout each almanac, on the pages devoted to the months of November,
December, January, and February.”
He looked at me inquiringly, and his lips began to move.
“Noble Sir!” said I, ere a sound had issued from his mouth, “in our
family, knights have always been without fear and without reproach.” He
bent his lofty form in silence and withdrew.
Possibly the reader may have a little curiosity to know the contents of
the parchment roll which I placed in the hands of the elder baron on
this occasion.
If brevity be the soul of wit, it was witty. If a fair round hand be the
garb of truth, it was truthful. Be this as it may choose to be, the
words which my pen had traced on that parchment roll, read as follows:
“All signs point to an extremely cold Winter.” “Indications are that the
coming Winter will be the severest for half a century.” “Forecasts all
give the same answer—a Winter of exceptional length and bitter
coldness.” “Most skilled prognosticators agree in predicting a degree of
low temperature rarely reached in these latitudes.” “About this time
expect unusual cold.” “Protect plants.” “Now look well to your winter
vegetables.” “Secure them from the extreme frost.” “Double your supply
of winter fuel.” “Now look for fierce snow-storms.” “Expect bitter cold
weather during all this month.” “Prepare for most unusual hail storms.”
“Be on your guard for sudden and penetrating north winds.” “House cattle
warmly for all this month.” “Beware of deadly blizzards, they will come
with a furious onset.”
After a few days’ absence, my father returned to the manor house. His
arrival was duly announced to me by Bulger, to whom I said: “Go, good
Bulger, and conduct the Baron to my apartment.”
Away he bounded with many a sportive leap and bark, and soon returned,
ushered in the elder baron with the joyous manner so common to him when
active in serving me.
“I have obeyed thee, my son!” murmured the elder baron with a stately
arc in his bending form.
“’Tis well!” I replied, motioning him to be seated.
“And now honored guide of my childhood’s uncertain feet, give heed to my
words: Our task is almost done. In a few days the investment of this
money, which has occasioned thee so much anxiety, fairly robbing thee of
thy heart’s service, will be complete; ay, complete; and, what is better
still, so fortunately invested that thou shalt be enabled to call
thyself the father of one of the richest children in the Kingdom.”
“Hearken, Baron. Go now into the leading markets of the land and put
every fur merchant under written contract to deliver unto thee in early
Autumn all the pelts, dressed, undressed, or on the backs of the owners,
of which they will guarantee the delivery under their hands and seals.”
The words had scarcely fallen from my lips ere the elder baron had risen
from his chair and caught me warmly to his breast.
“My son!” he cried as he stroked my protuberant brow, “it is a master
stroke! It is worthy of a governor of a province! I long to begin the
good work. Permit me to set out this very night!” “Wait baron!” said I,
leading him to his chair and gently constraining him to be seated.
“Wait, Baron; there is somewhat yet to be said. When thou hast completed
the purchase of all the pelts, which are expected to enter the Kingdom
this year, expend the rest of the money in purchasing all the wood, coal
and peat thou canst find, not that I would draw profit from the poor
man’s slender store; but simply to keep others from wronging him by
combining against him, as they would surely do upon the first
publication of the weather predictions.” “Ah, little Baron!” exclaimed
my father, “how thoughtful; for, as thou sayest, we must not lay a
burden on the poor man’s shoulders!”
Such was the diligence with which my father carried my plans to
completion, that in a single month I had bought and sold again the
entire product of the fur market, at a small advance, it is true, but
large enough to make me an extremely rich man.
It was so gently and skillfully done, that no one ever suspected the
clever ruse by which I was enabled to acquire riches enough to set out
upon my travels just as my inclination might prompt, and to know that
were I to be captured and held for ransom by the most grasping
freebooters, my bankers would have gold enough to ransom me.
Upon the completion of my eighth year I was seized with an
uncontrollable desire to enter at once upon the fulfillment of my long
cherished plans, to visit far-away lands inhabited by strange and
curious people. My own home, my own language, my own people, wearied me
and wore upon me.
In my sleep I paced the deck of staunch vessels, shouted my orders,
crowding sail in calm and reefing in threatening weather. I passed my
time from morn till night, packing cases with suitable articles for
traffic with the savages, so that I might be able to penetrate into
interiors never visited by civilized man, and ascend rivers closed since
the world began to the white-winged messengers of trade and commerce.
But, strange to say, my father urged thereto, possibly, by the
entreaties of my mother, firmly and resolutely set his face against my
project of leaving home.
I was beside myself with disappointment. I entreated, I implored, I
threatened. For the first time in my life—it pains me even now to make
the confession—I was guilty of a certain disrespect to the authors of my
being.
Bulger, after studying the situation for several days, reached the
conclusion that the elder baron was in some way the cause of my
unhappiness, and it required, at times, my sternest command to restrain
him from setting his teeth in the calves of the elder baron’s legs as he
quitted my apartment after some stormy interview.
“What!” cried I, in tones tremulous with grief, “am I doomed to waste
the splendid gifts with which nature has endowed me, shut within the
walls of this petty town, whose most boisterous scenes are the brawls of
its market places, whose people never witness a grander pageant than the
passing of a royal troop of horse? It must not, it shall not be. Thou
hast said, thyself, that I am no ordinary child to be amused with ball
and top, and entertained with picture books.”
But the elder baron had hardened his heart, and all my pleading was to
no purpose.
And yet I did not despair of gaining my point in the end.
The continual dropping of water finally wore away the rock. I made up my
mind now to move the elder baron to acquiesce in my project of leaving
home by resorting to entirely different tactics. Said I to myself:
“He wishes me to be a child: I’ll be one!” And forthwith I set about
making friends with every mischievous little rogue in the town.
Not a single juvenile ne’er-do-well escaped my attentions.
The more rampant, active, and tireless his power of mischief, the closer
I wrapped him in my affections.
From gray dawn to dewy eve these chums and boon companions of mine
flocked about the castle. They worshipped me as their leader and yielded
an implicit obedience to my commands as were I possessed of some mastery
over them.
The elder baron saw the gathering cloud and bent his head as if to meet
the coming storm with better chance of resisting it.
Came there a dinner party, the choicest Burgundy was found to have been
spirited away and the bottles filled with common claret. Did the elder
baron meet his friends in the fields for a trial with the hawks, it was
only to discover that they had been so overfed as to sit stupidly placid
when the hood was removed. Let the cook be told that guests were
expected, and that he must be careful to have the little dumplings of
his soup extra delicate, to the elder baron’s horror, a cherry stone
would be found in the centre of each little dumpling.
One of my coadjutors was venturesome enough to pilfer the elder baron’s
snuff box and fill it with pepper. The result may be imagined. Another
took good care to pour water into all the tinder boxes before the guests
called for their pipes. Upon attempting to rise from the table, here and
there a queue would be found securely tied to the back of the chair.
One of my favorite exploits was to station myself on the first landing
of the stairway and “hold the bridge like Horatius Cocles of old,” my
wild band of two dozen young barbarians rushing madly up the staircase
with screams, yells and vociferations which would have done credit to
any horde of real savages I have ever visited, while I, with my wooden
sabre, beat down their sticks, occasionally rapping too bold a youngster
on the knuckles and sending him bawling to the foot of the stairway, to
Bulger’s infinite amusement, as he always insisted upon taking part in
the fray and gloried in my prowess.
At last to my great joy, I noticed that the elder baron showed signs of
surrender.
Like a prudent general I ordered an attack all along the line.
There was to be a fox hunt the next day. I directed one of my trusted
lieutenants to feed the hounds all the raw meat they could swallow,
about an hour before the start.
Ten others, most fleet-footed and glib-tongued, I dispatched to the
houses of the ten leading physicians and surgeons of the town and its
immediate neighborhood, with the same message to each, namely, that
every man, woman and child at the manor house had been taken violently
ill, and that the greatest haste must be made to come with their
medicine chests so that the epidemic might be checked.
[Illustration: THE TEN BOTTLES OF MEDICINE BROUGHT BY THE TEN DOCTORS.]
The ten doctors galloped into the courtyard at nearly the same moment,
only to find the elder baron and his friends gathered on the platform
and holding a whispered consultation over the strange actions of the
hounds. The angry disciples of Galen refused to prescribe for the poor
animals, and galloped away again with their well-filled holsters
thumping against their legs.
Meanwhile I had not been idle.
To the claws of a score or more of the elder baron’s fowls I tied a kind
of fuzee of my own invention, so inflammable that the slightest friction
would cause it to burst into flame, and then I turned them loose in the
fields and garden adjoining the family hall.
They had been cooped up all the Summer, and were overjoyed at the
prospect of a good, comfortable scratching time ’mid the dry leaves and
stubble of the open fields.
The gamekeepers by this time had succeeded in arousing the hounds
somewhat from their stupor, when the cry of “fire! fire!” went up. The
hunting party hastily dismounted and joined the servants in the mad rush
for buckets of water.
I was sitting calmly in my apartment, with Bulger by my side, when the
alarm was raised.
The elder baron at first was inclined to think that although my
workmanship was plainly visible in the fabrics of mischief, which
consisted in overfeeding the hounds and summoning the ten doctors to the
manor house on a wild goose chase, yet the breaking out of the fire in
the neighboring gardens and fields was really something with which I had
nothing to do. The return of a venerable old Dominick rooster, which had
been either too feeble or too lazy to explode the fuzees attached to his
claws, settled the matter, however.
The elder baron’s mind was now clear as to who had conceived the crime
in which his poor fowls had so unwittingly become the accomplices.
That night Bulger and I went to bed with light hearts.
The elder baron had at last consented to let us set out on our first
journey in quest of strange adventures among the curious people of
far-away lands.
[Illustration: THE FOWLS THAT WOULDN’T SCRATCH, AND SO BETRAYED ME.]
CHAPTER V.
Preparations for my first voyage. The elder Baron selects the port
from which I am to sail. Description of port No Man’s Port. How I
escaped its quicksands, Whirlpool and Thor’s Hammer. Becalmed on the
Southern Seas, I rescue my ship in a wonderful way. Land ho!
Something about a beautiful Island. I leave my ship and start for
the interior. How I fell in with some most extraordinary beings.
Description of them. They leave me to go and request permission of
their chief to present me at his court. How I thought myself
attacked by a band of gigantic beings. My strange mistake. They
prove to be the same beings I had met the day before. What had
caused the transformation. The land of the Wind Eaters. I am
conducted to the court of Ztwish-Ztwish. More about the curious
people. The Chief’s affection for me. The bursting of the babies.
Go-Whizz becomes my enemy. I grow thin. Queen Phew-yoo wants me to
marry Princess Pouf-fâh. To regain my flesh I teach the Wind Eaters
to catch fish. Terrible accident resulting from a fire I had
kindled. Go-Whizz demands my death. Ztwish-Ztwish refuses. The
furious brawler tries to slay the Chief and is himself slain, by
Ztwish-Ztwish. To avoid the marriage with Pouf-fâh, I send Bulger
back to the ship, and then escape in the night. Too weak to bear the
fatigue, I am overtaken. Enmeshed in the nets of the Wind Eaters and
nearly beaten to death. Bulger rescues me. The relief party from my
ship come up with me. I reach the coast, and after a short rest,
sail for home.
[Illustration: BULGER HELPS ME WITH MY PACKING.]
I threw myself now heart and soul into the task of making ready for my
first voyage.
Bulger was not slow to understand what all the hurry-skurry meant.
He was delighted at the prospect of a trip to distant lands where life
had less monotony about it. By the hour he would sit and watch me at my
labors and, from time to time, to please him, I pointed out articles
lying here and there about the room and bade him fetch them, which he
invariably did, with many manifestations of pleasure at being permitted
to help his little master.
In fact, everybody lent a hand most kindly, so that, to my great
satisfaction, I was left more time for the study of navigation.
My poor mother, the gracious baroness, would not permit anyone else to
mark my clothing. With her own slender, white fingers she worked the
crest and initials of my wardrobe.
There was a matter which I turned over in my thoughts for several days,
to wit: What national garb I should adopt.
After long and mature deliberation I resolved to attire myself in
Oriental dress. I did so for several reasons. It had been a favorite
garb of mine.
Its picturesque grace appealed to my love of the beautiful, while on the
other hand, its ease and lightness made it very agreeable to one of
extreme suppleness of limb and elasticity of step. While the old manor
house was being literally turned topsy-turvy and everybody, from cook to
chambermaid, set by the ears, the elder baron was by no means idle. He
took good care, among other things, that I was well provided with
wholesome reading matter, and brought me several books of maxims,
precepts, reflections, thoughts and studies, which he requested me to
thrust into the empty corners of my chests, “for,” said he, and that,
too, with a great show of reason, “thou wilt have many idle hours on thy
hands in calm weather. It behooves thee to feed thy mind lest its
wonderful development be checked and thou become as an ordinary child,
with no thoughts above games and picture books.” My poor mother, the
gracious baroness, added to this stock of good literature by presenting
me with a small volume entitled: “The Straight Road to Good Health; or,
Everybody His Own Doctor.” As to my medicine chest, I gave that my
personal supervision, for I was always skilled in the art of reading all
kinds of symptoms and was gifted with the rare faculty of knowing almost
instinctively what remedy to give for a certain ailment, without first
experimenting upon the patient by trying one thing after another, as is
the custom with most people who pretend to heal sickness.
[Illustration: TRUE PORTRAITS OF BULGER AND ME; I AS I APPEARED IN MY
ORIENTAL DRESS.]
Everything was going well now, and I was in the best of spirits, when
the elder baron came to me with a proposal which, for some reason, I can
hardly tell why, displeased me, although it would seem that it ought to
have had the opposite effect. He proposed to precede me, by a week or
ten days, to the North Sea, in some port of which I intended to purchase
and fit out a swift, staunch vessel, purchase the vessel himself, give
his personal attention to fitting her out and shipping a crew of picked
men.
What could I do?
If I refused his offer, it would have been tantamount to a confession of
distrust on my part.
Can he have in mind any project to thwart my scheme?
O, perish the thought!
But I must confess that I did not accept his proffered services without
serious misgivings.
This sudden anxiety on the part of the elder baron to hurry my
departure, after having opposed it so long and so vigorously, made me a
little uneasy in my mind.
Before setting out for the North Sea to purchase a ship for me, the
elder baron entered my apartment, and spoke as follows:
“Pardon me, little baron, for interrupting thy labors, for I perceive
that thou art deep in the study of navigation.”
“Speak, Baron,” said I, looking up, with a mischievous smile, “that
right belongs to thee.”
“I have a last request to make,” he continued, in his usual calm manner,
“nor is it a matter of very great importance. Rather is it a whim, more
than aught else. Thou knowest from my lips, and from the perusal of our
family chronicles, that we were in ancient time very large land owners
on the coast of the North Sea. We controlled several ports, were
extensively engaged in trade, sending out at least a score of ships in a
twelvemonth. One of the ports of our domain was a famous one, famous for
the extraordinary character of its inlet and outlet currents, channel,
etc. It was said of this port that it was more dangerous than the open
sea, that vessels were really safer out of it than in it. I know not how
much of truth may be in all this, but I do know that one man, an
ancestor of ours, not only sailed into it, but safely out again, for
thou must know that the channel by which a vessel gained admission to
this port could not be used to leave it again, as the irresistible
current always flowed the one way, namely, from the sea into this
mysterious basin. To leave it, the bold mariner must trust his bark to
another channel, and therein lurked the danger.
“It would gratify me greatly, little baron, if thou couldst prove to the
world that, no matter how difficult, other captains once found, and now
find it, to sail out of this port, yet to thee it offered no
insurmountable obstacles, and therefore, am I come to ask thee to set
sail from this port!”
“It is called?” I asked carelessly, as I turned to a chart of the North
Sea.
“Port No Man’s Port,” replied the baron.
“I like its name,” said I. “Order my ship to await me there!”
The elder baron arose, and bending his body with stately grace,
withdrew. I accompanied him to the door and dismissed him with most
respectful obeisance.
“Port No Man’s Port,” I answered. “Ah, here is the chart!” The
descriptive text reads as follows:
“Abandoned for many years; ingress easy; egress so dangerous as to mean
fatal injury, if not destruction, to sailing craft; outer channel
blocked by a fearful whirlpool and swinging rock called “Thor’s Hammer;”
inner basin extremely dangerous from constantly shifting sands; closed
by order of the Royal Ministry of Commerce and Marine.” Upon finishing
the reading of these words I sprang up and began to pace the floor,
wildly and half unconsciously.
The blood rushed in upon my brain. I was obliged to halt and cling to
the back of a tall oak chair, or I should have staggered and fallen to
the ground.
Bulger was greatly alarmed and sent up a suppressed howl of grief. I
spoke to him as calmly as I could to comfort him.
After a few moments the vertigo passed off and my mind cleared up
completely.
“Nay, it is impossible,” I whispered, “the elder baron could not be
guilty of bad faith to me! Away with such a thought! He errs through
thoughtlessness and lack of experience. He little knows the terribly
dangerous character of the task he is setting me. To him, the talks of
shipwreck and death within Port No Man’s Port are but the legends of
old-time sailor-life. He has not the faintest suspicion that his
request, so lightly made, exposes his only child, son and heir to a
princely fortune and honored name, either to be engulfed by these
shifting sands, sucked down to destruction by this fearful whirlpool, or
crushed by a blow from Thor’s Hammer.
“And yet why murmur?
“It is too late to protest. Already the elder baron has proclaimed to
the world the, to him proud piece of news, that his son was about to
renew the old-time glories of his family! I must do one of two things:
Face these dangers like a man of cool, calm courage, or condemn myself
to a life of dull and listless activity, the magnate of a province and
not the hero of two worlds!
“No! the die is cast!
“I have said it and it is as good as done!
“My ship sails from Port No Man’s Port, or this little body feeds its
fish that day!”
Doubtless my eyes brightened, and my cheeks took on a glow of crimson
hue, for Bulger, who had been listening to my soliloquy with a most
pained expression on his face, as he vainly tried to get at the meaning
of my words, now broke out into a very lively succession of barks,
bounding and springing about the room in the wildest merriment. He knew
only too well that some terrible struggle had been going on in my mind.
Now he realized that all was well. Faithful creature, if he could only
tell his love, how he would put all human lovers to blush!
As the hour drew near for me to bid adieu to the baronial hall, that
good lady, the gracious baroness, my mother, suddenly thought of a
thousand and one things which she deemed of the very greatest importance
to me. She warned me that I was not to sleep in a draught; not to
partake of freshly-baked bread; not to drink cold water while
overheated; not to cut my finger nails too short; not to sleep with my
mouth open; not to wear my underclothing longer than one week; not to
neglect to brush my teeth; not to fail to have my hair cut with the new
moon; not to strain my eyes reading by a poor light not to swallow my
food without thoroughly chewing it; not to laugh while I had food in my
mouth; not to attempt to stop a sneeze; not to neglect to pare my corns;
not to pick my teeth with a metal point; not to examine the end of my
nose without a looking-glass; not to eat meat without pepper, or
vegetables without salt; not to exert myself after a hearty meal; not to
stand upon my leg while it was asleep; not to walk so fast as to get a
pain in my side; not to go to sleep until I had first rested on my right
side; not to fail to take a pill if I saw flashes in the dark; not to
neglect to tie a stocking around my neck in case my throat felt sore,
etc., etc., etc. When the moment came to take leave of the gracious
baroness, my good mother, I was deeply moved. All the servants and
retainers, from indoors and out, filed in front of me, kissed my hand
and showered blessings on me.
I may safely say that the only being present not moved to tears was
Bulger. He was so anxious to get under way that he passed an hour or so
racing from the manor house to the carriage and back again in a piteous
endeavor to get the procession started.
Start we did, at last.
A hundred hands waved us a fond farewell.
The stately trees that shut in the baronial hall swayed solemnly. I was
glad when we rolled out of the court yard for I needed rest and quiet.
My nerves had been on such a stretch for the past month that a change of
scene brought me balm and relaxation.
My journey to the North Sea was quiet and uneventful.
I found my ship safely anchored in Port No Man’s Port, and the elder
baron there in charge of her. He introduced me to the sailing-master,
pressed me in his own loving arms, and with a gracious smile and stately
wave of the hand, seated himself in the family coach. His only adieu
was:
“My son, thy wisdom comes to thee by inheritance. Thou couldst not have
acquired it. Therefore, make a noble use of so noble a gift. Farewell!”
I bent my head in silence. The carriage rolled away. I stood alone. Nay,
a true and loving friend was there. He looked up with his large,
lustrous eyes, as if to say:
“Don’t be sad, little master. No matter who goes, I’ll stay by thee
forever!”
Turning to my sailing-master, I ordered the ship’s launch to be manned,
and began at once a survey of the mysterious port in which my ship lay
anchored.
I found it to be a roomy basin, shut in by a rock-bound shore. In places
the waters slept beneath black and glassy surfaces; in others, all was
movement and commotion. Its waves came boiling and bubbling against the
launch with swirling masses of white sand, shifting hither and thither,
as if condemned to perpetual unrest.
The fact that my men, while fishing in different parts of the bay, often
caught deep-sea fish, proved to me that Port No Man’s Port was traversed
by a channel from four to six fathoms in depth.
The only difficulty would be to fix the boundaries of this constantly
shifting path long enough to sail across the basin.
I next turned my attention to the whirlpool. It marked the junction of
the outer channel with the basin of Port No Man’s Port.
Having purchased a number of condemned hulks for the purpose of testing
the strength and fury of the whirlpool, I caused a strong hawser to be
rigged to a capstan on shore, and was in this way enabled to let the
launch approach within a ship’s length of the whirlpool with perfect
safety. In truth, it was, when roused to the full measure of its fury by
the intrusion of any large floating body, a sight to strike terror to
the stoutest heart!
With a deep booming and rumble, its waters rose in tumultuous commotion,
boiling, bubbling, seething, till snow-white foam covered the pool like
a mantle of bleached linen, then lifting the intruder, which in this
case was one of the hulks that I had ordered to be launched upon them,
these angered waters whirled it completely around. In an instant, as if
exhausted by this tremendous effort, a mysterious calm sank upon the
pool. The foam-sheet, broken in shreds, danced gently on the rippling
bosom of the waters. All was peace, save that the hulk still lay
trembling like an affrighted being in the lap of this resting monster!
For, look! It is aroused again. Faster and faster it whirls its prey.
Deeper and deeper its now wide-opened jaws draw down the ill-fated hulk!
A terrible roar tells that the end is near!
’Tis gone!
Ay, but wait! It will give up its prey again!
Even now bits of plank float seaward, dancing on the rushing waters.
Soon the crumpled, broken, crushed remnants of that strong hulk will
follow.
This watery monster doth not feed upon what he swallows! He destroys for
the mere love of destruction. Night had come now. I returned to my ship.
The shifting sands and the whirlpool had uncovered their horrors. But I
feared them no more! Like the horse-tamer when he has at last succeeded
in thrusting the steel bit between the champing and gnashing teeth of
the wild young steed, I now felt that they were conquered.
“And now for Thor’s Hammer!” was my cry, as I sat down beside Bulger for
a brief moment’s reflection.
The first streak of gray light in the east found me on deck.
“Thor’s Hammer” was a huge shaft of black, flinty rock, projecting about
twenty feet out of the water and ending in a hammer-shaped head. It
guarded the channel where it reached the sea, standing exactly in the
middle, thus forcing a vessel to pass on one side or the other of it.
Beneath the waters, this dread sentinel must have ended in a gigantic
ball, which, in the flight of time had worn a socket for itself in the
bed rock of the channel; for it swung loose and free, moved by every
powerful billow from side to side, threatening swift destruction to any
passing craft.
To speak frankly, the sight of this terrible engine of destruction
appalled me! How shall I escape the vigilance of this gigantic sentinel,
who knows no sleep, no rest, whose blows fall with like fury on friend
or foe? How shall I lull him to repose for a few brief moments?
Determined to study closely the strength, the rapidity, and the
character of the blows struck by “Thor’s Hammer,” I caused several huge
structures of plank and timber to be erected near the position of this
mighty sentinel of rock. One after the other I ordered them to be thrown
into the channel.
At first, I was fairly paralyzed upon discovering that even the slight
vortex caused by the drifting by of one of these wooden structures set
the swinging rock in violent vibration and always towards the passing
object.
Judging from the effect of Thor’s Hammer upon these floating masses of
plank and timber, a single blow would suffice to crush the very life out
of my ship in spite of her unusual staunchness.
I stood transfixed with dread forebodings. I could feel the beads of
perspiration break from my forehead and trickle down my cheeks. Must I
give up and return home, broken in spirits, humiliated, the butt of
ridicule, the target of village wit, the subject of mirth and laughter
in every peasant’s cottage?
Oh, no! It can not, it must not be!
Like a flash of lightning, a thought flamed across the dark horizon of
my mind.
Am I not dreaming? Was it really so?
One of the wooden structures still remained. Controlling my emotion with
great difficulty, I ordered it thrown into the channel and took up a
favorable position to watch once again the wrath of the towering
sentinel! In a few moments “Thor’s Hammer” felt the coming of the craft
and bent itself in impotent rage beating the air with blows which fell
faster and faster! Ay, I was right! When once Thor’s Hammer had begun
its labor of death and ruin, it turned not from its task, so long as
there remained any object for it to spend its fury upon!
Nor was there any escape for the ill-fated craft until it had been
pounded into flinders! Hanging over it, blow followed blow with fearful
clash and clamor. Not until the poor remnant had drifted seaward, did
that black and flinty shaft cease its furious swinging.
Turning to my sailing-master, who stood with his wondering eyes fixed
full upon me, I called out in a calm and careless tone: “In three days,
skipper, if the weather is clear, we leave Port No Man’s Port!”
A lump rose up in his throat, but he gulped it down, and cried out
merrily:
“Ay, ay, sir.”
And what three busy days they were, too! My men were not long in
catching something of the indomitable spirit of their new commander. I
worked them hard, but I fed them well, served out grog with a liberal,
but wise hand, and saw that all their wants were satisfied. In turn,
their wonderment became admiration, and their admiration affection.
The first day all the hands that could be spared were set to work making
fishing lines, with a good, stout hook at one end and a cork float at
the other. The lines were cut about three fathoms in length, and the
floats were painted a bright crimson. I then gave orders to rig three
jury-masts, one midships, and one fore and aft.
My men set to work with a will, but I caught them several times in the
act of tapping their foreheads and exchanging significant glances. But
if this last order threw them into a brown study, my next had the effect
of a bombshell exploding in their midst.
Sailing-master and all, they stood staring at me as if they were only
waiting for me to annihilate them.
My order was to rig a steering gear under the figure-head. A coasting
vessel, which I had sent for, now came sailing leisurely into Port No
Man’s Port. I directed the skipper to pay her crew three months’ extra
wages, and discharge them.
This done, my men were ordered to lash the coaster on our starboard
side.
I verily believe that my whole plan, so carefully studied out, was at
this point only saved from utter failure by the wisdom of my faithful
Bulger.
The coaster had no sooner been lashed to our side than he sprang lightly
over the railing, and began to amuse himself by gamboling up and down
the clear deck. Suddenly he paused near one of the hatches and broke out
into a most furious barking. I called to one of my officers to look
sharp and see what the matter was. He reported in a few moments that one
of the discharged seamen had been found concealed in the hold. When I
threatened to put him in irons, he confessed that his design had been to
cut the coaster loose as soon as our ship had drawn near to the
whirlpool.
It was a narrow escape.
Dear, faithful Bulger, how much we owe thee for that discovery!
The third day dawned bright and fair.
The wind was most favorable, blowing strong off shore.
At the first glimmer of light, my men were astir and on the lookout for
my appearance.
They greeted Bulger and me with three hearty cheers.
They had made up their minds that what I didn’t know, Bulger did! At
last all was ready!
I nodded to the sailing-master, and in a moment or so the capstan began
to revolve, and the merry “Yo, heave O!” of the men told me that the
anchor had been started. Hundreds of the lines and floats, well-baited,
were now cast overboard. Standing on the taffrail, glass in hand, I
watched them closely and anxiously.
Imagine my joy at seeing several of these crimson floats disappear like
a flash, rise again, and again vanish for an instant.
“The first point is gained,” I cried out. “I have found the channel!”
Passing word quickly to the sailing-master who was in charge of the
steering gear, my good vessel moved slowly out of Port No Man’s Port,
stern first. Again and again the baited lines with their crimson floats
were thrown overboard. The deep water fish that swarmed the
ever-shifting channel kept steadily at work. As our ship advanced, they
tugged at the lines and thus kept the tortuous course plainly marked
out. Glass in hand, I watched the successful working of this part of my
plan, with tingling veins and a bounding heart. A loud huzza from my men
tell me that we have cleared the shifting sands. Ay, true it is! We have
crossed the basin of Port No Man’s Port! Its dreaded quicksands swirl
and roll in vain. It was not fated that they should engulf the Little
Baron’s ship!
But see! The channel narrows! The waters grow black, and troubled. And
hark!
Didn’t you hear that dull roar? I spring down from the taffrail! I pass
among my men and drop here and there a word of encouragement. My perfect
calmness impresses them. No merry “ay, ay, Sir!” goes up, but I see a
response in their faces. It is: “We trust you little captain, speak!”
The dull roar grows louder and louder.
The rapids catch us up and bear us along like chips on the foaming tide
of a mountain stream. Our staunch vessel rocks like a toy boat. The
coaster lashed to one side creaks and groans in its wild efforts to
break away.
Calling Bulger to me I pass the line around him and lash him firmly to
the main-mast, for I was fearful lest a sudden lurch might hurl him
overboard. On, on, we speed through the frightened waters. The roar is
deafening. I glance at my seamen. Their bronzed faces are blanched. They
cling to the shrouds and stays. Their eyes are riveted upon me.
Look! the fearful whirlpool is dead ahead of us. It opens its
foam-flecked jaws like some terrible monster. We leap into its very
mouth. Are we lost? How can it be otherwise? As if our staunch vessel
were a nutshell, the swirling, raging, whirling, battling, boiling
waiters catch her up in their encircling arms, lift her high above the
sea level, turn her completely around and drop her with such terrific
force that great walls of water rise on all sides and threaten to engulf
the frail wooden thing. But most wondrous change; mark how she floats
upon a glassy pool! The foam dances in the sunlight on the rippling
waves. All is peace where but a moment before nature raged with demoniac
fury. Quick as thought I leap into the mizzen shrouds: “Cut away the
jury-masts!” They fall overboard with a crash. My men work with a mad
earnestness. They know too well that every instant may be their last.
Our mainsail already hoisted is sheeted home without a word or a cry. We
are too near death to sing! See! See! The wind fills the great sail! We
move. The waters seem to scent our escape. They are awaking to new fury.
A deep rumble from the very bowels of the earth calls upon them to
arouse from their lethargy.
They reach out for us.
Too late! too late!
We sweep out of their reach. We are saved! We are saved! A shout goes up
from two score throats, from which Fear now takes her hand!
Look back! As if robbed of its prey, the whirlpool awakes with redoubled
fury.
A hundred arm-like streams of water gush forth and pour around our good
ship in vain effort to draw her back into that terrible vortex.
We are drenched with clouds of spray and mist, as we slowly but steadily
keep on our course. Would that we were safe upon the swelling tide of
the open sea, for there is still another danger to be met.
Our channel suddenly narrows. I could toss a biscuit to the rocky wall,
which shuts us in on both sides.
Again a deep silence falls upon ship and crew, broken only by a strange
sound of rushing waters, bursting out and dying away as regularly as the
swing of a pendulum. ’Tis Thor’s Hammer, beating the frightened waters
into foam, as it sways from side to side.
In spite of my effort to appear calm, I can feel my heart beat faster.
A cold chill benumbs my hands. A glance ahead startles me like a blow
from an unseen hand. There, with the morning sun resting on its
hammer-shaped crest, swings that dreaded shaft of flinty rock,
threatening instant destruction to any ship bold enough to attempt to
pass it.
In accordance with my orders, every sail on the coaster had been set,
and her helm lashed, so as to pass to the right of Thor’s Hammer.
“Courage, men!” I cried. “Stand by, all! Cut away the lashings! Cast off
the tender!”
Then waving my hand to the skipper, our mainsail came down with a run.
Everything worked like a charm. Our ship slowed up, while the coaster
shot ahead to her destruction. See, how gallantly the doomed craft
speeds on her way; for the breeze had freshened, and several gay
streamers and flags, which my men had run up to the topmast, fluttered
in the crisp morning air.
There! Did you not hear that crash?
Thor’s Hammer has struck her!
Blow follows blow!
Crash! Crash! Crash!
Now is our time, or never!
I was not caught napping. The moment we were clear of the coaster, I had
ordered sails enough to be set to hold our ship steady on her course.
Already we drew near to Thor’s Hammer, which is fast battering the
coaster to a shapeless mass. The sea is filled with bits of plank and
broken timber. Thor’s Hammer bends to its dread work of destruction,
unmindful of our presence.
What could withstand its terrible fury?
Those sturdy timbers yield like twigs.
Another minute, and we have the monster and his victim in our wake!
Now, now, we’re passing him! Our sails tremble from the very force of
his breath! Our deck is strewn with splinters! The roar and crash are
deafening. Thor’s Hammer bends for one last blow at the ribs and keel of
its broken and disjointed victim!
Hurrah! Hurrah!
Our good ship dips to the deep roll of the ocean’s breast! We are on the
open sea! Port No Man’s Port, farewell!
As my men looked back at the rocky gateway and the grim sentinel of Port
No Man’s Port, they tossed their caps into the air and sent up cheer
after cheer.
Bulger bounded about the deck, doing his best by most vigorous barking,
to testify his admiration for his little master.
The sailing-master drew near; and, touching his cap and scratching the
deck with the toe of his shoe, cried out gayly:
“Bravo! little Baron. That was splendidly done! I was sure we should
never get through the shifting sands. And when they were passed, I was
ready to swear the whirlpool would make short work of us. But when we
sailed safely out of that, I drew near the tail rail ready to jump
overboard, for I felt that nothing could save us from a blow from Thor’s
Hammer. I’ve grown wrinkled and gray facing the storms of Neptune’s
domain, but I never felt I had a master until now.”
I nodded and smiled, and quickly turned the conversation to some other
topic.
“By the way, skipper,” said I, “remember, the very moment we clear the
English Channel, turn her head southward!”
“Ay! ay! little Baron!” was the reply. Calling Bulger to me I now went
below. I wanted to be alone. The fact of the matter is, I needed rest.
The terrible strain on my nerves caused by the hopes and fears of the
past few days, began to tell upon me.
Throwing myself upon a canopy, I fell into a deep sleep from which I was
awakened by Bulger’s whining and crying.
The sailing-master was anxiously feeling my pulse.
I had slept three days and three nights. All this time Bulger had
absolutely refused to leave my side or partake of food, although the
skipper had tempted him with the daintiest morsels.
His joys knew no bounds as I sprang up and shook myself into shape.
“Where are we, master?” I cried.
“On the broad Atlantic, headed dead south, little Baron!” was the
answer.
“Good! send me a rasher of bacon and some hard-tack. The Atlantic breeze
has given me an appetite and, skipper,” I added, “a little broiled fowl
for Bulger.”
“And now, for the land of warmth and sunshine!” I murmured, “now for the
home of the orange and the palm! Cold winds like me not, I am a child of
the tropics, born in a land where nature works and man plays. No chill
blast ever whistled its sad tune over my cradle! Let those who will,
spend one-half their lives waiting for mother Earth to wake from her
Winter sleep! Freeze the body and you freeze the brain. I am of those
who love flowers better than snowflakes. Glorious South land! I greet
thee, thy child comes again to thy arms, oh, take him up kindly and
lovingly!”
* * * * *
Southward, ever southward my good ship sped along. By day I paced the
deck to watch the dolphins at play or to observe Bulger’s amazement when
a stray flying fish fell fluttering on deck; by night, with my eyes
fixed upon the blazing Southern Cross, I longed for the time to come
when I should set foot upon some beautiful strand decked out with coral
branch and shells of pearl, in whose limpid waters golden fish nestle
mid sea plants of not less brilliant hue.
It was now three weeks since the last murmur of Thor’s Hammer had fallen
on our ears.
My chronometer marked high noon. Every sail was set and our good ship
careened as gracefully as a swallow that bent in its flight to touch the
cool waters of some glassy lake. All of a sudden the wind fell, our ship
stood still on the motionless sea, my pennant hung like a string. There
was not air enough to lift the smoke from our galley fire. A strange
mysterious stillness weighed upon the ship and sea. I knew too well what
it betokened. One of those dreaded calms, more feared by the seamen that
the buffeting gale, had overtaken us.
Our ship stood like one moored to a marble wharf!
And as the thought flashed across my mind that days, ay even weeks might
pass ere the winds would lift themselves again to bear us on our way, a
feeling of utter listlessness came over me. It required a great exertion
for me to throw it off.
I dared not let my men see aught of discouragement in my face.
And yet, it was a hard task. Had I not been made of stern stuff, I would
have wept to see my progress stayed at the very moment victory was
almost within my grasp.
Again, as was the case, when the terrors of Port No Man’s Port rose,
like demons of malignant might, to shut me forever in that
rock-encircled basin, did my thoughts revert to home—to the elder baron
and his gracious consort, my dear mother; to the servants and retainers
of the baronial hall; to the villagers and tenantry. How, oh how should
I be able to face them all, if I were forced to return home with the
humiliating confession that my voyage had been a failure?
Bulger was the first to catch a glimpse of the shadow on my brow. He
turned his dark lustrous eyes full upon me so pleadingly as if to say:
“Oh, little master, what aileth thee? May I not do aught to drive the
dark melancholy from thy face? Thou knowest how I love thee. Teach me to
help thee. My life is thine. Thy grief weighs like lead on my heart.
Speak to me little master!” Tenderly and lovingly I stroked his head,
and spoke in softest tones to him. He was rejoiced, but still he sat and
watched me, for it was impossible to deceive him by feigning to be
lighthearted and unconcerned.
The second week found us lying like a log in a millpond, our sails
unvisited by the faintest breath of air; the sea sunken into a sleep
that seemed like death. Despair sat on the faces of my men. “Rouse thee,
little baron!” I murmured to myself as I paced my cabin floor, “where is
thy boasted cunning? Where is thy vaunted wisdom? Nevermore say that
thou art a man of projects, quick to devise, and quick to perform! Thou
hast lost thy hold on the spoke of fortune’s wheel!”
“Thinkest thou so?” cried I in answer to my own thoughts.
“Follow me, we shall see!” With a bound I cleared the gang way. The
sailing-master lay asleep on the deck. The men in groups, here and
there, looked the very picture of despair. Rousing the skipper with a
vigorous tug at his belt, aided by Bulger’s frantic outburst of barking,
I called out:
“Avast! there, skipper. Asleep from overwork? Pipe all hands on deck!”
The men came up in lively fashion, greatly amused by my cut at the
sailing-master, who stood rubbing his eyes, half dazed by my sudden
outburst. “Send me the ships carpenter!” I continued; and catching up a
piece of chalk I drew the plan of a large box or chest, nearly as long
as our ship’s breadth of beam, and gave the carpenter directions to
build it of the strongest planks to be had on board. He and his
assistants were soon at work.
Turning then to the cook I ordered him to kill the pigs and fowls we had
shipped for our own supply of fresh meat, bidding him to be careful and
not lose a drop of the blood.
These orders fairly drove my men wild with curiosity.
The sailing-master drew near and attempted to get some explanation from
me but in vain. I was too deep in thought to speak.
The long box was ready in a few hours. Word now went up that I was about
to abandon the ship and strive to reach land by rowing, and that this
long box was to hold the provisions.
The sailing-master again fixed his gaze inquiringly upon me. I pretended
not to notice his beseeching looks. The cook by this time had the fresh
meat in readiness. Under my directions it was all transferred to the
long chest, the blood poured over it, and the box securely closed with a
heavy plate-glass lid, made up of several pieces shipped for the purpose
of restoring broken lights. By this time the men had grown so excited
over this mysterious box and its still more mysterious contents, that I
was obliged to order them to fall back so that the carpenter and his
assistants might go on with their work without interruption.
The next step was to weight the long chest with lead and to attach
hoisting tackle to each end by strong iron rings. When all was ready I
called out to my men to stand by and lower it over the stern rail.
Stationed so that I could watch the lowering of the long box, I was
careful to sink it about three feet under water and then lash it firmly
to the ship’s stern. I had scarcely given the word to lower away on all
the sails when the ship began to move! The effect on my men was
indescribable. Some turned pale and stood as if transfixed with fear.
Others laughed in a wild maniac-like way. Others, who had their wits
about them, rushed to the stern taffrail to fathom the mystery.
A glance was enough!
It was a simple thing after all.
Gradually the others recovered their reason, and hastened to join their
companions and gaze down into the waters where I had lashed the long
box, with its glass lid and strange contents. Meanwhile our good ship
moved faster and faster through the sluggish, listless waters. A ringing
cheer, three times repeated, went up when the mystery was fully solved.
Mystery?
Hear then what this mystery consisted of!
In the first days of this dead calm, which settled like a terrible
blanket spread over us by the hands of some unseen monster, to check our
advance, I had noticed that the waters swarmed with sharks of
extraordinary length; that these fierce demons of the deep hung about
our vessel in shoals of countless numbers, attracted by the garbage
thrown overboard, and, doubtless, too, by the odor of the many living
beings on board the ship.
When, at times, a particularly large supply of garbage fell into the
water, so fierce was the onslaught of these ravenous monsters, that they
actually jarred the ship as they struck against its sides or stern,
locked together like advancing cohorts of trained soldiery.
Upon this hint I acted. If, as I reasoned, I can only control this now
wild force, why may I not make use of it to rescue my ship from a worse
danger than raging storm? For far better would it be to face the howling
blast and foam-crested wave than to perish from thirst, chained to the
open sea by this breathless calm.
Now, however, all was changed.
On, on, our good ship went, with ever-increasing speed, gliding
noiselessly and swiftly through the mirror-like waters. My device worked
far better than I had dared to dream, for, as the fresh blood began to
trickle through the crevices of the long box, the ravenous sea monsters
were almost maddened by its smell and taste. The largest and fiercest
pressed forward in serried ranks, tossing their smaller companions high
in the air, as they took up their places with wild and eager search for
prey which lured them on, ever so near them, and still ever beyond their
reach.
No sooner did the foremost ranks of this army of myrmidons of the deep
show signs of fatigue than long lines of fresh and eager recruits darted
forward, hurling their exhausted fellows right and left, like bits of
cork, and took up the task of following the ever-retreating prey, which,
although giving out its life blood, and plainly visible to them, yet
seemed to know no tiring, and sped onward, and ever onward before the
wild, tumultuous attack of their pushing, plunging cohorts!
The moon now shone like a plate of burnished silver on the blue walls of
heaven, and the deep silence of the sleeping waters was broken by the
splash of those mighty bodies, glistening in her light, as they toiled
and struggled to urge our vessel on its way.
I could not sleep.
Wrapped in a woolen cloak, to shield me from the insidious dews of the
tropics, I threw myself on deck, with Bulger’s head pillowed on my lap.
Something whispered to me that if those hunger-stricken marauders of the
deep would only keep to their task till the morning sun streaked the
east, my cheek would feel the breath of coming winds.
And so it turned out. With the first glimmer of daylight I caught sight
of a ripple on the lake-like bosom of the ocean. At that very moment,
too, I noticed that our ship was slowing up. I sprang up on the
taffrail. Lo! our allies had abandoned us. Not a single follower of that
riotous camp was in sight! Ah, little did they dream how they had saved
ship and crew! How limitless is man’s selfishness! The beasts of the
field, the monsters of the deep must minister to his pleasure, obey his
commands. I had pointed out the ripple in the water and when the first
sturdy breath of wind reached us we were in readiness to receive it.
Every sail was set.
My heart leaped with joy as our ship drew up to the wind, obeying her
helm like a thing of life!
And that was the way I saved my ship and crew from a worse danger than
storm-lashed billows. From this time on, all went well. Scarcely a week
had gone by when I was startled by a cry which sounded sweeter to my
ears than voice of monarch to courtier.
“Land ho! Dead ahead!”
Seizing my glass I sprang up into the main-shrouds, and turned my gaze
in the direction indicated. Ay, true it was! There it lay before us,
rising from the ocean with gentle slope, its heights crowned with trees
of many-colored foliage, its shores ending in long stretches of
snow-white beach.
Above the unknown land hung a purple mist of a deep rich tint, like the
cheek of a ripe plum. As we drew near a landlocked harbor seemed to
welcome us. Not a sound or sign of life, however, came to break the deep
repose which enveloped the bay and shore.
Slowly and in stately bearing our good ship sailed into the harbor and
cast anchor. The radiant beauty of the land now burst upon me. Ten
thousand shells of pearly tints and hues glistened on the white sands,
while in the limpid waters, sea-flowers and foliage of deepest crimson
swayed gently with the tide. Up the sloping banks nature seemed to be
holding high carnival. No shrub or bush or tree was content to wear
simple green. Each waved some blossom of richest radiance in the soft
and balmy air. Here and there, a brooklet came tumbling down the
hillside, rippling, purling and splashing over the moss-grown rocks in
its bed. The air was heavy with the fragrance of this vast garden so
beautiful and yet so silent and deserted.
The next day, leaving my sailing-master in command, I set out on a
tramp, accompanied solely by my faithful Bulger. My idea was to see if
this island, for such I thought it to be, contained anything quaint and
curious. The further I advanced into the interior of this fair land of
bright flowers, purling brooks, clear skies and perfumed air, the more
was I astonished to find that neither vine, shrub, brush, nor tree bore
any berry or fruit to feed upon; and though it was just such a land of
brooks, flowers and balmy air as some dweller of the far-away North
might dream about; yet was it untrodden by the foot of man, for, rare
indeed is it that the people of the tropics are willing to prepare any
other food for themselves than that which nature spreads before them.
I now began to be thankful that I had supplied myself plentifully with
dried fruits before leaving my ship to set out for a tour of the island,
for such it seemed to me to be.
At this moment Bulger halted, and raising his nose in the air, sniffed
hard and long, and then fixed his dark eyes on me as much as to say:
“Take care, little master, some sort of living creatures are
approaching!” I had hardly time to draw one of my pistols and give a
hasty glance at its priming when with strange cries and stranger
movements a dozen or more beings of the human species sprang out of the
thicket with noiseless steps, and surrounded us. I raised the fire-arm,
which I held grasped in my right hand, ready to stop the advance of this
band of most curious creatures, by slaying their leader; for, judging by
the forbidding aspect of their faces and the terrible condition of their
bodies, apparently reduced by the dread pangs of hunger, to mere sacks
of skin hung on frames of bone, which methought rattled at every step
they took, I anticipated an instant attempt on their part to strike us
down and eat us.
[Illustration: THE LITTLE BARON MAKES FRIENDS WITH GO-WHIZZ AND HIS BAND
OF WIND EATERS.]
But I was very quickly reassured. First, by the fact that they bore no
weapons of any kind; and second, by the softness of their voices and the
walkingbeam-like motions of their bodies, which I interpreted to mean a
sort of welcome mingled with a desire to make friends with a human being
so different from themselves. Although I gave them to understand, or
tried to do so, by imitating the ducking motion of their heads, followed
by an attempt to equal their performance in making a large number of
very low bows, so graceful and easy that they would have done credit to
a French dancing master, that they had nothing to fear, yet they
continued to back away from me as fast as I advanced. Bulger was
somewhat surprised at my eagerness to make friends with such a
starved-out looking set of creatures and kept up a furious growling,
eying them suspiciously as they continued the walkingbeam motion of
their bodies all the while backing away from me.
I now found myself in front of a group of umbrella shaped bamboo huts
into which most of them had retreated. With no little difficulty was it
that I finally succeeded in coaxing them forth and convincing them that
my intentions were perfectly peaceful. For a quarter of an hour or more,
they circled about me in silent wonder, while I, on my part, gazed in
speechless astonishment at these extraordinary looking specimens of our
race. What they thought of me, you will learn as my story goes on, but
how shall I ever describe them to you so as to give you even a faint
idea of their wonderful appearance.
Imagine skeletons of rather small stature walking about, with collapsed
meal bags hung upon them, skin hanging down in folds everywhere,
flapping about at every step and you’ll have some faint conception of
the utterly ridiculous and grotesque look of these beings.
Almost every bone in their bodies was visible beneath this thin
covering. Their cheeks hung like two empty pouches on each side of their
faces, their noses stuck out like knife-blades. Deep wrinkles and
creases crossed and criss-crossed their faces, giving them a look of
terrible melancholy and utter wretchedness.
With their skeleton fingers ever and anon they grasped a fold of skin
and smoothed it out or pushed it elsewhere as one might a loosely
fitting garment. And yet, utterly wretched and melancholy as these
creatures seemed to be to the eye of the looker-on, their voices were
light and gay, and soft as flute notes. They chatted and laughed among
themselves, were full of mischief and pointed their pencil fingers at
different parts of Bulger’s and my body with evident enjoyment at the
sight of things so new and strange to them. Several times while gazing
upon these mournful and woebegone looking faces and at the same time
listening to their happy and childlike chatter, I broke out into a peal
of laughter which was not only very ill-bred, but which invariably had
the effect of causing them to fall back in disorder.
Gradually, however, they grew bolder, and by means of a kind of sign
language, gave me to understand that they desired to touch me. By
recourse to the same common language of mankind, I informed them that I
should be only too happy to gratify their requests and proceeded to lay
bare my breast and roll up the sleeves of my coat. They half repented of
their foolhardiness, and crowding together, interlocked their arms and
legs in such a manner that, to save my life, I couldn’t tell where one
commenced and the other ended.
But after a few moment’s coaxing, I succeeded in persuading them to
advance and lay their hands upon me.
Loud outcries followed exclamations of wonder and astonishment. As I
afterwards learned the words they uttered meant: “Lump!” “Chunk!”
“Stone!” “Hard!” “Solid!” At this moment, feeling a little bit hungry, I
opened my sack of dried fruit and thrust several pieces into my mouth.
And now came a still more furious outburst of wonder, mingled with cries
of horror and disgust. Again they retreated and tied themselves into a
knot.
Can it be, I asked myself, that these creatures never touch solid food?
Observing now that they were consulting among themselves as to what
course to pursue in regard to me, and being afraid that they might take
it into their heads to escape into the thicket, for they were as quick
in their movements as sprites and phantoms, I lost no time in making
them understand that I desired to be led into the presence of their King
or ruler.
This seemed to please them. But with many duckings of their heads, they
withdrew a short distance, and held a sort of pow-wow. After which, one
of their number, who seemed to be a sort of leader among them, and whose
name, as I afterwards learned, was Go-Whizz, advanced toward me with
numerous low-bendings of his body, and succeeded in informing me that
their chief lived at a great distance from where we were, and that it
would be necessary for me to remain here while they returned to their
ruler to ask his permission to conduct me to him.
I readily consented to such an arrangement.
Go-Whizz then led me to one of their dwellings, pointed out a bed of
nice dry rushes, and invited me to make myself comfortable until he
should come again to conduct me into the presence of their chief,
Ztwish-Ztwish, as was the name he bore.
Bulger and I didn’t wait for a second bidding, for we were tired to the
bone after our long tramp. With half a dozen or more bows, quite as low
as those made by Go-Whizz and his companions, I began to make ready for
a night’s rest.
For a moment or so, I stood watching the retreating figures of these
extraordinary people who, in single file, swiftly and noiselessly, like
so many phantoms, had flitted away from the spot. Then throwing myself
down on the bed of rushes, called out to Bulger to lie down by me. But
he was not so trustful as I, and after caressing my hands, took up his
position at the door of the dwelling, so as to save his little master
from any treachery on the part of the phantom people.
Day now went out suddenly, like a lamp quenched by the wind.
Bulger refused to sleep.
But I, sheltered from the night dews by this thickly-thatched roof, soon
fell into a deep and refreshing sleep, out of which Bulger found it
difficult to arouse me, for I have a faint recollection of having felt
him scratching at my arm for several moments, ere I could shake off the
fetters of sleep, which held me bound so tightly.
Sitting up hastily, I discovered that Bulger was patrolling the floor in
a state of great excitement, pausing ever and anon to sniff the morning
air, which, it was plain to be seen, brought him a warning of some kind.
Instantly it occurred to me that wild beasts were prowling about in the
neighborhood. I examined the priming of my fire-arms. Bulger looked well
pleased to see that I was thoroughly aroused as to the threatening
danger.
He now grew bolder, and springing out into the open air, made a circuit
of the dwelling, only to return with bristling hair, and growling out
his suspicion that all was not right.
His ever-increasing anxiety now began to cause me genuine alarm. I was
upon the very point of making a hasty retreat to my vessel, when the
thought flashed through my mind: “What! escape these swift-footed
phantoms? It were idle to attempt it!” So I determined to take my
chances, come what might.
The hut was strongly built and its roof would at least protect us from a
flight of poisoned arrow’s.
While I was occupied in making a hasty survey of the place, a loud
outcry from Bulger startled me. I gave one look and a shiver of fear
zigzagged through my body.
An armed band was full in sight.
With fierce shouts, deep and rumbling, they came nearer and nearer.
Their massive forms swayed from side to side. Their huge limbs, moved
like walking oaks. Their arms seemed the sturdy branches ending in hands
which, in the dim morning light, took the shape of gnarled and knotted
knobs; terrific strength was shadowed forth by their broad and heavy
shoulders. One blow from a hand of such sledge hammer weight would lay a
frail creature like me helpless in the dust!
Bulger, brave as he was, quailed at the sight. In an instant I collected
my thoughts and breathed a last goodbye to the elder baron and to the
gentle baroness, my mother, in their far-away home beneath the northern
skies.
Now they had reached the very doorway, and stood beating their huge
chests and giving forth deep rumbling sounds.
Instinctively I unsheathed my poniard and brandished it in the air.
The effect was astounding!
With terrific cries, groans and shouts they fell back in the wildest
terror, rolling over each other, bounding asunder like gigantic
footballs, striking the earth and bounding into an erect position.
When at last these human air-bags settled down into something like rest,
one of their number broke out into the most plaintive and beseeching
speech which, I afterwards learned, had about the following meaning: “O,
Master: O, Magician! O, Mysterious Lump! O, Impenetrable Chunk! put away
that dread instrument! Prick us not with its awful point, pierce not our
delicate skins. The slightest touch from that frightful blade would
cause our bodies to burst like pricked balloons! Fear us not. We are thy
friends. We come to conduct thee to our great chief, Ztwish-Ztwish. I am
Go-Whizz, thy slave.”
Suddenly the truth broke in upon my wondering mind. There was no
falsehood in the speaker’s words. It was Go-Whizz! The others were his
companions—the wretched woebegone bags of bones who had parted with me
only the day before.
With a smile and gentle wave of the hand, I hastily returned my dagger
to its sheath and gave Go-Whizz to understand that he had nothing to
fear from me. Half crazed with curiosity I now advanced to take a closer
look at Go-Whizz and his companions. Sober fact is it when I tell you
that they were, man for man, the self same beings I first fell in with
on my starting out to explore the island.
But this wonderful change you ask? How had they in one short night grown
to such herculean build—arms and limbs as massive as those of Japanese
wrestlers.
I reply it was all air! When I first met these gentlemen they had not
dined. Now they had just come from a hearty meal. For, you must know
that I was now in the land of the wonderful Wind Eaters! When the air is
calm and the winds asleep, these curious people are obliged to fast,
and, their skins hang in wrinkled bags as I have described; but when the
wind starts up for a mad frolic or even a gentle puff and blow, these
strange creatures at once begin to increase in size, and not long is it
before every wrinkle and crease disappear like magic.
As Go-Whizz and his companion stood before me, I was struck by the
ridiculous contrast between their voices and the expression of their
faces. Yesterday, with their fierce and forbidding faces their voices
were soft and flute-like; to-day, their voices were terrible, deep and
rumbling, while their faces now puffed out smooth and round seemed
wreathed in smiles and good humor.
As I stood lost in wonder at the sight of these strangely-transformed
beings, Go-Whizz rumbled out something which I easily understood to be a
request that I should permit him to conduct me to the residence of his
great chief, Ztwish-Ztwish.
I smiled assent and set about gathering up my traps.
Bulger was completely nonplussed and fixed his lustrous eyes upon me as
much as to say:
“Dear little master, how canst thou trust thyself to these huge
mountains of flesh, a single one of whom could crush thy frail body as
easily as I would a mouse?”
I gave him a few caresses and stroked his silken coat, to let him know I
was sure that I was right. Go-Whizz and his band, clumsy as they seemed,
were by no means slow of pace. They moved forward at a brisk rate for
the air was calm and they had little to carry. Now and then, upon
bumping together, they bounded apart like rubber balls. It was a
difficult thing for me to keep from laughing, especially when I saw
Bulger’s look of utter perplexity. He rolled his eyes up at me in the
most comical manner. However, at last we entered the village of the Wind
Eaters, where the great chief, Ztwish-Ztwish held his court.
He too was puffed out pretty round, although, as I afterwards learned,
the laws of the land did not allow him to eat as heartily as his
subjects. Here and there a wrinkle was visible. His face and arms didn’t
have that look of puffy tightness common to his people after a hearty
meal. He had already been fully informed of my arrival on his island,
and of my extraordinary weight and hardness for my size.
It took about fifteen of the Wind Eaters to balance me in the scales.
Chief Ztwish-Ztwish received Bulger and me with the greatest kindness. I
was at once presented to his ministers of state and to the members of
his family. Queen Phew-yoo was a very stately dame, dignified and
reserved in her manners; but the little princess Pouf-fâh charmed me
with her childlike curiosity.
Their excellencies, the ministers of state, stood behind their master
and seemed intent upon giving him far more advice than he was willing to
listen to. Their names were Hiss-sah, Whirr-Whirr and Sh-Boom.
You may well imagine the excitement created in the home of chief
Ztwish-Ztwish by my arrival. From the highest to the lowest, from chief
to serving-man, everyone begged and implored to be allowed to feel of
me.
Anxious to make a favorable impression upon the strange people so that I
might have a good opportunity to study them at my ease, I submitted
good-naturedly for an hour or more, to being patted, pinched, prodded,
rubbed, and stroked.
It were vain for me to attempt to give you any idea of the thousand and
one outcries of surprise, delight, wonder, fear, anxiety, and dread
which went up from this multitude of strange beings, who were, although
they didn’t seem to think so, quite as great curiosities to me as I to
them.
My stock of dried fruit was now quite exhausted and I began to feel the
gnawings of hunger.
I was always blest with a splendid appetite and the pure bracing air of
this island only added to it. Bulger, too, I could see, was casting
inquiring glances about in search of some signs of kitchen arrangements.
I made known to chief Ztwish-Ztwish, as well as I could, the state of
affairs, and he at once summoned Hiss-sah, Whirr-Whirr and Sh-Boom to
his side for a consultation.
They held a most animated discussion and one too, which ran from quarter
hour to quarter hour without any sign of coming to an end.
All this time my poor stomach was wondering what had cut off the
customary supplies.
Like rulers the world over, chief Ztwish-Ztwish was impatient and
self-willed. Finally he lost his temper completely and moved about so
vigorously that his three ministers were kept continually on the bounce,
so to speak.
If you can only wait long enough every thing comes to an end. I was
finally bidden to approach the chief, who asked me whether I had, since
my arrival on his island, seen anything which I could eat?
I was obliged to confess that I had not. Whereupon there was another
consultation, which ended in Ztwish-Ztwish seizing his corkwood club and
sending each one of his ministers in a different direction, with three
quick smart blows. The sight was so ludicrous that I would willingly
have let my dinner go for a chance at the bat myself.
Suddenly an idea came to me. I could see that this settlement of the
Wind Eaters was not far from the seashore. So, as best I could, I made
chief Ztwish-Ztwish comprehend that I could eat the oysters and other
shell fish, of which I had noticed vast quantities lying on the white
sands of the ocean.
When the thing was made thoroughly plain to them that I proposed to
satisfy my hunger by devouring such horrid and disgusting creatures as
lived between these shells, I was really alarmed at the consternation it
caused.
Queen Phew-yoo and princess Pouf-fâh were taken ill and withdrew to
their apartments in great haste, while one and all, even including the
fierce Go-Whizz, were seized with symptoms of nausea. By degrees,
however, they recovered and orders were issued to half a dozen
serving-men who, not being gorged, were in good marching condition to
set out for the shore, and bring a supply of the shell-fish to appease
my hunger, which, by this time had really set its teeth in my vitals.
Meanwhile Bulger and I were conducted to a neat bamboo dwelling with an
umbrella-shaped roof, and left to ourselves until the supply of food
should arrive.
I was too hungry to sleep. And, Bulger, too, was in the same condition.
But he was patience itself, as he always is, when he knows that his
little master is suffering.
I threw myself down on a heap of dried rushes and my loving companion
came and pillowed his head on my arm.
After a tedious wait of an hour or so a great outcry told me that
something unusual had happened in the village of the Wind Eaters.
It was the arrival of the serving-men bringing the supply of oysters.
I could hardly restrain myself until chief Ztwish-Ztwish should summon
me to break my long fast.
When I reached the chief’s quarters I found a vast crowd of people
assembled to see the “Lump Man” put solid things down his throat.
Chief Ztwish-Ztwish and his court occupied front seats.
As you know by this time the voice of a Wind Eater depends upon the
condition he is in. If he has just eaten and his body is rounded out
like a well-filled balloon, his voice is deep and rumbling; if, on the
other hand, he has not taken food for a day or so and his skin hangs in
folds and wrinkles on his framework of bones, he speaks with a soft,
flute-like tone.
As I stepped to the front, followed by Bulger, and took my place beside
the heap of oysters, a deafening outcry went up, in which the deep roars
of the inflated Wind Eaters were mingled with the soft flute-like tones
of the fasting ones. Not noticing any instrument at hand with which to
pry the shells open I thoughtlessly drew my poniard from its sheath. In
an instant a terrible panic seized upon the assembled multitude. Queen
Phew-yoo and princess Pouf-fâh fell into a swoon. Chief Ztwish-Ztwish
being in a fasting condition darted away to his apartments like a
phantom. The ministers of state, Iliss-sah, Whirr-Whirr and Sh-Boom,
being puffed up to their fullest capacity, struck the ground with their
feet and rolled out of the way like huge footballs.
Quick as thought I sheathed my dagger, the sight of whose glittering
point had brought about all this consternation; and, profiting by the
lessons given me at our first meeting by Go-Whizz and his companions, I
began a series of head-duckings and walkingbeam motions of my body,
which soon restored confidence in my peaceful intentions and brought my
scattered audience back to their seats. Go-Whizz, who had run the
farthest, was now loudest in his boasts that he had not been the least
frightened. Chief Ztwish-Ztwish resumed his seat with considerable
nerve, but I noticed that he kept his eyes fastened on the place where I
had hidden my dagger in my belt. Although the sight of the toothsome
oysters only served to whet my appetite, yet was I now terribly
perplexed to know how I should pry the shells open, for the laws of the
land of the Wind Eaters visited the death penalty upon any one found
with a sharp-pointed instrument in his possession.
In earliest childhood the finger-nails are kept pared down to the flesh,
until they lose their power to grow hard, and their place is taken by a
piece of tough skin.
Teeth—the Wind Eaters have none; or, more correctly speaking, their
teeth do not grow above their gums. Nature seemed to have gradually
ceased taking the trouble to supply these people with something for
which they had absolutely no use.
You must bear in mind that these curious people had not always been
satisfied with such thin diet. In ancient times—so chief Ztwish-Ztwish
informed me, their ancestors had been fruit-eaters; the fruits, however,
failing, they had been forced to have recourse to the gums which flowed
from the trees, and as these gradually dried up, they made discovery
that the various winds which blew across the island were filled with
some invisible germs or particles, which had the power of sustaining
life.
To resume: Observing a flint hatchet lying on the ground, I laid hold of
it and set to work opening one of the largest oysters. A deep silence
settled upon the assemblage. With a skilful twist, I wrenched the upper
shell off, and, raising the lower one, upon which the fat and luscious
creature lay unmindful of his impending fate, I opened my mouth and
gracefully let the dainty morsel slip out of sight! A hundred cries of
half horror, half wonder broke like a great chorus from the surrounding
crowds of Wind Eaters. Again and again this outburst died away, only to
break forth once more with redoubled vigor.
Many of the lookers-on were made so seriously ill by this—to them—most
extraordinary spectacle, that they hastily left the place before I was
able to take a second mouthful.
You may fancy how they felt. About as you would were I to begin gulping
down bits of stone and iron.
Queen Phew-yoo clung timorously to her husband’s arm; but the princess
Pouf-fâh stepped boldly nearer to me, so that she might have a better
view of the “little man solid all through.” Again I raised one of the
largest shells and let its occupant slip noiselessly down my throat, not
forgetting each time to loosen the white muscle which held the shells
together for Bulger’s share of the feast.
Gradually the qualms of the Wind Eaters, at sight of a human being
swallowing food in lumps, gave place to a devouring curiosity on their
part to draw nearer and get a better view of my manner of satisfying
hunger.
I could understand enough to know that many of the Wind Eaters had
serious doubts that I really swallowed the oysters.
To them, I was little less than some sort of a sleight-of-hand man or
doer of tricks.
The little princess Pouf-fâh mounted upon one of the benches, and the
instant the oyster disappeared down my throat insisted upon my opening
my mouth to its greatest width, in order that she might take a look for
herself and see if the oyster were not hidden away under my tongue or in
my cheek somewhere.
A sudden scream of terror startled the lookers-on as much as it did me.
The little princess was carried away in a swoon.
It was my teeth! They had frightened the gentle Pouf-fâh half to death.
For a moment all was confusion. Encouraged by Go-Whizz, many of the Wind
Eaters seized their clubs and pressed forward with murderous intent. The
reappearance of princess Pouf-fâh, bright and smiling, set everything
right again.
Now the crowd was seized with unconquerable curiosity to draw near and
take a look for themselves at the terrible thing which had thrown
Pouf-fâh into a swoon.
My jaws soon began to ache from stretching my mouth wide enough open to
give each one of them a glance at my double row of ivory cutters and
grinders, and if I do say it myself, I had in those days one of the
finest sets of teeth that ever cut their way through a slice of Nienburg
biscuit, or ground up a piece of German roast goose.
From now on, these childlike and simple-minded people became pretty
thoroughly convinced that the “Little Man Thick All Through” was a kind
and peaceful creature and every way perfectly harmless.
The children flocked about me, and encouraged by my smiles and
head-duckings soon made friends with me.
I was glad of this, for I was anxious to make a close study of the Wind
Eaters young and old.
You may judge of my surprise when I saw a bevy of these
children—animated puff-balls that they were—engaged in the to them,
novel sport of rushing full tilt at me and bouncing off like rubber
balls from a board fence.
Well, I suppose you are bursting with curiosity to hear something more
definite about these strange people.
To me they were not entirely unknown. I had read here and there ancient
books of travel by Arabian authors, of some such a race; whose bodies
were so frail that they were unable to partake of any stronger and
heavier food than the sweet gums which flowed from the trees and whose
skins were so transparent that they were called “glass-bodied,” the
beating of their little hearts being plainly visible to the eye of the
beholder. I have no doubt that these authors referred to the dwellers of
this wonderful island, on which no fruits, berries or edible roots were
to be found, and whose ancestors, as I was informed by chief
Ztwish-Ztwish, did, in former ages, thus sustain their lives. But I must
confess that the fact that there were in existence human beings who
literally lived upon air; or, more correctly speaking, upon winds laden
with some invisible particles of life-sustaining matter, was a little
more than I had ever dared to dream out, even in the most active
workings of my imagination. You may judge then of my delight upon
finding myself among these extraordinary people, and upon discovering
them to be such true children of nature, mild-mannered and
peacefully-inclined.
And yet I was not long in making a discovery which proved to be quite an
important one to me.
It was this. I learned that although the truth was as I have stated it,
that the Wind Eaters are as a rule, a race of peace-loving creatures,
gentle in their dispositions and averse to wrong-doing, yet there were
exceptions to this general rule. Strange to say, it depended on what
wind they fed upon.
All the women, for instance, were gentleness itself. They fed upon the
soft zephyrs of the south. But the great majority of these people
contented themselves with satisfying their hunger by resorting to the
strong and wholesome west wind; while a goodly number, from some idea
that it had a sweeter and more delicate flavor, a sort of heavy,
nut-like taste, preferred the fitful, irregular east wind. It was
however not considered wholesome diet by the best physicians of the
nation and they contended that those who made a habit of feeding upon
this wind were never as hale and hearty as those who restricted
themselves entirely to the nutritious and bracing west wind.
A few there were—as in every land there are those who delight in strong,
rich food, who insisted upon feeding on the rugged, gusty north-west
wind, claiming that it was best suited to their wants, and that nature
had intended man to partake of a wind powerful and strong-bodied, in
order to fit them for the battle of life. There were even some—a very
few, be it said to the honor of these mild-mannered and peace-loving
people, who, contrary to the laws of the land and the express commands
of chief Ztwish-Ztwish, welcomed the blowing of the angry whistling,
boisterous north-wind, and drank in the dangerous fluid until their
better natures were completely changed; and from being gentle, timorous
and peace-loving, they became rough, and quarrelsome.
To this ilk belonged Captain Go-Whizz. In fact, as I was told by
Whirr-Whirr, chief Ztwish-Ztwish himself showed signs of fear when he
saw Go-Whizz come swaggering into the village, his eyes inflamed, his
steps unsteady, his speech indistinct after a heavy meal upon the rude
and buffeting wind of the north. While in this condition Go-Whizz lost
the slight control he had over himself and had, upon one occasion, so
far forgotten himself as to breathe out threats and defiance against
chief Ztwish-Ztwish, driving that ruler out of his own apartments, by
advancing upon him with a bit of flint which he had ground to a
dangerously sharp point.
Such were the curious people among whom I now found myself sojourning
and on terms of pleasant intimacy with their ruler.
A few days after my arrival at the village of the Wind Eaters, I was,
unfortunately the innocent cause of rather a grave accident, which, for
a while had the effect of making me somewhat unpopular at the court of
chief Ztwish-Ztwish.
It all came about in this way:
I’ve already told you how quick the children were to discover the
solidity of my body and what delight they took in throwing themselves
against me full tilt, in order to have the sport of bouncing off again
like so many rubber balls.
Now you must keep in mind the fact that even after a hearty meal, a
whole dozen of these babies weighed about one good pound.
I used to encourage them to play about me, in order the better to
observe their curious tricks and ways, one of which was to lock arms and
legs and thus form a chain of human links, one of which being fastened
to a peak of the roof and the other possibly to some high staff or pole,
at times even extending across the street and ending on the roof of the
opposite dwelling. Thus festooned they spent hours swaying to and fro in
the cool of the day, often swinging themselves to sleep. And it was not
at all an unusual thing to see one of the mothers in search of her child
come bustling along, halt, take down the line of living links, unhook
her baby, replace the line and hurry away home.
While seated, one day, on the balcony of one of chief Ztwish-Ztwish’s
cottages, a dozen or more of the children set to work to form such a
chain, one end of it being fastened to one of my earrings which, like a
good sailor, I took pleasure in wearing at times, and the other reaching
nearly to the ground, passing over the high rail of the balcony.
Scrambling, pushing and squirming, uttering the queerest cries, shouts
and squeals, these tiny Wind Eaters were half wild with joy, when
suddenly one of those nearest me swung against the point of a needle
which I had, doubtlessly, thrust into the lapel of my coat the last time
I had been doing some mending, for, like a true sailor, I was skilled in
the use of needle and thread.
I was aroused from my dreamy contemplation of these fantastic beings by
a sharp crack like that made by the bursting of a toy balloon.
Again and again the same sharp noise rang in my ear.
A glance was sufficient to explain it all. I could feel my hair
bristling up with horror as I saw the living links of this chain snap
asunder, one after the other, and disappear into thin air. Exploded by
coming into contact with the needle point, the force of the explosion of
the first of these tiny puff-balls of humanity had been sufficient to
burst the baby next in the line and so on to the end of the chain!
A dozen of them gone in less than as many seconds and not so much as a
lock of hair to carry home to the heart broken mothers!
In a few moments, the news of the accident had spread to every quarter
of the village. The weeping, shrieking mothers, howling for vengeance,
gathered quickly about the dwelling into the interior of which Bulger
and I had retreated.
Now you may believe me when I say, that I would not have stood in the
least dread of an army of the Wind Eaters, when they were fully inflated
after a hearty meal, but it so happened that the air had been calm for a
day or so, and that many of them were now shrunken to the living
skeleton size in which I had first met them. In this condition they were
foes not to be despised, for, moving as they did, with almost lightning
rapidity, their mode of fighting was to entangle their enemy in fine
nets, woven of bamboo fibre and then beat them to death with their
clubs.
True, these clubs were made of corkwood, and a score of them weighed
less than a pound; yet, this fact would only make death slower and more
painful; for, while a few blows might suffice to put one of their own
kind out of his misery, it would, most surely, have required a whole day
for them to beat the life out of such a solid enemy as I was.
Before I had chance to collect my thoughts, Go-Whizz was at the door
with his band, their nets coiled to throw over me, while behind the
net-throwers stood a row of club-bearers, anxiously awaiting their turn
to begin proceedings. Thought I to myself: “This is serious business. If
chief Ztwish-Ztwish is not at hand, they will entangle me in their nets
and try to beat the life out of me before he returns, for they well know
his affection for me.” But, worse than all, was the fact that Go-Whizz
had just returned from a distant part of the island, whither he and a
few of his chums had made a secret journey, in order to gorge themselves
on the rude and boisterous north-west wind. He was full of swagger and
ire! I had never seen him swollen to such a size. His voice sounded like
the deep bellowing of some fierce animal.
He whirled his net in the air, and called out in thundering tones for
his men to follow him.
I felt now that the moment had arrived for me to make a desperate effort
to save my life and Bulger’s, too, for, with his four feet twisted up in
one of their nets, he would fall an easy prey to Go-Whizz and his band.
I felt, too, that it would be worse than useless to appeal to Go-Whizz
for mercy, influenced, as he was, by long and deep draughts of the
fierce and raging north-west gale.
There he stood, puffing, blowing, blustering, swaggering, as round and
round his head he swung the fatal web, which, the moment I should
attempt to take my back from the wall, he intended to cast over me as a
fowler would entrap a bird.
Suddenly I bethought myself of the little instrument which had brought
me to this dangerous strait.
Before drawing it, however, from its hiding-place, I determined to play
the bully and swagger a little myself.
Now, the heaviest Wind Eater weighs about six pounds; and, as you may
imagine, my weight, nearly a hundred pounds, was a source of great dread
to them. They stood in constant fear that I might accidentally tread
upon one of the toes of a Wind Eater and explode him.
Before they would allow me to venture out upon one of their balconies,
or to inhabit an upper story of one of their dwellings, they proceeded
to strengthen it with the stoutest bamboo poles they could find. So, I
now began to give the valiant Go-Whizz a few gentle reminders of my
weight and solidity.
Leaping high into the air, I landed upon the bamboo flooring with such a
thump that everything creaked and trembled.
At first there was a general stampede of Go-Whizz’s followers, and that
blustering leader was the only one left to face Bulger and me.
He stood his ground pretty bravely, although I could see that he was
half inclined to heed the cries of his men and make his way out of the
dwelling before I succeeded in wrecking it. But, after a few more of my
jumps, seeing that the flooring withstood all my efforts to break it
down, Go-Whizz succeeded in rallying his band.
Again, and now more furious than ever, they surrounded us, shrieking and
howling like mad, their uplifted right hands bearing the dangerous nets,
with which they hoped to entangle Bulger and me, and then dispatch us.
Now, it was high time for me to fall back on my reserves.
I did so. The effect was simply astounding. The needle proved to be one
of the kind used for darning; very long and bright, and exceedingly
sharp-pointed. My dagger point was bad enough. It had thrown them into a
wild and panicky fear. But, this little instrument, as I brandished it
in front of them, threw them into fits of rigid terror.
They stood rooted to the ground, their bulging eyes riveted upon the
needle-point as if they, one and all, expected it to prick them to death
if they stirred an inch.
At last, making a mighty effort, Go-Whizz broke away from the spot,
uttering a deep and rumbling cry of horror, his men rolling after him,
in the wildest terror. When they saw the tumultuous manner in which the
valiant Go-Whizz and his followers retreated from my presence, the
assembled men and women, with frightful cries, took to their heels as if
a legion of demons were pursuing them.
In a few moments Bulger and I stood alone on the battle field. He had
not budged from my side during the time that death threatened me.
“Come!” said I, as I stooped and stroked his head. “Come, thou faithful
friend and companion, let us go to chief Ztwish-Ztwish and lay the
matter before him!”
The chief had just awoke from a noonday nap. He had calmly slept through
the whole conflict, and so it was necessary for me to give him a full
account of the unfortunate accident which resulted in exploding an
entire string of babies, and of Go-Whizz’s attempt to slay me. He
listened with great calmness and most patiently too. He then begged to
be excused for a few moments as an attendant had just informed him that
a very soft and sweet south wind had begun to blow.
He stepped out on the balcony; and after he had taken about a dozen
mouthfuls of the pure, refreshing breeze, returned looking a little
plumper and, like all men after enjoying a meal of favorite food, was
still more amiable and kindly in his manner than before.
The news that a dozen of the smallest subjects had been so
unceremoniously popped out of existence didn’t seem to worry him very
much. What moved him most of all, was the fact which, apparently, up to
that hour had never entered into his mind, namely, that a point so fine,
so delicate, so deadly, so nearly invisible, could be created by the
hand of man!
I assured him that it was that very moment hidden in the stuff of my
garb, right in front of his eyes.
He trembled.
I strove to reassure him, by explaining to him that I would as soon
think of plunging my poniard into my own heart as of turning this almost
invisible and yet deadly point against his life.
He tried to smile, but it ended in a shudder.
“Thinkest thou, little man thick-all-through,” asked chief Ztwish-Ztwish
with a trembling tongue, “that I may look upon it and not fall into a
swoon?”
“O, most assuredly, great chief:” was my reply. “In fact, most light and
buoyant Ztwish-Ztwish,” I continued, “I can rob this dreaded instrument
of all its power to injure thee and place it in thy hand like any
harmless bit of wood. Is it thy will that I should thus deliver to thee
this dreaded point?”
With a slight shiver, chief Ztwish-Ztwish made answer:
“Ay, great and learned little master, I think I can bear the sight of it
now. I am, indeed, very brave, but thou knowest a single prick of that
deadly point would instantly end the life of the sturdiest Wind Eater.”
I again assured him that there was really nothing to dread so long as he
followed my directions. So saying I drew the darning needle from its
hiding place.
Chief Ztwish-Ztwish closed his eyes at first, but gradually grew bold
enough to gaze upon the glittering point.
Stooping down I picked up one of the cork clubs and breaking off a bit
of the smaller end thrust the needle point into it.
Chief Ztwish-Ztwish watched my movements with a sort of painful
curiosity.
“There, great chief of the Wind Eaters,” I exclaimed, “now thou mayest
toy with it, hide it in the rushes of thy bed, it cannot injure thee! It
is as harmless as a pebble rounded by the sportive, sparkling waters of
one of thy mountain brooks. Take it! it may serve thee some day, in case
of a sudden attack upon thy illustrious person.”
“At such a moment, fear naught! seize it firmly, draw its dreaded point
from its hiding place in this bit of cork. So small is it that it will
be invisible in thy hand, and while thine enemy stands before thee in
fancied safety, pierce him to death; for, thou are ruler and it is
fitting that death should strike him who attempts to rob thy people of
their chief!”
Chief Ztwish-Ztwish took the needle with trembling hand, and hid the bit
of cork which held it under the thatch of the roof. Then, calling out,
he summoned one of his serving-men and bade him bring from a neighboring
apartment a certain small bamboo chest, from which he drew a string of
rare jewels somewhat of the nature of amber, only a thousand times more
brilliant. With this beautiful gift he dismissed me, issuing orders to
his ministers that no harm should be allowed to come to me for the
accident which exploded the string of little Wind Eaters.
Go-Whizz could with difficulty hide his anger at seeing me once more an
honored guest at the court of chief Ztwish-Ztwish.
I did not relax my vigilance in the least, however. Every night I barred
the windows with my own hands, and placed Bulger’s mat of rushes in
front of the door, so that it would be impossible for the wrathful
leader to surprise me.
Now that the explosion of the babies was quite forgotten, my sojourn
among the Wind Eaters would have continued to be extremely pleasant, had
not a new difficulty arisen to cause me anxiety.
The rather thin diet upon which I had been existing, since my arrival
among these curious people, while it appeased my hunger, robbed me of
that plump and well-fed look which I had always had, I found myself
losing flesh at an alarming rate. Chief Ztwish-Ztwish and queen Phew-yoo
were delighted, for as they expressed it, “the little man
thick-all-through was rapidly becoming in appearance at least, a genuine
Wind Eater.”
Bulger, too, fell away dreadfully.
Now and then I surprised him with his dark, lustrous eyes fixed upon me
with as much as to say: “O, little master, what is the matter with us?
We eat, and yet we grow thin. Are we really turning to Wind Eaters?”
And another bad phase of the matter was, that while my ever-increasing
leanness was causing me so much anxiety, it was carrying joy to the
heart of queen Phew-yoo who, it seems, had formed the plan of keeping me
for the rest of my life in the service of her lord and master by
bestowing upon me the hand of the fair princess Pouf-fâh.
Queen Phew-yoo’s explanation of my ever-increasing thinness was, that it
was the effect of the wonderful atmosphere of their island; that it
mattered very little how thick and solid a man might be, if he lived
long enough among them, he would gradually lose it and become, if not a
genuine Wind Eater, at least almost as light and airy a being as they
were.
As I learned of these views from others before hearing them from the
queen’s own lips, it was not at all a surprise for me, one day to
receive a message from the stately Phew-yoo summoning me to present
myself before her.
She accorded me a very gracious reception, and princess Pouf-fâh too,
showed great delight at seeing me under her mother’s roof. She bounced
hither and thither like a toy balloon, now shaking perfume from dried
flowers, now holding up strings of the curious gems, which I have
already mentioned, and making them glisten in front of my face.
I amused her by holding her out on the palm of my hand and tossing her
up and catching her, as I would a rubber ball.
Queen Phew-yoo looked on in mute satisfaction.
When Princess Pouf-fâh had grown weary of play, the queen spoke as
follows:
“O, little man thick-all-through, I have to say to thee that which will
gladden thy heart. The great chief, my husband, and I have noticed with
joy that day by day thou art growing thinner and thinner. Know then,
that this is the magical effect of the air thou breathest. When our
forefathers landed on this island, they, like thee were solid all
through. Therefore, be not alarmed when, a few months hence, thou
findest thyself completely changed. Thou wilt, ere long, lose this heavy
load of useless flesh, which thou hast been for so long a time condemned
to carry about with thee, and become light and buoyant, like us. And, O
beloved Lump, that thou mayest hasten the change from thy present solid
form and become a graceful and hollow being like one of us, I do, with
the chief Ztwish-Ztwish’s counsel and consent, accord thee permission to
eat with us each day. This very hour shalt thou make thy first meal upon
the sweet and wholesome wind of the South. The very moment, little
Chunk, that thou hast become thin enough to suit the great chief, he
will give thee the fair princess Pouf-fâh for thy wife.”
At these words, the princess, who really seemed to be very fond of me,
clapped her hands joyfully, and bounced between her mother and me like a
toy football.
“But, little Man-Lump,” continued queen Phew-yoo, “before we set out to
dine on the sweet wind which blows over Banquet Hill, there are two
things which the great chief Ztwish-Ztwish said I must be very
particular to mention to you, the two conditions upon which he is
willing to honor you above all men, by bestowing the hand of the
beautiful princess Pouf-fâh upon thee.”
“Name them, gracious queen!” I cried, for I was too wise to raise any
objections at this point. I knew only too well that a single word from
chief Ztwish-Ztwish would hand me over to the tender mercies of the
fierce Go-Whizz.
“They are,” resumed queen Phew-yoo, puffing out her cheeks and tapping
them playfully with the backs of her thumbs, “they are, little man
thick-all-through, that thou shalt file thy teeth down even with thy
gums and keep thy nails always pared down to the flesh.”
“It shall be, gracious queen, as thou desirest,” I replied, with several
low bendings of my body.
“Then,” answered queen Phew-yoo gayly, “there remains nothing for thee
to do but to begin at once to accustom thyself to our food; so let us
set out for Banquet Hill without delay, for the sweet south wind is
blowing fresh and strong!”
I accompanied queen Phew-yoo and princess Pouf-fâh to the place
indicated. It was a beautiful knoll, from which I could look far away to
southward over a valley, enchantingly fair.
She and the princess at once began to inhale the soft, sweet air, and
encouraged me to do the same.
They were delighted with my efforts. In fact, the motherly Phew-yoo
seemed a little bit anxious lest I should overeat myself.
After the princess had taken a few deep draughts, I was surprised to see
an attendant approach her and place about her throat a necklace of
beads, strung upon an elastic cord. This was a precaution to prevent the
princess from eating too heartily, were she so inclined. Well, as you
may imagine, I returned to my apartments from dining with queen Phew-yoo
and princess Pouf-fâh on Banquet Hill a very hungry man; if that were
possible, hungrier than I was before, for the pure, fresh air and many
deep breaths had fairly made me ravenous.
Once more alone with Bulger, I set to work thinking out some scheme to
get hold of more food; and, by checking my alarming loss of flesh, put
an end to queen Phew-yoo’s plan of transforming me into a genuine Wind
Eater and giving me the princess Pouf-fâh for a wife.
It occurred to me that possibly I might catch some fish in one of the
arms of the sea nearest to the village and broil it on live embers, for
I had my tinder box in my pocket.
This plan worked to a charm. I soon succeeded in teaching several of the
serving-men to rig up a number of their war-nets as a sort of seine, and
was overjoyed the first time I cast it to make a haul of a dozen or more
fine sea-bass.
Bulger entered into the sport with great zeal, seizing a rope in his
mouth and tugging away for dear life, as we began to haul in.
The next thing was to gather some dry leaves and wood, and start a
suitable fire to make a bed of embers. Crowds of the Wind Eaters
gathered about me and watched my movements with a sort of mixture of
wonder, fear and pleasure.
When at last the smoke began to curl up, and the flame showed itself,
cries of consternation broke forth, and a wild stampede ensued.
Chief Ztwish-Ztwish was hastily summoned; but, I had no difficulty in
convincing him that I intended no injury to anyone, that the red tongues
which he saw darting forth were perfectly harmless if they did not come
in contact with one’s flesh; that it would only be necessary for him to
issue a command forbidding the people to approach too near to the
tongues of crimson which darted from the black clouds of smoke.
By the time the live embers had formed I was ready with a dressed
sea-bass of about two pounds’ weight, and the cooking began.
It is needless for me to assure you that Bulger and I sat down to a
delightful meal, really the first satisfactory one since my arrival
among the Wind Eaters.
From this time on all went well. Every day my oyster gatherers and my
fishermen made their visit to the shore to keep my larder supplied. Upon
their return, I was always in readiness with a fine bed of embers. So
things went on for a week or so. I was delighted to find Bulger and
myself gaining flesh in splendid style. And still, every now and then I
was obliged to accept queen Phew-yoo’s invitation to dine with her and
the princess Pouf-fâh at Banquet Hill, where I pretended to enjoy a meal
on the soft and perfumed south wind quite as much as they did
themselves. Queen Phew-yoo insisted that my complexion was growing
clearer and more transparent every day, and that, beyond all doubt, in a
few months I would be able entirely to give up a “swallowing stones” as
she called it.
While I was quietly pursuing my studies of these curious people, another
unfortunate occurrence took place, and this time it turned out to be a
very grave and serious matter.
The Wind Eaters were not long in getting accustomed to the, to them, at
first, startling sight of “crimson tongues darting from the mouths of
black clouds.” In fact, they soon learned to like the odor of the
delicate morsels as they lay broiling on the embers, and when the air
was chilly, didn’t hesitate to form a circle around Bulger and me as we
sat eating our dinner and enjoy the warmth, and to them, curious
spectacle at the same time. It so happened that one evening, I had left
a deeper bed of embers than I had imagined. The ashes collected over
them and they continued to glow till nightfall. A band of roysterers
belonging to the Go-Whizz faction, by the merest chance, returned
homeward that night from a trip to the north shore of the island, where
they had gorged themselves upon the boisterous wind of that quarter.
Attracted by the glow of the remaining embers, they made haste to gather
a lot of wood, threw it upon the smoldering fire, and, as the flames
began to thrust out their red tongues here and there, ranged themselves
in a circle to enjoy the warmth, for the night was damp and chilly.
[Illustration: CAPTAIN GO-WHIZZ AND HIS LIEUTENANT THREATEN THE LITTLE
BARON]
So pleasant did they find the effects of the warmth that they resolved
to pass the night there and threw themselves down on the ground as close
to the fire as they deemed it prudent to go.
About midnight a gentle scratching on my arm from Bulger’s paw, told me
that something unusual had happened, for he never awakened me unless he
was quite sure that the matter was serious enough to warrant him in
disturbing me.
I found the village in the wildest state of alarm. Ear-piercing screams
from the women mingled with the deep rumbling outcries of the men.
You have no doubt, already guessed what had happened. The facts were
simply these: In the night, the cold had increased, and several of the
Wind Eaters, half asleep, and half stupefied by the deep draughts of the
boisterous north-west wind, had approached closer and closer to the
fire, when suddenly the vast quantity of cold air which they had
swallowed began to expand and four of them exploded with a terrific
noise.
In quicker time than it takes to tell it, my dwelling was surrounded by
a screaming, shrieking, howling mob of Wind Eaters, demanding my instant
death.
It required all of chief Ztwish-Ztwish’s influence with his people to
save me from being entangled in their fatal nets and beaten to death on
the spot.
To make matters a thousand times worse, the bully and swaggerer,
Go-Whizz, entered the village at this very moment, with a pack of his
quarrelsome hangers-on at his heels. He had been away on a secret trip
to the farthest northern point of the island, where the north wind howls
and roars its maddest. I had never seen him puffed up so to the very
bursting point with his favorite food.
When he heard of the fate which had overtaken his four comrades, his
fury knew no bounds. He and his followers pounded their chests until the
air quivered with deep and rumbling sounds, while ever and anon they
broke out into the wildest lamentations for their dead companions. He
openly and boldly charged chief Ztwish-Ztwish with having betrayed his
people and given over their once happy island to certain ruin at the
hands of the “little monster thick-all-through,” who, by his dread magic
and foul mysteries, would soon bring their people to feed upon stones
like himself.
Day now began to break; and with the coming light, the confusion in the
village seemed to take on new strength. So sure was I that death was
about to strike me that I wrote out several messages to the elder baron
and to the gentle baroness, my mother, on the leaves of my note-book,
and left directions with one of the chief’s serving-men that, in case of
my death, it was my wish that he should send them to my people, whom he
would find on my ship in the beautiful bay on the distant shore of the
island.
I said nothing about Bulger, for I knew only too well that he would die
by my side.
I prepared for the worst. I examined the primings of my pocket-pistols,
and concealed my dagger under my coat at the back of my neck, where I
would be better able to reach it, if it came to close quarters.
This done, I proceeded to cut my finger-nails to as sharp points as I
could, for I was determined to sell my life as dearly as possible.
While I felt confident of chief Ztwish-Ztwish’s affection for me, yet I
couldn’t tell at what moment he might lose courage and turn me over to
the mob, in order to save himself.
Bulger watched all my preparations with wide-opened and intelligent
eyes, occasionally giving utterance to a low, nervous whine, as the
howling, shrieking, roaring mob surged back and forth in front of chief
Ztwish-Ztwish’s dwelling.
By the law of the land, the common people were prohibited from entering
the inner enclosure of the chief’s abode, but Go-Whizz, being one of the
nobles or minor chiefs, was entitled to advance into the chief’s
presence and state his wrongs or make his requests.
So now, the raging Go-Whizz, parting from his followers, who never
ceased crying out for vengeance upon the “little demon Lump,” who, on
two different occasions, had spread death and destruction among their
people, strode into the presence of chief Ztwish-Ztwish.
The chief was calm. He had not partaken of food for four and twenty
hours, and stood up, wrinkled, creased and seamed, as the Wind Eaters
always look when fasting. Near him sat queen Phew-yoo and princess
Pouf-fâh, while directly behind him were ranged his three councillors,
Hiss-sah, Whirr-Whirr, and Sh-Boom. They were well-rounded out by recent
draughts of the strong and wholesome west wind, and hence, looked as
contented and smiling as Ztwish-Ztwish looked sad and solemn. I stood in
an adjoining apartment, concealed behind a bamboo screen, with my
faithful Bulger by my side. I was so placed that I could see all,
without being seen myself. Chief Ztwish-Ztwish knew of my presence
there.
As Bulger caught a glimpse of the raging and bellowing Go-Whizz, he grew
so nervous that I was obliged to stoop and stroke his head to let him
know I feared nothing. But the fact of the matter is, great dangers
always exert a subduing influence upon me.
I face them cooly, but sadly, for my thoughts in such moments go back to
the elder baron and to the gentle baroness, my mother, in the far-away
home ’neath the skies of the beloved fatherland.
Like a huge football impelled by the kick of some gigantic foot,
Go-Whizz landed in the audience chamber of chief Ztwish-Ztwish. He shook
his arms violently, and bounded up and down with inward fury, for he was
still too much beside himself with rage to utter any other sound than a
deep rumbling growl or mutter.
From my place behind the bamboo screen I followed, with all the keenness
of sight for which I am so justly famous, every movement of the furious
Go-Whizz, as well as the actions and demeanor of chief Ztwish-Ztwish and
of his councillors, for I was determined not to be caught napping in
case any signs of treachery should be visible. At the very first glance
I saw that the rebellious Go-Whizz had something hidden in his girdle,
and from the shape and length I knew at once that it was a flint knife.
Quick as thought, I beckoned a serving man to my side and sent a message
to the chief, telling the attendant to appear to be engaged in waving
the branches of perfumed leaves as was his duty while he whispered it in
the chief’s ear.
It was as follows:
“Be on thy guard! O, Chief. The brawler hath a flint knife hidden in his
girdle. He will attempt to slay thee. Be careful! Be calm!”
Go-Whizz had now quieted down a little; but, with a voice of thunder, he
began his tirade. He pictured the long years of peace and happiness on
their island, the blessings they had enjoyed under the long and glorious
line of rulers of which Ztwish-Ztwish was the worthy descendant. He
thundered out defiance against all the enemies of the Wind Eaters and as
softly as possible roared his own praises telling of the many deeds of
valor he had performed in Ztwish-Ztwish’s service and ended by declaring
himself ready and willing to die for his beloved chief.
When Go-Whizz had spoken, the chief bowed his head for a few moments in
silence and then made answer: “Thou hast spoken truly and wisely, O
Go-Whizz! Thou art brave. Thou hast the right to demand favor at my
hands! Speak, Go-Whizz, what may Ztwish-Ztwish do for thee?”
At these words of Ztwish-Ztwish, all the former fury of Go-Whizz broke
forth once more. Pounding his chest and striding up and down the
audience chamber, he roared out:
“That thou givest into my hands this very hour, the ‘Solid Demon,’ the
dreaded ‘Man-Lump,’ the monster ‘Thick-All-Through’ who hath brought all
this death and ruin into our peaceful land!”
Chief Ztwish-Ztwish was silent for a few moments.
Need I tell you that my very heart listened for the reply?
I could hear nothing but the deep, coarse, grating sound of Go-Whizz’s
breath as I leaned forward to catch the first word which should fall
from the chief’s lips.
It seemed a lifetime. At length Ztwish-Ztwish spoke:
“My brother, thou art inflamed with the deep draughts of the fierce and
raging north wind! Thou art beside thyself. Thou seest not clearly! I
must not adjudge death except when the decree will rest on the laws of
our fathers. True, the ‘Little Man-Thick-All-Through’ hath been the
cause of great misfortune to our people, but the innocent cause. He hath
not striven or desired to harm us. He is a lover of peace, a friend of
his kind. My followers were warned of the danger of the crimson tongues.
The ‘Man Lump’ did not seek their death. And full well too, thou knowest
that the laws of our fathers bid us to hold the lives of our guests as
sacred as the texture of our skin. Go thy way, therefore, Go-Whizz, I
cannot doom the ‘Man Lump’ to death.
“Is this,” roared the disappointed leader, “the kind of justice which
thou givest to my people?”
“Ay, is it, thou brawler!” replied chief Ztwish-Ztwish, now fast losing
control over himself. “Hold thy peace and depart, lest in my wrath at
thy frequent wrong doing I give thee over to merited punishment!”
“Have a care, Ztwish-Ztwish!” roared Go-Whizz, boiling over with rage,
“have a care lest thy people rise in their might and cast thee out, thou
unjust ruler!”
“Begone, I say!” was Ztwish-Ztwish’s calm but stern reply.
“Go thou first, then, traitor to thy people!” thundered out Go-Whizz,
springing forward with the flint knife raised high in the air.
Cries of terror burst from those gathered in the audience chamber. But
chief Ztwish-Ztwish calmly put forth his hand and touched the would-be
assassin.
With a deafening crack the body of the raging Go-Whizz flew into a
thousand pieces, like a huge balloon seized by the hands of the tempest
and whirled against the spear-like branches of some shattered oaken
monarch of the plain.
Queen Phew-yoo and princess Pouf-fâh, bewildered and terror-stricken,
clung to each other, while silent fear sat on the faces of those around
the chief. But he was calm, and spoke a few words in a mild and steady
voice to the queen and the princess.
When the people learned of Go-Whizz’s attempt to slay their ruler and
how the brawler, at the very instant he lifted the flint knife to
strike, had been mysteriously stricken dead at Ztwish-Ztwish’s feet,
they sent up loud huzzas, for the fierce Go-Whizz was more feared than
loved, even by his followers.
It required several days for the village of the Wind Eaters to quiet
down and take on its every-day look, after the mysterious death of
Go-Whizz; but, with his disappearance vanished all opposition to chief
Ztwish-Ztwish’s rule.
The people firmly believed that it was the avenging spirits of the air
who had touched the brawler with their sword points when he raised his
hand against their ruler.
I need hardly tell you that the chief’s gratitude to me knew no bounds.
No gifts were too beautiful or too costly to be offered me. And the fact
that I declined them all, only seemed to strengthen his affection for
me.
But how could I, how dared I reject the gift of the hand of the fair
princess Pouf-fâh?
To do this would be to undo all that I have done, to make Ztwish-Ztwish
my enemy, to transform his love into hate, his confidence into
suspicion—possibly to write my own death warrant.
There was but one course left for me to pursue. And that was escape!
And escape, too, it must be at once, before I had lost the chief’s
confidence. One of Ztwish-Ztwish’s first acts after his rescue from the
flint knife of the murderous Go-Whizz, was to restore to me the tiny
instrument with the invisible point.
This done, a terrible load seemed to be lifted from his mind. He became
himself again. And with his returning happiness and content, came a
still stronger desire to hasten my marriage with the princess Pouf-fâh.
With the greatest caution, I made this and that excuse, in order to gain
time to collect my thoughts and settle upon some sure plan of escape,
for recapture I knew meant death, or worse than death—imprisonment until
I should consent to give up all desire to leave the island of the Wind
Eaters, and pledge myself to become, so far as nature would permit, one
of their people.
Cautious as I was, my excuses awakened suspicion.
The first proof of this was to find that orders had been given to cut
off my supply of fish.
Queen Phew-yoo was afraid that so long as I was permitted to have all
the solid food I wanted, I would not grow thin enough to be content with
air diet, and, therefore, not satisfied to make my home among them for
the rest of my life.
The next thing to happen to me was to find my supply of oysters and
mussels reduced one-half by orders of Phew-yoo. This meant yield or
starve!
It struck me like a bolt out of a clear sky!
But it has always been just such blows as this which have, throughout my
life, aroused me to calm, quick, intelligent action.
I hesitated no longer. My plan reached perfection in a single moment.
When nightfall came I hastily scrawled a few lines addressed to my
sailing-master, telling him of the fate which threatened to overtake me
and bidding him arm a few trusty men and hasten to my rescue. This I
tied to the collar of my loved and faithful Bulger. He covered my hand
with caresses and I held him clasped in my arms for an instant while the
tears fell hot and fast. Then I softly opened the door of my bamboo
lodge.
The night was bright and glorious. “Away, my beloved Bulger!” I
whispered, stooping and pressing my lips for the last time on his silken
ears and shapely head. “To the ship! Away!” He paused, looked into my
face, gave a low whine as if to say: “Ay, ay, little master, I
understand!” And away he sprang like the wind. For an instant I could
follow him as with a long and sturdy bound he sped along! And then he
was gone!
The next morning, to my utter astonishment, I was informed that all the
preparations for the marriage of the princess Pouf-fâh and the “little
man thick-all-through,” were completed and that the feasting and
merrymaking would begin the day following.
This piece of news, startling as it was, I received with perfect
calmness. I completely disarmed all suspicion by my apparent
satisfaction with the bright prospect of becoming the son-in-law of the
great chief Ztwish-Ztwish. I searched my pockets for trinkets to bestow
upon the light and airy Pouf-fâh.
Queen Phew-yoo was not visible. So great had been the joy of her
mother’s heart that in a moment of weakness she had partaken too
greedily of the rich, but unwholesome east wind and was now suffering
from a fearful attack of dyspepsia.
This was a most fortunate thing for me, for I am quite certain that
queen Phew-yoo would never have consented to allow me to return to my
own apartments that night. There was now but one thing left for me to do
and that was to make for the distant sea-coast, where I had left my ship
and crew.
And start, too, that very night. As ill luck would have it, chief
Ztwish-Ztwish, noticing that a delightfully strong west wind had begun
to blow insisted upon having a sort of preliminary feast about sundown.
I was invited to join the party.
Not daring to refuse, I set out with the merry-makers and not only tired
myself out by making frantic efforts to fill myself with their invisible
food but it was nearly midnight before the village grew perfectly quiet
and everybody seemed to have closed the doors and windows of his
dwelling. But, after all, the rioting of the Wind Eaters was a fortunate
thing for me. They went to bed so gorged with many and deep draughts of
the hearty and filling west wind, that they slept like logs, if you will
allow me to compare puff-balls to solid wood.
I waited until the rumbling of the voices had died away as the last
group of roysterers broke up and the solitary Wind Eaters, scattered
along the streets, disappeared one by one into their bamboo dwellings.
Leaving my door fastened on the inside, I sprang lightly through the
window, and under cover of the deep shadows made my way unnoticed to the
outskirts of the town. Here I broke into a sharp run, for at very most I
would have but six hours’ start of the Wind Eaters and that was far too
little; for, as I have already told you, they flit along like phantoms
when in a fasting condition, and even when pretty well filled, are very
swift of foot—more especially if the air be quiet so as not to impede
their advance.
On, on, I sped with a desperate resolve to make such a good use of my
start as to make it impossible for them to overtake me.
To my horror, after about an hour’s run I noticed that my legs were
beginning to tire.
This was a terrible blow to me. For a few moments I staggered along half
unconscious of where I was, whither I was hastening and of the awful
danger threatening me. All at once the truth of the matter broke upon
me.
I was but the wreck of my former self. The long months of fish diet had
robbed my muscles of that wonderful strength and elasticity which was
once my pride and my chief dependence in moments of peril.
Frail as I had grown, my legs now bent beneath me.
Slower and slower grew my pace. My heart seemed to swell and shut out
the very breath of life.
On, ever onward, I toiled with a desperate effort to escape my pursuers,
whose rumbling voices it half seemed to me were faintly booming in the
distance.
But Nature would do no more!
I reeled, I staggered, I stopped, I fell!
How long I lay there I know not. But when I came to myself, I could
plainly feel that change in the air which tells of the coming day. The
rippling of a brook fell on my ear. I dragged my aching body in the
direction the sound came from. A deep pull at the cool, clear water of
the brook refreshed me somewhat. I attempted to rise; but, O, new loss
of hope—to discover that my joints had stiffened while sleeping on the
ground, uncovered, yes, even ill-clad, for I had left one piece of my
clothing hanging on the window-sill of my lodge in the village, to quiet
any suspicion which might arise in the minds of the serving-men.
Thoughts of home, however, of the elder baron, of the gentle baroness,
my mother, of my loved Bulger, flitted through my fevered brain, and
prompted me to make one more effort to regain my feet and escape death
at the hands of chief Ztwish-Ztwish’s enraged people, who would soon be
bounding along, up hill and down dale, like spirits of the wind, as they
were.
A groan escaped my lips as I rose to my feet, so like knife-points in my
joints were the pains which shot through my frame.
But I must try to be up and away, even though the effort cost me a
thousand agonizing twinges.
I owe it to the loved ones at home to push on till I fall utterly
broken, till, like a stricken beast, robbed of the power to stand, I
should topple and fall at the feet and at the mercy of my pursuers.
Such were the thoughts which oppressed my poor, reeling brain.
A terrible mystery, a torturing dream weighed me down.
I still had my mind. I could see. I could feel. I could hear. And why
should I not rise and move onward, and away from the certain death which
hovered over me?
Crazed by such thoughts, I struggled to my feet and staggered along,
sending forth a groan with every step!
But I had steeled myself to the task, and dragged myself along, still
oppressed by some strange and mysterious power, which gave to every
pebble the rock’s size, and widened every gully to a yawning chasm, on
the brink of which I paused in sickening fear of plunging into some
black abyss. And yet, oh joy! gradually the films faded from my eyes,
the mysterious power lifted its spell from my brain. I felt more like
myself.
I saw clearer. My step grew firmer. Now, at last, thought I, all is
going well!
When, suddenly, a long, blue-gray streak of light flashed along over the
heads of the hills in the far distant eastern sky. It was the signal of
morning!
Again, with a groan I sank on my knees, caught myself, rose half-dazed,
pressed on again, slowly, slowly, every step jarring on my heated brain
like a hammer’s blow; but still onward, onward!
A terrible grip as of some giant hand—palm of iron and fingers of
steel—set itself on my very vitals. The thought that even now my escape
was known to my enemies, that the phantom Wind Eaters, armed with their
nets and clubs, were flitting out of the streets of chief
Ztwish-Ztwish’s village, charged to carry me back alive to a worse death
than death itself, or slay me for having broken faith and set the face
of honesty over my fraud and deceit, seemed to paralyze my limbs and rob
me of the little strength I had left.
Still on and ever onward I struggled, like one in the dull stupor of the
wine cup. Fast! ah, too fast that streak of gray dawn lengthened and
widened and the orb of day shot up through the morning shadows a
messenger of light here and there, now weak and fitful, now stronger and
farther reaching.
I saw them, ay, I felt them, for in my dread of them they seemed to
flash toward me and strike my half closed eyes, as if knocking at the
windows of my soul and rousing me to move out of death’s harm.
For a brief moment I halted as if expecting some fond, familiar voice to
ring in my ears.
It came.
It was the gentle baroness, my mother! Gently, softly, sweetly, that
well-known voice came floating on the morning air bidding me take heart,
calling me by name just as in childhood’s days, and saying: “My baby! my
boy! my son! my darling! Rouse thee! Press on! Press on quickly!” And
then I took heart.
The fearful clamp set on my breast relaxed its hold.
I could feel my strength returning. But oh, so slowly, so slowly! Still,
it was on its way back at last! I could feel my feet grow lighter. With
some effort I quickened my pace almost to a run.
On, on, I sped, now every instant giving me new strength, every motion
sending the warm blood tingling to my fingers’ ends.
The spell had been lifted! I was myself again!
Swifter, and swifter my pace quickened until I flew along as in days of
old, when with ease I left all comers far behind me!
Methought I could almost hear the plash of the waves on the snow-white
sands of that beautiful harbor where my good ship lay.
On, and ever onward, I sped with a new and mysterious strength. I was
astounded at my own deeds. I was almost afraid, so fast I was bounding
along, lest again some demon of the air should touch my limbs and stay
my course.
But hark! Didn’t you hear that deep rumble?
The sky is clear. It cannot have been the voice of the storm fiend.
Ha! again, deeper and clearer than before, that hoarse, low, muttering
rumble, half-roar, half-growl comes borne along on the wings of the
awakened breeze.
Lost! Lost! Lost!
It is the cry of the pursuers, it is the voice of the enemy!
Those children of the air are on my track. They follow me with leap and
jump. What madness to think to outrun them. Let me halt and die like a
man! Look how they bound along over the plain!
Swift and noiseless are their steps, phantoms that they are!
I halt. I turn. I grasp my fire-arm! Too late! A score of entangling
nets envelope me! I struggle only to entwine myself the more, arms,
hands, legs, feet, are twisted in wretched confusion.
I sway, fall, roll over, wrapped ’round and ’round in that dreadful
tangle!
And now down upon my defenceless body comes a rain of sharp, stinging
blows. Deep rumbling cries fill the air and keep time in a wild way with
the showers of blows rained on my face and head and hands.
As they continue they seem to increase in strength.
The pain, bearable at first, now becomes excruciating.
The light goes out of my eyes, swollen shut as they are beneath this
cruel pelting.
A thousand ringing sounds assail my ears.
My brain reels—I am going—going—dying—
When, hark again!
You can not hear it! Your ears would not know it! But mine do! Mine do!
’Tis Bulger’s bark and I am saved! Faster and faster the Wind Eaters ply
their clubs.
I do not heed them. I do not feel them now, for nearer and nearer comes
that joyous music.
’Tis here!
I’m strong again. I rise half up—my lips move—I speak—I cry out: “Quick,
good Bulger, or all is lost!” A single glance at the terrible plight of
his little master tells him all. With a howl of rage, his dark eyes
shooting flame, he throws himself upon the heels of the Wind Eaters. His
sharp teeth pierce like needles!
Crack!
Again and again he sends his fangs through the skin of a Wind Eater.
Crack! Crack!
Their clubs cease swinging. A cry of horror goes up, as for the fourth
time good Bulger’s teeth pierces the heel of a Wind Eater and sends his
body with a loud report to vanish into thin air.
They turn; they break away in wild dismay; they fly for their lives,
casting away their clubs and abandoning their victim. I could see no
more.
It grew black, a vertigo seized me. I tried to free my hands to touch my
loved Bulger, for death, I thought, had come!
* * * * *
When life came back Bulger was licking my hands and face and whining
piteously. He had gnawed the netting free from the limbs of his little
master.
With a cry of joy and a brust of tears, I caught that faithful, loving
creature to my breast.
At that instant, distant shouts came floating over the hills. They came
from my sailing-master and his relief party.
I could not answer. But Bulger raised his head and sent forth a few
sharp barks to tell them where we were.
In a short half hour they were at my side.
[Illustration: AS I APPEARED THE DAY AFTER MY RESCUE BY BULGER.]
After my bruised face and hands had been bathed in cool water and I had
swallowed a few mouthfuls of wine, I felt strong enough to get on my
feet and move slowly forward.
Bulger walked proudly by my side, pausing ever and anon to look me in
the face, meaning to ask:
“How goes it with thee, little master?” Once on shipboard, strengthened
by good food and cheered by the comforts of my cabin, I was not long in
getting my health back again. After a week’s rest, I gave orders to
weigh anchor and turn our good ship’s head northward, for I was anxious,
very anxious to see the elder baron and the gentle baroness, my mother,
and tell them all about the wonderful things I had seen.
CHAPTER VI.
How the elder Baron and the Baroness received Bulger and me upon our
return from our first voyage. I am decorated by the Emperor with the
grand cross of the Crimson Cincture. The elder Baron presents me
with a copy of an ancient Roman newspaper. I read of the murder of
the beautiful Paula, and the banishment by Cæsar of the Seven
Sculptors to a far-away island in the southern seas. I resolved to
set out in search of the Island. My departure. Trouble with crew. My
sailing-master loses his reason. I hear the cry, Land ho! It is the
Sculptors’ Island. Description of it. I go ashore. Paula’s statue.
Adventures on the Island. Bulger makes a wonderful discovery.
Something about the strange people who inhabit the Island. Their
habits, their pleasures, their characters. I am overtaken by an
alarming melancholy. My awful dread at thought of becoming as one of
the dwellers on the Sculptors’ Isle. I learn of the existence of
Antonius. I seek him. Vain endeavor to grasp his hand. Our
interview. The strange and moving history of the Seven Sculptors and
their descendants. How they were transformed into the Slow Movers.
Bulger and I propose to leave the Island. Extraordinary conduct of a
bust of the great Cæsar. Our farewell to the Slow Movers. Their
adieu. Our good ship sails away.
[Illustration: THE BEAUTIFUL PAULA.]
Upon my return from my first journey to far away lands, the elder baron
and his faithful spouse, my beloved mother, followed by all the
retainers of the household, met Bulger and me at the outer gate and
welcomed us home with that wild and boisterous joy which only German
hearts are capable of.
The elder baron threw his arms around my neck, and, forgetful of the
fact that I was only half his size, lifted me completely off the ground
in the unreasoning joy of a father’s heart, nearly throttling me.
I kicked vigorously, but, the soft felt soles of my oriental shoes
prevented me from giving him to understand that he was fast choking me
to death.
At last my thoughtful mother noticed that I was growing black in the
face, and laying hold of my legs, pulled me downward out of the
dangerous embrace in which the elder baron had wrapped me. Not, however,
until my father’s Nuremberg egg had bored painfully into my protuberant
brow, adding another bump to that already bumpy territory. Upon noticing
which the elder baron dispatched an attendant to his apartment with
orders to search his medicine chest for a bottle of volatile liniment.
In his eagerness to undo the harm he had inflicted, he poured a stream
of acrid liquid into my eyes, causing me intense suffering. This red and
inflamed condition of my eyes, however, the tenants, and retainers
attributed to my emotion upon entering the baronial hall once more,
after so long an absence.
I didn’t regret this little accident at all, for while I am opposed to
that ready-made style of emotion which some people always keep on hand,
I have no objections to a noble and dignified use of tears.
It is needless to say that every body was delighted to see Bulger. They
all found that he had increased in size, beauty and intelligence.
He received all this homage with a dignity that was charming to behold.
To impress the crowd with a due sense of that discipline and
self-control which he acquired as the constant companion and confidant
of his master, he absolutely refused to touch the many tid-bits and
dainty morsels which the retainers offered him, and gazed with the
utmost indifference at the other dogs in their mad scramblings for the
food which he had declined.
I was very proud of him.
In a few days everything had settled down to its wonted quiet again
beneath the baronial roof. Evenings I passed giving accounts of the many
wonderful things I had seen while abroad.
To these sittings, a few of the older and more confidential household
servants were admitted.
My good mother arranged them in a semi-circle behind the chairs of the
elder baron and his guests. I, with Bulger by my side, occupied a dais,
either seated by the side of a table holding my curiosities or standing
in front of my auditors in an easy position, while I held them
spell-bound by my narration.
There was one thing that worried me, and it was this: How will the elder
baron receive the announcement of my intention to leave home again, ere
many moons?
To my great surprise and delight he didn’t even wait for me to make
known my intentions.
While seated in my library, one day, poring over a very rare book of
travels which I had just purchased, a gentle tap at the door caused
Bulger to raise his head and give a low growl.
“Come in!” said I.
It was the elder baron.
“I disturb you!” he began.
“You have that right, baron,” I replied, with a gracious smile; “be
seated, pray.”
And saying this, I arranged the pelt of a very beautiful and rare animal
which I had killed while abroad, so as to make a comfortable seat for
the elder baron on the canopy.
“My son!” said the baron, “I come to bring thee this little token from
our gracious master, the Emperor.”
I looked up.
He held in his hand the insignia of the Grand Cross of the Crimson
Cincture.
I laid the bauble on the table.
“Little baron,” continued my father, “I am well pleased with thee.”
I made a low obeisance.
“Thy marvelous adventures fill all mouths. Thou hast set a new lustre on
the family name, and I come to rouse thee from thy apparent sloth. Thou
must be up and doing. Thou must shake off this indolence which will gain
an increased power over thee each passing hour. New triumphs await thee.
Go forth once more. Turn aside out of the beaten paths. Seek the
wonderful and marvelous. But ere thou settest forth, ponder the contents
of this parchment roll. Many years ago, when the down of manhood first
came upon my cheek, and before life’s burdens had come to lie heavily on
my soul, I found it in the damp and noisome vaults of an ancient Roman
Convent, which the pestilential air of an encroaching marsh had emptied
of its inmates. It may turn thy footsteps toward something strange and
interesting!”
Concealing with difficulty the joy occasioned by my father’s words and
my earnestness to know the contents of the parchment roll, I returned
the elder baron’s salutation with marked respect, and he withdrew.
I need not assure the reader of the almost breathless anxiety with which
I unrolled the volume.
It was in the Latin tongue, and was the work of a scribe.
The ink had faded somewhat, but, even in places where it had entirely
disappeared, I could by the aid of a strong lens readily trace out the
words by the lines scratched into the parchment by the point of the reed
pen.
It was a copy of an ancient Roman newspaper or Acta Diurna, and bore a
date corresponding to our forty-fifth year before the present era.
Cæsar was at the height of his power.
Peace reigned, the arts flourished. Rome, the centre of the world, was
the home of a glory and magnificence far beyond anything the eyes of man
had yet gazed upon.
The contents of this copy of the Acta Diurna were largely made up of
detailed accounts of a famous trial just completed at Rome, in which
seven noted sculptors had been found guilty of poisoning a beautiful
maid named Paula, after they had each completed a statue of her, in
order that no other sculptors should ever be able to make use of her for
the same purpose.
The judges had pronounced the sentence of death upon them, but in
consideration of their splendid services in beautifying the imperial
city, Cæsar had changed their punishment from death to life-long exile.
The seven sculptors had been transported in an imperial galley to a
far-away island in the Southern Seas. As stated in this copy of the Acta
Diurna it was the most remote piece of land belonging to the Roman
Empire lying to the Southward:
“Ad insulam remotissimam imperii romani medianorum.”
As an additional act of the imperial clemency the wives and children of
the condemned sculptors had been graciously accorded permission to
follow their husbands and fathers into their terrible exile.
When I had finished reading all the minute details of this strange crime
and its awful results, I found that my blood was coursing through my
veins with a mad violence. I paced the floor with such a quick and
nervous step and with agitation so plainly visible in my looks, that I
was aroused from my reverie by the anxious whining of Bulger, who was
following me about the room close upon my heels.
Why not go in quest of this far-away isle to which these seven sculptors
and their families were transported by command of great Cæsar?
Perchance in that far-distant isle dwells a race of beings who,
forgetting the world, and forgotten by it, will, by their strange habits
and peculiar customs so interest me as to repay me for all the dangers I
may run in crossing untracked seas and turning aside from ocean paths.
Perchance their descendants may be living yet?
This idea now took possession of my whole being.
Sleep was impossible.
Far into the night I pored over ancient charts.
While deepest silence enwrapped the baronial halls, I worked out in my
mind, or, rather, let my mind work out, the course which I should
pursue.
For it was always a custom of mine never to attempt to solve the
unsolvable. In fact, I early made the discovery that any interference on
my part with the mysterious workings of my mind tended rather to impede
its action.
So I waited calmly for light.
It came at last.
Closing my eyes, with my inner sight I could see a map of the eastern
world traced in glowing, shimmering lines upon an inky background.
And there, too, could I see my course marked out in dotted lines of
fire.
With a loud, ringing cry of joy I sprang to my feet and exclaimed: “I
shall find this wonderful isle! I shall unlock the portals of the
Southern seas! I shall gaze upon the descendants of Paula’s murderers!
“Come, Bulger! Away! Away!”
Hastily bidding adieu to my parents, I swung myself into the saddle,
and, with Bulger securely strapped en croupe, dashed madly away towards
the shores of the Mediterranean.
“The baron’s mad son is off again!” cried the peasants, as I galloped
past their farm houses.
In three days I stood upon the deck of my vessel.
In obedience to my orders, the captain’s hand literally rested upon the
helm.
All that day he had been standing with his eyes riveted upon the shore,
for something told him that I could not be far away.
Everything was in readiness, even to the last biscuit.
As Bulger and I leaped over the rail, my good ship rounded to the wind,
and darted away like a thing of life.
The blood tingled in my veins at sight of the blue waves and white
bellying sails.
Bulger gave vent to his satisfaction in mad gambols and ear-piercing
barks.
It was certainly an auspicious beginning.
Leaving the command of the ship to the mate, the captain joined me in
the cabin, where I unfolded to him my project of sailing in the Southern
seas in quest of a long-forgotten island.
He made haste to unroll his chart and adjust his spectacles, in order to
fix the location of the island when I should give him the latitude and
longitude.
Fancy his almost consternation when I told him that the only proof I had
of the existence of such an island was the brief mention in the ancient
Roman newspaper.
Was I mad?
Did I care no more for life than to throw it away in such a foolhardy
undertaking?
Had I no idea of the rage of the terrible typhoon, the treachery of the
hidden reef, the weight of the watery mountains which would topple on
our deck?
Could I expect seamen to go where there was no record that the most
adventurous sailors of past centuries had ever ploughed the water?
I smiled.
“Master,” said I, after a moment’s silence, “this ship is mine, and you
have sworn to serve me like a true seaman, but if your courage has
failed you, you shall be put ashore at the first port we make. Go!”
“Nay, little baron,” cried the skipper, “I was only testing your
resolution. If you have the courage to sail into unknown seas, I have
the courage to follow you, come bright skies and calm waters or come
storm clouds and thunderbolt!”
I shook the old man’s hand, and bade him go on deck, for at last sleep
had come to my wakeful eyes—the first time in three whole weeks—and I
wanted to be alone.
In a few days we passed the Straits of Gibraltar and turned southward,
keeping the African coat in sight.
I passed my time perfecting myself in the Latin language, and often
called forth very vigorous protestations from Bulger by addressing him
in that tongue, and making use of him as a sort of audience before which
I delivered my speeches after I had rounded them and polished them.
The only stops we made now were for water or provisions.
By daylight and starlight my staunch ship bounded along on her course as
if some friendly nereids were pushing at her stern. In the long watches
of the night I lay in my hammock and pictured to myself that Roman
galley as it bore those seven exiles with kith and kin away from their
beloved land forever.
Ere another moon had bent her crescent in the evening sky we had reached
the Cape, and came to anchor with intent to overhaul our ship most
thoroughly before going farther southward.
This occupied several days.
I chafed under the delay.
Ten times a day I summoned the ship’s master to my cabin and urged him
to make greater haste. He bore with me most patiently. My heart gave a
leap, when, at last, I heard the master order the crew to set the sails.
The seamen were singing and tugging away at the main-sheets as I stepped
upon the deck.
“How shall I head her, little Baron?” asked the master, raising his hand
to his cap.
“Dead to the southward!” I replied.
He stood transfixed.
He had thought that we would round the Cape and follow the usual course
to the Indies.
His lips move as if to protest.
I cut him short, however, with an imperious wave of the hand.
Several of the sailors, noticing the pallor which had overspread the
captain’s face, drew near and stood gazing upon us, half wonderingly,
half inquiringly.
“Captain!” said I calmly, but quite loud enough to be overheard by the
men standing in a group near by, “my pistols were made by the Emperor’s
armorer. They never miss fire. Let me find you changing this vessel’s
course a single point east or west of south and I’ll kill you in your
tracks!”
Saying this I walked away.
From that moment all went well.
The ship’s master saw that I was determined to have my way, even if I
lost my life in consequence, and he yielded.
Turning around to the group of sailors, I called out:
“A thousand ducats to the man who first sights land!”
A hearty cheer rent the air, and calling to Bulger to follow me, I went
below to think.
That night I not only took the precaution to hang a lanthorn so that I
could lie in my hammock and see a ship’s compass at any time I might
awake, but, fearful lest some treachery might be attempted, I ordered my
faithful Bulger to sleep with his back against the door so that the
least vibration would arouse him.
Night after night these precautions were followed out most strictly.
During the day, too, my pistols were always in my belt.
Bulger felt the danger I was in, and he, by his vigilance gave me the
advantage of eyes in the back of my head.
A low growl warned me of the approach of the master or one of the crew.
Thus protected and guarded, I felt that nothing save a general mutiny
need be feared. And this I knew to be almost impossible, for a number of
the crew were too devoted to me to listen to any traitorous proposals.
They would have slain the master in cold blood had he dared to breathe
the word mutiny!
Things went very well for about ten days when I saw that a terrible
struggle was going on in the captain’s mind.
I began to fear that he might lose his reason and throw himself into the
sea.
His face took on a yellow-greenish hue.
He was literally dying of fright.
One morning he threw himself upon his knees in front of me, and with
tear-stained cheeks implored me to put back to the African coast again.
I did all I could to quiet him, but in vain.
His reason was slowly but surely giving way.
Calling the mate to me, I put him in command of the vessel, and directed
him to confine the captain in his cabin and place a guard over him.
It cut me to the heart to be obliged to do this, for the poor fellow
begged like a dog to be left in command of his ship.
But I was deaf to his entreaties.
I felt that now all trouble was at an end.
The wind was blowing fifteen knots an hour.
Every stitch of sail had been crowded on.
We fairly leapt out of the water like a thing of life, half flying half
swimming.
Ever and anon I glanced at the compass.
She was headed dead south.
My cheeks tingled and I could feel the flow of warm blood through every
vein in my body.
The moon went up like a shield of burnished gold. The sea glittered like
liquid fire. Anon, a porpoise leaped into the air and sent a thousand
ripples circling away as he plunged into the water again
Our good ship cleft the glassy bosom of the sea like some huge black
monster of the deep, and left a trail of fire in her wake as far as the
eye could reach.
Towards midnight I went to rest.
But neither rest nor sleep was possible.
Half undressing, I threw myself into my hammock, and Bulger took his
accustomed place at the door.
The lanthorn was not strong enough to overcome the light of the full
moon. It streamed through the bull’s eyes in weird, fantastic rays, and
crowded my cabin with strange and mysterious forms.
They were seven!
Their faces and figures were godlike, so white, so beautiful were they.
There was an indescribable sadness in their full dark eyes.
They spake not a word.
Suddenly the paneling of the cabin ceiling parted, and disclosed a
staircase wrapped in dim, uncertain light.
Adown these steps came a most gracious being, so white and fair and
lovely that I gazed with bated breath.
Down, down it came, nearer and nearer.
She needed but wings to be an angel!
But, oh! her fair face was so filled with sorrow!
Her lips were parted, her long black hair fell in confused tresses on
her shoulders.
She stepped into the cabin. And then, with a quick, dread look, her gaze
fell upon the seven bowed figures.
“Paula!” they cried, and drew their white robes over their heads.
* * * * *
“Land ho! Land ho!”
What! Could I believe my ears?
“Land ho! Land ho!”
With a bound I sprang from my hammock and rushed upon deck.
Ay, it was true! There, half a mile ahead of us, was a sight that
stunned me like the blow of a bludgeon.
Land it was, but not such a land as in my wildest dreams I had hoped to
find.
Ten thousand lights glimmered on that mysterious shore, and illumined
the front of a Roman temple whiter than milk. A marble staircase of the
same hue led down to the very water’s edge.
A sacrifice was in progress.
From the highest terrace a column of black smoke curled slowly upward.
No sound reached my ear.
I stood almost bereft of my senses.
At last, my power of speech returned. I ordered anchor to be cast, and
clinging to the shrouds of my good ship, gazed long and joyfully upon
the entrancing scene.
The land rose in natural terraces from the seashore, and no matter in
what direction you looked, your eye caught glimpses of a graceful statue
or group of statuary gleaming in the white moonlight, amid the dark
foliage, like white-robed figures astray in a wood.
“It must be!” I murmured to myself.
“I have found it! This Roman temple, this marble stairway, these groups
of statuary, all point to the glorious success of my voyage of
discovery. This is the Sculptors’ Isle!”
How long I stood there gazing upon this beautiful shore I know not. Some
one pulling gently at my sleeve roused me from my reverie.
It was Bulger.
I stooped and stroked his head for a few moments.
Suddenly I awoke to a sense of great weariness, and casting another
glance toward that mysterious shore, I turned and descended to the
cabin.
I soon fell into a deep sleep.
The terrible strain upon my nerves since leaving the Cape, caused by the
half mutiny of the crew, the insanity of the ship’s master, and the long
watches through which I had lain and listened for the cry of land, had
at last told upon me.
The sun was several hours high when I sprang out of my hammock and
rushed upon deck.
Could it all have been a dream? Should I find the noble temple,
staircase of marble, and all the towering statues melted away into thin
air?
Ah no!
That beautiful shore was still there, unrolled before my wondering eyes
like some fair picture full of light and grace and delicious coloring.
“Man the launch!” I called out and in quicker time than it takes to tell
it, I was on my way to the shore of the Sculptors’ Isle.
Faithful Bulger sat beside me, his eyes bright and expressive as he
gazed into my face.
Landing at the foot of the marble stairway, I sprang lightly out of the
launch, followed by Bulger, and bounded up the marble steps.
There were three landings before I reached the level of the temple, from
each of which the outlook grew more and more delightful. In truth, it
was a glorious approach to produce which art and nature had fairly
outdone themselves. At length I cleared the last flight of steps, and
with a throbbing heart crossed the tessellated court and paused in front
of the entrance to the temple.
The embers were still smouldering on the altar, around which stood
several white-robed priests with low-bowed heads and averted faces.
Unwilling to break in upon their solemn office, I turned and followed a
broad way, paved with marble and shaded by most graceful trees and
trailing vines.
At every step my eyes fell upon some statue of ravishing beauty—now
nymphs; now goddess; now Jove himself; now the great Cæsar; now the fair
Graces; now terrible Pluto; now smiling Ceres; now the crescent-crowned
Diana, accoutered for the chase; now dancing satyrs; now goat-footed
Pan; now some Roman hero or statesman; and ever and anon, came the
figure of a maiden, wondrously fair, but with an unutterable look of
sadness upon her beautiful face. So often did the same figure meet my
gaze that I was led at last to approach its pedestal in hopes of finding
some explanation. I gave a cry of pleasure as my eyes fell upon the name
sculptured there.
It was Paula.
Now every doubt was dissipated.
I had indeed found the Sculptors’ Isle
Broad winding paths, leading right and left, now lured my footsteps. No
fairy land could be more beautiful.
Golden fruit glistened ’mid the dark green leaves.
Flowers of countless hues bloomed on every side, sending forth the most
delicate perfumes. Trailing vines hung in graceful festoons or twined
around the pedestals of the statues, carrying their white blossoms to
the whiter hands of these silent and motionless inhabitants of this
region of loneliness. I say inhabitants, for as yet my eye had seen no
living creature, save the priests grouped about the altar.
Have I landed upon the shores of an island, upon which nature, with a
lavish hand, has bestowed stately forests, placid lakes, purling brooks,
trees laden with delicious fruits, plants waving their flowery tassels
and plumes in the perfumed air, vines trailing their richly variegated
foliage from tree to tree, a radiant sky above, a soil clad with velvety
verdure beneath, only to find it abandoned, deserted of man; a thing of
beauty and yet loneliness, a mere polished and painted shell, out of
which all life has gone forever?
Such was the train of thought which busied my mind as I strolled along
through these winding paths paved with marble shut in by a leafy roof,
through which ever and anon the sunlight burst to light up the
masterpieces of the sculptor’s art, around whose pedestals climbed and
clambered scores of flowering vines, some carrying in their curved laps
clusters of berries, brighter in hue than burnished gold, others holding
out to the passer-by bunches of grapes deeper in purple than the Lydian
dye.
As I pursued my way through this enchanted garden, in which the swaying
lily stalks bent their perfumed-filled cups down to my cheeks and the
trees dropped their gold and purple fruit at my feet, while deep in the
bosky thicket of red-leaved shrubs and silken-tufted pine, the
melancholy nightingale warbled his liquid melody in slow and plaintive
measure, my heart yearned for the sound of a human voice.
“Would that some living being,” I cried, “no matter how bent and twisted
in figure, or how discordant in voice, might come forth to meet me in
this beautiful solitude.”
I noticed now that my path was ascending a gently sloping hillock. I
quickened my pace, for I was anxious to stand upon some elevation, so
that I could command a more extensive view of the outlying country.
As I gained the summit of the hillock, a scene of indescribable beauty
met my gaze.
As far as the eye could reach I saw unrolled beneath me a landscape of
such surpassing loveliness that I paused spell-bound. Imagine a valley
shut in by wooded heights, through which a silvery stream courses
tranquilly; here a forest giant spreads its far-reaching limbs, and
there a clump of fruit trees display their load of golden treasures in
the sunlight; on this side flowering shrubs shine white as ivory against
the dark greensward, on that with trailing vines and trimmed copses,
man’s hand has built many a shady bower of fantastic outline; to this
add scores of statues posed in every conceivable attitude of grace and
beauty—here a group, there a single figure, and farther on by twos and
threes, standing, reclining, sitting, at play, in meditation, listening,
reading, thrumming stringed instruments, in attitudes of the chase,
casting the quoit, or reaching up to pluck fruit or flowers.
“Is this a dream?” I murmured. “Am I not the sport of some mischievous
spirit of the place?”
From this deep reverie the loud barking of Bulger aroused me with
shock-like violence.
I looked in the direction of the sound.
Poor, foolish dog, he was gamboling about one of the statues and amusing
himself in waking the echoes with his voice.
I was a little nettled by the interruption, and called to him to cease
his barking.
It seemed to me almost a sacrilege to disturb the deep repose of this
fair valley.
Again the barking broke forth. This time Bulger’s strange antics were
wilder than before.
He seemed fairly beside himself bounding around and around the statue
which was that of a young man in the act of reaching aloft for fruit or
flowers—and giving vent to a sort of half anger, half mischief, in a
series of barks, growls and whinings. Rare indeed was it that Bulger did
not give heed to my wishes, no matter how faintly expressed, but now,
not even a threatening tone of voice seemed to have the slightest effect
upon him.
He continued his mad gamboling and sharp, angry barking. Determined to
reproach him most severely for his disobedience, I strode angrily toward
him.
I drew near.
I looked! I saw!
Ashes of my forefathers, what? The statue had wide-opened eyes. The
statue had the blush of life on its cheeks.
Motion, movement, even to a hair’s breadth, there was none! And yet
these fair blue eyes were bent upon Bulger in half-inquisitive,
half-wondering gaze.
I rubbed my eyes and looked again.
I took a step forward.
Suddenly a wave of fear crept over me like the flow of icy water. Would
the living marble, as it warmed to life, moved by some long pent-up
passions, raise its hand and strike me dead?
Gathering myself together, I glanced toward a group of maidens at play
beneath the shade of a leafy roof of arched branches and interlacing
vines.
Quicker than it takes to tell it, I sprang forward and fixed my gaze
upon their faces.
Death could not hold the human form in attitude more motionless than
theirs.
And yet their eyes were filled with strange light.
Upon their fair faces the red tint of life glowed, bright and warm!
Where was I?
A strange feeling of half dread, half delight, now swept over me.
And still I dared not speak. My voice will break the spell by which all
these breathing children of earth’s flinty breast keep their hold on
life, and they will fade away to nothingness.
And now the eyes of her nearest me—of deeper black than polished coal,
appeared bent full upon me. I could see, I thought, the glisten of those
ebon orbs, as if a tear had broken over them.
Her hand was outstretched.
What if I touch it, thought I, to see if it have the warmth of life
within it, or whether it be not in truth a thing of stone, and I the
sport of some mischievous spirit of the island?
I’ll do it, if I’m slain like a poor worm, which, warmed by an
approaching flame crawls to meet it.
I touched its finger-tips!
O, wondrous thing!
They were not of stone, but of softest, warmest flesh!
I staggered back, expecting to see the group vanish in thin air.
But no; it moved not.
It stood as motionless as before!
And now I felt my limbs grow strong beneath me.
I determined to speak, come evil or come good!
Fixing my gaze upon their fair young faces, I uncovered and addressed
them thus:
“O, strange and mysterious beings, resent not this bold intrusion of a
puny mortal upon your sacred repose! Speak to me! If ye so will, let me
take my feet off the soil of your fair island. But ere I go, speak to
me, let me know whether ye be not the creations of some spirit of this
isle, or whether ye are really living, breathing beings!”
No sound issued from those rosy lips, parted as if in the very act of
speaking.
No movement, no tremor, came to break the marble-like pose of these fair
figures.
A whole minute elapsed.
To me it seemed an eternity.
I stood riveted to the ground in most anxious suspense.
The minutes dragged their heavy bodies along one after another.
But joy unutterable!
Their lips begin to move.
A smile, almost imperceptible at first, spreads slowly, slowly, over
their faces.
The crimson of their cheeks takes on a deeper hue.
Their eyes bend a most sweet and friendly look upon me.
The word “we” falls gently on my ear.
Another pause!
I lean forward, in most painful suspense, to catch the next faint
syllable.
It came at last.
“Live!”
“They live!” I cried in a loud and joyous voice, “they live! I am not
the sport of any strange divinity. These figures are not cold and
senseless marble, but warm-blooded, breathing, thinking, living beings!”
I cannot tell you the depth of my satisfaction that this discovery was
made by my loved Bulger. He saw the terrible perplexity which had come
upon his master, and hastened to his rescue; not frowning face, not
threatening voice was sufficient to turn him from his purpose of letting
light in upon my darkened mind. In my deep contrition, I could scarcely
bring myself to speak his name.
I felt how unworthy of his love I was.
But he pardoned me with a nobility of character more than human and
spake his forgiveness by covering my hands with caresses and uttering a
series of soft low barks.
With Bulger by my side, I now mingled with these flesh and blood
companions of the island’s marble dwellers, passing from one group to
another in speechless wonderment. Ay, in good faith they were alive, but
not more so than the flowers, the shrubs, the trees, the vines which
helped to make up the lovely scene of which they were the brightest and
fairest ornaments.
The vines moved from place to place more rapidly than they, the flowers
oped their buds more quickly than the maidens did their lips. Like
beautiful figures of wax, moved by the slow uncoiling of some hidden
spring, these living statues passed hours, nay days, in rising to their
feet or sinking down upon the velvety greensward.
For several hours I stood watching the white hand of a maiden as it
reached forward, with imperceptible motion to pluck a red-cheeked peach
which hung beside her. A full hour went by ere those delicate fingers
were clasped around the peach, another ere it had been carried to her
lips. There, all day long, she held it pressed, but as the sun went down
behind the wooded hills, it fell from her loosened grasp and rolled
towards my feet. I slowly stooped, for I was not long in discovering
that my quick movements pained these animated statues, and picked it up.
I could feel that some of the pulp had been drawn from the luscious
fruit, but the skin was hardly broken, so gently had she fed upon it.
At this moment, seeing a smile upon the face of one of the maiden’s I
turned to find upon whom she bent her gaze.
It was a handsome youth, who stood, perhaps fifty feet distant, with his
eyes fixed beamingly upon the maiden’s.
“Surely” thought I, “affection will, as in other lands, quicken their
movements; they will advance toward each other somewhat rapidly now.”
But no, the long twilight yielded little by little to the deeper
shadows; night came; the moon set her glowing disc in the heavens, and
yet that youth was not near enough to clasp the hand of the maiden he
loved.
From the first coming of the twilight, smiles had been slowly gathering
upon the faces of the other youths and maidens, whose eyes were turned
upon the lovers.
At this moment a gentle “ha!” fell upon my ear, and, after the lapse of
half an hour, another and louder “ha!” followed it, to be, after a still
longer pause, followed by still another “ha!” This last “ha!” was
lengthened out into a clear and ringing note which lasted several
seconds. Then it grew fainter and fainter, and died away like a spent
echo. Their mirth was over.
As I was threading my way among these living statues, one morning, I
came upon a group of children at play.
At first I could not see that they had noticed my coming at all, but
after the lapse of a quarter of an hour I discovered that their large
beautifully clear eyes were slowly turning toward me, so I determined to
sit down near by and observe them. Fancy my delight upon finding that a
delicate thread-like flowering vine had twined around and around the
body of a little golden-haired maid of about seven, encircled her neck
with its many colored leaves and coral berries, and coiled itself like a
crown of gold and crimson upon her soft ringlets, dropping its blossoms
and tendrils gently down around her head and shoulders.
Seeing my astonishment, and hearing my words of delight, a mild-faced
woman seated near me slowly, slowly raised her hands and extended her
fingers to make me understand that these little cherubs had been ten
days at play there upon the ground.
“This beautiful vine,” thought I, “has joined in their sport. As much
alive as they, it is in truth one of their playmates, and has wound
itself lovingly around the child seated nearest to it.”
I looked again. Lo! a tree loaded with delicious nuts was swinging in
the breeze and shaking them into the laps of these children at play,
while on the other side, a tall, graceful plant bearing cup-shaped
flowers of sunny whiteness, each of which I noticed was filled with
limpid water, drops of which sparkled in the sunlight like polished
gems, gently brushed against the cheek of a smiling boy, as if to say:
“Drink, dear little brother!”
“Wonderful!” cried I, “these happy creatures, these trees and flowers,
these fruits and vines are all children of the same family. No storms
ever come to darken these fair skies. Eternal spring reigns here. By
daylight, starlight and moonlight their lives flow gently along like
some broad, silvery stream, whose motion is too slow for human eye to
note it. Mysterious people! How shall I fathom the wonderful secret of
your existence? How shall I read the history of a people whose only
books are speechless brooks and silent groves, whose tongues have so
lost their power to interpret thought that months might go by and yet
the mystery remain unsolved!”
After a sojourn of a few days among the “Slow Movers,” as I shall call
them, I made a discovery which alarmed me greatly.
I found that this mysterious silence, this strange fate which cast me
among living creatures with whom converse was next to impossible, this
utter inability to distinguish the living statues from the marble ones,
was beginning to prey upon my mind.
Bulger noticed my ever-increasing melancholy, and exerted himself to
amuse and comfort me.
I responded but poorly to his thousand and one cunning tricks and
laughable antics.
In fact, I felt that my mind was gradually yielding to some dread
influence which pervaded the very air, and which, even hour by hour, so
gained in strength that I realized the necessity of making a superhuman
effort to break away from the power it had already acquired over me, or
else become myself a living statue and brother to the forms of flesh and
marble which inhabited this wonderland.
I will not weary my readers with minute details of the plan which I had
conceived to end the danger which threatened me, to snatch myself from
the living death which I could already feel creeping over me.
In my despair I determined to apply to the oldest of the Slow Movers,
and throw myself upon his mercy, so to speak, to tell him of my longing
to escape from the terrible fate threatening me, to return home to my
beloved parents, who would go down in sorrow to their graves if I, their
sole child, their pride and their hope, should never come again to
gladden their old age.
But more than this, I determined if possible, to learn the history of
the island and its mysterious folk, and to that end I resolved to
beseech him to indicate to me where I might find some record of their
past, some book or parchment, so that I might not go through life
burdened with the brain-racking thought that I had been powerless to
solve this mystery—a thought, which, if it did not shorten my days,
would most surely embitter them.
As I have already explained, in attempting to converse with the Slow
Movers I was confronted with a two-fold difficulty. In the first place,
though I might burst with impatience, yet must I preserve a perfectly
calm and placid exterior, and, in the second place, when, after the long
and wearying delay, it came my turn to make reply, that reply must not
exceed the snail’s pace of the Slow Movers’ speech, else their bright
eyes clouded up and they seemed absolutely paralyzed by the rapidity of
my utterance. Their eye-lids sank slowly down and they seemed to fall
into a deep slumber, out of which it took hours to arouse them.
At the first streak of dawn I sought out the aged Slow Mover, whom I had
often noted in his leafy temple, seated on a marble pediment his eyes
fixed on the silent stream which bathed the very roots of the trees,
whose wide-spreading branches helped to roof over his habitation.
All that day and the starry night which followed it, I sat at his feet.
Picture to yourself my utter despair at learning that not a word or a
line, not a leaf or a parchment, was in existence, which, might end my
fearful anxiety. I say fearful, for stronger and stronger, hour by hour,
grew the impulse to put an end to this life of useless, senseless
activity and join the throng of living statues into whose heart no vain
regrets came to darken their placid dream-life.
On the morning of the second day a thought burst upon my mind. It was
this:
Perchance there may dwell, somewhere on this isle, some one living
creature, who, unlike his brothers, may possess the power of rapid
speech, whose tongue, for some reason or other, may have stayed
loosened.
I reasoned thus: In every land there were opposites, good and bad,
beautiful and ugly, graceful and awkward, swift and slow. Surely on this
isle must live such contrasts as these. True, it may be an exception;
but it would be most wonderful if it did not exist.
All that day I spent in imparting unto the aged Slow Mover my train of
thought.
It was deep in the twilight ere I had succeeded in putting the question
to him: Whether there was not some living creature dwelling on this
island whose powers of speech were more like mine, and to whom I might,
in my ever increasing dread of transformation into a Slow Mover, flee
for refuge from myself, for satisfaction of the irresistible longing
pressing on my very soul.
But the shades of evening were not so deep that I could not note the
darker shadow which began to gather on the face of the aged Slow Mover
when I had completed my question.
I was startled.
So violent were the beatings of my heart that they sounded loud, though
muffled, above the sighing of the zephyr, the rustle of the leaves, the
plaintive warbling of the nightingale.
As this shadow went on growing, ever deeper and deeper, on the old man’s
visage, I felt that I had touched some ancient wound, which, though
long-forgotten, now bled afresh.
His lips parted, his head sank slowly, slowly, a sigh came forth, so
full of meaning, so like a tale-bearer of some long hidden sorrow, that
I feared for the worst.
My limbs stiffened.
I could feel the blood lessen its pace in my veins and go groping along
as if uncertain of its way.
I pressed the tips of my fingers to my cheeks. They were cold as
polished marble.
I essayed to speak. The words would not come.
At last I made a violent effort—
“Bulger!” I whispered.
Poor dog, he slept at my feet.
I struggled to escape the spell for one brief moment, that I might stoop
to give my faithful friend a farewell caress.
Hist!
The Slow Mover spoke.
“Son!”
I was saved!
He had aught to say to me.
The spell was broken.
My heart began to beat again; the warm blood ran tingling through my
veins.
It was a narrow escape.
Already my finger tips had cooled.
Another moment and I would have joined the throng of Slow Movers, and
become a brother to the marble dwellers on the Sculptors’ Isle.
All that night the aged Slow Mover talked to me. And when the sun went
up I knew all. I knew the secret which had so darkened his placid
countenance. I knew the cave in which dwelt the hermit of the Sculptors’
Isle—an outcast, a prisoner, shut in between the narrow walls of a
cavern by the sea, for no fault of his, for no sin, for no wrong.
Nature had so willed it.
Why, the aged Slow Mover knew not.
Antonius was the name which the hermit bore.
When morning came I sought him out.
I found him seated by his cavern’s portal, looking out upon the glory of
the eastern sky.
This was the secret of his exile:
Some cruel fate had, in his youth, visited him with a dread disease, not
unlike that which is known as St. Vitus’ dance. When the fit was upon
him, not only did he lose all control over his limbs, so that his feet
bore him whither he willed not to go, and that, too, with extreme
rapidity, but his arms likewise executed the most rapid and vigorous
gestures, now in apparent anger, now entreaty, now wonder. You will
readily understand why ill-fated Antonius came to be banished from the
midst of the Slow Movers.
Although their brother, and deeply beloved of them, his lightning-like
rapidity of motion, his violent gestures, his almost ceaseless change of
attitude, not only offended the Slow Movers, it dazed them; it shocked
them; it checked the sluggish flow of life blood within their veins, and
threatened them all with slow but certain death.
He must go!
He did!
Antonius was banished to the cavern by the sea, where never came sound,
save the ocean’s roar when lashed by the demons of the gale, or its sad
murmur and ceaseless break and splash in its moments of slumber and
rest.
But, most terrible of all the manifestations of the unfortunate
Antonius’ fearful ailment was the utterly wild and ungovernable rapidity
of his speech.
Like maddened steeds, tongue and lips rushed along!
To the eyes and ears of the Slow Movers, such a violently expressive
face, such mad rapidity of utterance, were death itself!
Not one brief month would have found a living statue in that home of
flinty hearts, had Antonius not gone!
Antonius was thankful for that dread decree, which housed him forever in
the cavern by the sea!
He saw the sufferings of his people, and though his eyes in that brief
time wept more tears than all his brethren ever had shed in their
sluggish lives, yet were they but a poor proof of the awful grief he
felt.
Antonius turned towards me as I approached the spot where he sat wrapped
in deep meditation. A sad, but withal kindly smile flitted about his
lips, like the quick but faint glimmer of the lightning in the distant
sky.
He rose.
I paused to await his bidding to approach him.
He spake not a word, but stretched out his hand.
I bounded forward to clasp it and press it to my lips.
At that instant the fit fell on him.
I could see the look of pain which flashed across his face.
Away he glided, now backward, now forward, now sidewise, now obliquely,
his hand outstretched in a desperate effort to reach me, who, with equal
desperation, advanced and retreated in a mad endeavor to grasp what
constantly eluded me.
Bulger utterly unable to comprehend this wild dance among the rocks of
that cavernous shore, followed my heels barking furiously.
I could take no time to quiet him.
Away, away, sped Antonius with redoubled speed, his right hand extended
toward me as if with a pitiful prayer to grasp it and thus end the fit
which was shaking his limbs so furiously.
Pausing to catch my breath, I again pursued the flitting figure with a
determination to overtake it or perish in the attempt.
At last it seemed to circle in smaller and ever smaller rings.
Now was my time!
I sprang upon that whirling form, with a sort of mad desperation, to
seize and hold its outstretched hand.
At length I held it.
But no!
His body had come to a rest, but now high over my head, now at my feet,
now flashing up one side, now down the other, now whizzing in front of
my eyes, now encircling my head like a bird in swift flight that hand
went on, ever on, in its wild and mysterious course!
My strength was failing me!
Shall I ever be able to grasp it!
Antonius, too, showed signs of yielding to the awful power of the dread
disease which tormented him!
His face took on a strange pallor! His breast heaved convulsively. With
one last despairing effort I succeeded in catching his hand in its
flight around my head!
I clung to it with desperate vigor!
My touch dispelled the venom from his veins.
He seemed to awake as from some awful dream. He passed his hand across
his eyes.
He smiled.
Still clinging to his hand, I gently forced him to be seated upon a
rocky bench, over which the ocean had woven a velvety covering of
sea-grass and weeds.
“Antonius!” I cried, “peace come upon thee! Forget thy suffering. Be as
thou once wert! My touch can give thee rest at least for a brief
respite!”
He pressed my hand. A deep sigh lifted his breast. It was the last gasp
of the demon which oppressed him.
He was now at rest.
To me his utterance was rapid but not more so than that of many quick
thinkers with whom I had conversed.
“What wouldst thou?” said he, in a low but strangely sweet, mild voice.
I unfolded to him the object of my coming.
I went back to the finding of the Roman newspaper and my departure from
home.
All, all; I told him all; how I had come into the home of the Slow
Movers, how I had mistaken them for marble like the rest of the figures
about the island, how I longed to have the mystery cleared up.
All that day Antonius and I sat by the sea in most delightful converse.
Only once, at high noon, did he set a brief limit to his tale while we
passed into his cavern to partake of food and drink.
With a high-bounding heart, I listened to his story of the landing of
the Seven Sculptors upon the isle. Their first task had been to rear the
glorious temple with its long flight of marble steps leading down to the
sea. Then they, and, later, their sons, and their sons’ sons, had set to
work to people this beautiful island with almost countless figures of
the rarest grace and finish.
In the forests, by the river’s banks, through the valley, on the
hillside, adown the terraces, to the very water’s edge, rose the
faultless statues in wondrous beauty and profusion.
Here, there and everywhere, forms of matchless grace gleamed, snow-white
amid the leafy bowers or tangled underwood.
A mysterious ardor burned within the hearts of these exiled artists. It
would seem that theirs was a wild sort of hope to rear on that
far-distant isle another Rome—an infant daughter, but fairer and whiter
in her marble magnificence than the glorious mother who sate upon her
seven hills!
Times and times again, aye, thrice three score and ten, the wretched
Paula arose out of the quarried blocks, ever fair and ever fairer, now
bent in awful grief, now putting the very skies to shame with the
entrancing beauty of her upturned, pleading, sweet and pitiful face.
Here and there, too, stood great Cæsar, never to be forgotten for his
godlike clemency in snatching the sculptors from terrible death.
As the second century of the exile dawned upon the little Roman Kingdom,
far away beneath the Southern skies, at the very moment when the colony
was waxing strong and vigorous a strange and mysterious thing happened
to the dwellers in this island home of sweet content.
No more male children were born!
The seven sculptors, now bent with age, and their faces hollowed by the
sharp chisels of remorse, went, one after the other to the dark realm of
Death.
Their sons, too, came into ripe manhood. And their sons grew up, happy
in the possession of that glorious talent which had peopled the isle
with such matchless forms of beauty.
But now the race had reached the end of its long reign in the world of
art.
Decade after decade slipped away, and still there came not one male
child to gladden a sculptor’s home.
A sort of blank despair sank upon the colony.
The elder sculptors laid their chisels down in utter hopelessness.
Even the younger wrought less and less.
Still there came no boy to wake the old-time song and laughter of that
once joyous island home.
Fingers cunning in art grew stiff with age.
Hearts full of glorious inspiration waxed dull and spiritless! One by
one they all went the way which mortal feet must tread.
A terrible, a wonderful change came over the people.
Weighed down by this leaden grief, surrounded day and night by these
speechless, motionless marble forms, which, although silent as the very
clod itself, yet cried out unceasingly: “Give us more companions in
these solitudes!” these unfortunate people almost turned to marble
itself.
They became, in good sooth, brothers and sisters to the marble dwellers
on this island.
At length the end came!
The last sculptor was laid upon the carved bier of the great white
temple by the sea!
A silence so long, so deep, so dreadful, fell upon the people that it
almost seemed their speech was lost forever.
Within the dark grottoes and bosky underwood, they crawled to hide away
from the very light of day.
Their limbs, once so supple and elastic, ever ready to bear their owners
over hill and across plain, delighting in the dance, inured to the race,
now became heavy and slow.
They seemed almost about to turn to stone, and join the silent company
around them.
In good sooth, such a fate was imminent, when the happening of a joyful
event averted it.
A year had passed since the last sculptor had gone to join the shadowy
caravan which moves forever across the desert of Eternal Silence, when
his seven sad-faced daughters were fairly startled by an infant’s cry.
But look!
Their widowed mother stands before them with a babe nestled in her arms.
It is a son!
The joyful tidings can only creep from family to family.
Alas! it was too late to call them back to old-time customs and habits,
too late to start their blood again in old-time bounding, leaping course
through their veins.
They were a changed people!
True, their happiness came again, but it was not the same. They could
smile and laugh, but it was scarcely more than faces of marble moved by
some mysterious power. They could talk, but so slowly fell the words
that it almost seemed some statue spoke amid the leafy coverts of the
island. They could move, but snail or tortoise outstripped them with
ease.
[Illustration: REMARKABLE BEHAVIOR OF A BUST OF CÆSAR IN THE LAND OF THE
SLOW MOVERS.]
Ay, they were changed indeed; fated henceforth to people their beautiful
island home with living statues.
For years in long flight sped away, till one century followed another,
and yet the wondrous talent came back no more.
It was lost forever!
Long, long ago, too, the people forgot the story of their fathers.
It is kept alive in the hearts of a few chosen ones, and they hand it
down, each quarter century, to younger keepers selected for the purpose.
To Antonius the secret had been thus confided.
And such was the tale he told to me!
With a light heart, now that its weight of doubt and uncertainty had
been lifted from it, I bade Antonius farewell, and, followed by Bulger
wended my way back to the abodes of the Slow Movers.
As I passed through one of the groves peopled with marble forms, I
paused, I hardly knew why, in front of an admirable bust of the great
Cæsar.
Bulger joined me, and there we stood, children of this late day, with
our eyes uplifted to the face of him whose smallest word was once copied
down on waxen tablet as if it were the utterance of a god.
I had always liked Cæsar.
We resembled each other in many ways.
We were both men of action.
I felt sorry for him now, that he should be forced to live, even in the
shape of marble, among such dull and inactive people as the Slow Movers.
I told him so.
“And yet, Julius,” said I, “called of men the Great Cæsar, what a
fortunate thing it is that thou art not living now, for thou wouldst be
overcome with shame at finding everybody reading my adventures while the
book which thou wrotest concerning Gaul lies mouldy and dust-covered on
the shelves of the libraries!”
The following day, in passing that way again, and glancing up at great
Cæsar’s face, I noticed that a smile had just started in the right
corner of his mouth. So stolid had he become through his long residence
among the Slow Movers that he had just begun to be amused by the remark
I had made on the previous day.
Thoughts of home now arose in my mind.
The fact is that shortly after my interview with Antonius in his cavern
by the sea, Bulger had commenced to show unmistakable signs of
home-sickness. So I dispatched him with a note to the officer of my
vessel to begin preparations at once for the return voyage.
Bulger made haste to execute the commission.
He proceeded to the foot of the marble staircase, and then by loud
barking attracted the attention of the officer whom I had left in
command.
He sent a boat ashore and Bulger met it with my letter in his mouth.
To tell the truth, I would have fain lingered for a week or so longer
among the Slow Movers, but it was plain to be seen that they were
growing restive at my presence.
On the cheeks of many of them all signs of ruddy peach-bloom had
disappeared.
Day by day they grew more and more like their marble brethren.
My quick movements so wearied their eyes that after a few hours’ stay in
their midst I found myself surrounded by a company of deep sleepers.
Nor dared I speak.
For no matter how I softened my voice, or how slowly I uttered my words,
they jarred upon the delicate ears of the Slow Movers, and signs of
suffering gradually passed over their faces.
My resolution was therefore quickly formed.
With a snail’s pace I passed from group to group, from bower to bower,
from grove to grove, saying in a soft and measured tone: “Fare——well!
Fare——well!”
Then I directed my steps toward the white temple by the sea, for I knew
my boat’s crew were waiting for me at the foot of the marble staircase.
As I passed in front of Great Cæsar’s statue I turned to wave a last
adieu.
What saw I, think you?
Why, that same smile which had begun in the right corner of his mouth
several days ago, had crossed over to the other side of his face and was
just at the left corner of his mouth.
On the right side, whence it had come, all was as stern and calm as when
he sat enthroned at Rome, and ruled the world.
Several hours later, as we were busy setting the sails of my good ship
there fell upon my ear in a soft, echo-like tone, the word.
“Fare!”
The Slow Movers had begun to speak their adieu. The winds were
favorable.
The sails filled.
As the sun went down, pouring a flood of golden light upon the beautiful
marble staircase, the great white temple and the many snowy statues
which gleamed so bright and fair amid the dark foliage of the trees and
vines upon the terraces of that mysterious island I threw myself upon
the deck with intent to keep my eyes fixed upon the lovely scene as long
as possible.
My good ship sailed away in deepest silence. For I had given orders that
no one should speak above a whisper.
Now the Sculptors’ Isle had faded to a mere speck in the horizon, and
now, in the gathering shades of night, it was swallowed up, and lost
forever!
My heart grew heavy.
Bulger nestled his head in my lap, with his loving eyes fixed full upon
me.
Sleep overcame us both.
The sky was star-studded when we awoke.
The cool night wind had refreshed me.
I sprang up with the intention of going below. At that instant there
came floating along on the evening breeze, like a mountain echo nearly
spent, a soft mysterious sound.
My ear caught it! It was:
“W—e l—l!”
The Slow Movers had finished speaking their adieu.
CHAPTER VII.
Once more I grow tired of the quiet pleasures of home. The elder Baron
opposes my leaving the land. His reasons. How I freed the ancestral
estates from the pests of moles, meadow-mice and ground-squirrels;
and how I set out for the Indies with my faithful Bulger. I enter a
wild and untrodden territory. Wonderful transformation of day into
night, and night into day. The huge fire-flies. My capture of one
and what it brought forth. How I reached the borders of
Palin-mâ-Talin, the Great Gloomy Forest. Benè-agâ the blind guide.
My sojourn in his cave. I enter Palin-mâ-Talin under his guidance.
Strange adventures in the Great Gloomy Forest. Benè-agâ takes leave
of me. My advance is blocked by Bōga-Drappa, the Dread Staircase. My
flight down its treacherous steps. I enter the land of the
Umi-Lobas, or Man-Hoppers. Am carried a prisoner to their king.
Something about him and his people. King Gâ-roo’s affection for me.
His gift to me of copies of all the books in the royal library—All
about the princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ. I am condemned to a life-long
imprisonment among the Umi-Lobas. I plan an escape. How it was done.
Efforts of King Gâ-roo to capture me. Farewell of little princess
Hoppâ-Hoppâ. How I sailed away from the land of the Umi-Lobas, and
made my way back across India. My return home.
[Illustration: PORTRAIT OF ONE OF MY MOUSERS IN RUBBER BOOTS.]
Like all lovers of a roving life, I was not long in growing tired of the
quiet ways and simple pursuits of the inmates of the old baronial hall.
At times, I felt like an intruder, when I caught myself sitting with
eyes riveted upon the pages of some musty, old volume of strange
adventure in far-away lands, while the elder baron, the gracious
baroness, my loving mother, and several cousins from the neighboring
estate, gave themselves up to the sweet pleasures of the fireside,
feasting upon honey-cake, drinking hot spiced wine, playing at draughts,
dominoes, or cards, now chatting in the most animated manner of the
trivial things of every-day life, now bursting out into uproarious
laughter at some unexpected victory won at cards or at some fireside
game.
Silently closing my book, and still more silently stealing away, I
sought the quiet of my apartments, where, with no other companions, save
faithful Bulger, I gave myself up to unrestrained indulgence in waking
dreams of life in a storm-rocked ship, landings on strange shores,
parleyings with curious beings, battling with the wild-visaged typhoon,
or hurrying with sails close-reefed and hatches battened down, to gain a
safe port ere the storm king’s ebon chargers could rattle their hoofs
over our heads.
My dear mother, the gracious baroness, made extraordinary exertions to
drive away my low spirits.
Knowing my fondness for coffee cake, she suffered no one to make it for
me excepting herself. And at dinner she took care to place a professor
or, some learned person beside me, so that I might not find myself
condemned to silence for the want of a gifted mind to measure mental
swords with.
But all to no purpose. I grew daily more taciturn, absent-minded, and
plunged into meditation. With my eyes fixed upon vacancy, I sat like one
with unbalanced mind amidst the lightest-hearted merry-makers. In vain
the company besought me to relate past adventures, to tell them tales
already thrice told. I only shook my head with a mournful smile, and
made good my escape from scenes which were painful to me.
Bulger felt that his little master was suffering, and coaxed with
plaintive whining to have me make known to him the cause of my grief.
His joy was wild and boisterous when he saw my body-servant enter my
apartments, bearing an empty traveling chest upon his shoulders.
To tell the truth, life at the baronial hall pleased Bulger not a whit
more than it did me.
The house dogs annoyed him with their attentions, and he was wont to
retire from the dining hall with a look of utter disgust upon his face,
when one of the family cats, in the most friendly spirit, drew near and
tasted a bit of his dinner.
All caresses, too, from other hands than mine were distasteful to him;
and, although for my sake he would permit the gracious baroness to
stroke his silken ears, yet any familiarity on the part of the elder
baron was firmly, but respectfully, declined.
The very moment I saw my chests placed here and there in my apartments,
my spirits rose. I became like another being. The color returned to my
cheeks, the gleam to my eye, the old-time ring to my voice.
From lip to lip, the word was passed: “The little baron is making ready
for another journey!”
From early morn to deepening shadows of twilight, I busied myself with
superintending the packing of my boxes. It was a labor of love with me.
I never was born for a calm life beneath the time-stained tiles of
paternal halls! My heart was filled with redder, warmer blood than
ordinary mortals. My brain never slept. Night and day, shadowy forms of
men and things, strange and curious, swept along before me in
never-ending files.
One morning, while at work with my boxes, a low knock at my chamber door
fell upon my ear. Bulger, scenting an enemy, gave a low growl. I swung
the door open. It was the elder baron.
“Honored father,” I cried gayly, “act as if thou wert master here! Be
sad, be gay; sit, stand, drink, eat, or fast!”
“Little baron,” began my father in a solemn voice, “I beseech thee give
over thy jesting. When thou hast heard the object of my visit, grief
will chase every vestige of mirth from thy light heart.”
“Speak baron!”
“Art thou a dutiful and loving son?” asked my father, fixing his dark,
mournful eyes full upon me.
“I am!”
“’Tis well!” he replied, “then arrest this making ready to abandon thy
parents in their hour of misfortune. Put an end to all this unseemly
hurlyburly, and to thy longing to be gone from beneath the paternal
roof.”
The clouded face, trembling and tear-filled eyes of the elder baron
shocked me. I could feel the blood leaving my cheeks, where, till then,
it had bloomed like the glow of ripening fruit.
But I checked myself; and, motioning the baron to be seated, said in a
calm—though spite of me—trembling voice:
“Noble father, it is thine to command; mine to obey! Speak, I pray thee,
and speak too, plainly—if need be, harshly. Bare thy most secret
thoughts. What aileth thee? What sends these dark shadows to rest on
that calm, smooth brow?”
“Thanks, little baron,” was my father’s reply, “for thy promise of
obedience. This is the weight which presses on my heart: Since thou hast
taken up this rambling, roving life, robbed of thy counsel and
co-operation, I have seen our ancestral estate hastening to ruin. Last
year our tenantry scarcely harvested enough to keep body and soul
together. This year promises to turn out worse yet. Desolation sits upon
the broad acres once the prize of our family! Crops fail, grass withers,
trees turn yellow! The poor cattle moan for sustenance as they winder
about in the dried-up pastures. I look upon all this wreck and ruin, but
am helpless as a babe to stay it! Speak, my son; wilt thou, hast thou
the heart, canst thou be so cruel as to turn thy back upon these pitiful
scenes without raising thy hand to avert the impending doom?”
“Baron!” I interposed mildly, but firmly, “facts first! eloquence
thereafter! Impart unto me, in plain, King’s speech, the cause of all
this ruin! What hath wrought it? What hath desolated our fair fields?
What hath carried this rapine among our flocks and herds? Speak!”
“I will, little baron, give attentive ear!” rejoined my father with
stately bend of the body:
“As ancient Egypt was visited with scourge and plague, so have been our
ancestral acres! In pasture and grain fields, myriads of moles feed upon
the tender rootlets; in grass lands, swarms of meadow-mice fatten on the
herbage; in orchards and nurseries, countless numbers of
ground-squirrels spread destruction far and near! Such are the terrible
scourges now laying waste our once fair estates, your pride and mine,
and the envy of all beholders!
“Little baron, I feel, I know that thou canst help me; that somewhere in
the vast storehouse of thy mind, rest plans and devices potent enough to
restore these broad lands to all their former beauty and
productiveness.”
“Baron!” was my reply, “when was there a time that thou foundst me
wanting in my duty to thee or lacking in power to assist thee?”
“Never!” ejaculated the elder baron with great emphasis.
“Then, betake thee to my gentle mother—the baroness—thy consort, comfort
her. Bid her take heart! Say I will not go abroad until these pests are
driven from our ancestral domain!”
The elder baron rose. I accompanied him to the door, then, we saluted
each other with dignity and he withdrew to bear the glad message of my
promised assistance to my sorrowing mother.
Alone in my apartments, a terrible feeling of disappointment came over
me. I felt that it would be useless to continue in my preparations to
leave home in the face of these dire misfortunes now threatening my
family. For, as I reasoned—and I think with great clearness—the name of
our family would dwindle to a shadow, were we robbed of these broad
acres of pasture and meadow-land, forest and orchard.
To me, a landless nobleman had something very ludicrous about him; and I
fully made up my mind that I would either save my ancestral estate from
ruin, or lay aside forever my title of baron, as a gem which had lost
its radiance, even as a pearl, which the stolid rustic ruins for the
sake of a meal of victuals!
That night I partook of no food, so that I might lie down with unclouded
mind.
Bulger noticing this, concluded that his little master was ailing, and
likewise refused to touch food, although I ordered his favorite
dish—roasted cocks’ combs—to be prepared.
Till midnight I lay awake in deepest thought over the arduous task which
confronted me. At the stroke of twelve from the old clock on the stair,
I determined to let my mind work out the problem itself, and turned over
and went to sleep.
The baron and baroness entered the breakfast-room with unclouded brows
the next morning. I greeted them very cordially. The conversation was
enlivened by one or two of the elder baron’s ancient anecdotes which he
furbished up for the occasion with several new characters and an
entirely new ending. I laughed heartily—as I was in duty bound to do.
Breakfast over Bulger and I sallied forth to begin work. I resolved to
attack the moles first.
To get rid of pest number one was not at all a difficult matter for me,
when once I set about thinking it over. In fact, I may say right here,
that this task, set me by the elder baron, would have been an impossible
one had it not been for my intimate acquaintance with the natures,
habits and peculiarities of animal life. Always a close student of
natural history there was little about the four-footed tenants of the
fields which had escaped my observation.
Accompanied by Bulger; armed with a pair of short, wooden tongs; and
carrying a basket, I set out for the grain fields.
Bulger was in high glee for he had already made up his mind that there
was sport ahead for him.
In less than an hour, with him to point out their hiding places and to
unearth them, I had captured a hundred moles. Returning to the
overseer’s lodge, with his help I cut off the nails of each mole’s fore
feet close to the flesh and then gave orders to have the lot carried
back to the grain fields and released. Turning my attention now to the
meadow-mice, I realized at once that to get rid of pest number two would
be the most difficult task of all.
The unthinking reader has doubtless already cried out in thought: “Why
not turn a troop of cats into the meadows, and let them make short work
of the destructive little creatures?”
Ah how easy it is to plan, how difficult to execute! Know then, my
clever friend, that the meadows were wet and that though often tried the
cats absolutely refused to enter them.
The merest tyro in natural history is aware of a cat’s aversion to
wetting its fur; and, above all, of stepping into water. Even moisture
is disagreeable to a cat’s feet and she will willingly walk a mile
rather than cross a plot of dew-moistened green sward. However, I
determined to begin my operations at once.
Knowing the wonderful changes which the pangs of hunger will work in an
animal’s nature, forcing the meat-eaters to turn to the herbage of the
field for sustenance—I hoped for favorable results.
Selecting half a dozen vigorous young cats from the cottages of our
tenantry, and providing myself with a lot of India rubber caps used for
drawing down over the necks of bottles, in order to make them air-tight,
I proceeded to encase the legs of each cat in these coverings, cutting a
hole in each one, however, so as to allow the paws to pass through. I
wished to accustom them to these leggings before covering the feet
entirely. My next step was to subject the cats to twenty-four hours
fast. After which, I caused some of their favorite food—broiled fish to
be placed at the other end of a long room, covering the intervening
space with long-napped rugs, which I had first dipped into water.
In spite of their hunger, they absolutely refused to cross the dripping
rugs.
Advancing to the edge, they tested the condition of the obstacles which
blocked their advance upon the savory food feeling here and there for a
dry spot; and then retreating with piteous mewing, as they shook the wet
from their feet.
Drawing the rubber caps completely over the feet of one of the cats, I
now placed her on the wet rug, encouraging her to remain there by
feeding her a few dainty bits of the fish. Finding that her feet did not
get wet, she consented to walk here and there over the wet surface, in
order to secure toothsome bits of food. I made the same experiment with
the other cats, and everything went as well as I could wish.
The next day I continued my instruction, and to my great joy, succeeded
in schooling the whole lot, not only to make no objection to having
their feet encased in the rubber boots, but even to wade through an inch
or more of water, in order to secure a particularly dainty bit of food.
I was now ready to make a practical test of my trained hunters.
The day preceding the trial they were again subjected to a prolonged
fast.
I must frankly confess that my heart beat rather nervously as I, with
the overseer and two other assistants set out for the low lands,
carrying the trained mousers—already shod in their rubber boots—in three
baskets.
We advanced cautiously upon the meadow-land, but so far as the mice were
concerned, our caution was useless, for they ran about under our very
feet.
As I stood gazing over the long stretch of devastated meadow-land, once
so famous for its thick, velvety grass, the tears gathered in my eyes
and my voice choked. Now or never, thought I, must the attempt be made
to save these fair fields from utter ruin. At a wave of my hand, my
assistants stooped and released the somewhat startled cats. They were
not long, however, in collecting their wits and getting ready for
business.
Sharp hunger is an excellent sauce! As the six monsters leaped among
those troops of tiny creatures—till that moment nibbling, playing or
teasing one another, without a thought of harm or danger—the wildest
consternation seized upon them.
Not only near by us, but as far as the eye could reach, panic and
disorder spread among these, till then peaceful little beings. Those
which sought safety in their holes were hurled back by others rushing
frantically out into the open air.
The cats kept at their work like avenging furies. They killed for the
mere pleasure of killing, passing like a death-dealing blast here and
there over the meadows.
After the work of destruction had been kept up for half an hour, I
directed that the trained six should be carried back to their quarters,
for I was too good a general to let my troops get their fill of sack and
plunder.
The next day another attack was made upon the enemy. The trained six, if
anything, spread death right and left with greater fury than at first.
The wet lands no longer had any terrors for them. They splashed through
the puddles like mischievous boys through roadside brooks and ponds.
I now bethought me of turning my attention to the ground squirrels. My
first step was to send to town for several bushels of the smallest
marbles that could be purchased. Then, having, with the assistance of my
ever-faithful and loving friend and helper—my dear, dumb brother
Bulger—located the whereabouts of several hundred burrows of the
ground-squirrels, I gave orders to have a half-dozen or more of the
marbles rolled down into each one of those holes.
These labors completed, I withdrew to my apartments and set about
amusing myself in several ways, while awaiting a report from the
overseer.
Many of the tenants who had watched my operations against the moles,
meadow-mice and ground-squirrels, even ventured openly to denounce them
as “wild whims”, “a dreamer’s ideas” “silly workings of a diseased
mind.”
Poor creatures! They had lost their all. They had seen the labor of long
weary months ruined by these pests. They were embittered and skeptical.
I had not the heart to notice their rather impertinent utterances. While
awaiting the developments, I plunged into the delights of some tales of
a bold traveler written in the ancient Assyrian tongue in the
wedge-shaped letter.
Three days went by and no news from the superintendent!
Two more, made five full days!
On the sixth came nothing.
At last, with the dawn of the seventh I was awakened by loud and long
continued cheering beneath my windows. Springing from my bed and drawing
aside the curtains, I was astonished to see long lines of our tenantry,
men, women and children bearing banners, wreaths, garlands, etc.
One company of children carried long, thin rods from the end of which
dangled dead moles, meadow-mice and ground-squirrels.
The moment I presented myself at the window, there was an outburst of
cheering, so sturdy that the windows rattled before it. A tap at my door
called me in another direction. It was the elder baron!
“Haste! little baron!” he cried eagerly “descend to the castle platform,
the people are beside themselves with joy! Canst thou catch their cries?
Not a mole, nor a mouse, nor a squirrel is alive on the broad acres of
thy estate. I say “thy” because it is justly thine! Thou hast saved it
from utter ruin. Henceforth for the few years which kind Providence may
will that I should tarry with thee, let it be as thy guest.”
“Nay, nay, baron!” I replied laughingly, “that may not be! Till thou
sleepest with the noble dead of our long and honored line, thou art
master here!”
I pressed his hand reverently to my lips and sent him to talk to the
people until I should be ready to take my place at his side.
I can well fancy how impatient the reader is to hear something more
about the manner in which I rid my ancestral estate of these noisome
pests. With regard to the meadow-mice that needs no explanation, but,
the disappearance of the moles and ground-squirrels seems somewhat
mysterious.
Well and good. I’ll make it clear! Gentle reader, if you had been as
close a student of the natures and habits of these animals as I, you
could have done the same thing yourself. You must know, then, that the
mole’s body bears about the same relation to his forefeet, as a boiler
does to a steam engine, which is admirably adjusted in all its parts,
working smoothly and noiselessly, like a thing of life—polished and
beautiful in all its bearings and put together so skillfully that no
human thought could better it. That is to say, the only wonderful thing
about a mole is his hand.
That is a delight to a student of natural history.
I have sat for hours and studied the marvelous shape of this hand. And
strange though it may seem to you, no one knows better than the mole
himself, that therein lies his hold on life.
You’ll bear in mind, that I caused the nails to be clipped off the
forefeet of the hundred moles, close to the flesh, and then turned them
loose. In other words, without absolutely destroying their marvellous
hands, I completely destroyed their usefulness.
Now another thing you must be taught, that in the busy communities of
these little animals, there are no sluggards. Every one must work. Only
one thing stops him from using his hands.
That is death. When a mole sees his fellow stop work, he knows what has
happened.
Upon the return of the hundred captives to their burrows, there was joy
mingled with terror!
Whose turn might come next?
But, when the moment arrived to fall into line and set to work, there
was consternation!
What! alive, and not able to dig?
Immediately, the wildest panic seizes upon the community. They abandon
their homes! With frantic haste, they pierce new burrows in every
direction, leaving their ill-fated companions behind them to die a
lingering death—literally buried alive. Weeks, months will elapse ere
they recover from this wild fear. Then they will be miles away.
And the ground-squirrels, you ask. The ground-squirrel is as conceited,
inquisitive, persistent and hard-headed as he is hard-toothed. If he
knew that the world was round he would claim that it was simply a huge
nut and wish that he were big enough to get at its kernel.
When the marbles first came rolling down his burrow, he was pleased.
They were so smooth, so round! He rolled them hither and thither, as
content as a child with a new toy. Then he stored them away for another
day’s amusement. Pretty soon he began to tire of them. They were
dreadfully in his way. They annoyed him greatly. And yet, he couldn’t
bear to think of parting with them. Finally the question arose in his
mind: What are they, anyway? Surely they must have a kernel! And so he
set to work gnawing upon them. They were terribly hard, but he was
determined to get at the pit. Day after day, he kept at the thankless
task, gnawing, gnawing, until, one fine morning, he awoke to make the
awful discovery that his teeth were gone!
Now, a ground-squirrel may be said to consist of four teeth, and nothing
else. These gone there is no way to keep the other part alive.
True, he may, after infinite labor struggle through a nutshell, but it
is too slow work to keep up his strength. Every nut becomes a harder
task.
And so it was with the vast colony in our orchards. The first few days
quite a number made their appearance as usual. Then, fewer and fewer
came out of their holes, and they looked thin and feeble and showed no
inclination to gambol and chatter. At the end of the week, the work was
done. They had wrought their own destruction. The entire colony had
perished from starvation.
Thus it was, I restored the fair lands of our family to their old-time
productiveness and removed all the obstacles which stood between me and
my immediate departure from home.
In a few days all was ready.
The elder baron and the gracious baroness, my mother, parted from me
with a gentle rain of tears, and a refreshing shower of blessings.
Accompanied by my dumb brother—the ever faithful Bulger—and one trusty
servant, I set out by extra post for Vienna.
Thence at break-neck speed, I journeyed to Buda-Pesth and reached the
Black Sea via Bucharest.
Traversing that body of water in a swift vessel, commanded by an old
sailing-master of mine, I skirted the foot hills of the Caucasus
Mountains, and made my way to Teheran.
Here I tarried several days, long enough to purchase a few camels and
horses and join a caravan, soon to leave that city on a trading
expedition.
The proprietor of the trading company renewed his welcome in heartier
terms when he was informed that I had brought a goodly collection of
European trinkets with me.
To clinch his good will—so to speak—I gave him a pair of fine German
pistols.
We were now sworn friends.
I remained with the expedition until it reached Cabul. The proprietor
was astounded to learn that I did not contemplate returning westward
with him. After a whole day spent in eloquent pleadings, he gave in,
fell upon my neck, wept, and wished me good speed.
I was glad to be rid of him, for I was in no humor to form friendships
with men whose souls never rose above a sharp bargain. Attended only by
my faithful Bulger and a single guide, I set out from Cabul; crossed
northern Hindoostan, and entered Thibet to the north of the Himalayas.
This was the land of which I had long dreamed—a land absolutely unknown
to the outside world.
I never had any inclination to pass over beaten tracks. By nature and
education, a lover of the strange and marvellous, my soul expanded
beneath the skies of this far-away and curious land, like a flower
beneath the sunlight of a warm May morning.
Scarcely had I penetrated more than a dozen leagues into this wild
untrodden territory than I made the astonishing discovery that the sun’s
light was obscured the entire day; while the sky, by night, was flooded
with a soft, mysterious light, quite bright enough to enable me to read
the finest print with perfect ease. In other words, the natural order of
things was exactly reversed. So, I—always quick to accommodate myself to
existing circumstances—made use of the dark days for rest and sleep, and
pursued my journey by night.
One morning, however, the mystery was explained. The impenetrable
clouds, which had been veiling the heavens like a pall, suddenly sank
earthward; and, to my almost unspeakable astonishment, I discovered that
this blanket of inky blackness was made up of living creatures—gigantic
fire-flies, quite as large as our ordinary bat, and far blacker in both
body and wing.
When night came, this living tissue was changed into a robe of
sparkling, shimmering glow, mantling the heavens like a garment of
burnished gold spangles, upon which a burst of soft light, as if from
ten times ten thousand waxen tapers, fell in dazzling effulgence. It was
something to see and die for. Bulger’s poor startled mind made him look
up, half in dread, half in wonder at this mysterious fire, which
enveloped everything in its flame, and yet consumed nothing. I had but
one thought. It was to capture several of these huge fire-flies. Night
after night I watched patiently for an opportunity.
It came at last.
I was preparing some coffee, and my back was turned. Suddenly, I was
startled by a piteous outburst, half whine, half bark, from poor Bulger.
A cluster of these living stars had fallen at his very feet. Quicker
than thought, I sprang forward and threw my blanket over them. Then,
with the greatest care, I transferred them to one of my wicker hampers.
Bulger, upon seeing this basket on fire and yet feeling no heat, was
most painfully nonplused. He walked round and round the improvised cage,
keeping at a safe distance, however, now sniffing the air, now looking
up to me with a most imploring glance—as if to say:
“Dear little master, do explain this thing to me! Why doesn’t it burn
up?”
To my great disappointment, the three captives died after a few days’
imprisonment, not, however, until they had laid a number of eggs—about
the size of robins’ eggs—which I packed away most carefully in my boxes
of specimens.
I may say, right here, that, upon my return home, I subjected these eggs
to a gentle warmth and was charmed to see emerge from each one of them a
larva about the size of a pipe-stem; but, to my delight—and to Bulger’s
absolute terror—this pipe-stem affair had, inside twenty-four hours,
become as large round as a Frankfort sausage.
In due time, they passed into the chrysalis state. But this apparent
death seemed to become a real one.
Weeks went by and there were no signs of a metamorphosis.
I was cruelly disappointed.
More important matters, however, arose to occupy my thoughts. The
sleeping fire-flies of the Orient were quite forgotten, when, one
evening, the women servants of the manor house, with blanched faces and
piercing shrieks came literally tumbling headlong down the main
stairway.
Fortunately I was sitting on the first terrace of the park. With a bound
I gained the hall-way, and snatching down a brace of fire-arms from the
wall, throw myself in front of the wildly shrieking troop of women,
calling out in stentorian tones, for silence.
“Has murder been committed?” I cried, “Is there revolt among the
tenantry? Has blood been shed?”
“No! no! little baron!” they exclaimed, with wild eyes and clasped
hands, “but the castle is on fire! Your rooms are in flames! Your
treasures will be consumed! Quick! little baron; save them! save us!
save the gracious lady and venerable master!”
Quicker than it takes to tell it, I laid hold of the rope of the alarm
bell and set it pealing.
The retainers answered with a will. A score of them burst into the
hall-way ready for the word of command.
“Seize the fire-buckets, my lads!” I called out calmly, but in a tone of
sufficient dignity to inspire perfect confidence.
“Man ladders to the windows of my apartments.”
By this time another gang of the tenantry came rushing in upon the
scene. I met them with an order to unhang the portraits in the baronial
dining-hall, and store them in a place of safety. Then, having spoken a
few words of comfort to the gracious baroness, my mother, I seized a
fire-bucket and led the line up the stairway. Laying my shoulder against
the door of my apartments, I burst it open; and, with head lowered
before the blaze of light dashed in, followed by the bucket-bearers.
“Halt!” I cried.
It was too late! some of my finest hangings and rugs were spoiled by
half a dozen buckets of water emptied upon them.
The mystery was solved! The blaze of light that fairly flooded my
apartments proceeded from the huge fire-flies which had hatched out
without being noticed by me. But I didn’t begrudge my ruined hangings.
There was my recompense clinging to the walls.
I need hardly say, that the giant fire-flies were the wonder of their
day, and brief as it was it sufficed to cover my name with a glory as
resplendent, as their mysterious fire.
[Illustration: THE LITTLE BARON READING BY THE LIGHT OF THE GIGANTIC
FIRE-FLIES.]
I caused a huge lamp of exquisite oriental pattern to be constructed,
and having placed the light-bearers beneath its dome of polished glass,
passed several nights in the most perfect happiness, seated in its soft,
white light, poring over musty volumes of travel, written in tongues
long-forgotten, save by a few of the most learned scholars. But, my
delight was short-lived. The gigantic fire-flies absolutely refused to
eat anything, although I tempted them with a hundred different kinds of
food. Little by little, their mysterious flame lost its bright
effulgence—burning lower and lower until it went out in death.
* * * * *
To resume the thread of my story:
I was growing impatient to reach the table-lands of the Himalayas, and
taxed the powers of endurance of my guide to their uttermost.
In our bivouacs at times he would encircle my slender ankle-joints with
his thumb and index finger and exclaim: “All the gods helped make thee,
little baron!” meaning that there dwelt great will-power and strength in
my small body.
The skies now cleared up. The living pall rolled backward, toward the
horizon, and naught remained to tell of the mighty flood of light which
so lately overran the heavens save a faint shimmering streak of fire in
far distant Western sky.
Soon it went out altogether. Thus far, our journey had been through an
open country, with here and there a clump of forest trees which, at last
grew so frequent that I felt sure we must be approaching the confines of
some extensive piece of woodland.
In this I was not mistaken.
As we reached the summit of a range of hills, I could see in the
distance a long, dark line of forests. My guide, who had pushed on
ahead, in search of water, came galloping wildly back.
I paid no particular attention to him, until I noticed that he had
dismounted in great haste and was running towards me.
“Turn back! turn back! little master!” he exclaimed, throwing himself at
my feet, and clasping my legs with his arms!
“Enter not in the Palin-mâ-Talin! (Home of Darkness.) A hundred pilgrims
have laid their bones in the moss-grown depths of the Great Gloomy
Forest! It is as pathless as the ocean! It is as silent as death. It is
as limitless as the heavens! Nor man nor beast can breathe its cool,
moist air, and live! Turn back! I beseech thee, little baron; tempt not
the Palin-mâ-Talin!”
“Palin-mâ-Talin! Palin-mâ-Talin!” I repeated, as if awakening from a
dream, “why, it must be—ay, there can be no doubt of it—the Great Aryan
Forest, in which, countless centuries ago, the human race having
abandoned their holes in the clay banks, first learned to hunt the wild
beast, feed on his flesh and clothe themselves in his skins.”
In my joy at this discovery I threw a handful of gold pieces into the
lap of my astonished guide.
Bulger, always ready to share my happiness, came bounding to my side,
barking loud and shrill. To my infinite surprise, the answering bark of
a dog came floating on the morning breeze.
“Hark!” I exclaimed, in a whisper. This time it was unmistakable.
“’Tis one of Benè-agâ’s dogs!” was my guide’s reply. “Come, little
master, let me lead thee to his cave. It is beneath the very shadow of
the Great Gloomy Forest. He can tell thee of its dangers, for he hath
crossed it!”
“And come safely back?” I asked.
“While life lasts he will sit in the gloom of Palin-mâ-Talin!” murmured
the man.
“What meanest thou?” I cried.
“I mean, that the noonday sun cannot chase the shadows from his eyes.”
“He is blind?”
“Ay, little master, blind!” was the guide’s reply, “and yet save this
blind hermit, there lives no human creature who can lead thee safely
through the Great Gloomy Forest!”
“Have done with thy jesting!” I cried.
“Nay, little master!” was the man’s answer. “I speak in all truth and
reverence, for Benè-agâ is a holy man, and in him dwells such a radiant
spirit, that his path is illumined and his footsteps are sure when other
men would walk to their destruction!”
“O, lead me to him!” I exclaimed with ill-concealed joy. “A thousand
pieces of gold are thine, if the blind hermit consents to be my guide.”
“A thousand pieces of gold!” repeated the guide with a gleam in his dark
eyes. “Ah, little baron, no one can earn that princely reward, excepting
thee thyself! Who am I, poor, miserable, ignorant slave that I am, that
I should attempt to move this saintly and learned man in thy behalf? He
would heed the cry of one of his dogs far more quickly than he would my
chatter!”
“Is he so unlike his kind,” I asked, as we rode slowly along, “as not to
love gold?”
“Ay, little baron! if every dried leaf in his forest path were a coin of
burnished gold, he would not stoop to pick one up!”
“Are his ears closed to flattery?”
“As closed as his eyes are to the sun’s rays.”
“Loves he not some savory dish?”
“Fruits and berries content him!”
“Surely a draught of rare old wine, mellow with age, fragrant as crushed
roses, purple within the beaker, would warm his heart to quicker
beating, and incline him to serve me!”
“Nay, nay, little baron! a gourd full of water from the sparkling rill
near his home in the rocks, is sweeter to him than any nectar ever
distilled by the hands of man!”
“They say he is learned! Then shall my gift be a score of rare old
books, priceless parchments filled with thoughts so noble, so deep, so
subtle, that, to read therein, means to live a thousand years in one!”
“Ah, little master,” replied my guide, with a mournful smile, “thou art
still astray. This dweller ’mid the rocks, this lover of solitude, the
measure of whose life, they say, is full three hundred years, knows no
other books than the pages of his own soul! On these he has turned his
thoughts so long and so diligently, that the foolish outpourings of
so-called authors seem like the merest prattle of childhood.”
“But look, little master, we are drawing near the home of the blind
hermit.”
I turned my eyes in the direction indicated.
A rocky ledge, wild, craggy, broken, seamed and twisted, crowned with a
growth of pine trees having knotted, gnarled and fantastically-shaped
trunks and boughs, shut in our view. As we drew near the entrance to
Benè-agâ’s cave, a troop of dogs, of various ages and species, came
bounding forward with loud barkings.
Bulger advanced to meet them boldly, after first glancing at my face to
see whether I objected or not.
It was a long while since he had met any of the members of his race, and
then again, he doubtless wished to get a good look at these residents of
such a distant land.
The feeling seemed to be mutual, for in an instant the barking ceased,
and the hermit’s dogs gathered about Bulger in silent wonderment.
After a series of salutations, which plainly ended in the best of
fellowships, the hermit’s dogs endeavored to lure Bulger away for a run
in the forest and fields, but in this they were, I need scarcely say,
entirely unsuccessful. Bulger gave them to understand in very decided
terms that he would talk with them, and even romp with them, but that it
must all be done under the eyes of his master.
We now halted and dismounted.
“This is the place,” said my guide in a low tone. “Through that deep
fissure in the rocks thou wilt find a path that leads to Benè-agâ’s
cave. Enter it boldly, little master. At the entrance to the cave thou
wilt find a dried gourd hanging on the rocky wall. Seize it! When
shaken, its seeds will give forth a loud, rattling sound. This done,
move not, though the shadows of evening find thee still standing at the
door of Benè-agâ’s cave. Farewell, little master; Heaven make good to
thee tenfold thy kindness to me! I will await thee three days. If by
that time I do not hear thy voice calling me to serve thee again, I
shall return to my kindred!”
Advancing to the cleft in the rocky wall, I found the gourd hanging by a
leathern thong.
The loud rattling of the seeds, as it broke the deep silence of this
wild and lonely place—fit vestibule to a temple devoted to silence,
solitude and meditation—startled me painfully.
Restoring the gourd to its place, I leaned forward to catch the faintest
sound of the hermit’s voice which might reach my ear.
It came not.
The silence grew more oppressive than before.
The broken, twisted rocks, overhanging and surrounding me, took on
fantastic forms.
In every dark cavity I saw some misshapen creature stirring about.
A dreadful feeling of loneliness crept over me.
No sound came, save the loud throbbing of my own heart.
A half hour went by!
Benè-agâ spake not a word.
“Perhaps he sleeps!” I whispered to myself.
My words awakened the echoes of the rocky recesses, and the word
“sleeps” came back to my ears in a hundred different tones, now loud and
hissing, now soft and sibilant.
At last a full hour had now gone by since I had rattled the seeds of the
dried gourd, and yet the blind hermit spake no word.
Again the death-like stillness sank upon the place, and the gathering
shadows grew deeper and deeper.
Could the guide have played me false? I asked myself.
Nay, that cannot be!
And yet why comes there no sound from Benè-agâ’s cave?
Shall I summon him once more? May he not have gone forth to gather food?
Am I doomed to be turned back when I have reached the very threshold of
my long-wished-for desire?
These and a hundred other questions flitted through my mind as I stood
in the dark and gloomy corridor that led to Benè-agâ’s cave.
By the shadows on the rocky wall I could see that I had now been
standing at least two hours awaiting summons to draw nearer.
But hush!
He speaks at last!
My heart bounded joyfully, and yet as if with a leaden weight upon it.
“Who is it that disturbs my meditation?” were the hermit’s words.
“A stranger! A brother! One who needs thy guidance!” I replied in a
firm, yet humble tone.
“No human creature is stranger to me! Thou art too young to be my
brother! The light that is left me shines only for my own feet!” came
slowly from the hermit’s cave in a full, deep, rich voice.
“True, great master,” I replied, “but then, may I not be thy son, and
follow thy footsteps?”
“Thou art very wise for thy years,” spake Benè-agâ.
“Not so wise, great master,” was my reply, “as I shall be when I have
sat at thy feet.”
“Come somewhat closer; thy child-voice sounds like an echo,” continued
the blind hermit. “And yet thou art not a child! Some great spirit plays
in sportive mood behind thy face! I see that thou art blue-eyed and
flaxen-haired. Thine eyes are set wide asunder, and above them towers a
dome of thought. Thy home is in the land of the Norseman. At least thy
fathers dwelt there. On thy cheek glows the crimson which, in the peach
and apple-land, stains the autumn foliage!”
As I had not yet even stepped within Benè-agâ’s cave, these words of the
blind hermit caused a strange feeling, half of fear, half of dread
fascination, to creep over me.
My heart throbbed violently.
His ear, far keener than birds’ or beasts’, caught the sound.
“Fear not, little one!” said he, in deep, rich tones, full and swelling
like the voice of organ pipes, “if thou canst content thyself with a
handful of berries when thou art hungry, with a draught from the
neighboring rill when thou art thirsty; if thy young limbs are sturdy
enough to wrest repose from a rocky couch, then art thou welcome! If
not, go thy way! For twenty years I’ve been busy with a certain problem,
and have no time to stop and spread a more bountiful repast!”
“But season thy frugal fare with thy wisdom, great master,” I returned,
“and it will be sweeter to my palate than stall-fed ox and mellow wine.”
“Come somewhat nearer, little traveler, so that I may see thee better!”
spake the blind hermit, kindly and gently.
I did not wait for further summons, but stepped boldly into Benè-agâ’s
cave.
It was, in truth, little more than a lofty cleft in the rocks, with
several deeper recesses, in which the shadows lay undisturbed. Its roof
of jagged, broken and blackened masses of stone, was arched and lofty.
In and about it, flocks of small swallow-like birds nested, and at times
broke out in musical twitterings. Barren, gloomy and utterly forlorn as
the place was, without chair, mat, bed or blanket, every thought of its
awful loneliness and abject surroundings vanished from my mind, as I
fixed my eyes upon its occupant.
As I had stepped within the limit of Benè-agâ’s cave, he had slowly
risen from his bench of stone, and now stood erect before me. Of
powerful build, tall and majestic, with long snow-white hair and snowy
beard, he towered like a statue of Parian marble in the dim twilight, to
which now, however, my eyes had become accustomed.
I gazed upon him, half in fear, half in delight.
I could feel my breath coming fast and faster, as I riveted my gaze upon
his wonderful face, so full of love, patience, courage and contentment.
Had he bent his eyes upon me, I would never have believed him blind, for
they were unclouded, full and lustrous. And yet, on second look, I saw
that their gleam was like the brightness of the polished gem, that lacks
the softness of living, sensitive orbs.
Benè-agâ was clad in a rude garb of dried skins, from which the hair had
been skilfully scraped. Tossed back from his broad and massive brow, his
white locks hung in heavy ringlets on his broad shoulders, while his
wonderful beard, as white and glistening as spun glass—around his body
twice entwined—clung like a snow-wreath twisted about a sturdy oak by
the circling gale.
[Illustration: BENÈ-AGÂ, THE BLIND GUIDE.]
So, like a mighty son of earth he towered, rude, yet noble; untaught yet
learned, human yet godlike that I stood transfixed. My tongue forgot its
tricks of speech. I felt that I should turn to stone, if he did not
speak to me.
While standing thus speechless, robbed of power to move a limb, Bulger
broke the spell!
At Benè-agâ’s feet lay a sick dog, infirm thro’ age and not ailment;
blind like his master, his head pillowed on some soft dry leaves—the
only semblance of bed within the hermit’s cave.
Bulger’s gaze fell upon this pitiful spectacle. With cautious step,
outstretched neck, and wide-opened eyes, he approached his sick brother,
sniffed him over, licked his face and ears, whined piteously and then
fixed a pleading look upon me as if to ask: “Dear little master, canst
thou do nothing to help my poor, sick brother? Canst thou not make him
well again, so that I may coax him out into the warm sunshine to play
with him?”
Benè-agâ spake: “I see that thou art not alone, little wanderer, thou
bringest a companion with thee. He is welcome. His tenderness and
sympathy will carry joy and gladness to the heart of my suffering
friend, whose head I’ve pillowed upon some soft grass! I, too, love
dogs! Thou seest they are my sole companions. Their love is less
exacting than human love. They require no pledge or promise. They
understand my silence, read my thoughts and are content!”
“But, come! little traveler, time presses. Speak! What brings thee to
Benè-agâ’s cave? If it be idle curiosity, depart! But, if thou seekest
counsel; if thou comest with honest intent to ask my advice in some
arduous matter, I am ready to serve thee!”
“I thank thee, great master!” I replied, humbly. “Know then that I would
traverse the Great Gloomy Forest and that report hath reached mine ear
that thou alone, of all human beings, canst guide me through its
never-lifting shadows, shield me from its poisonous vapors and let me
not follow my own foot-prints in ever-widening circles, until reason
itself feels the dreaded spell of that vast, trackless, pathless
wilderness!”
“’Tis true!” gave answer Benè-agâ in deep, sad tones. “I can perform the
service thou askest! But, O, my son! thou must know that a most sacred
vow holds me in its mysterious power, securely locked, that I should
lead no fellow-creature through that pathless wood, save on certain
conditions!”
“Name them, great master!” I cried.
“That he who asks this service,” continued Benè-agâ, “shall tarry thirty
days and nights with me in my rocky home, to inure him to the burden of
awful gloom and silence; that he, in all that time, taste of no food
save the berries, on which I feed; slake his thirst with no draught
other than that which I bring him from the neighboring rill and sleep on
the bare rock, even as I do! Reflect! the apprenticeship is severe. Deem
it not dishonorable, nor weak, to shrink from so hard a task! Pause,
reflect, ere thou answerest. I’ll resume my meditations for an hour and
then question thee again!”
“Be it so, great master!” I made answer; and, Benè-agâ’s sightless eyes
seem to turn to the shrunken form of the dying dog.
Silence filled the cave, and feeble twilight struggled against the
gathering gloom. My thoughts turned homewards! I could hear the gentle
voice of the baroness, my mother. The castle windows were lighted, and
the tall lindens shook a rich perfume from their blossoming boughs. All
seemed so sweet and peaceful. My mother’s voice reached me—I caught its
every word: “Set forth my son’s repast!” said she in soft, mild tones.
“See that his favorite dishes are kept warm. Choose none but the
choicest wine for him; and, take good care that his bed be soft and
even, and his pillow’s smooth!” My breath came only with painful effort
as these words rang in my ears.
I started up with a bound. In spite of myself, I took a step toward the
portal of Benè-agâ’s cave, where the last rays of the setting sun tipped
the angry, jagged, broken rocks with gold.
“Well, my son!” spake the blind hermit. “Art thou still resolute?”
“Ay, great master!” I cried, turning back and drawing near to him.
“Fear naught! Though puny in body, yet was I born with the strength of
steel in my limbs, and the will power of a score of common men.”
“Lead thou on! I will follow thee.”
A faint smile spread over the noble countenance of the blind hermit, as
he replied:
“I have not told thee all, my son! Till we pass from these walls of
stone, and stand in the open air, thou must not speak a word aloud. Nay,
nor in a whisper, either. I will set thy food and drink before thee, and
that,” he continued, pointing to a projecting shelf of rock, “shall be
thy bed! On its bare surface, rest thy limbs when nature bids thee
sleep. Art thou still resolute?”
“Ay, great master!” I replied with loud and buoyant voice, “I will do
thy bidding!”
“’Tis well!” said Benè-agâ. “I like thy brave and steadfast soul! But
hold me not hard of heart in condemning thee to this gloom and silence!
Temper the bitterness of thy fate by giving thyself over to deep and
earnest meditation, during the few brief hours that it shall last.
Forget the so-called world—a bubble that bursts when thou thinkest to
grasp it; a shadow, which thou pursuest with eager pace, and yet canst
never overtake; a mirage, rising before the weary traveler’s gaze, with
visions of delicious gardens, watered by limpid rills and cooled by
sparkling fountains, only to melt away and leave him more weak and
fainting than before. Look within thyself! Thou art the temple of an
immortal soul! Enter its portals! Fix thine eyes on the mysterious
writings there unrolled! Grow not weary and discouraged if thou canst
not decipher their meaning as easily as thou wouldst the books of man!
And O, my son, should the gloom and silence of Benè-agâ’s cave weigh too
heavily on thy young soul, raise thine eyes to some one of the many
lines which I have carved upon these rocky walls, in my hours of
recreation. They will guide thee back to sweet contentment; give thee
strength to persevere unto the end! And now, my son, farewell! Though
with thee, near thee, even by thy side, yet remember, I am far from
thee. Ay, farther than earthly staff can measure! Be hopeful, be strong,
and thou wilt conquer! Again, farewell!”
“Farewell, great master, farewell!” I exclaimed; and, as my words echoed
through the vast, rocky chamber, the last ray of light fled before the
thickening gloom, and all was inky blackness.
I had noticed, ere the darkness came, that I was standing near the
projecting shelf of rock which was to serve me as a bed, when nature
called me to rest.
Turning now softly, I groped my way toward it and stretched myself at
full length on its bare surface. For a few moments all went well. Such a
conflict of thought was raging in the chambers of my mind, that I took
no note of the chill which this couch of stone sent creeping through my
limbs. I closed my eyes, thinking to coax sleep to them, and thus forget
the ever-increasing pang!
In vain! It seemed as if death itself had seized my feet between his icy
palms!
Sharp pains leapt from one joint to another, and wherever my body came
into contact with that couch of stone, it seemed as if a thousand
needles pricked my flesh. Half-crazed by the ever-increasing agony, I
tossed from side to side, like one in delirium. At times I sat up to
escape from stupefying dizziness which caught me in its swift,
encircling whirl! My heated pulse beat at the thin walls of my temple,
until it seemed as if I should go mad! A rushing, soughing, gurgling
sound of many waters roared in my ears, while strange, fantastic forms,
in lines of fire on inky background, flitted to and fro before my eyes,
until I began to fear I should soon be doomed to sit in eternal gloom
like Benè-agâ himself.
And now heat and cold held alternate sway within my tired and broken
frame. Vainly I strove to wet my parched lips with my tongue! The fever
had dried it to a chip. For a few brief moments the torture ceased!
I breathed more freely!
My limbs, thought I, are getting used to their couch of stone! I shall
full asleep and forget my sufferings!
But no! With redoubled fury they came back to their work.
I dared not cry out so soon to Benè-agâ, for mercy, for release from the
cruel conditions he had imposed upon me! Rather death than yield so
quickly; shrink so like a coward who stands motionless and trembling on
the battle field, as a spent ball strikes his breast.
I slept at last!
But O, what a broken, fevered sleep it was! A sleep with unclosed eyes,
full of dark and dismal sights. I could stand no more. I yielded and
longed for death. In thought, I kissed my parents’ hands and felt their
soft caresses on my brow and face. And then, it seemed the gracious
baroness, my mother, caught my hand in hers and pressed it fervently on
her lips. The kiss was so warm, so tender, so life-like, that I started
up like one awakening from a long delirium. It cannot be a dream, I
murmured, I am awake!
Tossing my racked form over on its side, so that I could touch my right
hand—the one on which I had felt the kiss, with my left the mystery was
explained.
’T was Bulger!
He was beside my couch of stone. It was he who had licked my cold, numb
hand and turned my thoughts homeward. I caressed his head and ears and
sought to make him lie down lest the rustle might disturb the blind
hermit. He refused to obey, altho’ I thrice let him know my wishes. It
was his first act of disobedience and for an instant drove all thoughts
of pain from my mind. To all my suffering now came this new grief.
Aroused from my stupor at last, by his persistent refusal to obey I
collected my thoughts sufficiently to realize that he was bent upon
leaping on my couch. His forefeet were already resting upon its edge. I
dared not resist lest he should break the solemn stillness of Benè-agâ’s
cave by giving vent to some sound of entreaty. No sooner had he sprung
upon the rocky shelf than I felt him crouching on its edge, and reaching
down as if in the act of seizing something in his teeth, something so
heavy, too, that it called for violent exertion. Whatever it was, I was
not slow in discovering that he was endeavoring to drag it upon my rocky
couch. Half rising, I stretched out my hand to solve the mystery.
O beloved Bulger!
In an outburst of affection I pressed my lips repeatedly upon his body.
He took no note of my caresses, but only tugged the harder at the thing
he held within his teeth. It was my blanket!
Taught in his early years to fetch my slippers, my gloves, my cap to me,
when he found them lying here or there, he had never forgotten to render
me these petty services. And thus, noticing that my blanket had,
apparently, been forgotten, he seized it, heavy as it was and dragged it
to his little master’s bed.
Regardless of Benè-agâ’s ire; unmindful of the fact that to accept
Bulger’s gift was plainly an open breach of the compact between the
blind hermit and me, I wrapped my bruised and aching body in the thick,
warm covering and fell into a long refreshing sleep.
Such was my first night in Benè-agâ’s cave. The next day was bright and
clear and the rocky chamber seemed less dismal to me. My eyes were
becoming accustomed to the gloom.
From morn till night, I shunned that bed of torture, passing my time
studying out the hidden meaning of the words which Benè-agâ has carved
on the rocky walls; watching the birds as they flitted in with food for
their nestlings or standing near the blind hermit with my gaze riveted
upon his noble features, thick, clustering hair and far-flowing beard!
From this time forth all went well. I soon forgot the long hours of that
terrible night of silence and despair. Indeed, I was astounded to find
how swiftly the time sped along when one gives himself up to deep and
all-absorbing meditation.
Days and nights flitted by like alternate hours of light and darkness.
I was startled from a deep sleep by hearing the full round voice of
Benè-agâ saying: “Up! up! little traveler, up! my son, the morn is
breaking. The appointed hour has come! To-day we must enter
Palin-mâ-Talin or all thy apprenticeship shall have been in vain!”
I sprang up; and, approaching Benè-agâ, related in tones of unfeigned
grief, how I had disregarded the sacred compact between us; and, that,
altho’ it cut me to the heart, to be obliged to turn back, when I stood
upon the very confines of the Great Gloomy Forest, yet I was not worthy
to follow him, and was firmly resolved not to plead for mercy!
All! I told him all! how my frame had been so racked by pain that I was
upon the very point of crying out for release from the terrible compact,
when my beloved Bulger came to my relief, and saved me from that
degradation. He heard me in silence, his noble countenance giving no
sign or hint of what was going on within that lofty soul.
At last, a sad and almost imperceptible smile spread over his face and
he spake as follows: “Take heart, my son. All is forgiven. Thou art but
a child and I should have lightened the burden of this apprenticeship.
Nor can I hold thee worthy of blame for yielding to such a touching
proof of thy dog’s love for thee! Hadst thou repulsed him he would have
lain in wakeful sorrow by thy bedside all that night—dear, faithful
soul! Would he belonged to me!”
So saying, Benè-agâ bent his towering form and caressed Bulger’s head
and ears.
Nor was Bulger slow in returning the hermit’s caresses. They had become
the best of friends. Bulger felt the fascination of Benè-agâ’s
mysterious power from the very first.
When the hour arrived for us to leave the rocky chamber of gloom and
silence, and step out into the sunlight once more, my heart broke out
into its old-time beat. Had I not been in the presence of the venerable
Benè-agâ, I should have leapt and danced for joy, as we emerged from
that dreary abode, and I felt the warm air fan my cheek once more. But,
one thing struck me now most forcibly. It was the wonderful change which
I noted in the blind hermit himself, when he stood in the sunlight and
the morning breezes tossed the curls of his white, silken hair, like
April winds making merry with a flock of snowflakes. First, his
appearance was quite different from that to which I had become
accustomed. A leathern cap crowned his massive head, and held his thick,
rebellious hair somewhat in control. His wide-flowing beard had entirely
disappeared beneath his rude garb, save where it clothed his face and
neck. I saw at once that he was clad for work—for toilsome progress
through Palin-mâ-Talin’s thick growth. In his right hand he carried a
curious rod or wand, long, slender, polished and extremely flexible. I
soon learned to wonder at his extraordinary skill in using this staff to
guide his steps or discover the nature of any object not within the
reach of his hands. A rude pouch or leather bag was swung across his
shoulder.
The change in Benè-agâ’s manner was still more noticeable. To me, this
change was as pleasing as it was unexpected. In a brief half hour he
became another man. His deep, rich voice, soft and round as the sound of
an organ-pipe took on a mellower tone! A faint smile wreathed his noble
features, as the sunlight fell upon them. His step became quick and
elastic, his movements brisk and agile. So wonderfully keen were his
remaining senses that only the closest observer could have guessed that
he was blind.
Turning in the direction of the spot where his dogs were at play, he
startled me by breaking out into a joyous,—
“Yo ho! my children! Yo ho! my brothers! Here to me! Here to me!”
His dogs—Bulger among them—bounded forward with a loud chorus of
barking. Benè-agâ caught the stranger’s voice. “It pains me deeply,” he
cried, “to rob him of his playfellows, for I see him gamboling and
sporting with my children!”
As the blind hermit stooped, his dogs, with loud cries of sorrow at
parting, sprang up to lick his face and hands.
“Go, my children! Go, my brothers!” said Benè-agâ. “Content yourselves.
I’ll come again soon, very soon, with love warmed by absence!”
All was now ready for the start. Beneath the rising sun I could see a
long, dark line, far away, where earth and sky came together. It was
Palin-mâ-Talin. Home of Darkness! The Great Gloomy Forest!
Thither Benè-agâ now directed his footsteps with astonishing rapidity of
gait, tapping the ground with his long, polished wand as he hurried
along!
Awe-struck, I followed my blind guide!
In comparison with such miraculous powers of hearing, smelling and
feeling, my eyes were worthless. Ever and anon he called out to me:
“Guard thee well, my son, a viper stirred in the grass to thy left!
Guard thee well, my son, to touch the leaves of the flowering shrub
through which we are passing now—they are poisonous.”
“Guard thee well, my son, to taste the waters of the rivulet to which we
are coming, until I have made trial of its purity.”
“Guard thee well, my son, to pluck one of the flowers which now delight
thy eye, and charm thee with their odor. ’Tis next to death to breath
their perfume close to thy nostrils.”
“Guard thee well, my son, to crush upon thy skin one of the little
insects which now fill the air, lest thou spread a subtle poison o’er
thy flesh!”
As we drew near to the outer edge of the Great Gloomy Forest, a strange
joy lit up Benè-agâ’s face. He beat the air with his polished wand in
graceful curves and circles, as he poured forth, half singing, half
reciting, a sort of chant, invocation, or mysterious greeting to
Palin-mâ-Talin, Home of Darkness!
As if charmed by the rich music of his own voice, his spirits ran higher
and higher. At times he halted to catch the soft echoes as they came
floating back on the wings of the morning air.
As nearly as I can remember Benè-agâ’s chant was something like this:
“O, la, la, la, la, l-a-a-a-a! Hail to thee, Palin-mâ-Talin. Shadowy
Land! La, la! Lu, la, lo, li! Lu, la, lo, li! We are coming to thee,
beloved Temple of Silence and Gloom! Let us into thy dark corridors,
Palin-mâ-Talin Lo-il-la! Lo-il-la! Thou art victor! Palin-mâ-Talin, my
beautiful! From thy buckler of darkness fall the Sun’s arrows,
splintered and broken! O, la, la, la, la, la, l-a-a-aa-a-a! We are
coming King of Gloom and Stillness! Palin-mâ-Talin. O silent domain! Let
us in from the roar and the glare! Let us in from the roofless world. We
are near at hand, Palin-mâ-Talin! Swing open thy black portals! Lift thy
veil of Gloom! Admit thy children into thy silent chambers. O,
Palin-mâ-Talin, Lo-il-lo! Lo-il-lo! Lo-il-lo! Lo-il-l-a-a-a-a-a-a!”
At last we stood by the very edge of Palin-mâ-Talin.
Benè-agâ swept his polished wand against the foliage of one of the
low-hanging, far-reaching branches; then, sprang forward and seizing a
handful of the leaves, crushed them in his grasp and raised them to his
nostrils. “This is not the gateway, my son” he cried, “we must turn
farther northward!”
After about half an hour, he again halted and reaching out for a handful
of the leaves inhaled their odor.
“Not yet! not yet!” he murmured. “Somewhat northward still! Be not
troubled, my son. Thou see’st Palin-mâ-Talin with thine outward eye! Not
so Benè-agâ! He must lay his hand upon the very walls of this Temple of
Silence and Gloom ere he can see it!”
Suddenly the blind hermit paused. His thin nostrils quivered, his
massive breast heaved convulsively. “We are almost there!” he spoke in
measured tones. “I catch the perfume of the foliage which clothes the
two ebon columns of the gateway.” I looked and saw before me two
towering trees, whose wide-reaching branches swept the very ground. Side
by side they stood, alike in size and grandeur. Benè-agâ passed his hand
caressingly over the first branch which brushed his cheek and pressed
its leaves to his lips; then, broke out into his wild chant once more.
I stood looking at the blind hermit and listening to his song of
greeting, hardly knowing what to expect next when, suddenly, he threw
himself upon his knees and crept under the far-reaching branches of one
of these gigantic sentinels of the Great Gloomy Forest.
Bulger and I followed him! Thus it was we entered the domain of
Palin-mâ-Talin, Home of Darkness. I shall not try to describe to you the
solemn stillness, the mysterious twilight of the Great Gloomy Forest,
nor to paint for you the wonderful beauty of the deep green mosses which
covered rocks and trees: trailed from the swaying branches, carpeted the
floorway, or hung like heavy canopies, from tree to tree, above our
heads, and increased the gloom caused by the thick, interlacing foliage.
I had followed Benè-agâ’s noiseless footsteps about half a mile into the
stilly depths of Palin-mâ-Talin when, I began to feel a strange chill
creep over me; beginning at my very finger tips and pursuing its
insidious way toward my very vitals. So rapidly did it run its benumbing
course that I was upon the point of calling out to the Benè-agâ, when he
halted; and having broken a twig from a tree with foliage of dark green
and polished leaves, bade me eat them, saying:
“Palin-mâ-Talin does no harm to those that know him!”
I found the leaves pungent and agreeable to the taste. Their effect was
magical. My limbs at once forgot their numbness and my step lost its
heaviness.
We had now been several hours in the Great Gloomy Forest; and, thus far,
Benè-agâ had advanced into its ever-increasing gloom—for night was
falling, without a halt.
Had Benè-agâ had as many eyes as Argus and each of lynx’s power, he
could not have pursued his way thro’ Palin-mâ-Talin’s gloomy corridors
more easily and more securely. His polished wand flashed like a thing of
life in his miraculously trained hand, touching everything, vibrating,
swinging, advancing, retreating, with a rapidity, that my eyes could not
follow.
“O, great master!” I called out to him, “let me not be presumptuous
enough to speak to thee of things which should be left unstirred in the
chambers of thy mind, but if it be permitted to me to know, tell me how
thy rayless eyes can pierce this gloom and find a path thro’ this
trackless forest, wrapt in the gloom and silence of ten thousand years!”
“It shall be as thou wishest, son;” replied the blind hermit “the little
there is to know thou shall hear! But surely, thy young limbs must be
weary. First let me make ready a bed for the night and spread some food
and drink!”
So saying, he swung his leathern bag off his shoulder, took from it a
roll of dried skin and spread it on the ground; then, wrenching four
pine boughs from a tree near by, he thrust them in the earth one at each
corner of a square, and striking a spark with his tinder-box, set fire
to the pitch which trickled down the boughs.
The flickering flames cast a thousand weird shadows on the trailing
mosses and black shrouded trees, and filled the air with a grateful
warmth.
Benè-agâ now drew forth some dried fruit and berries.
We ate in silence.
Bulger sniffed at the food but nothing more.
Our frugal repast concluded, the blind hermit took from his leathern
pouch a sharp-pointed piece of flint with which he pierced the bark of a
tree near our bivouac. Into the hole he thrust a slender reed. I was
astonished to see a limpid liquid flow from the end of the reed. He
filled a gourd with it and placing the drinking vessel in my hand said
in a low, caressing voice:
“Drink, my son! ’Twill refresh and strengthen thee!”
I raised the gourd to my lips. The liquid was cool and sweet, and very
pleasing to the taste.
“Drink as deep as thou wilt, my son,” cried Benè-agâ, “for
Palin-mâ-Talin could slake the thirst of an army.”
Again I placed the gourd to my lips. This time I drank long and deep. A
gentle warmth now coursed thro’ my limbs. My eye-lids sank downward,
oppressed with a most delicious longing for sleep. Pillowing my head on
Benè-agâ’s pouch, with my hand resting on my faithful Bulger’s head, I
was soon wrapped in slumber.
When I awoke, it was still night. The pine knots had burned nearly out.
There sat the blind hermit beside me. I could see that he was keeping
watch. His head turned as I stirred.
“Thou hast asked me,” he began, to tell thee how I am able to find my
way thro’ Palin-mâ-Talin’s gloom. Here, in this trackless home of shadow
no outward eyes would avail me aught. Thou hast seen how the floor of
this vast Temple is everywhere alike. For it, nature has woven a carpet
of thick, velvet moss which, in the flight of centuries, takes on no
change of hue. ’Tis ever the same! Tear a pathway in it, in a few short
days the rent will be made whole. Blaze the trees, the encircling mosses
will, in a brief period hide the marks, and all thy labor will be in
vain. Even supposing that thou couldst succeed in leaving a lasting
trail behind thee, the deadly poison which lurks in this damp air would
chill thy life blood ere thou couldst cross from outer wall to outer
wall of this vast Temple, with its roof of interwoven moss and foliage,
impenetrable to the noonday sun.
“Thou hast felt the first touch of that deadly chill, which curdles the
warmest blood and sends a sleep of death upon the rash intruder! But to
me, O, my son, Palin-mâ-Talin is all light and glow! I cannot see that
gloom which strikes such terror to thy soul. And thou must know, my son,
that Palin-mâ-Talin has no shadows deep enough to hide the north star
from my sight. I always know which way it was the sun went down, and
which way it will be that he will rise; for all the winds are known to
me, and whence they blow. To thy cheek the air appears to sleep at
times. To mine, never! ’Tis no more a task for me to catch the
breath-like zephyr—unfelt by thee—than it is for thy faithful dog to
take up the trail of his master’s footsteps and follow it through the
crowded mart. Then again, thou must bear in mind that for a hundred
years and more I’ve been a shadowless figure in this, home of shadows;
that the trees of Palin-mâ-Talin have taken me to their hearts, and I
them to mine; that not only do I know how and where they grow, but it
hath been revealed to me that these towering children of Palin-mâ-Talin
are not scattered helter-skelter, here and there, in orderless manner;
but, that in a certain measure, they are ranged in lines from the rising
toward the setting sun, each species forming a belt to itself, not like
a grove by man’s hand planted, but in a wild, yet orderly confusion. To
thee, this would be a useless guide, for thou hast seen how the trunks
are swathed up in garbs of moss, and how the gloom gives all the foliage
the same deep-dark hue of green. To thine eye, here, all these trees
seem alike, the countless offspring of a single sire! And yet it is not
so! For, when in my progress through these lofty corridors of gloom and
silence I sway too far northward or southward, a single handful of
leaves crushed in my grasp, gives up the secret of my whereabouts. But,
even this sure guiding string has failed me at times, and I have gone
astray in the home of my friend! And yet in such moments, Palin-mâ-Talin
had no terrors for me! When thus, an aimless wanderer in this trackless
wood, I learned to draw aside this garb of green which decks
Palin-mâ-Talin’s breast, and lay my hand upon his very heart!
“So has kind nature sharpened my sense of feeling that by the simple
touch of the clay beneath our feet I can set my erring footsteps right
and regain my lost path. Be thou, my son, in coming years, as steadfast
in thy search for truth as I have been in my endeavors to change this
gloom and silence into living light and speech, and thou wilt walk
through life’s devious paths as easily as I thread my way through the
trackless chambers of Palin-mâ-Talin!”
As Benè-agâ ceased speaking, he lifted his song, making the trailing
mosses sway with the vigor of his notes, now deep and solemn, now clear
and far-reaching.
The echoes came back softened down to flute notes. He listened
breathlessly.
“O wonderful man!” thought I, “even the sleeping echoes rouse themselves
to guide thy footsteps aright.”
“Come, my son!” he cried in tones of gladness, “our torches go to their
end. Let us push on! Though the sun be not yet high enough to chase the
inky darkness out of Palin-mâ-Talin’s depths, still, with this guiding
string thou canst follow me!”
Saying this, he placed the end of a leather thong in my hand, and we set
out once more.
After we had been an hour or so under way, the sun’s rays began so to
temper the darkness of the Great Gloomy Forest, that my eyes were of
some slight use to me!
Again Benè-agâ broke out in a wild chant, and paused to catch the echo.
“Ah,” murmured the blind hermit, half in soliloquy “that was a greeting
from the drowsy waters of Lool-pâ-Tool!”
Imagine the feeling of utter helplessness which came over me an hour or
so later when, suddenly I found myself standing upon the banks of a
broad streamlet, of hue blacker than the wings of night, apparently
stagnant; or, at least so sluggish as to seem well deserving of the
title “Drowsy Waters.”
“This is Lool-pâ-Tool!” said Benè-agâ, as he rested his chin on his hand
and seemed to be gazing down on its inky surface.
But how to cross it, for no bark was moored in sight—was now the
bewildering thought which oppressed my mind! Surely it cannot be forded,
for to the eye it seemed as deep as it was silent and mysterious. Nor
yet, would it be otherwise than inviting death itself to plunge into its
stagnant waters and swim to the other side.
While I stood thus wrapped in a cloud of anxious thought, Benè-agâ
himself seemed scarcely less perplexed. His usual calmness had deserted
him.
Drawing some pebbles from his leather pouch, he cast them one by one
into the stream, bending forward to catch the sound they made with
eager, listening air. Then turning to the right he followed the banks of
Lool-pâ-Tool, keeping his staff in the water and beating it gently with
the tip as if striving to draw some secret from it.
Again he paused and cast some pebbles into the dark and sluggish stream,
and bent forward to get their answer. Again, he woke the echoes, and
listened breathlessly to the reply that came, only to take up the march
after a brief delay with what seemed to me a somewhat hesitating step.
Evidently he was astray. His calm, noble face lost its look of serene
confidence. Suddenly halting, he reached out for a handful of foliage,
crushed the leaves in a quick and nervous grasp, inhaled their odor, and
then resumed his march as before, with head dropped forward on his
breast, and doubt and uncertainty visible in every movement.
For an instant the thought flashed thro’ my mind that possibly Benè-agâ
had gone so far astray as to make the discovery of the right course
impossible. I could feel my lips draw apart, and my heart creep slowly
upward into my throat!
The thought of a lingering death from starvation in the chill, dark
corridors of Palin-mâ-Talin, set a knife in my heart.
I almost tottered as I followed the blind hermit’s lead. My tongue was
too dry to let me cry out to him in my sudden despair.
While these terrible thoughts were chasing each other thro’ my mind,
Benè-agâ halted; and, resting his staff upon the branches of the nearest
tree, broke out into one of his wild invocations:
“O Palin-mâ-Talin, Benè-agâ calls unto thee! Hear him! He is astray! Set
his feet in the right path! Let him not wander aimlessly about in thy
gloom and silence. O, Palin-mâ-Talin! He is thy child; be kind and
loving to him!”
With these words Benè-agâ threw himself upon his knees, tore away the
thick covering of moss, until he had laid bare the forest floor; from
this, he took up a handful of the soil and pressed it between his
fingers as if to test some secret quality.
When he arose I knew that all was well. A radiant glow played about his
features. He was himself again!
Catching up his wand, he broke away with mad strides, as if pursued by
very demons. Only by running could I keep within sight of him.
On! on! we sped along the banks of Lool-pâ-Tool stream of the “Drowsy
Watery,” mile by mile, Benè-agâ carolling his wild chants of glad
thanks, I panting as if bent upon escaping fleshless death himself.
Another hundred paces and I would have fallen headlong to the ground.
My feet seemed shod with lead.
Bulger set up a most piteous whining as he saw the look of despair
settling on my face.
Suddenly the blind hermit halted; and, turning towards me, cried out in
a joyous tone:
“This is the place my son. It is all over now! Fear nothing! Mount on my
shoulders! Thou wilt not add a feather’s weight to the burdens which I
carry there! Be not troubled about thy dog. Lool-pâ-Tool has no terrors
for him.” Such was my confidence in the blind hermit’s power to bear me
safety across the mysterious stream that I did not wait for a second
bidding to mount upon his shoulders altho’ as far as I could see, the
waters of Lool-pâ-Tool looked just as black and deep as ever. Advancing
to the edge of the stream Benè-agâ now began, with quick and nervous
movement of his staff, to search for hidden stepping stones.
In vain I strained my eyes to catch some sign of resting place for his
feet.
And yet, they were there: for with giant strides, steady, sure and
rapid, Benè-agâ passed over the “Drowsy Waters” of Lool-pâ-Tool and set
me safety down on the other bank. I made effort to speak my thanks. But,
wonderment had robbed my tongue of power of utterance. I could only gaze
in silence upon that noble face—now clad in all its former serenity—then
turn and follow its owner’s footsteps.
After a few miles further advance Benè-agâ halted, and, bending his gaze
upon me, as if his eyes were as full of light as his look was of
radiance, spoke as follows:
“My son, my task is done! Look, dost thou not see that gleam of light
yonder? ’Tis the outer wall of Palin-mâ-Talin. Pass it and thou wilt
enter the world of noise and glare once more! Thou hast no further need
of me. Go straight on; and, in a brief half hour, the sun’s rays will
greet thee again! Once outside of this pathless wood, thou wilt find
thyself upon a lofty parapet—a sheer height of two hundred feet above
the plains below. Look about thee and thou wilt see a stairway of solid
rock, leading downward to the plain—not such as built by hands of man,
with steps of even height, hewn regular and smooth, but a rude,
fantastic flight of stairs left standing there by nature when she
cleared away the mass each side. Upon these narrow steps, smoothed by
the beating storms of ten thousand years, the waters daily pour a
treacherous slime, so that those who have rashly tried to pass to the
fair land below, now lie among the jagged rocks. No foot is sure enough
to tread on the slippery steps of Bōga-Drappa. To fall means certain
death. I cannot counsel thee my son. Be wary! Be wise! Farewell.”
As this last word fell from Benè-agâ’s lips he flashed out of my sight
like a spirit form.
The Palin-mâ-Talin covered him with her darkness.
He was gone.
The tears gathered in my eyes.
Fain would I have pressed its hand to my lips.
I knew it was useless for me to try and call him back or to follow him.
So, with a heavy heart I turned and pressed forward in the direction he
had indicated.
I was soon at the outer edge of Palin-mâ-Talin and to tell the truth I
felt my heavy heart grow light again. Bulger too, showed his delight at
being once more in the warm sunshine. Breaking out into the wildest
barking he raced hither and thither with the joyous air of a boy set
free from long and irksome task.
As Benè-agâ had described to me, I now found myself standing upon a
lofty parapet, overlooking a delightful valley, thro’ which I longed to
wander, after my long stay in Benè-agâ’s cave and the gloomy trail
through Palin-mâ-Talin’s depths.
Walking along the edge of the cliff I was not long in coming upon the
Stair of the Evil Spirit or Bōga-Drappa as it was called.
It was jagged, irregular and tilted here and there; and yet, quite even
and stair-like when one considered that it was of nature’s building. As
the blind hermit had warned me the treacherous slime covered
Bōga-Drappa’s entire length, forever renewed by the impure waters which
trickled down its steps.
To attempt to descend would have been worse than madness.
No human foot was sure enough to tread those slippery stones and reach
the bottom.
Although I was impelled by the strongest desire to hasten forward I saw
that a single rash act might end my life.
Ordinary obstacles have no terror for me. But when nature sets a
threatening barrier in my way I halt, but do not surrender.
And, therefore, I sat calmly down to ponder over the problem that faced
me.
For three days I tarried on this parapet and each day I visited
Bōga-Drappa and gazed long and fixedly upon its far-reaching flight of
rocky steps.
On the third day I had solved the problem.
Hastily gathering up every fragment of lime-stone lying near, I piled it
in a cone-shaped heap and around it and over it I laid a mass of dry
leaves and billets and over all such logs as I could lift. Then,
striking fire with my flint and tinder I set the pile in flames.
In the morning I was rejoiced to find a heap of the purest quick-lime
beneath the ashes.
By means of an empty skull of some animal of the deer family, which I
found lying near, I at once began to feed the waters trickling over
Bōga-Drappa’s steps with the lime.
All that day and up to the noon hour of the next, I kept the water which
flowed down the stairway, milk white with the lime.
Now, however, came the greatest difficulty. From the size of the stream
I realized that it would be impossible for me to stay its course by
means of any dam that I could build, for a longer time than one brief
half hour. But, I dared not wait too long, for the coating of lime,
which, by this time I knew must have been deposited on the rocky steps,
to harden in the sun.
The dam might break and undo all my work.
At high noon, when the sun was beating down the hottest, I put the last
touch to my dam. I was startled to see with what rapidity the waters
gathered in the basin I had built. With anxious eyes and throbbing
heart, I stood at the head of Bōga-Drappa’s stair of rock and gazed up
and down.
I could see no signs of drying on the black and glistening steps. One
moment after another glided by. At last a faint trace of whiteness began
to show itself here and there. I turned an anxious glance at the
gathering waters. The frail dam seemed about to yield to the
ever-increasing pressure.
In one or two places, I caught glimpses of tiny rivulets trickling
through.
Once more, with a terrible feeling of faintness I glanced down the long
dark flight of steps. Half blinded by the noon day sun I nevertheless
caught sight of a snow white crust on the stairway.
Now was my time or never!
Calling out to Bulger to precede me I sprang boldly down the stair
which, till that moment had been black with treacherous slime. The
waters broke away and came rushing on my very heels. Down, down, I went
in headlong haste, bounding like a deer from step to step!
My heart sank within me as I felt the torrent, now mad and raging
spatter its spray on my neck.
Another instant and I’m saved! My feet strike firm.
I see the fair country come nearer and nearer.
Another leap, and with my faithful Bulger I’ve cleared the dreaded
stairway of Bōga-Drappa! Staggering forward, I reach the greensward of
the valley and fall fainting, after my terrible race for life!
Bulger’s mingled wailing and caresses roused me after a few moments of
clouded brain and then all was well. And yet a shudder stole over me as
I raised my eyes to take a last look at the rocky stairway of
Bōga-Drappa, now clad once more in its black, glistening, treacherous
slime.
Refreshed by a hearty meal upon the luscious fruit which grew in
wonderful profusion on every side, followed by a deep draught of cool,
clear spring water, and calling joyfully to my faithful Bulger to follow
me, I set out for the distant summit of the ridge which shut in this
peaceful little corner of the earth’s surface, so well fitted for the
home of human beings, and yet so utterly abandoned and tenantless, even
by four footed creatures. While, I am a great admirer of nature in all
her aspects from wildest grandeur to picture-like delicacy, yet no spot
which is not inhabited by man or beast, can long hold me content.
I must have life, not the dull spiritless life of tree, shrub or plant,
ever-chained to one spot, but the restive, bounding, throbbing life of
man or animal to study, contemplate and reflect upon. Therefore, it was
that I determined to pass at once out of this beautiful little valley.
I pushed on with eager step for I was desirous of gaining the high land
before nightfall. In this I was successful, but the twilight had so
deepened when I reached the crest of the ridge, that any survey of the
country lying beyond was impossible.
Shortly after I had lighted a bivouac fire, Bulger came in with a
bird—of the quail kind—and I proceeded to broil it on the live embers.
The faithful animal was delighted to be once more in a country in which
he could serve me and while our supper was cooking, took occasion to go
through a number of his old tricks, in order to see his little master’s
face brighten up.
Side by side, we lay down for the night in that far-away land, and were
soon fast asleep.
The morning broke with rare splendor. I hastened to examine the country
beneath me. It was dotted here and there by groves and bits of woodland
and seemed unusually green and fruitful.
What attracted my attention more than anything else was the fact that,
as far as my eye could reach, the region was watered by a perfect
network of little rivers, which glistened in the morning sun like bands
of burnished silver.
I had never seen the like. It occurred to me at once, that should these
streams prove too deep and rapid to ford, it would force me to change my
course entirely, and pass either to the north or south, until I reached
a clear country. It was pretty well toward sundown when I stood upon the
confines of this strange land which I named Polypotamo or “Many Rivers.”
The streams, which varied from ten to twenty feet in width, were deep,
clear and swift.
As you may readily imagine such a country was very productive. Fruit and
flower-bearing shrubs and trees, all of a most beautiful green grew in
the wildest abundance. The air, cooled and purified as it was by the
numerous streams of limpid water, was like a magic inhalation, carrying
a strange feeling of dreamy delight to every part of the body.
Said I to myself:
“If this fair land be not inhabited then it is a monstrous pity, for
here kind nature has spread her riches with a more than usually lavish
hand.”
Bulger and I stretched ourselves upon the bank of the first stream that
we reached and were preparing for a nap after our long days tramp, when
suddenly the strangest noises reached our ears. He started up with a
look of mingled alarm and curiosity which, could I have seen my own
face, I would undoubtedly have found pictured there in equally strong
lines.
Louder and louder grew these curious sounds.
I listened with pricked-up ears, as I strained my eyes in the direction
whence they came, eager to catch the first glimpse of the beings who
uttered them.
I had not long to wait. About an eighth of a mile away, my eyes fell
upon a sight, which, in spite of the possible dangers threatening my
life, in case these creatures had proven to be vicious or savage, caused
me to burst out into a fit of uncontrollable laughter.
There, in full view, was a troop of human creatures, dwarfish in
stature—not being much over four feet in height—who seemed incapable of
using their legs as we do; but moved about from one place to another by
hopping, as some birds do, or as rabbits would do if they moved about
standing upright on their hind legs.
In an instant they caught the sound of my voice; and, with the swiftness
of the wind, and with an ease that astounded me, leaped over the two
intervening streams—each of which was at least fifteen feet in width—and
came bounding toward us with the same gigantic leaps! The whole thing
was done so quickly, and the mode of locomotion was so novel and
altogether wonderful, that I was surrounded before I knew what happened
to me.
It is needless to say that I couldn’t understand their language,
although I soon mastered it, consisting as it did of pure Aryan roots,
no word being of more than three letters.
The Man-Hoppers—such was my translation of their name, Umi-Lobas—ranged
themselves in a circle around Bulger and me, threw themselves on their
faces, so to speak—for their arms were ridiculously out of all
proportion to their bodies—and threatened with shrill outcries and
menacing movements, to kick Bulger and me to death instantly unless we
surrendered unconditionally.
It was a novel sight.
[Illustration: THE JOLLY PARTY OF UMI LOBAS (MAN HOPPERS) THAT CAPTURED
BULGER AND ME.]
Bulger was inclined to advise resistance; but, when I had given a
hurried glance at their feet, which were very large and attached to
astonishingly vigorous legs, I deemed it only prudent to run up the
white flag; in fact, I gave them to understand that we threw ourselves
on their mercy.
But first, a word about these strange people:
They were, as I have said, small of stature, and let me add that, upon
their narrow, sloping shoulders were set delicate, doll-like heads,
animated by large, lustrous, black eyes of extreme softness in
expression. Their arms looked like the arms of a boy on the body of a
man. But, although so small, for they reached only to their waists and
ended in tiny, shapely hands, yet they showed themselves possessed of
extraordinary strength and dexterity. Their legs, however, were the most
wonderful part of them.
In fact, I might almost say that the Umi-Lobas were all legs, so out of
all proportion was the development of their limbs. The effect of this
disproportion may be easily imagined. It so dwarfed their bodies that
they appeared like cones set upon two legs.
“Miscreant!” cried the leader, as I learned three days later when I had
mastered their language, “if thou dost not instantly admit that his
majesty, Gâ-roo, King of the Umi-Lobas, is not the fastest, farthest and
most graceful jumper in the world, thou shalt be kicked to death without
the least ceremony!”
I made signs that I was quite willing to admit this, although I didn’t
understand exactly what it was!
Seeing that I was not disposed to attempt any harm, the Man-Hoppers
sprang to their feet and seated themselves in a perfect ring around
Bulger and me, like so many rabbits when standing on their hind feet to
reach something, intent upon getting a good look at us, or at me rather,
for Bulger was evidently no great novelty for them.
They kept up a perfect rattle of remarks in shrill piping tones upon my
personal appearance. I, too, was by no means idle.
I kept even pace with their galloping curiosity, studying the expression
of their faces and the movements of their bodies. After a few moments I
was given to understand that I must start at once for the palace of
their gracious monarch, Gâ-roo, the One Thousandth, for they were a very
ancient people.
As I rose to my feet and took a few steps toward the water, intending to
assure them that I could not leap across the stream, it became their
turn to laugh.
And laugh they did too, with such spirit, such heartiness—I might almost
say such violence—that I never realized till then that they laugh best
who laugh last.
Again and again their piping, pygmy voices broke out in shrill chorus
while their pretty doll faces were convulsed with merriment.
Bulger repeatedly showed his teeth, and gave vent to short, spiteful
barks as the Umi-Lobas continued their, to him, unseemly behavior. But I
knew it would only injure us in the end, if I showed any signs of anger,
so I simply shrugged my shoulders and waited for them to recover from
their fit of merriment. Finally, between the pauses of laughter I caught
such words as:
“Pendulum-legs!”
“Man-scissors!”
“Man Tongs!”
“Flip-flop! Wiggle-waggle!”
“Here she goes, there she goes!”
Such were a few of the terms expressive of the impression which my poor
unoffending legs made upon the minds of the Umi-Lobas.
They quieted down at last and again began to make signs that I should
prepare to follow them.
When at last I succeeded in making them understand that I was not a
jumper, and could no more leap across the stream in front of us than I
could hop over the moon, their mirth now gave place to disgust. Such
pleasant phrases as:—
“Lead legs!”
“Two-legged snail!”
“Little man stuck-in-the-ground!”
“Little man tied-to-his-head!” etc., etc., were fired at me.
After a consultation, it was determined to dispatch two of their number
for a sort of porte-chaise in use among the Umi-Lobas in which to
transport Bulger and me to the King’s palace.
Away went the messengers like the wind, in leaps of twenty feet seeming
scarcely to touch the ground, bounding along in the distance like pith
balls. After a short delay they reappeared bearing, slung on a sort of
yoke resting upon their shoulders, a stout wicker basket.
Bulger and I were invited to step into it; the cover was closed and
securely fastened by a stout leathern thong. Then with a bumpety bump
sort of motion away we went across land and water.
Bulger whined piteously and fixed his lustrous eyes upon me, as if to
say:
“Little master, if they are transporting us to torture or death I’m glad
I am with thee!”
I soon gave him to understand that there was no danger.
He returned my caresses and we both awaited further developments. It
seems that the two Man-Hoppers who had been sent for the porte-chaise
had spread the news of their strange capture, so the whole town was on
the watch for our arrival.
At last we came to a full stop. The basket was set down on the ground
and the leathern thong loosened. To tell the truth, I was as anxious to
see as they were.
A terrible hubbub was in progress, those in authority having seemingly
lost all control over the pushing, pulling, scrambling mass of
Umi-Lobas. With such violent outcries and still more violent gestures
did they gather about us, that I began to fear that they would overturn
our carriage and do Bulger and me some real injury, in their mad
curiosity.
Suddenly a voice, louder and shriller than all the rest, called out:
“Silence! His majesty, Gâ-roo, the Thousandth, King of the Umi-Lobas, is
approaching. Down! Down! Silence! Fall back!”
One of the attendants now raised the lid of our basket and courteously
invited me to step out.
Without stopping to give the thing a thought, I seized the leathern
thong, sprang lightly up and threw one of my legs over the side of the
basket.
Instantly there was an outburst of shrill, ear-piercing exclamations of
wonder, fear, surprise, horror, delight and I don’t know how many other
emotions.
For a moment I was startled, and half inclined to make my way back into
my basket again. Suddenly, however, it occurred to me what it all meant.
The Umi-Lobas being able to move their legs only backward and forward,
and utterly incapable of moving one leg without the other, were about as
much astonished at seeing one of my legs come flopping over the side of
the basket, as I would be if you should throw one of your legs out
sidewise and strike your foot against your shoulder.
As I sprang lightly to the ground and took a few steps towards King
Gâ-roo, who stood surrounded by his court officials, a very lean
Umi-Loba on one side of him and a very fat one on the other—a perfect
whirlwind of such cries as: “Pendulum-legs” “Walking-Scissors!”
“Measuring-Man!” “Little Man All Head!” etc., etc., burst forth.
King Gâ-roo received me very pleasantly; requesting me to walk, run, hop
on one foot, cross my legs, he, standing with wide opened eyes as I went
through my paces to please him.
He then asked me my name, my rank at home, my profession, my age, what I
liked to eat and drink, how much heavier my head was than my body, etc.,
etc. I made such a good impression on the King of the Umi-Lobas that he
turned and invited me to spend some time at his palace.
I was delighted, for I was very desirous of studying the manners and
customs of these strange people, and of conversing with their learned
men. Suddenly, there was a great change manifest in the King’s manner
toward me. He listened with knitted brows and compressed lips, first to
his fat counsellor and then to his lean one.
His lean minister, so lean that he appeared to me to be an animated
steel spring snapping apart, was named, Megâ-Zaltô or “Great Jumper,”
than the King himself no one being able to leap across a broader stream.
His fat minister, so fat that he was able to advance only by little hops
of a few inches at a time, was named Migrô-Zaltô, or “Small Jumper,” and
as he had for many years been unable to race about the country like the
other Umi-Lobas and had consequently had much time on his hands, which
he had used to improve his mind reading and studying, until he had
acquired great wisdom. Hence King Gâ-roo’s choice of him as royal
minister and court adviser.
I was again ordered to stand in front of his majesty, the ruler of all
the Umi-Lobas.
“Sir Pendulum-legs!” said he, “upon reflection, I am persuaded that thy
visit to my dominions bodes no good. Thou must know that I have two
privy councillors, to whose advice I always listen and then do as I see
fit. His excellency Megâ-Zaltô,” continued King Gâ-roo, pointing to his
lean minister, “counsels me to command that thou be stamped and kicked
to death at once, saying that thou wilt work great injury among my
people; thou being a foreigner from a far-away land, they will endeavor
to imitate thy manner of walking. Our good old-fashioned ways of walking
will be sneered at; and my people’s legs will soon lose their wonderful
strength and activity.
“My other councillor, who is a very learned man and loves to discuss
questions of race, manners and customs with strangers, advises me to let
thee live for several weeks, at least, until he has had an opportunity
to get some valuable information from thee. Now, I am a quiet and
peace-loving King, for nature by surrounding my dominions with such a
network of rivers, and giving us the power to leap over them, makes it
next to impossible for an enemy to follow us. Therefore, Little Man All
Head, it is my royal will that for the present no harm come to thee!”
“Thanks, most powerful and graceful jumper in this or any other world!”
said I, with a very low bow. “I accept my life at thy hands in order to
use it to make known thy goodness and greatness in every land I shall
pass through.”
My delicate flattery touched King Gâ-roo very perceptibly. He smiled and
nodded his little doll head in the friendliest manner. But Megâ-Zaltô’s
fierce, little face was screwed up in a thousand wrinkles. I felt within
me that he was firmly resolved to do me injury.
Now, there was another interruption. A shrill, piping baby-voice
suddenly rang out in a series of angry screams, while a score of other
voices in soft, soothing tones could be heard as if endeavoring to
comfort the screamer.
I turned my eyes in the direction of the voices. To my surprise and
delight I saw coming towards me one of the female Umi-Lobas, advancing
timidly with light and graceful hops, like a sparrow on the greensward.
Her head and face looked for all the world like some of the wax dolls I
had seen in Paris, only she was a trifle paler than they.
It was the beautiful princess, Hoppâ-Hoppâ. She seemed to be in a very
fretful and petulant humor, and showed her peevishness in every
movement.
Nothing pleased her. She pouted, hung her head, and threw her baby-arms
about, upon the most trivial provocation.
As I learned afterwards, this all proceeded from her unwillingness to
marry the lean, bony Megâ-Zaltô, who was violently in love with her, and
to whom the King, in a moment of some great contentment, had rashly
promised the princess in marriage, and as King Gâ-roo had in doing so
taken the Umi-Lobas’ vow: “May I never be able to jump farther than the
length of my nose, if I break my vow,” he dared not break his word, and,
of course, the old, thin, bony, wrinkled Megâ-Zaltô insisted upon his
sticking to the bargain.
The effect of all this was to throw the beautiful princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ
into a deep melancholy. In fact, she refused absolutely to partake of
any food for so long a while that everybody said sadly, “She will die!”
King Gâ-roo was beside himself with grief. But, as Megâ-Zaltô had no
blood, he couldn’t feel any pity for either father or daughter, and
insisted that the King should stick to his bargain with him.
Led on at last by the rich reward offered by King Gâ-roo to any
physician who could succeed in making princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ partake of
food, one of the court physicians hit upon the following plan:
The attendants were directed to set a table in the princess’ apartment,
and load it down with her favorite dishes. Then the lady-in-waiting was
instructed to bind a silk band around the princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ’s body,
when the latter retired for the night, so arranged that it should press
gently, but continuously on the sympathetic nerve, and cause her to walk
in her sleep.
The plan worked successfully. Every night about midnight princess
Hoppâ-Hoppâ would rise from her bed, while in the deepest sleep, sit
down at the table and partake of a hearty meal. After which she returned
to bed, when one of the ladies of the bed-chamber immediately loosened
the silken band, lest she might arise the second time and overeat
herself.
Princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ advanced towards me, hopping along with a timid
air, until she was close enough to get a good look at me.
I was then desired to go through my paces once more, which I did with a
great deal of vigor, concluding the performance by sitting down and
crossing my legs.
Hoppâ-Hoppâ smiled faintly at first; but, when it came to the
leg-crossing feat, she clapped her little doll hands and broke out in a
laugh about as loud as the low notes of a flute.
King Gâ-roo was crazed with joy. It was the first time Hoppâ-Hoppâ had
laughed for a year. I could see that there was a hurried consultation
going on between King Gâ-roo and his fat and lean ministers. I knew only
too well what it all meant. But princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ interrupted the
consultation, and solved the whole question herself by crying out like a
spoilt child clamoring for a toy, “I want him!”
King Gâ-roo burst forth into a loud laugh, in which everyone joined,
save the lean, rattle-jointed Megâ-Zaltô, who scowled fiercely at me,
screwing his little face up like a dried apple.
“He is thine; take him, beloved daughter,” exclaimed King Gâ-roo gayly,
“and if he can cure thy melancholy and make thee once more the joy and
sunshine of our Court, no one of the glorious gems which deck our royal
diadem shall be too good for him.”
Amid great rejoicing and loud huzzas, a silk cord was tied about my body
and I was led away by the beautiful princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ. Bulger
resented the indignity of tying a cord around my waist and came within
an ace of setting his teeth in the thick leg of the attendant who
performed that service for me. Growling and showing his teeth right and
left, the poor, puzzled animal followed me to prison; I say to prison,
for that was what it proved to be.
Night and day, a guard surrounded my apartments and kept within
respectful distance when I was summoned to divert the gentle princess by
running, hopping on one foot, walking with my toes turned out or in, or
with my feet stretched far apart.
But the one thing which delighted the princess and chased the melancholy
from the pretty doll face was my ability to cross my legs. This
wonderful feat I was obliged to repeat and repeat until my limbs fairly
ached; but no matter how often repeated to the gentle Hoppâ-Hoppâ it was
ever new and wonderful, and she invariably rewarded me by smiling and
clapping her baby-hands.
About this time it was that my beloved brother Bulger gave me another
proof of his deep affection and most extraordinary intelligence. I had
no sooner begun to prepare for bed than I noticed that something was the
matter with him. He fixed his lustrous black eyes pleadingly upon me,
bit my shoe playfully, tugged at my clothing, sprang upon me, then
bounded off toward the bed, sniffed at it, growled in unfeigned anger,
and then making his way back to me, began to tease and worry me once
more. I was half inclined to get provoked. By turns I scolded and petted
him. All to no purpose; he continued his strange actions, growing, if
anything, more and more violent in his manner. At last I was ready for
bed. Striving with all my power to quiet and console him, I made an
effort to throw myself on my bed, so that he might leap up and lie down
beside me.
But no, it was impossible. With grip of iron he laid hold of my
night-robe and held me firmly fast, whining and crying most piteously,
as if to say,
“O, loved little master, why is it that thou canst not understand me?”
Suddenly a strange thought flashed across my mind. I stooped and glanced
under my couch.
Nothing seemed amiss.
Then, as if urged on by some unseen hand, I seized the bed-clothing and
hurled it on the floor. Lo, the mystery was solved! There, hidden
beneath the drapery, shone the tips of a dozen or more tiny blades, each
sharper than a needle’s point, and as I found upon examination, stained
with a poison so subtle that the slightest prick would have robbed me of
life. Need that I tell you how the tears burst forth, how I flung myself
upon my knees and caught that beloved animal in my arms, covering him
with kisses?
He was satisfied.
Again, had he added to that long list of debts due him from me—debts
only to be discharged in coin fresh and bright from the heart’s mint. As
you have doubtless guessed, this cowardly and cruel attempt on my life
was the work of that living coil of steel springs, Megâ-Zaltô, who had
determined to put out of the way the hated foreigner, whose monstrous
deformities were so pleasing to the being he loved.
King Gâ-roo was greatly incensed when, upon Bulger’s recognition of the
would-be murderer in the presence of the whole Court, the miserable
wretch made a clean breast of it, and related how he had arranged the
knives with his own hands.
“Out of my sight, thou unworthy servant! If I do not command that thy
vile heart and viler head be parted by the executioner’s axe, it is
because thy father rendered mine priceless services. Go! Come not again
until I summon thee!”
King Gâ-roo now took me into special favor.
In the first place, he was delighted to see how successful my efforts
had been to amuse the princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ, on whose baby cheeks the
roses glowed once more, and whose child-voice rang out again as of old,
like a flute note or a tiny silver bell.
His majesty ordered that the Court painter should forthwith make a
portrait of Bulger for the royal gallery, and that a plaster cast of my
head should be taken for the royal museum.
I was much pleased with all this attention.
But I noticed that the very moment I hinted at the necessity of my
speedy return home, King Gâ-roo skillfully turned the conversation to
some other subject. The fact of the matter was, he feared to have me
leave the palace lest his beloved Hoppâ-Hoppâ should miss my daily
performances and fall back again into her melancholy.
The little princess herself was not slow in exerting her power over me.
Snapping the ground with her feet, like a rabbit, when I failed to be
quite as entertaining as usual, and even going so far as to threaten me
with a dose of that living coil of steel-spring, called Megâ-Zaltô, when
I refused to cross my legs and uncross them quickly enough to please her
ladyship.
One day, being in a sort of brown study, over my position, and revolving
in my mind several different ways of making my escape from King Gâ-roo’s
dominions, I unwittingly paid little attention to Hoppâ-Hoppâ’s
commands. In vain she stormed, snapping the ground with her little feet,
shaking her baby hands at me, piping out in shrill and angry tones at my
negligence.
I didn’t quicken my pace one jot. A heavy load of thoughts oppressed my
mind.
My heart was full of sorrow.
All that day I had been thinking of home, of the dear old baron and the
gentle baroness, my mother, and wondering whether they missed me at the
castle.
Suddenly came a messenger from King Gâ-roo summoning me at once to go to
the audience chamber.
With a bound I came to myself.
The little princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ had gone to her apartments.
I started to call her back.
Every instant I expected to hear that little bundle of bones and
malevolence jump out at me like a venomous toad.
With fear and trembling I betook me to the King’s chamber.
To my unspeakable delight his majesty, the ruler of the Umi-Lobas, was
in the rosiest of humors.
He met me with outstretched hands, poured out a beaker of wine for me,
and bade me sit down at the very foot of the throne.
I strove in vain to stammer out my thanks.
He would not hear a word of them; said that “the stream should flow the
other way,” meaning that I was the one to be thanked.
“Now, little man all head,” began the King, after I had finished my
wine, “I have sent for thee to try and make thee happy, in the same
measure as thou hast contributed to my happiness. This day I speak to
thee from a father’s heart. Thou hast restored my darling child to
health and contentment, and remembering from my conversations with thee
that thou art a great lover of rare and useful books, I have had copies
made of every book on the shelves of the royal library, and I now beg
thee to accept them as a very slight token of my gratitude.”
I was speechless.
The blood rushed fast and hot to my cheeks.
I stammered out a few senseless words of protest, thanks, surprise, and
what not.
The plan seemed to me only too plainly a scheme to tie me in King
Gâ-roo’s service, to load me with several thousand volumes which I would
have no possible means of carrying with me, and which, to leave behind
would be such an insult that arrest and imprisonment would most surely
follow.
At last I succeeded in getting myself together in some shape, and spake
as follows:
“O, most powerful, wonderful and graceful jumper of all the Umi-Lobas,
Gâ-roo, thousandth of thy line, I implore thee do not load me down with
such a vast and priceless treasure. Thou knowest I am but a sojourner
for a brief term in thy kingdom; I have no caravan, when I go hence to
transport this vast accumulation of wisdom, stored in so many thousands
of thick and bulky volumes, steel-clasped and iron-hinged. Thy gift is
far too princely for so humble a visitor as I. Therefore, most gracious
King Gâ-roo, bestow it upon some wealthy noble of thy land, in whose
spacious castle halls these books may find a safe resting-place, shelf
rising on shelf, a very fortress of learning, impregnable to the cohorts
of ignorance.”
King Gâ-roo smiled.
Then, turning to an attendant, he said:
“Summon Poly-dotto to attend before me, and bid him bring the library
with him.”
I was more puzzled than ever by this command.
In a few moments the door swung open, and an aged Umi-Loba, well bent
with years, with long tufts of white hair growing from his ears—for
these people do not permit hair to grow upon their faces, plucking it
out and destroying its roots in early life—and carrying a single volume
of goodly size under his arm.
He advanced with feeble hops, steadying himself upon a staff.
His voice brought a smile to my face in spite of myself, for it whistled
like a flute, unskilfully stopped, and ever and anon broke out into a
funny squeak.
But although infirm of body, Poly-dotto was a perfect wonder of mind and
memory.
I was fairly startled to find that Poly-dotto could understand my
language with perfect ease, not a thing to startle one, either, when we
stop to think that all our European tongues originated in this part of
the world.
Poly-dotto hopped forward, made an attempt to bend his body more than it
was, thrust the long, white tufts of hair growing from his ears into the
bosom of his garb, and placed the book he had brought with him into King
Gâ-roo’s hands.
His majesty returned the salutation of the aged sage, and then, bending
a look upon me, beckoned to me to draw near.
I obeyed.
“Receive, Sir Pendulum-legs,” cried King Gâ-roo, “as a mark of my
affection and a proof of my gratitude, this complete and perfect
transcript of the entire royal library, for many centuries the pride of
the Kings of the Umi-Lobas.”
I glanced at King Gâ-roo, then at the back of the book thinking that it
was merely the catalogue of the books contained in the royal library.
But, no; there was the title, “Complete Transcript,” etc.
I opened the book.
Its pages were thinner than the finest tissue I had ever seen.
I turned to the last page.
Twenty thousand pages!
My astonishment was redoubled.
With some difficulty, on account of my unskilled fingers, I turned over
some pages here and there. They were all closely filled with minute dots
and strokes.
To my eye, one page seemed like another, a bewildering repetition of
these same little dots and strokes.
I looked up at King Gâ-roo and Poly-dotto. They were both much amused
over my confusion.
Like a flash the truth burst upon me. It seemed to me like waking from a
dream.
Yes, there was no doubt of it. I was that moment in the land of the
original short-hand writers. Here had arisen that mysterious system of
recording language by means of dots and strokes, of which so many men,
in so many different countries, in different centuries, had claimed to
be the inventors.
In my readings of ancient peoples I had often seen it darkly hinted at,
that far, far back in remote ages there existed a race of beings, with
short arms and tiny hands, who had invented a written language to suit
their wants, in which absolutely no letters at all were used, the words
being represented by dots and strokes placed at different heights to
denote different sounds.
With a sort of breathless delight I now sat down and began to examine
the book anew, pausing every now and then to repeat a few words of
thanks to the King of the Umi-Lobas.
“Inform little man all head, most learned Poly-dotto,” cried the King,
“how many volumes he holds in his hand.”
Poly-dotto caressed the white tufts hanging from his ears, and spake as
follows:
“The royal library which thou holdest in thy hand, contains eight
thousand volumes all rare and valuable, and only to be found in the
library of our royal master. These volumes treat of astrology, alchemy,
divination, cheirosophy, medicine, mathematics, law, politics,
philosophy, pastimes, warfare, fifty volumes of poetry, fifty of
history, fifty of wonder-stories, besides several hundred treatises on
theosophy, altruism, positivism, hypnotism, mind-reading, transmigration
of souls, art of flying, embalming etc., etc.!”
“O, wonderful! Most wonderful!” was my ejaculation.
“But I beseech thee, O, learned Poly-dotto,” I continued, “impart to me
the secret of all this! Unfold to me the origin of this most wonderful
system of writing whereby the wisdom of ages may be recorded in one
small volume!”
Poly-dotto glanced at the king, who bowed his head in sign of his royal
consent that the aged sage might speak.
“Where we now stand,” began Poly-dotto, tossing back the long tufts of
white hair which reached from his ears to his shoulders, “was once a
rugged and mountainous country. In those days, now some thirty thousand
years ago, our people were more like thine than at present. To climb the
rocky sides of these mountains required long, sinewy arms and strong
hands of great grasping power, and flexible legs, moving quite
independently of each other, like mountaineers in all lands. But, all of
a sudden, these rock-crested heights began to sink and the valleys to
rise; true, very slowly and gradually, but yet uninterruptedly, so that
in a few years, what had been a rough, broken country, ridged and
wrinkled, began to take on the aspect of a perfectly level land. With
these changes our people began to change.
“Having no longer any use for hands of iron grip and arms of tireless
muscles, they were not long in finding out that this strength was
leaving them, that their great breadth of shoulder and depth of chest
were slowly but surely disappearing in their sons and grandsons. By a
strange fatality, about this time, a terrible flood passed over our
luckless land. Our panic-stricken people had just time enough to escape.
For several months the regions once inhabited by a contented little
nation were covered by water many fathoms deep. When, at last, the
waters had subsided, and our ancestors were permitted to set foot again
on their native soil, what a change met their eyes! This vast domain of
our gracious master, King Gâ-roo—the Thousandth, had become as you now
see it, a perfectly level plain, net-worked by the countless narrow but
deep and swift-rolling streams. But the soil brought in the arms, so to
speak, of these raging waters and cast upon our houses, burying them far
beneath, was of most extraordinary fertility, just as you see it now.
Every manner of plant, fruit, flower, vegetable and grain grows here
without cultivation when once planted. Our people were not slow to take
advantage of Nature’s kindness and build up once more the happy homes
destroyed by the flood. But now we were brought face to face with a most
wonderful state of things. Here we were shut in, surrounded by a vast
network of streams, and yet taught by our terrible experience so to
dread water, that not even to escape from death itself could our people
be induced to swim across one of these little rivers or pass over it in
any sort of boat. Time went on. It was either a question of living on
these long narrow necks of land, and walking scores of miles to pass
around the bends and curves of the streams, or else jump over them. Our
wise men issued instructions to our forefathers, telling them how from
early childhood they must train their little ones to leap, encouraging
them by rewards to keep up the practice until leaping became as easy to
them as walking and running had been. The royal ancestors of our most
gracious master enacted most stringent laws against walking and running.
In a few generations great changes took place. It was not an unusual
thing to see a child of eight or ten leap six or eight feet over
rivulets while playing some game like your hide and seek. As these
child-hoppers increased in years, their power of leaping soon led them
to see that they could advance much more rapidly by jumping than by the
ancient, toilsome way of setting first one and then the other foot
forward.
“The streams now widened, putting the leaping powers of our people to
severe tests. But we overcame every obstacle, and in a few generations
it became a rare thing indeed to see a Umi-Loba moving about in the
ancient manner. As you may easily imagine, Nature could not furnish
vigor enough to enable our people to transform themselves in this
manner, and at the same time preserve their length, strength and power
of shoulders, arms and hands. A most astonishing result showed itself.
What was gained below was lost above. Our people’s arms began to grow
flabby; their hands took on a delicate and nerveless appearance, as if a
long illness had bleached and softened them. Then the wise men of our
nation noticed another change. After a certain age, the arms of our
children ceased growing entirely, and although our physicians made
extraordinary efforts to overcome this sudden stoppage of growth, which
usually occurred when our children reached their tenth year, yet all
their exertions were of no avail.
“Our king, to his great dismay, saw growing up about him a race of young
men whose arms were so short, and whose hands were so small and
delicate, that they could no longer wield the spears and bows and arrows
of our forefathers. Even the knives and forks and drinking cups had to
be made smaller and smaller as these wonderful changes came about.
“And not long, too, was it before our wise men found it utterly
impossible to hold and guide the long, heavy pens of their ancestors, or
to lift the ponderous volumes in which our fathers had kept the records
of our nation.
“With smaller pens came smaller books, and finer writing, until at last
one of my ancestors, in a moment of happy inspiration, conceived the
idea of giving up the ancient way of writing by means of two score or
more of letters, so large that only a few of them could be written upon
one line, and of which two or three were necessary in order to record
one simple sound, and of using little dots and strokes as fine as hairs,
to represent the sound of our words.
“Our children were delighted.
“Their short arms and tiny hands were well fitted for such work.
“In a few years the new system of writing was taught in all our schools,
and by royal edict became the only lawful method of writing throughout
the kingdom. Later, another of my ancestors greatly improved the system,
so simplifying it that whole sentences could be recorded by a single
tiny dot or hair-stroke.
“By means of this wonderful system is it that we are enabled to compress
a whole library into one single book, as you have seen, and to make it
possible for our royal master to carry about with him on his journeys
the assorted wisdom of ages, in so compact a form that it may be placed
under the royal pillow and yet not wrinkle it.
“Thou knowest full well,” continued Poly-dotto, with a smile, as he
raised one of his baby hands and pointed a tiny finger at the book I
held in my hands, and upon whose pages my eyes were fixed in wide-opened
astonishment, “that in thy country a story writer could not possibly
squeeze a single one of his tales between those covers!”
King Gâ-roo laughed heartily at this speech.
After a few moments more of pleasant chat, I was dismissed by his
majesty with promises of continued favor.
As I was backing out of the audience chamber, King Gâ-roo cried out
gayly, as he shook a tiny finger at me:
“Look well after princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ, Little Man-All-Head!”
While seated in my apartment, the day following my reception at court
and the presentation of the royal library to me, whiling away the time
as best I could by dipping into the early history of the Umi-Lobas, I
suddenly heard a great wheezing and whistling noise, as if some one
suffering from the asthma were approaching.
Bulger gave a low growl.
I sprang up, and upon going to the door was not a little surprised to
see Migrô-Zaltô, coming toward me with very short hops, every one of
which drew forth a grunt.
However, he finally reached a seat in my apartment, and after half an
hour’s rest, addressed me as follows:
“I bring thee good news, Little Man-All-Head. His majesty, King Gâ-roo,
has graciously resolved to appoint thee one of his Ministers of State.
Poly-dotto has informed him that your head is exactly three times larger
that the largest Umi-Lobas, and that, consequently, you must be at least
three times as wise as any of his counsellors. He is, quite naturally,
unwilling that any other monarch should have the use of the vast
treasure of wisdom stored in thy head. His design is to treat thee like
a son, to surround thee with everything that gold can buy or cunning
hands fashion, for thy comfort and amusement; in a word, so to shower
honors upon thee that thou shalt soon forget thy home and kinspeople.”
The effect of Migrô-Zaltô’s words upon me was indescribable.
I felt as if my heart were about to beat its last.
It was only by the greatest effort that I could pull myself together,
stammer out my thanks to his majesty, King Gâ-roo, and save myself from
betraying my utterly disconsolate condition.
Behold me now a prisoner for life! For in spite of all these honeyed
words, King Gâ-roo now proceeded to double the number of guards set to
watch my movements, and thus head off any attempt at escape.
I, of course, pretended not to notice this extra precaution.
In fact, I put a smiling face over my sad heart, and pretended to be
perfectly contented; to have given up all thoughts of ever returning
home.
I took good care to let Migrô-Zaltô know that I now intended to begin
studying the ancient history of his people.
With the princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ, too, I was all kindness and sympathy. But
while I was thus engaged in throwing my keepers off their guard, I was
diving deep into the folk-lore of the Umi-Lobas.
The books of the royal library, so graciously bestowed upon me by King
Gâ-roo, stood me in good service.
I determined to get at all the weaknesses of the Umi-Lobas, in order to
see if I could not discover some way to elude their vigilance.
It was all dark to me for the first few days, but at length I caught a
glimmer of hope.
It came about this way:
The Umi-Lobas dread water. My own observation, as well as Poly-dotto’s
words, had directed my attention to this strange fact.
Provided by nature with limbs of such extraordinary strength that they
can leap over streams, even thirty feet in width, they have a
superstition that nature intended them to avoid touching the surface of
a stream.
For the first, I now observed that they had no boats of any kind, and
that their children, unlike other children, never played upon the banks
of the beautiful streamlets which flowed in every direction around their
homes.
“A boat is the thing I need!” said I to myself, every pulse beating with
suppressed excitement.
But, ah! where to get it!
It were idle to attempt to build a boat or even a raft without
attracting the attention of my watchers and raising an outcry.
I must abandon that idea.
By a strange fatality my bitterest enemy now came to my assistance. You
doubtless remember how that animated coil of steel spring, Megâ-Zaltô,
tried to kill me by placing tiny poisoned knife-blades in my bed.
Well, after that I never laid down at night that I didn’t first pull off
the cushions, drapery and coverings of my couch in search of any more of
the same kind.
I never found any, for Megâ-Zaltô was still in disgrace, and forbidden,
under penalty of instant death, to approach the royal palace.
But I did find something else.
It was this:
I discovered that my bedstead emptied of its cushions and clothes, was
exactly the shape of a yawl boat; in fact, of so fine a model as to give
infinite pleasure to my sailor’s eye, and, most astonishing discovery of
all, that it was already fitted with a staunch and shapely mast, the
staff which supported the hangings. All I needed was a couple of thin,
straight sticks for booms, and I would be able to take one of my sheets
and rig a square sail in a few moments.
Here again I found myself face to face with an appalling difficulty.
Even admitting that I could elude the vigilance of my keepers, how was
I, all alone by myself, to transport the heavy bedstead to the water’s
edge, a quarter of a mile away!
I was upon the point of giving up the whole scheme.
The more I turned it over in my mind the more its dangers and
difficulties increased.
I paced the floor with quick and anxious step, scarcely aware of
Bulger’s solicitude.
He was at my heels with vain coaxings, trying to quiet me down.
At last, in blank despair, I threw myself in a chair.
Bulger raised himself on his hind legs and gazed inquiringly into my
face.
His tongue was out.
He was suffering from the heat.
For the first time I became aware of my condition.
The perspiration was streaming down my face. Suddenly a new idea flashed
though my mind and helped out the old one.
Said I to myself:
“I’ll complain to the King of the heat; I’ll tell him how accustomed I
am to outdoor life and sleeping in the open air with no covering, save
the blue sky and twinkling stars; that I shall most surely pine away
with inward wasting unless I be permitted to move my bed during the
midsummer heat down by the river side, where the air is coolest and
purest.”
King Gâ-roo listened to my request without the slightest suspicion that
any idea of escaping from his domain was flitting through my mind.
In fact, he would have as soon expected to see one of his royal beds
spread its drapery for wings and fly away to the mountains as to see it
go flashing down the river with one of the sheets set for a sail.
So my request was granted at once.
My bed was moved down to the river’s edge, where one tent was raised to
house me in case of a rain storm, and another to shelter the troop of
guards which always kept at a respectable distance from me, and yet near
enough to hop down upon me in about three seconds.
So far all had gone well. At first my plan was to launch my boat and
make my escape in the night, but I was obliged to give this up, for I
discovered that the guard was always doubled at night fall.
Escape, if I escape at all, then must be in the broad daylight.
Six of the Umi-Lobas soldiers stood sentry about my quarters from
sun-rise to sun-set.
That they were armed it is needless to say.
But their tiny swords and pikes had no terror for me.
With a stout club I could have beaten them down in a few moments.
Their terrible legs and feet, however, were quite another thing.
One blow from the feet of a vigorous Umi-Loba would have laid me dead on
the ground.
I have often seen these guards amuse themselves by striking deep holes
in the ground or by breaking stone slabs an inch thick with a single
blow of their heels.
I must choose a different mode of eluding such dangerous pursuers.
They must be drugged.
But how to accomplish it?
To offer them all food at the same moment would most surely arouse their
suspicions.
Then again, they did not all eat together.
So too, it would be worse than folly to attempt to drug their drink.
What was to be done?
Again my heart grew sick and faint within me.
I sat down to collect my scattered thoughts.
At that moment the attendant began to serve my midday repast. I glanced
at the tempting dishes and sparkling wines. It was a feast fit for a
King.
“Sir Pendulum-legs,” said the serving man, with a low bow, “this is the
season for O-loo-loo eggs. The first find was made to-day. The nest held
six. His majesty sends thee two and wishes thee a pleasant dream.”
Now let me tell you what this strange speech all meant.
The O-loo-loo bird is about the size of a quail, and lays from six to a
dozen eggs of a jet black hue. But as the bird, whose plumage is as
black as a bat’s wing, makes its nest in the wilderness, among the rank
growth of a heather-like plant, of so dark green a foliage as to seem
almost black, the eggs are invisible to the hunter’s eye, and the nests
can only be found by posting sentinels to mark the spots where the birds
alight.
As you may imagine, O-loo-loo eggs are worth their weight in gold. Nay
more, the people are forbidden to eat one.
Such is the King’s command!
They all belong to him, and the finder must straightway bear his prize
to the royal palace where a rich reward awaits him.
But the most mysterious thing about them is yet to be told! Not only are
these eggs of most delicious flavor, but two of them are sufficient to
throw the eater into a deep sleep, during which the most delightful
dreams steal over him! Visions of exquisite loveliness flit before his
eyes, and life seems so sweet and satisfactory that waking is really the
keenest pain. The cause of this strange effect was for many centuries a
mystery and the ancestors of the Umi-Lobas were wont to worship the
O-loo-loo bird as a sort of sacred creature. But the mystery was solved
at last. It was found that these birds fed upon the seed of the poppy
plant, and hence the power of their eggs to cause sleep in those
partaking of them.
I ate the two O-loo-loo eggs to test the matter, and in a few moments
found myself sinking into a most delicious slumber.
When I awoke I saw light where darkness had lately reigned.
The way to escape from King Gâ-roo’s guards was now clear to me. I at
once proceeded to save up my O-loo-loo eggs.
In a few days, they became more plentiful, and it was not long before I
had accumulated two dozen of them.
And now, thought I, if I offer them to my keepers as a feast, their
suspicions will be aroused; they will refuse to partake of them, and the
whole matter will be laid before the king and I shall be shorn of the
little liberty I have. Therefore, I must use my knowledge of human
nature.
As each man passed on his rounds I called him to me, and showing him
four of the O-loo-loo eggs, said:
“I like thee; thou art my favorite, couldst thou be very close mouthed?”
The fellow’s eyes sparkled with delight, and I could see that his mouth
was watering at the sight of the dainty morsels.
Upon his assuring me that he would take good care that no one should
know how kind I had been to him, I gave him four of the eggs, enough to
make him sleep like a log for three hours.
He bolted them, shells and all.
I was much pleased with the working of my plan.
The next sentinel, who made his appearance a few moments after the
first, was served in the same way. And so on with all the others. Each
promised most solemnly never to reveal his good fortune to his comrades.
My plan thus far had worked splendidly.
In about a quarter of an hour I had the supreme satisfaction of seeing
all six of them begin to rub their eyes, then yawn, then stretch their
little arms up over their heads in the sleepiest manner possible. In
less than half an hour they were all stretched out on the greensward,
snoring like good fellows.
Now was my time to act!
I sprang toward my bed to empty it of its contents and launch it on the
little river which flowed near by, when, to my horror, I heard the
princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ calling, “Little Man All Head! Little Man All
Head!”
A cold chill crept over me! There she came, hopping toward me like the
wind, calling out for me to come and make her laugh!
What was I to do?
Strike her down?
Smother her?
Oh no; I could not have harmed that innocent little doll-faced being,
had it been to save myself from life-long imprisonment.
Suddenly, like a flash of lightning, a bright thought flitted through my
brain.
I have run, hopped, and stood on one foot, kicked one foot high in the
air, crossed my legs, etc., to amuse the little princess, but I have
never danced for her!
If she can find it amusing enough to laugh heartily at such plain
old-fashioned antics, she will surely go into convulsions when she sees
me dancing a quick time jig with heels flying in the air.
So, calling out to her in my gayest manner, I said:
“Come, little princess, come little Umi-Loba. Hop this way! Be quick;
I’ve something very funny to show you.”
She didn’t wait for a second bidding.
With two bounds she was beside me.
Bidding her be seated I began to dance and she began to laugh. In half a
moment I quickened my step and she broke out into the wildest merriment.
“O, do stop, Little Man All Head,” she gasped. “O, do stop, or I shall
die!” I didn’t want her to die, but I did want her to fall down into a
swoon.
So now I let myself out.
My legs flashed like sunbeams dancing on the water.
Bulger looked on in dignified astonishment.
He failed utterly to make out what his little master meant by these
furious antics.
Indeed they were furious.
Faster and faster my nimble feet beat the ground. Wilder and more
uncontrollable became the laughter of the little princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ.
The tears coursed down her pretty face she rocked from side to side; she
bent forward and back.
Adding still more speed to my movements, I kept my eyes fixed upon her.
Victory!
The end came at last!
She rolled over on the greensward in a swoon.
“Now or never!” I murmured to myself.
In quicker time than it takes to tell it, aided by my faithful Bulger, I
emptied the bed of its contents, set my shoulder to one end of it, while
Bulger fastened his teeth in some fringe that hung from the other, and
then, he pulling with might and main, and I pushing with all the
desperation of a battle for freedom, the wooden structure was slowly
brought to the bank of the river.
It was a hard task for us!
But we did it.
Now down the slippery bank it glided with a rush, striking the water and
floating like a duck.
In an instant Bulger and I sprang on board of the little craft.
To rig up one of the sheets as a square sail and set it on the pole
which had held the curtains was only the work of a few seconds.
A stout long-handled fan served me for a rudder.
Away! Away! I was off at last!
The wind was fresh and strong, and my square sail worked to a charm.
At that moment a shrill, piping voice reached my ear.
“Little Man All Head! Little Man All Head! Where art thou? Come to me!”
The shrill, far-reaching tones of her voice attracted a hundred
attendants. They seemed fairly to spring up out of the ground.
Pell-mell, with a wild rush, the stronger ones leaping over the heads of
the less vigorous ones, they made for the river banks.
Alarm bells now sounded on every side.
Gongs and strangely-sounding horns and rattles called the people to the
spot where the little princess had been found lying half unconscious on
the greensward.
The sight of the half dozen sentinels stretched out here and there in
the deepest sleep, the scattered drapery of my couch, the bed itself
missing, all told too plainly the story of my escape.
All this time, my snug little craft was making good headway down the
river, which grew wider at every hundred feet.
With one wild outburst of shrill, angry voices, the Umi-Lobas turned to
pursue the fugitive.
Bulger whined piteously as he saw them swarming on the banks.
In another moment they began leaping from one bank to another, passing
over our heads in perfect clouds.
I knew full well that they would not dare to leap into my boat but I
feared that they might overwhelm us with showers of their little spears.
However I determined to try the effect of one of my pistols on them if
their spears annoyed me.
King Gâ-roo, beside himself with spiteful anger, now arrived upon the
scene, and took command of his assembled troops and serving men.
First he tried entreaty upon me, offering me princely sums and royal
honors if I would only turn back.
But I was deaf to his honeyed words. Whereupon he fell into a towering
passion. He ordered his soldiers to recapture me dead or alive.
A shower of spears now whistled through the air.
Most of them fell far short of their mark, for the river had now widened
so that I was at least thirty feet from the shore whereon they were
standing.
But a few of these spearlets fell dangerously near me.
Fearing that their points might be poisoned, I determined to try the
effect of a pistol shot in the air.
The loud report of the fire-arm, and the puff of smoke which followed
it, filled the Umi-Lobas with the most abject fear.
They threw themselves on their faces and cried out that I was an evil
spirit.
I could now see that King Gâ-roo had given orders to let me sail away in
peace.
They made no further attempts to molest me, and yet it was very plain
that they were loth to part with the “little man all head,” for whom
their King and the princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ had conceived so warm an
affection.
I, too, felt a wrinkle in my heart as my little boat bore Bulger and me
away on the rippling waters of the beautiful river now grown so wide
that I was at least a hundred feet from the bank, and the palace of King
Gâ-roo began to fade away in the distance.
For several miles they followed the banks of the stream, keeping
opposite me, and ever and anon sending me a good bye in a soft and
plaintive voice.
Straining my eyes, I could see little princess Hoppâ-Hoppâ, borne aloft
on the shoulders of a group of serving-men, and waving me a last adieu.
Then, once more, I caught the sound of that shrill baby voice:
“Good bye! Good bye! Little Man-All-Head! Hoppâ-Hoppâ says good bye
forever!”
And so I sailed away from the land of the Umi-Lobas, the land of the
Man-Hoppers!
In a few days the river began to broaden out and the land of the
Umi-Lobas was left far behind! The moment I caught sight of any signs of
human beings on the river banks, I steered my staunch little boat into a
broad cove, whose sloping shores led to lofty table lands. Here, with
tear-moistened eyes, I moored the little craft which had snatched me
from a life of keen, though silent, sorrow, and followed by faithful
Bulger, struck out boldly for the interior. After a few weeks’
journeying I entered a country which was now and then traversed by
traders. They were astonished to find me traveling all alone by myself,
but readily accepted my statement that I had become separated from a
troop of traders, and that my horse had died.
I now made haste to re-cross India and gain the shores of the
Mediterranean, whence I took passage for home, with a joyous heart and a
memory well-stored with quaint facts and curious recollections.
[Illustration: BULGER AND I SAIL AWAY FROM THE LAND OF THE UMI-LOBAS
(MAN HOPPERS), IN MY BEDSTEAD YACHT.]
CHAPTER VIII.
In the streets of Constantinople, I fall in with an Armenian merchant,
who presents me with a MS., 6,000 years old. It proves to be
palimpsest. Its wonderful contents. I learn of the existence of a
boiling sea, and set sail in search of it. Three of my seamen are
swallowed by a marine monster. I rescue them. We reach Neptune’s
Caldron. Description of it and of its banks. Strange adventures
there. We set sail for home, but are overtaken by a fearful storm
which drives us on the coast of China. Bulger saves our lives. I am
received with great honor by the dignitaries of the province—am
quartered in the palace of So Too the Mandarin. Bulger incurs the
enmity of the authorities. He is accused of having an evil spirit,
and is arrested and put on trial. I defend him. He is condemned to
death. My efforts to reverse the sentence are successful. Strange
adventures in the palace of the Lord Taou-tai. Bulger and I are able
to overcome all obstacles put in our way. We are accorded permission
to set out for a seaport where we take passage for home. Our joy in
finding ourselves safe out of the hands of our enemies.
[Illustration: SOME CROWS LIKE BOILED DINNERS.]
While sauntering through the streets of Constantinople, one day,
loitering in front of the bazars, or listening to the tales of some
story-teller on the street-corner, I fell in with an Armenian merchant.
He was a man of varied attainments, had read much, traveled much, seen
much.
We ate sweetmeats and drank coffee together for several days.
He was so delighted with my keen intellect, sharp, nipping wit, and
great powers of imagination, that he expressed himself as being more
than paid for his journey to Constantinople, although he had not yet
opened his packs.
When the time came for us to part, he proceeded to loosen the leather
thongs which held down the lid of a strange looking chest, whose top and
sides were covered over with curious figures in inlays of several
colors.
From one corner of this receptacle he drew forth a volumen or roll-book
of antiquity.
To one end of it was attached, by a strip of parchment, a waxen seal,
stamped with what seemed to have been a monarch’s signet ring. This
ancient and venerable book exhaled a very musty smell.
The Armenian handled it carefully, saying:
“It is quite old; some 6,000 years.” Seeing astonishment depicted on my
countenance, he smiled and continued:
“Yes, 6,000 years! It has only been unrolled far enough for me to
decipher the nature of its contents. It treats of the human soul, and
pretends to have solved its mystery completely—a problem which has
baffled the philosophers of all ages. It even goes so far as to claim
that the essence which we call “soul” may be taken out of a body and put
into a bottle; that one soul may be thrust into a man’s body to keep his
own company, and that in this manner the whole world may be reformed,
made over; evil being entirely destroyed and good only remaining.
“You smile, little baron, but it seems to me quite feasible. For
instance, this rare old book quite rightly assumes that if we could
thrust a good soul into a body already inhabited by a bad one, that man
or woman would henceforth cease to do evil, or, at least, the good soul
would continually betray its bad companion, and, altho’ the man might
plan a murder, he would not fail to inform some one of his dread
purpose, and thus defeat his own ends.”
“Or,” continued the merchant, “take the case of a miser; by thrusting
the soul of a spendthrift into his body, his inclination to hoard money
and starve his family would be forever and always opposed by an ardent
desire to waste his earnings, and the result would be that these two
vices would neutralize each other; and so with a drunkard or a thief: by
placing the soul of a water-drinker in the one and of a moral man in the
other, a perfect reformation could be brought about. This is a valuable
book, little baron, but I give it to you, merely exacting a promise from
you that in case I am right in my understanding of it, you will impart
the secret to the fathers of the church.”
I gave the merchant my promise, and not wishing to accept so valuable a
present without making some return therefore, I drew from my finger a
ring containing the petrified eye of a basilisk, which, in the dark,
emitted light enough to read the hour on a watch dial.
He was almost tiresome in his expression of thanks.
We separated.
I laid the ancient volume away in my chest and gave no thought to it
until some time after my return home, when, one fine day, Bulger,
attracted by its very musty odor, seized it by the vellum strip holding
the seal and drew it forth from its hiding-place, then looked up at my
face as much as to say:
“What is it, any way, little master?”
I determined to unroll the book at once.
The merchant had warned me to be most careful in so doing, lest the
whole thing fly into a thousand pieces.
I therefore proceeded to prepare a wooden tablet or panel, which I
smeared with a strong glue, so that, as the parchment unwound, it should
be caught by this sticky surface and held firmly fast.
The plan succeeded admirably.
After several hours’ close application I was overjoyed to see the volume
entirely unrolled and held firmly and evenly to the surface of the
panel.
Fancy my delight, after the glue had dried sufficiently to make an
examination of the writing, to find that this ancient volume was a
palimpsest!
I felt instinctively that this dissertation upon the nature of the soul
was the sick man’s dream of some poor dweller in the double darkness of
ignorance and superstition. So I made haste to wash away his fervid
outpourings by a plentiful use of something still hotter—namely, hot
water and soap; for my studies had told me that the ink used by the
people of his time and generation contained no mordant, and was, in
fact, only lamp-black and grease.
I now got at the real contents of this venerable book.
The writing was dim and shadowy. I did not let that trouble me, for,
skilled as I am in the chemist’s art, I lost no time in applying an acid
which restored the writing to its old time blackness.
I had some difficulty in deciphering the language in which it was
written—the ancient Phoenician—but, with the aid of several scores of
dictionaries, I finally rendered it into a modern tongue, passing it
through the Aramaic, thence into the Greek, and, finally, into my own
tongue.
When at last I had gotten over all difficulties and could read the
descriptions with that ease necessary to bring out their full sense, I
was nearly beside myself with joy.
It was the story of a voyage made by a venturesome navigator, six
thousand years ago, when the earth was still in its infancy; still hot
in some places; in fact, only the highest mountains and table lands had
cooled off enough to be habitable.
Pushing off from the shores of Arabia, this bold captain had pointed his
ship towards the rising sun.
And, wonder of wonders! after many awful perils and terrible privations,
he had entered waters which, to his almost unutterable amazement, grew
warmer and warmer as he sailed over them.
At first his men refused to proceed any farther, but by dint of threats,
persuasion and goodly presents, the bold sailor went his way, wondering
and rejoicing. After many days he entered a body of water, which, from
his descriptions, I at once recognized as the China Sea. But now all
further advance was impossible.
In vain his oarsmen lent their aid to drive the little vessel forward.
Huge waves of heated water, always from the same direction drove his
craft backward.
At last the truth of the matter dawned upon him.
He was on the outer edge of some vast boiling sea, which, rolling its
hot waves ever outward, drove back his cockle shell of a bark. Making
for a lofty promontory, he clambered to its highest point, wearing thick
felt shoes and gloves to protect his feet and hands from the heated
rocks.
A fearful and yet a sublimely beautiful sight met his gaze.
For hundreds and hundreds of miles the waters were in a state of most
violent boiling, springing and leaping into the air as if a legion of
giant demons were beneath forcing their hot breath upward from vast
cavernous lurking places.
Upon reading of this boiling sea, I was seized with an uncontrollable
desire to go in search of it.
True the waters might have cooled down in all these centuries, and yet I
was confident I should find some trace of this once terrible caldron of
seething waters.
The China Sea was only slightly known to navigators of my day and
generation.
It had often been darkly hinted at that this vast body of water was
studded with wonderful isles and filled with rare monsters.
I had no time to lose.
Hastily penning a letter of adieu to my father and mother, I joined my
ship—accompanied by my ever faithful Bulger—and turned her prow towards
the rising sun.
So well were the waters of the East known to me, from my long and close
study of the most reliable charts, that I found I could almost steer my
craft through them blindfolded.
It was not many days ere I entered this beautiful expanse of water,
which, in the youth of the world, was filled with such marvelous
creatures swimming on it and in it.
Onward, ever onward, through its dark blue waves, now mounting their
foam-crested heights, now rocking like a thing of life upon this billowy
highway, my trusty little vessel ploughed her way. Ten times a day,
under plea of wishing to cool my brow in a basin of sea water, I called
out to some one of my men to let down a bucket, but only to find, to my
deep disappointment, that its temperature was no higher than is usual in
those latitudes.
I began to grow low-spirited. My crew noticed my dejection, and at times
my attentive ear caught murmurs of discontent.
To restore my men to their usual good spirits, I offered a reward of a
thousand ducats to the one who should first discover that the water was
growing warmer.
A thousand ducats!
It was a goodly sum, but I was growing desperate.
The large reward, however, had one good effect; it put new life into my
men.
All day long buckets rattled against the ship’s side.
Three of the more venturesome men hit upon a plan to earn the reward and
divide it among them.
Lashing themselves together, they then lowered themselves down over the
side of the vessel, until their feet just touched the water. Here they
determined to stay, so that they might be the first to announce the
increase of warmth in the water, and in this way make sure of the
thousand ducats.
Suddenly a fearful outcry, accompanied by the most piteous whining on
the part of Bulger, caused me to rush up on deck.
A sea-monster, a third as long as our ship, had risen directly under
them.
Motionless with fright, they fell an easy prey to this terrible foe.
Opening his vast, cavernous jaws, he swallowed the whole three at a
single gulp!
My men were wild with grief!
They heaped mad words of reproach upon me.
I had great difficulty in restoring anything like order or discipline.
My commands fell upon deaf ears.
At last I succeeded in quieting the raging, weeping crowd.
Knowing from my experience with such dread inhabitants of the deep, that
this monster had only whetted his appetite by these morsels of human
flesh, I directed my men to make haste and construct a straw man, using
clothes of the same color as those worn by the three unfortunates.
Into the bosom of this effigy I stored away a quarter quintal of
ipecacuanha, of prime quality, which, by good luck, I found in my stock
of medicines.
The dummy was now lowered to the water’s edge, at exactly the same spot
where the monster had made his luncheon on my three excellent seamen.
We had not long to wait.
He rose to the bait in a few moments, and, opening his huge jaws, thrust
out a tongue as large and as red as a roasted ox, and gulped down the
savory morsel I had provided for him, with a rumbling gurgle which made
my blood run cold.
Recovering myself, I sprang up into the shrouds and kept my eyes fixed
upon this rare monster, who floated away lazily a ship’s length and then
came to a dead halt.
Ever and anon a quiver shot thro’ the entire length of his body.
Evidently he was having no little difficulty in swallowing this last
morsel.
Huge ridges formed about his neck and rolled backward till they were
lost beneath the waters. A certain uneasiness now marked his movements.
He rolled from side to side, opening and shutting his jaws with a snap
that sounded like the bang of two great oaken doors.
The dainty quarter quintal of ipecacuanha was manifestly beginning to
distress him.
His rocking and rolling motion increased in violence.
At one moment his huge body turned upon its side, bent itself until head
and tail met; at another it arched itself in the air until its black
back spanned the waters like a bow.
I now felt that it was time to act.
“Stand by the starboard launch!” I called out to my men. “Avast that
blubbering! All ready?”
“Ay! ay!” came back from the gang.
“Lower away, then!”
I was not a whit too quick with my orders.
The launch had no sooner struck the water than the sea-monster—after a
series of terrible contortions, during which it almost seemed as if his
huge body would be snapped in twain—began to disgorge the varied
contents of his stomach.
First, shower after shower of many colored fishes, of all sizes, from a
hand’s length to three cubits, filled the air.
As they fell into the water, they calmly swam away, no doubt well
pleased to find themselves in more agreeable surroundings.
Thousands of shell fish, all kinds, sizes and colors, then came flying
forth, rattling their claws together as they fell into the water, as if
in defiance at their huge foe that had been so unceremoniously called
upon to give up the results of many a long hour’s hunt.
The living was followed by the dead, for now came forth several wooden
buckets, three old blankets, numerous bits of plank, rope ends, shreds
of sail, paint pots, bundles of oakum, and wads of cotton, all of which
he had picked up while following in the wake of our vessel. At last the
man of straw was cast out high into the air with a deep grunt of
satisfaction.
After him came number one of the lost seamen.
Numbers two and three were not slow in arriving.
The launch made haste to pick them up, leaving the sick monster to
recover his health and spirits as well he might.
Bulger received the rescued men with the wildest manifestations of
delight, and clapping on all sail, away we bounded before a rattling
breeze.
To my infinite joy, the water now began to increase in warmth.
Hour by hour the rise in temperature, although slow, was steady.
“At length, my men!” cried I to my crew, “we are on the right track. Be
patient! I promise you that before the sun has quenched his fire in the
western seas we shall cast anchor in Neptune’s Caldron!”
My predictions came true to the very letter.
Just as the last rays of sunlight were gilding the foam-crested waves of
this mysterious sea, a long, low line of shore was sighted dead ahead,
ending in a precipitous headland.
Bearing away we rounded this and found ourselves at the entrance of a
large land-blocked bay or gulf, from different points in which huge
columns of snow-white steam floated lazily skyward, twisting themselves
in most fantastic shapes ere they vanished in the purple twilight.
My men sent up a loud, long, lusty cheer, as we sailed into Neptune’s
Caldron.
As we drew near shore, to my great bewilderment, for I had not dared to
think that living creatures could exist in these heated waters, I caught
sight of moving things in the Caldron. Nay, there could be no doubt, for
these heated waters were as limpid as a mountain spring and the bottom
plainly visible ten fathoms below.
Fish of all colors and sizes floated hither and thither, while myriads
of crabs, lobsters and other queerly shaped crustaceans crawled about on
the snow-white sands, following their leaders in long lines, like a
procession of cardinals, over the white marble pavement of some great
city in the western world.
I say “crimson lines,” for the heat of the water had clothed them all in
suits of richest red.
As I sat in the ship’s launch on my way to the shore, gazing dreamily
down into the waters, half-dazed by these marvellous sights, a shoal of
fish rose near the boat and turned their beautiful tinted sides for an
instant to the cool air.
To my amazement I saw that their eyes were sightless, that the extreme
heat of the waters had clouded their limpid orbs milk white and shut out
the light forever!
A cold chill crept over me, for, to me, the spectacle was as uncanny as
if the carp had sprung from the elder baron’s table and begun to swim
about in their native element once more.
But the list of strange things was not yet exhausted, for as I drew
nearer to the beach, you may imagine my mingled wonder and amusement at
seeing scores of fish with their backs planted against the sand furrows,
calmly fanning themselves with their broad, flat tails.
Upon setting foot upon the shore, I was astonished to find the land, for
far as the eye could reach, covered deep with millions and millions of
eggs of different sizes, varying from that of a pigeon to that of an
albatross or wild goose.
In places these eggs lay in heaps far higher than my head; in others
they were ranged in long lines, like white furrows turned by some
gigantic plough!
Suddenly the truth dawned upon me. To these shores vast flocks of
sea-birds came to lay their eggs year after year, attracted by the
warmth of the atmosphere. There they build their rude nests and fill
them with eggs and enter upon the task of hatching out their young, when
suddenly the heated waters hurled by some gale or resistless current,
rises upon their resting places and spreads death where life was just
beginning, by cooking the countless thousands of eggs which fill their
nests. And so on from year to year, until now I behold the work of a
thousand floods, which have in turn added their contribution to this
vast stock!
While standing on the shores of this wonderland, one morning, gazing out
across the steaming surface of Neptune’s Caldron, several of my crew
came running toward me with startled mien and great outcry, all pointing
skyward. I turned and looked in the direction indicated.
A vast cloud, black and threatening, hung in the heavens.
As I stood watching it, it broadened and widened until it fairly
darkened the light of day.
My men were now on their knees, uttering the most piteous lamentations,
for they imagined the end of the world was at hand.
I commanded them sternly to leave off their wailing and groaning, for I
saw that the great black cloud was simply an enormous flock of birds, of
what species I could not then tell.
Nearer and nearer they came, with the sound like the rushing of wild
winds.
They covered the whole sky like an inky pall.
It was evident to me that they intended alighting upon the shore of the
Caldron, and fearing lest their immense numbers, in settling down, might
smother us, I called out to my men to stand by the ship’s launch.
There was no time to lose.
For, as we pushed out from the shore, tens of thousands of these birds—a
species of crow, but twice the size of those at home—began to settle
down in long rows as far as the eye could reach.
For the first, now I noticed that every crow held something in its
claws. I looked again, and saw that each of these birds carried an
immense mollusk, fully as large as a watchman’s club and something the
same shape. Imagine my mingled surprise and amusement upon observing
that those in the first row were now making for the water’s edge.
Approaching cautiously, each crow thrust his mollusk into the shoal
waters of the Caldron and stood by, with eyes sparkling with joyful
anticipation, to watch for results.
He had not long to wait.
Unaccustomed to the great heat of the water, the mollusk soon began to
open its shell, first cautiously, but as the hot water poured in upon
it, with great precipitation, fairly with a snap. Waiting for a moment
or so until the hot water had curled the animal quite free from its
shell, the fastidious birds then partook of the savory contents, gave a
few caws of grateful acknowledgement, and withdrew to make room for the
next row. This changing places, cooking of provisions and feasting
lasted for half a day.
By that time the entire flock had exhausted its raw material. Then with
deafening cries and loud flapping of pinions, these feathered epicures
rose into the air and disappeared as they had come.
Fain would I have prolonged my stay upon the shores of Neptune’s
Caldron, but I observed that the steam from the waters was disagreeable
to Bulger.
With speaking eyes, he implored me to hoist sail and seek some, to him
pleasanter land.
I could not withstand that appeal.
So I made a farewell survey of the egg mounds, gazed my last at the
red-shelled crustaceans and chalky-eyed fish of the Caldron and went
aboard of my staunch vessel.
Heading now westward, I crowded sail, intending to hug the China Coast
pretty closely on my homeward voyage. All went well for the first few
days after leaving Neptune’s Caldron.
Bulger ranged the deck, playing the maddest capers.
Thoughts of home now began to occupy my mind.
The elder baron was growing old. I felt that I ought not to prolong my
voyage. He might be in need of my counsels.
Suddenly, one day, at high noon, the skies darkened, the winds sprang
up.
I thought nothing of it.
It will only be a mad romp, which will serve right well to blow us along
homeward.
But, oh, what a short-sighted creature is vain man, who thinks to read
the signs of the skies, the winds and the waves!
The merry whistling of the wind soon gave place to the dismal howl of
the blast.
The storm fiend was stalking abroad.
The startled waters now leaped wildly up from their beds, rolled
tumultuously onward, whipped into foam and fury by ten thousand lashes
of the blast, till, in their mad efforts to escape, they dashed
themselves against the very clouds.
The scene was terrible. ’Twas useless to command, for not a throat of
steel could have drowned the wild yells of the tempest.
To my horror, I discovered that we had sprung a leak.
The pitch and tar, softened by the heat of the water in Neptune’s
Caldron, had bulged from the ship’s joints and allowed the calking to
escape.
Like a sheet of card board, our rudder was now torn from its place and
whirled away on the crest of a giant billow.
Behold us now at the very mercy of the storm, the plaything of wind and
wave, a cockle shell fallen on the battle ground of nature’s waning
elements.
Bulger, lashed to the rigging by my side, uttered no plaint, no cry of
fear, no sound of distrust.
I could see that his speaking eyes were following me about as much as to
say:
“I am not afraid, little master, so long as you are by me.”
I could feel my heart thump out a loud “thank thee, dear, faithful,
little friend!”
From time to time I passed my hand caressingly over his head and neck.
His tail moved sadly, but I knew its meaning.
It meant:
“Little master, I am ready to die; ay, most willing to die, if I can die
with you by my side.”
It really seemed as if his love was about to be put to a final test for
the dreadful cry of—“Breakers ahead!” was passed from man to man till it
reached my ears.
It was only too true.
Their roar now broke upon my ears, faint, low but deep, terrible, half
like distant thunder or the growl of some gigantic beast of prey.
In a few brief moments we were on the reef.
With a terrible crash our staunch little vessel leaped upon the rocks
and wedged herself in, tight and fast, between two jagged ledges.
The relentless sea now broke over and over us.
“Oh! if the day would only break!” I murmured, “possibly we might find
some means to reach the main land.”
To stay here simply means destruction.
After hours of the severest suffering, for every sea which broke over us
seemed as if bent upon the fell purpose of tearing our limbs from their
lashings—day came at last.
I discovered now that we were about a quarter of a mile from the main
land.
With my glass, I could distinguish great crowds of people running hither
and thither on shore. But they made no effort to send us succor or to
encourage us to cling to the wreck until the storm should abate.
What was to be done?
With a fearful crash, our masts now went by the board.
Our ship was showing signs of breaking up.
Neither threat nor reward could move any one of my men to attempt to
swim ashore with a line.
The sun now burst forth in a blaze of golden light.
I could feel the tears gather in my eyes as I looked about and saw the
sad ravages of wind and wave.
Although the storm had abated somewhat of its fury, there was no time to
be lost.
Dread creakings of the ship’s timbers warned me to leave the wreck ere I
should be crushed against the rocks.
Only disorder and confusion seemed to characterize the movements of the
crowds gathered on shore.
While apparently aware of the terrible import of our signals of
distress, they showed no inclination to risk their lives in trying to
save ours.
Turning to Bulger I cried out:
“O, dearest Bulger! thou tried and true friend, companion of my sorrows
and sharer of my every joy, thou alone canst save us! Thou alone canst
rescue thy loving master and these poor wretched creatures from
impending death! I know thy courage; I know thy affection. In thy
radiant eyes I read thy willingness to do or die!”
From his earliest youth I had trained Bulger to be a bold and skilful
swimmer. No eddy, current, undertow or whirlpool was angry or wild
enough to strike any fear to his stout heart.
With ease, at my commands, he would dive two fathoms deep and bring the
smallest coin from the bottom.
Our vessel might go to pieces at any moment, for she had wrenched
herself loose from the rocky ledge and was pounding on the jagged,
flinty edges of the reef with a wild and ungovernable fury.
Every fleeting moment became more precious than its predecessor.
Making a superhuman effort, I caught the end of a reel of twine, and,
having fastened it to Bulger’s collar, bade him leap into the bubbling,
boiling, seething, swirling, madly-rolling waters, storm-lashed, whipped
into foam, till billow broke on billow and all seemed but one mingled
mass of fury, rage and fright. With a rapid succession of anxious,
whining cries followed by a series of quick, loud, sharp barks, Bulger
gave me one last look; and, placing his paws on the taffrail, sprang
lightly over and disappeared.
My heart stood still for a moment.
But look!
He rises!
He strikes out for the shore, now tossed like a bit of cork on the
arched backs of a storm-affrighted billow, now sunken out of sight into
the foam-flecked trough of the sea.
Look again!
Hark! I can catch the faint sound of that sharp, joyous bark sent back
to cheer his little master’s heart.
And now he is gone!
I see him not; but as the twine runs through my hands, I can almost feel
every throb of that dear, stout heart!
Steadily he keeps at his work, for steadily and rapidly the reel spins
round.
Crack!
There goes our keel in twain.
Quick, good Bulger; the end is near!
But look!
What means that commotion on shore?
See the crowd, how it presses down to the very breaker’s edge!
Now they fall back!
Hark!
Did you not hear that shout?
Saved! Saved!
Bulger has landed!
The men on shore have hold of the twine.
The reel whirls swiftly around!
My men, ashamed of their cowardice, crawl from their hiding-places and
set to work with a will.
Already they have fastened a line to the end of the twine and it is
moving briskly over the rail.
There can be no doubt now.
Bulger has saved us!
Springing into the main-shrouds and shielding my mouth from the gale
with my hands, I called out to my men:
“Stand by the hawser! Make fast the line! Now heave, O! Let go all!”
With an angry splash the hawser fell into the sea and was soon on its
way shorewards.
And this was the way Bulger saved the life of master, mate and twelve
seamen!
I was the last man to leave the ship.
As I did so, she shook herself loose, drew back, ran hard on the rocks
with such a terrific blow that she broke into pieces as if struck by
lightening bolt or some gigantic hammer wielded by an unseen Thor.
With a wild cry of joy Bulger met me as I was drawn through the
breakers.
I threw myself on my knees and covered him with kisses, while tears
rolled hot and fast down my cheeks.
The people of the land gathered group-wise about us and watched our
interchanging of caresses in deepest silence, agitating their thumbs and
twitching the corners of their mouths.
“What land is this? Where are we, good people?” I inquired, after this
first outpouring of love and gratitude had spent its fervor.
“Bold barbarians!” replied one of the nearest group, whose richer dress
bespoke the man of rank and authority, “thou standest on the shores of
the mighty dominion of Kublai, Child of the Sun, Lord of the Imperial
Yellow Garb, Knight of all the Buttons, Man of the Sacred Countenance,
Successor to all the Glories of his Ancestors now Guests of Heaven,
Source of all Law and Equity, and Chevalier of all the Orders, and we
are his wretched, miserable, unworthy, good-for-nothing slaves!”
Whereupon the entire multitude performed the kowtow.
“So then! I cried, most puissant, noble, and altogether delightful,
Sir,”—at the same time performing the kowtow with that grace which only
the genuine citizen of the world can command—“I stand upon the sacred
soil of the mighty Chinese Empire.”
“Aye, bold barbarian,” answered the speaker, “in the province of Kwang
Tung, in the district of Yang-chiang, of which I, So Too, Mandarin of
the White Glass Button, am Imperial superintendent.” Hearing this, I
begged So Too to give me leave to speak, which granted, in a brief but
eloquent speech, well larded with all those savory epithets so sweet to
the ears of an official in that land, I told him of my illustrious
family, my strange desire to scour the remotest seas and least-visited
lands for marvellous things; how I had sailed in search of Neptune’s
Caldron, of the strange things seen there, of my setting out on my
voyage homeward, my encounter with the storm-fiend, and last of all, my
shipwreck on the shores of the boundless dominions of the Child of the
Sun.
And now, all that I craved from the servants of the Man of the Sacred
Countenance was such aid and assistance as would enable me and my men to
reach the nearest seaport where foreign ships cast anchor, so that we
might go down to the sea once more and reach our loved ones. To all this
So Too gave response with a most gracious smile, and then invited me to
pass beneath his roof, lay off my wet clothes, drink some warm tea, and
have his rubbers smooth the wrinkles out of my tired flesh.
My seamen were not forgotten. His retainers were ordered to look well
after their wants.
Just as we were about to set out for So Too’s residence, several of his
body guards struck their gongs a furious blow.
The din was ear-splitting.
With a loud bark Bulger rushed towards me, and laying one ear against my
leg closed his other with his paw.
So Too and his retainers, at seeing this to me laughable sight, looked
grave, agitated their thumbs and twitched the corners of their mouths.
Just as I was about crossing So Too’s threshold, to my inexpressible
chagrin I discovered that I had lost my purse containing a large sum of
money. In a desperate hope that I might have dropped it on the sea
shore, I bounded away in that direction, but I had not gone a hundred
paces ere I met Bulger carrying the purse in his mouth. I had in truth
dropped it while kneeling on the beach and caressing my beloved rescuer.
Noting that in my eagerness to follow my gracious host, I had not missed
the lost treasure, Bulger had driven away several of So Too’s retainers,
who manifested a desire to appropriate the pouch of gold to their own
use, and picking it up in his teeth, had raced after me as fast as his
burden would permit.
As we crossed So Too’s threshold, several small, woolly dogs sprang out
and gathered about Bulger. They were apparently delighted to meet with
one of their race, so distinguished in appearance and dignified in
carriage. Fain would they have exchanged the usual canine civilities
with Bulger, but he absolutely declined to enter into any conversation
with them or to express any surprise at these extraordinary looking
cousins of his, which seemed like so many animated bundles of
freshly-ginned cotton. Keeping close at my heels, he skillfully avoided
their advances, and gave a low growl of relief when the door of the
ante-chamber was closed upon them.
After a warm bath, my stiffened limbs were limbered up by the stroking,
patting and rubbing of So Too’s bath assistants.
I was then invited to encase my body in a rich suit of embroidered silk,
and this done, was conducted into the presence of the amiable So Too,
who received me with a smile that was as persistent as it was broad.
Several hours were now consumed in drinking tea, eating dainty little
sugar cakes, and telling each other the most extravagant and shameless
fibs in the shape of compliments,—compliments about everything, voice,
eyes, ears, chin, mouth, hands, feet, etc. Although I only reached to So
Too’s shoulder, he regretted, in a piteous tone, his lack of stature and
praised my tall, stately, noble, commanding height.
Overcome at last by sheer exhaustion, So Too closed his eyes and
appeared to have dropped off in a little nap.
Seizing upon the opportunity, I raised my voice and began to urge upon
him the necessity of immediate action with regard to me and my men.
Whereupon he arose, and after a series of kowtows, the same broad smile
playing around his wide mouth and small kindly black eyes—withdrew to
consult with his assistant, sub-assistant, and first and second
sub-assistants.
It was quite dark when So Too re-entered the room.
Bulger and I, during his absence, had slept most soundly.
No wonder, for we were both tired to the bone.
Orders were now given to illuminate the halls and apartments.
In a few moments, thousands of the most brilliantly colored and quaintly
decorated lanterns shed a delightfully soft glow over everybody and
everything.
Again we took our places around the superbly decorated table which held
the paraphernalia for brewing tea and the exquisitely painted cups and
saucers of egg-shell thinness, and the tea drinking and cake-eating were
resumed. Again I skillfully turned the conversation to the subject of my
departure for the nearest seaport.
Again So Too arose and backed out of the room for the purpose of holding
another consultation.
By this time my stock of patience had dwindled down considerable.
Every moment I could feel my blood grow warmer and warmer.
After a delay of half an hour or so, a retainer entered to inform me
that So Too had fallen asleep in the council-room, and that no one save
a Mandarin with an opaque blue, transparent blue, flowered red or plain
red button could presume to awaken him, and that there was no Mandarin
of so exalted a dignity within fifty miles of that spot.
At these words my blood fairly boiled over.
I sprang to my feet and began to pace the floor like a caged animal.
Coming to a halt in front of a tall lacquer cabinet loaded down with
costly porcelain cups and vases, I raised my foot, and kicking out
vigorously, toppled the thing over on the floor.
The crash was terrible.
I was really startled, for I was afraid I had knocked half the house
down.
But I had the satisfaction of seeing the Mandarin come rushing into the
room, followed by assistants, sub-assistants, gong-beaters,
sword-bearers, head-shavers, ear-ticklers, tongue-scrapers,
nail-polishers, and skin-rubbers, besides many others of his retainers,
whose offices and callings were unknown to me.
“You have deliberated, now decide!” I exclaimed in a tone of voice that
for depth and volume would have done credit to the hero of a blood
curdling drama; and at the same moment I placed the sole of my foot
against another cabinet, quite as lofty as the one I had just toppled
over, and quite as richly laden with curios, vases and ivories.
So Too was now wide awake and not at all anxious to see this second
cabinet share the fate of the first.
“Thy foot to its place!” he called out, waving me to a seat, and placing
himself between me and the threatened cabinet. “Thy foot to its place,
my gracious benefactor.”
After he had seen me safely seated, he continued thus:
“Know, then, my gentle guest, that I, So Too, Imperial Mandarin of the
white glass button, after mature deliberation with my most honorable
Council, do order and decree that thou and thy servants shall be, as
thou hast prayed, forthwith conducted to the city of Canton, and there
be delivered into the keeping and custody of the officers of him of the
Sacred Countenance, until opportunity shall present itself to procure
means of sending thee and thy servants back to your native land!”
Here I bent my body in token of my profound gratitude.
The Mandarin likewise made a low obeisance, and then continued:
“I do further decree that the evil spirit which attends thee in the
shape of a dog shall be at once bound with chains and cast into prison
there to await, his trial for witchcraft!”
Had So Too plunged a two-edged knife into my vitals I could not have
felt a more agonizing hurt.
“Bulger? My beloved—Arrested? Witchcraft? Chains; Prison?” I stammered
out.
“I have so decreed!” calmly replied So Too. “Oh! no! no! no! I cried, it
cannot—it must not be! He is no evil spirit—no evil dwells in him. He is
but a simple, loving, intelligent dog! I crave suspension of this
terrible decree! What hath he done? O beloved Bulger, is this thy reward
for saving fourteen human lives? Is this the way in which thou art to be
repaid for all thy courage, thy love, thy devotion? O, no! no! Kill me
if you will, cruel stranger, thrust me into a prison cell, but spare
Bulger, spare him——”
I could say no more.
It grew black before me. A fit of vertigo came upon me. I staggered,
reeled, fell lifeless to the floor.
When I came to my senses, So Too’s servants were busy rubbing and
chafing my hands and feet and burning pungent wax beneath my nostrils.
Bulger, uttering the most piteous and anxious cries, was hastening from
one side to the other, pausing now and then for an instant to lick my
hand or face. I sat upright to collect my senses; then clasping Bulger
in my arms I patted, smoothed, kissed and caressed him amid a hundred
sighs and groans, heart-rending enough to melt a breast of stone. Then
throwing myself on my knees in front of So Too, I implored him to be
merciful—to spare a faithful, loving being, whose heart was as free from
guile as the flinty rock from tenderness; whose life had but one
thought: to serve, guard, defend, save his master.
“Rise, unfortunate stranger!” was So Too’s reply, in a tone of deep
commiseration, taking me by the hand and gently compelling me to be
seated by his side. “List! If thou shouldst slice my body into ten
thousand pieces I could not revoke this decree. Know that in this land
of the Child of the Sun, a magistrate may not unsay his words. Mercy
belongs to him, who dwells in higher places. This creature which thou
lovest so, hath been adjudged to be an evil spirit. It is a favorite
form of theirs; for as the dog is man’s close and trusted companion,
malevolent spirits are most likely to assume that form, when desirous of
obtaining admission to his house and heart in order to work his ruin.
This wild and unreasoning affection for thy dog proves only too clearly
that the evil spirit which dwells within him has already drawn the black
lines of his mysterious art thrice around thy soul. Thrice three times
will complete his dread purpose. Thou wilt then be lost forever! ’Tis
well that some good spirit of the air or water hath delivered thee into
the keeping of the Child of the Sun. For now, upon the trial in the
Imperial Chamber of Perfect Justice, thine eyes will be opened; thou
wilt be fully persuaded that an evil spirit of tremendous size and
fearful power is squeezed into that small creature.”
“Never!” I exclaimed with flashing eye and glowing cheek.
So Too smiled faintly and laying his hand upon my arm continued: “Soft,
illustrious guest, thou forgettest that Perfect Justice dwells in the
bosom of our gracious Monarch. His ministers and judges have tongues;
but they are not their own; they only utter the thought of the Imperial
mind; therefore, what they decree must be right!”
“And if the Court,” I inquired, with bated breath, “should decree that
some evil spirit hath taken up its abode, as thou claimest, in the body
of my faithful Bulger—what—what—would be the—the—penalty?”
“Death!” whispered So Too.
“And is this thy boasted justice!” I cried, with tear-bedimmed eyes, “to
condemn a dumb creature to death with no voice to plead for him?”
“Nay!” interposed So Too, “thou shalt speak for him, thou shalt be heard
in his behalf—thou shalt be his advocate.”
“For this mercy,” said I, “my heart empties its thanks at thy feet; and,
if my words, my pleading prove not powerful enough to avert the fearful
penalty thou hast named, the executioner shall but whet his axe on that
small neck, for I shall lay my head beside this dearer head than
shoulders ever bore! Blow out the spark that illumines those loving eyes
and all this great world could not light a fire bright enough to cast
the gloom out of my life!”
So Too shook his head mournfully, but made no reply.
Calling my men to me I spoke as follows:
“Go, honest souls, I cannot be one of you. Return to your homes and
firesides. An Imperial escort will conduct you to the port of Canton.
There, beneath some friendly flag you will find means to reach your
native land! Peace and good fortune go with you!”
Then, turning to my first mate, I added:
“Seek out my father, the elder baron, impart unto him the story of my
shipwreck; the arrest of Bulger; and my firm determination to save him
from the terrible fate now impending, or to die with him! The elder
baron knows my love for Bulger. He would deem me a degenerate son of his
illustrous house, were I to abandon this faithful companion of my
dangers and sufferings to so unmerited a fate. Go! Place this signet
ring on thy finger. Deliver it to my mother, with my most dutiful and
humble greeting. Be wise; be brave; be honest!”
My men now formed in single file, and as they passed in front of me each
one paused and pressed my hand to his lips.
Bulger, too, was ready for the leave taking. Mounted upon a chair at my
side he extended his right paw to each seaman.
Tears streamed down their weather-beaten faces and, they invoked
blessings on the head of their brave little companion who had saved them
from a deep grave in the briny waters.
Scarcely were they out of my sight when a deafening beating of gongs
announced the arrival of the guard. My heart slipped from its resting
place. A cold sweat gathered in beads on my temples. It was only with
the greatest effort that I could draw breath enough to keep me from
sinking lifeless to the floor.
So Too murmured a word of sympathy.
At the sight of the gailors and sound of the chains, I uttered a
piercing cry and threw myself on my knees with Bulger clasped tightly in
my arms. Poor, innocent beast! he was utterly unable to comprehend the
actions of those about him.
“He shall be well-treated!” murmured So Too. “Fear not for his safety or
comfort!”
The gailors now advanced, and stooping down, clasped the delicate
manacles—which were of polished silver, upon Bulger’s feet.
He looked up at me with eyes so speaking, so full of love and so
trusting that I could not bear their gaze. It meant: “I submit without a
murmur, for I know that thou wouldst not let any harm come to me!”
Then one of the guards lifted him gently and placed him in a silk-lined
hamper, slung upon two poles. The lid was quickly adjusted and fastened,
and ere I could collect my senses to speak a last farewell they hurried
away with their prisoner, for it was plain to be seen their hearts were
deeply moved by my woful countenance and grief-shaken voice.
At So Too’s solicitation I now went to rest.
Rest? Alas! how could sleep get into my tearful eyes? All night long I
lay awake bemoaning the sad fate which had overtaken me. Had accusation
and arrest fallen upon me, I could have borne it like a man; but that
Bulger’s loving heart should have been singled out to bear a blow so
undeserved was almost death to me.
[Illustration: BULGER, IN CHAINS, BEGGING FOR HIS LIFE. ONE OF THE
LITTLE BARON’S DREADFUL DREAMS.]
As the hours dragged wearily along I thought of reversing my order
sending my men away, and of attempting a rescue. I thought of schemes to
bribe the gailor. I thought of demands for the interference of my
government. I thought of an appeal for mercy direct to the Emperor
himself. When day dawned I was utterly exhausted and sank back upon my
pillow with a groan. Anticipating my inability to get any rest for my
throbbing brow and fever-heated limbs, So Too was early at my chamber
door with his attendants. Under his directions they bathed me in cooling
lotions, patted, rubbed, and chafed my limbs; fanned me, stroked my
wrists and temples, gave me draughts of quieting powders and gently
pressed my eye-lids down, until gradually I sank into a deep sleep,
which lasted quite until high noon.
I awoke with a strong heart. Now I was myself again. My sorrow had not
grown less; but, for the time being, I was master of it.
So Too met me with a broad smile. I kowtowed profoundly. He expressed
the hope that, his “tall, graceful, broad-shouldered, handsome visaged
guest of knightly bearing” had slept well. “As for me,” he added, “my
miserable, little, crooked frame was full of pangs and tortures all
night long.”
To look at him it was hard to see any effects of all these “pangs and
tortures.”
He seemed the very picture of good health and spirits. His broad face
was as smooth as a baby’s and his little eyes sparkled with suppressed
humor and mischief. We grew quite merry over our morning meal.
I was playing a part. I determined to let him think that by degrees I
was becoming cured of my extravagant affection for Bulger.
With every cup of tea he drank his cold exterior kept melting off. I
felt that if I left him quite to himself, he would give me a clearer
view of his inside nature than if I attempted to draw him out by leading
questions. I called into use all my wit and imagination. I buried him
beneath compliments and fine speeches. I told him some of my most
diverting stories. At last, I was successful. The servants were directed
to withdraw. So Too now assured me in the name of all his ancestors,
that I was the most delightful guest that had ever sipped tea beneath
his roof. He entreated me to honor him by rising and placing my tall,
graceful, knightly form along side of his miserable, puny little rack of
bones.
I made haste to accept the invitation, protesting, however, that I was
quite overcome by the honors showered upon me.
He maintained, with equal pertinacity that he was utterly unfit to
occupy a seat by my side.
So we continued our war of compliments. Suddenly So Too thrust his right
hand under his richly embroidered tunic and drew forth a small case of
tablets, which folded upon each other in a curious way. He gave it a
slight jerk and it flew open and unfolded itself. “I have been
thinking,” he began, “of the approaching trial of thy dog on the charge
of witchcraft.”
A lump arose in my throat at these words, but I gulped it down and
simply bowed my head as a sign of my attention.
“Thou art a stranger in our land,” continued So Too, “perchance thou
wilt be pleased to know the things which I am about to tell thee.
Nowhere else in the great world can Perfect Justice be found save in the
dominions of our gracious Emperor, him of the Sacred Countenance. While
thy nation and the rest of the Western world knew no other law than
force or fraud, we had already received from our ancestors thousands of
volumes filled with the rules of Perfect Justice. Happy indeed should be
that criminal whose good fortune leads him to commit his crime in our
favored land. His punishment will be exactly what he deserves. Thou, as
the advocate of this fortunate prisoner, who is so dear to thee, art
allowed to choose the yamun before whom he shall be tried. I, So Too,
thy friend, do here set before thee the list of yamuns so thou mayst
choose thine own arbiter.”
Saying this, So Too placed the unfolded tablets in my hand, and then
dropped off into a gentle doze.
I scanned the list with mingled awe and curiosity. It read as follows:
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ THE LIST ITSELF. ALL BY ITSELF. │
│ │
│ OF AND NOTHING ELSE. │
│ │
│ ONLY THE JUST JUDGES. ALL BY THEMSELVES. │
│ │
│ FOLLOWED BY NOTHING ELSE. │
│ │
│ I. LING BOSS, A Just Judge.│
│ II. QUONG CHONG, A Just Judge.│
│III. POO POOH, A Just Judge.│
│ IV. WAH SAT, A Just Judge.│
│ V. LUNG TUNG, A Just Judge.│
│ VI. KEEN CHOP, A Just Judge.│
│ │
│ THE LIST OF JUST JUDGES. AND NOTHING ELSE. │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Thinking that So Too was sleeping soundly, I half unconsciously murmured
to myself, as I glanced at the first name on the list: “Ling Boss, a
just judge!” When to my great surprise—which, however, I was careful not
to show—So Too, without opening his eyes spoke as follows:
“Aye, a just judge; a very just judge; but a dangerous one; neck too
short, too much blood—hence, brain too hot—never willing to hear both
sides; a good judge for him who speaks first before the blood begins to
press upon his brain, a bad judge for a long cause.”
“Quong Chong?” I repeated inquiringly.
“A just judge,” replied So Too, “an extremely just judge, but too tall
and thin; not blood enough for his long body; brain too far away from
heart; cold and merciless; does not eat enough, only a little fish; a
good judge for a very bad man.”
“Poo Pooh?” I suggested, in a low tone.
“A just judge, a thoroughly just judge,” continued So Too, “but not to
be trusted; laughs too easily; too much given to making puns; always
ready to deal out death to a solemn-visaged man; only too happy to
sentence a man to death if he can make a pun with his name and the axe
or block or something belonging to the executioner.”
“Wah Sat?” I asked timorously.
“A just judge, an entirely just judge,” said So Too, apparently half
overcome with sleep, “but a judge to be avoided; too much given to
asking questions; never weary of turning round and round like an auger,
until he strikes bottom; a good judge for a hard and knotty cause—slow,
but sure, eating away falsehood bit by bit; not a good judge for a plain
case.”
“Lung Tung?” I questioned, half in despair, glancing at number five.
“A just judge, an undoubtedly just judge,” So Too gave answer, in the
same sleepy tone, “but a dangerous judge; too fond of hearing himself
talk; too liable to use up the criminal’s time and then condemn him to
death for not having defended himself within the hour allotted to him!”
Here my heart sank within me; but I drew myself together. There was
still one name left. I glanced at it despairingly. “Keen Chop?” I
murmured.
“A just judge, a perfectly just judge;” remarked So Too with a slight
increase of animation, “a flower, a pearl of a judge; eats well, drinks
well, digests well; fond of the good things of life, a great lover of
beautiful vases and statues and screens and embroideries—always willing
to hear both sides and—”
Here So Too came to a halt and fell into such a sound slumber that he
snored loudly. I waited patiently for him to finish his nap. He resumed
exactly at the point where he had left off.
“Very anxious to build a larger and finer house and to fill it with rich
and rare ornaments.”
Again So Too dropped off. Not to be outdone by him in apparent
indifference at the matters under discussion, I likewise gave way to a
feeling of drowsiness and was soon fast asleep.
How long we slept I know not; but, when we awoke my mind was perfectly
clear on one point. I turned to So Too and said:
“I am resolved! Keen Chop is a just judge! Let him decide Bulger’s
fate!”
Three days, long and anxious ones for me, went by before I was accorded
a hearing in the Hall of Justice. So Too made great efforts to amuse me
and turn my thoughts away from the poor innocent captive. But all in
vain. Those dark, lustrous eyes were always fixed upon me. Day and
night, they kept repeating the same question: “Dear little master what
does it all mean? I know you will not desert me, but why must I be so
long separated from you?”
At last the long-wished for hour arrived. I was escorted to the Hall of
Justice by a band of So Too’s retainers. A seat was assigned me in front
of the platform, which the judge and his suite were to occupy. The vast
chamber was crowded with clerks, officers, gong-beaters, accused and
accusers; but a deep silence rested upon them all. As I walked to my
seat a subdued murmur ran over the multitude, for Bulger’s case was in
every one’s mouth; and I could see that my youthful appearance excited
great surprise.
Suddenly a beating of gongs announced the arrival of the judge.
Keen Chop entered the Hall of Justice with a majestic tread and solemn
air, partly the effect of a pair of huge spectacles which were held
astride his nose by heavy silken cords and tassels passed over his ears.
He was followed by a vast array of clerks, servants and attendants.
There were ink-bearers and pen-bearers; there were fan-bearers and
book-bearers; there were foot-rubbers to chafe his feet in case they got
asleep from long sitting; there were nose-ticklers armed with long
feathers, whose office it was to arouse Keen Chop should he drop off
into too long a nap; there were eraser-bearers whose duty it was to blot
out from the tablets all the judge had said when he resolved to change
his mind. “Let the vile, miserable, wretched accused be brought into the
august presence of Keen Chop, the just judge!” cried one of the Court
officers, in a loud voice.
After a few moments’ delay, the wicker hamper which contained my
faithful Bulger, was carried into the chamber through a side entrance,
set down in front of the judge and Bulger lifted gently therefrom and
placed on a table at my side. The silver manacles were still attached to
his feet. My heart stood motionless as I heard the rattling of the
chains which ran from leg to leg. I had steeled myself to appear calm;
but in spite of my efforts, the tears trickled down my cheeks. Bulger
gave a start as his dark, lustrous eyes fell upon me and he uttered a
long, low whine as if to ask: “What does all this mean, dear, little
master?” And then he raised his right paw as high as the chain would
permit, and held it out for me to shake—as was his custom when craving
forgiveness for some mischievous act which had displeased me.
I pressed the outstretched paw long and tenderly.
“Doth the prisoner confess his guilt and humbly beg for mercy at our
hands” inquired Keen Chop turning his huge eye glasses full upon Bulger.
Whether it was the disagreeably shrill and creaking tone of the judge’s
voice or the glitter of the large glass discs set in front of his eyes,
which displeased Bulger, I know not; certain it is he made answer for
himself with a single loud and angry bark. Keen Chop was so startled
that he dropped his smelling salts and motioned to his fan-bearers to
cool his heated face.
“Silence!” roared one of the gong-beaters, giving a deafening thump upon
his gong to inspire respect; and, at the same time fiercely agitating
his bristling eye-brows and mustachios.
“My lord judge,” said I performing the kowtow, “I crave consent to speak
for the prisoner. He is not guilty of witchcraft. Nor doth any manner or
kind of evil spirit dwell within his body. He is a true and faithful
servant and companion of mine; perchance, with somewhat more than the
usual intelligence of his kind. As his defender I call for the proofs of
this most unmerited accusation!”
Keen Chop now fell asleep. But, after a few moments, his nose-tickler
succeeded in arousing him.
“Let the proofs be read!” spake Keen Chop in slow and measured tones.
One of the clerks arose; and unfolding a huge sheet of paper, with
wooden rollers fastened at the top and bottom like a window shade, began
to read in a drawling, singsong voice as follows:
Proof First: That the prisoner did, without any command, upon reaching
the shore from the wreck, proceed to bite the twine attached to his
collar in twain; and, taking up the end in his mouth, pass by a group of
imperial officers, and a group of merchants, and a group of artisans,
and a group of idlers, and make for a group of sailors, at whose feet he
laid down the end of the twine.
Proof Second: That the prisoner did, at the sound of the official gong,
unlike the animals of his race dwelling among us, manifest great
displeasure and ill-humor, rush towards his master, lay one ear against
his master’s body and close the other with his paw.
Proof Third: That the prisoner did, on the same day, in the presence of
imperial officers, without any command, pick up a purse of gold dropped
by his master and restore it to him.
Proof Fourth: That the prisoner did, on the same day, in the presence of
imperial officers, upon crossing the threshold of the Lord High Mandarin
So Too, unlike animals of his kind, contemptuously and disdainfully
reject the kindly welcome and friendly greetings given him by his
Excellency’s dogs.
* * * * *
I confess that, as the clerk of the Court finished reading these proofs,
my heart rose slowly into my throat. They were, in good earnest, proofs
of far more than the usual intelligence of animals of his race. I was
staggered by the amount of proof they had collected. While I felt that I
should have difficulty in persuading Keen Chop that all this was only
the result of careful training, aided by a special aptitude on Bulger’s
part, I was very careful not to betray any nervousness or lack of
confidence.
I called for some tea, on a plea of needing refreshment; but really to
gain time to collect my thoughts and get myself together, after such a
staggering blow.
Meanwhile, Keen Chop dropped off into a calm doze.
I finished my tea and sat waiting patiently for the nose-tickler to
arouse him.
When I saw that Keen Chop was wide awake again, I arose with great
dignity; and, placing myself beside Bulger, who was watching my every
movement and listening to my words with an almost painfully anxious
expression, which meant only too plainly: “What does it all mean, dear
little master?” I began as follows:
“My Lord Judge! Most ancient, antique and venerable Patriarch, stricken
in full five score of honorable years, thy snow-white locks bespeak thy
wisdom!” The fact of the matter is, Keen Chop was quite a young man, and
so far as I could see had no hair at all on his face or head save a
scanty pig-tail; but I knew how flattering it was to a magistrate to be
called “old and venerable” and hence my desire to make a good impression
at the very outset. “My mother’s breast knows no other child than me and
I no other brother than this faithful creature whom heaven, for its own
good reasons, hath set upon four feet; but who, if the strength of love
could lift him up, would walk beside me, our two hearts on the same
level. O, venerable judge—whose wisdom, like fair fruit red-ripened in
the Autumn season, is now so ennobled by the flight of time, thou
knowest what love can do! Thou knowest full well how it can so steel the
thin beak of the mother bird, that the merciless talons of the hawk have
no terror for her! Thou knowest, better than this poor bit of humanity
which now pleads before thee, that man’s spear hath not point sharp
enough to drive the bear from her cub! Thou knowest how the timorous
sparrow, to shield her nestlings, will face the viper’s horrid crest,
forked tongue and stony eye! And what shall I say of this faithful
creature’s race? When lived there one of his kind that was known to
desert a poor and humble master, for a richer one; or to refuse
forgiveness for a rash and undeserved blow? Where else can human hearts
invest their love and draw such usurer’s rates as here? We were babes
together! The same sunbeams that danced a welcome on my awakening into
life, found him, too, just arrived. Of quicker growth, he was his
brother’s keeper. I gave him all my love, for no other playmate was
there to share it. I planted better than I knew, for on the thankful
soil of his true heart, that love of mine struck such deep and vigorous
root that it gave of its strength and power to his brain! Love hath so
sharpened thought, that it hath grown wondrous strong! The spirit, thou
callest ‘evil,’ is, as the learned know, a reasoning being; and,
although it may go upon four feet and whine, and yelp, and growl, and
bark, this is but the mask it wears.
“O aged judge, in the vast storehouse of whose mind experience hath
piled wisdom many stories high, thou wilt ere long believe me, for I
shall make it most plain to thee—that this faithful, loving animal, is
not gifted with the mysterious power of reason! True, most true, nature
hath widened his vision; but not removed its boundaries.
“Mark now, O learned patriarch, how easy a thing it is for truth to
pierce the armor falsehood wears, for gird she ne’er so tightly, there
are always some joints that will not come together!
“If my poor, weak mind be not strong enough to brush away the so-called
proofs of this evil spirit, then let me be withered by the flame of thy
just indignation! This creature loves me! Not the vigor of ten-thousand
human hearts blent in one could yield a warmer love than his for me! And
yet behold how short its vision is!
“This curious fire-arm was given me by a Turkish merchant whose life I
saved in a brawl. I have so set it that a feather’s weight will
discharge it; but, first I smeared some sugar paste upon its trigger.
Lo! I turn it toward my breast! If this creature now hath but the
faintest glimmer of impending harm to his beloved master, he will refuse
to lick away the sugar paste!”
A death-like silence fell upon the assembly. I held the fire-arm out
towards Bulger. In an instant he scented the sweet odor of the paste and
thrust his tongue out in several unsuccessful efforts to reach it. A
sharp explosion rang through the great hall.
I stooped and picked up the ball—which had flattened itself upon a steel
plate hidden beneath my robe.
Bulger’s amazement was not so great as Keen Chop’s. He made signs for
refreshment. Tea was hurriedly served. A hundred fans wafted the
sulphurous vapor away from his nostrils.
“Once more, O wiser judge than ever in Western Lands, shed the radiance
of human wisdom on things dark and obscure, behold how I tear away the
weft of falsehood which some ingenious mind would have this august
tribunal adjudge to be pure truth! Here, on this salver, I hold some
toasted bits of cocks’ combs—to this creature’s taste, the daintiest
morsel which nature and art can unite in producing!” Catching a sniff of
his favorite dish, my good Bulger began to bark and whine and strain his
manacles to their utmost in wild endeavors to reach it. I held the
salver out so as to permit him to reach a few pieces of the toothsome
food. He was now beside himself; one moment begging, coaxing, pleading;
the next, scolding, threatening, expostulating. No doubt he was very
hungry, for it was hardly to be expected that the prison messes would
suit his dainty palate.
“Most venerable judge!” I resumed, “as thou well knowest, evil spirits
hold in great repugnance and dread all subtle and mysterious brews and
poisonous compounds with which man strives to display or destroy them.
Look now! I sprinkle this coveted dish, before his very eyes, with a
powder so deadly and direful in its effect on life that this weak hand
of mine holds power enough to change this mighty hall filled with light
and life, into one vast charnel house. And again I bring the food within
his reach, covering it with a sheet of glass lest his ardor out-wit my
vigilance!”
Bulger now fell upon the plate of glass which covered the food, with
renewed impetuosity, giving vent to sharp cries of disappointment as he
vainly endeavored to lick up the tid-bits, rattling his chains as he
strove to scratch away the glass which kept him from his expected feast.
Commanding him to be silent, I uncovered the dish and set it within
reach of several dogs which I had caused to be tied near at hand.
At the first touch of the poisoned food they fell to the ground as if
stricken by a thunderbolt.
“Again, most sapient and venerable judge, let me add proof to proof that
naught of reason dwells within the mind of this faithful creature!”
“I was wounded once in his sight by a treacherous slave. His dagger
point pierced my breast; but I smote him dead ere he could find my
heart. Yet the danger of that moment seared the image of that poniard
forever on this creature’s memory.
“Bid now a retainer turn a dagger towards my breast!”
It was done!
With frantic cries and wild-starting eyes Bulger strove to leap upon my
supposed assailant.
“Cover now the blade with its sheath!”
It was done!
Again my good Bulger made desperate efforts to reach the man, filling
the room with cries of rage and fear.
“Cast away both sheath and blade!”
’T was done!
But still my loved Bulger made maddest effort to protect his master.
“Cast away the heft and blade and raise the empty sheath against my
breast!”
’Twas done!
Still it was all the same! No matter whether covered or uncovered point;
whether harmless heft, or still more harmless sheath, was turned towards
my breast, Bulger’s cries of mingled rage and fear, his mad attempts to
break away from the shackles which bound foot to foot were first and
last, exactly as fierce.
Keen Chop now did several things. He drank some tea. He ordered one of
his menials to tickle his ear. He removed his huge spectacles and handed
them to an attendant who proceeded to polish them. He then attempted to
fall asleep. But, at a sign from me, Bulger began to bark so furiously
that he gave a sudden start as if he thought the animal was about to lay
hold of his calves. Taking advantage of this, I strode up in front of
Keen Chop; and fixing my gaze upon him, spake as follows:
“Most ancient Magistrate, I crave your gracious consent to add another
plea to my defense of this dumb creature. I would be the veriest
ingrate, whom any wretched outcast might, with justice, spurn and
revile, were I not to defend this devoted being with all my mind’s
cunning and heart’s love!”
With these words, I sprang lightly up the steps which led to Keen Chop’s
chair, and ere he could say nay, caught up his fan which he had just
laid down on the table beside him.
“Now, venerable judge, for a last,—and I trust overwhelming—proof that
no evil spirit dwells within that creature’s body.
“Here are two fans: Thine! Mine! Thine, made sacred by the touch of thy
age-palsied and time-stricken hand! Mine, a worthless trifle; if it were
possible, made still more worthless by the touch of my worthless hand.
If, as this Court hath charged, an evil spirit dwells in this animal’s
body, it knows full well that power of life or death hangs on thy lips;
that thou canst pardon with a smile or slay with a frown; that thou
canst condemn to lingering torture or strike his shackles off with a
nod!
“Ay, more! that if it should, to thine eyes seem meet and wise, thou
canst adjudge both master and dog worthy of death and grant them no
greater boon than that their blood shall flow together after life is
over, as their love was one when living!
“Behold, I cast these two fans at his feet!”
Loud murmurs broke out all over the vast assembly. Many rose in their
seats and craned their necks to watch the result.
Bulger looked up at me with a puzzled air at first; but his mind was
soon made up. He picked up my fan tenderly and carefully, and with
wide-opened, love-lit eyes, raised himself on his hind feet and laid it
in my lap, wagging his tail the while, as much as to say: “Never fear,
little master, I know what belongs to thee!”
Then, with an outburst of snarling, barking and growling, threw himself
upon Keen Chop’s fan, shook it savagely until the richly painted
covering was torn in shreds and lay scattered about; tossed it up in the
air, only to leap upon it with all fours as it touched the floor; and
then, setting his stout claws in its joints wrenched them asunder as if
they were made of paper.
But this was not all!
To complete the list of indignities which he had visited upon Keen
Chop’s property, he now turned his back toward that grave magistrate;
and by several sudden and vigorous kicks with his hind feet, sent the
sticks in a shower flying so close to his head that one actually struck
against the huge disc of glass placed in front of Keen Chop’s right eye.
But a court officer, who had fallen sound asleep, and let his head fall
backward, did not escape so luckily. Two of the largest sticks entered
his nostrils and remained sticking there like arrows in a target. The
man awoke with an ear-piercing shriek. In spite of the commands of the
court officers, that every one who laughed should be bastinadoed, there
was suppressed giggling here and there. Keen Chop himself twisted his
face into the most comical grimaces in order to keep from bursting out
into a fit of laughter. As for Bulger, he was beside himself with
pleasure. In fact, he fairly howled with joy. Keen Chop now moved his
thumb as a sign that he was about to speak, and a deep silence fell upon
the multitude.
I was summoned to approach the steps of the judge’s chair. He spake as
follows:
“When thou art taller, thou wilt be stronger! When thou art older, thou
wilt be wiser!
“Know then, that, as the abject slave of the Child of the Sun, him of
the Sacred Countenance, Lord of all the Orders, I had intended to
dismiss this charge against thy dog, cast off his manacles and set him
free. But it may not now be done!
“Thy pleading hath convinced me that he doth deserve to die! A just
cause needeth no other defence than words. But thou hast pleaded with
hands and legs and feet! Thou hast been over-earnest! ’Tis proof, thou
knewest the weakness of thy cause. Hadst thou not spoken at all and had
thy dog himself but oped his mouth at the very outset, what had fallen
therefrom would have freed him from his shackles.
“Now he must die!
“Let him be delivered to the public executioner!” And then, with a
motion of his hand, he ordered the gongs to beat, so that it was
impossible for me to make reply. The great chamber was now the scene of
the wildest hubbub. The guards crowded around me as if they feared I
might, in my desperation, sacrifice my life in attempting to rescue
Bulger.
Poor Bulger! He had been quickly lifted into his wicker cage and borne
out of the court-room.
Although I could feel my heart hammering on my ribs I gave no sign of
the storm of emotion that was sweeping over my inward being. I could
hear those terrible words “public executioner” ringing in my ears; but
my infallible second sight caught no glimpse of that dreadful officer,
and hence I felt that there was still hope. But, I moved neither hand
nor foot.
The gongs ceased beating.
The throng departed from the hall of justice.
The guards, kowtowing, backed out of my presence. I stood there alone in
that vast, silent chamber.
I was aroused at last from my deep reverie by the approach of a
messenger from Keen Chop. He thus addressed me:
“The wretched, little, misshapen Keen Chop humbly begs the tall and
stately stranger to drink tea with him in his private apartment.”
Mechanically I followed the judge’s servant, who lead me through long
and winding corridors. Keen Chop had laid off his huge spectacles and
received me most graciously.
All the servants were dismissed. We sipped our tea in silence for a
while. At length, rising and stepping behind a screen, he returned,
bearing a huge volume.
It was the record of Bulger’s trial. He desired me to examine it while
he refreshed himself after his long sitting on the judge’s bench with a
short nap.
I turned the leaves of the record over slowly. Not only were my words
set down with the most perfect accuracy, but correct drawings of the
various scenes filled the broad margins of the record.
On the last page I noticed that a blank space had been left between the
words “must” and “die” and “him” and “be delivered.”
“’Tis miraculous!” exclaimed Keen Chop, starting up and rubbing his
eyes. “What a wonderful creature is thy dog! As I slept I dreamt that he
oped his mouth and what fell therefrom convinced me of his innocence.”
“Let him be brought into your august presence, O just judge!” I replied.
In a few moments Bulger’s wicker house was deposited on the floor and he
was lifted gently out of it. I could only with the greatest exertion
keep back the tears as his large, speaking eyes were turned full upon me
as if to ask: “When will all this mystery come to an end, little
master?” I stroked his head with a loving hand to assure him that all
was right.
No sooner were the attendants out of the apartment than, taking the
purse of gold which Bulger had picked up on the beach and restored to
me, I placed it in his mouth and made a sign for him to carry it to Keen
Chop, who had now resumed his huge spectacles, and sat poring over the
pages of the record of Bulger’s trial.
Bulger did not wait for a second bidding.
Making straight for Keen Chop, he raised himself on his hind feet and
dropped the purse in that dignitary’s lap.
“’Tis wonderful! ’Tis very wonderful!” cried Keen Chop, testing the
weight of the purse, with a pleased expression of countenance, first in
one hand and then in the other. “Thy speech was silvern, but his silence
is golden! ’Twere a crime to part two such faithful hearts. Go in
peace!”
“But the record of the trial?” I asked. Keen Chop spoke not, but turning
to the last page, he laid his finger on the place where the blank spaces
had been left.
They were now both filled.
The word “not” had been written in each of them.
The guards were now summoned, and in a few moments the shackles were
loosened from Bulger’s feet. Upon finding himself free once more, he
leapt into my lap with a wild cry of joy, and covered my hands and face
with caresses.
I could not keep the tears back. Clasping the faithful animal
convulsively in my arms, I wept like a child.
But a cloud came over our joy; for Keen Chop, upon my request for a safe
conduct to the nearest seaport, informed me that he was powerless to
grant my request; that I must apply to Slim Lim, the Taou-tai, or
Imperial Governor of the province, Lord of the Peacock Feather, Knight
of the Plain Red Button, etc., etc.
“’Tis well!” I exclaimed. “Deign to send one of thy servants to conduct
me into the presence of his honor the Taou-tai! I pine to set foot once
more on my native strand. I long to put an end to the sorrowful anxiety
of my parents.”
Keen Chop shook his head and smiled sadly.
“Know, O honored guest,” said he, “that no one may approach the
Taou-tai, Lord of the Peacock Feather, unless in answer to most humble
petition of twenty pages length, his high and mighty Lordship deign to
accord an audience! To attempt to do otherwise might mean death at the
hands of the guards; but would most surely mean imprisonment in the
deepest dungeon of the imperial fortress.”
“So be it!” I replied. “Come death, come imprisonment, I stand this day
in the presence of Slim Lim the Taou-tai, Knight of the Plain Red
Button, and Lord of the Peacock Feather!”
Keen Chop groaned loud and deep. But seeing that I was resolved to set
out at once for the governor’s palace, he sent one of his attendants to
conduct me to the gate, instructing him, in case the guards raised their
swords to slay me, to cry out in a loud voice that I was a harmless
lunatic and had escaped from my keepers.
To end all opposition I consented to this.
Whereupon Keen Chop bade me an affectionate adieu, and, followed by my
faithful Bulger, I turned my steps toward the palace of the Taou-tai.
To tell the truth, chaos reigned within my mind.
In as many seconds, twenty different plans of action occupied my
thoughts. How shall Bulger and I overcome the opposition of armed
guards? It will be madness to provoke them to use their weapons upon us!
If I am fated to stand in the presence of the Lord Taou-tai, it must be
accomplished by ruse and stratagem.
Luckily for me, the shades of night now began to fall, for, although the
gateway and corridors of the governor’s palace might be illumined by ten
thousand lanterns—as in truth I found them to be, when I reached
them—yet the light they shed was soft and uncertain.
Counting upon the almost lightning celerity of my movements and the
utterly noiselessness of my footsteps, I succeeded quite easily in
flitting by the group of sentries who were stationed at the outer gate.
Delighted with my good fortune, I sprang lightly up the steps of the
portico, and, closely followed by Bulger, strode into the main corridor
with dignified mien and stately air.
Eight towering fellows, armed with savage-looking pikes—for one of whom
it would have been no more trouble to spit me and toss me out of the
window, than for a boy to impale a frog on the end of his pointed stick
and toss it on dry land—now blocked my advance.
So noiseless had been my step that I had approached within a few feet of
them before they became aware of my presence. Had I dropped from the
clouds, their astonishment could not have been greater and more
ludicrous to behold.
They clutched each other by the arm, leveled their index fingers at me,
and whispered in a hoarse voice, as one man:
“A little devil!”
“Nay, my good men,” I replied, with a most gracious smile, “not a little
devil, but a soldier like yourselves; one who has fought ’neath many
skies, knows what a good sword is, what good wine is, would rather fight
than run, can tell a good story, and loves war as a hunter loves the
chase!”
The eight men looked at each other, tapped their foreheads
significantly, and then fixed their gaze upon me as if they were in
doubt whether my next move would be to jump down their throats, vanish
into thin air, or expand into an awful ogre, and gulp them all down
without pepper or salt.
“Come, comrades,” I called out in a careless tone, “lay aside your
pikes, and I’ll show you something that I picked up on a battle-field in
the war against the Algerines, something so curious, that if you had not
slept a wink for three months and a day you would still be willing to
keep awake and examine it.”
Saying this, I drew my musical snuff box out of my pocket, and tapping
its lid mysteriously, tiptoed my way towards the outside entrance of the
corridor, and beckoned them to follow me.
They did so, with the most comical expression of half-wonder and half
curiosity depicted on their faces. But first they quietly set their
grim-looking pikes in the rack against the wall.
Motioning them to lay their heads together and bend down so that they
could see and hear—for I reached about up to their girdles. I touched
the spring of the snuff box and it began to play.
It is impossible for me to give you any idea of the delight which shone
upon their great, round smooth faces.
Their mouths fell open.
Their fingers twitched nervously, as if they longed to touch the little
wonder, and yet dared not. I felt now that the moment had arrived for me
to act.
Winding up the snuff box to its utmost limit, I thrust it into the hands
of one of the guards, who seemed beside himself with joy, and showed him
how to touch the secret spring.
As the music began again, they closed up their group so tightly that
even if I had wished to remain one of the circle it would have been an
impossibility. To my infinite satisfaction they now seemed to dismiss me
most unceremoniously from their society.
More quickly than it takes to tell it, I drew a ball of strong twine
from my pocket, and fastening the ends of their cues securely together,
I retreated to the outside entrance of the palace and placed the other
end of the string between Bulger’s teeth, with a motion that meant:
“Stand fast and pull hard!”
In another instant I had passed the group of guards and was making for
the door of the audience chamber.
Suddenly the enormity of their negligence dawns upon them.
They look up.
They see me already at the end of the corridor!
They drop the enchanted box which has decoyed them from the path of
duty!
They start towards their pikes!
Some mysterious force holds them chained to the floor!
Bulger is doing splendid work!
My hand is on the door of the audience chamber!
Smitten with a superstitious dread of some unseen power, the guards
stand rooted to the spot.
A low whistle tells Bulger that his task is complete.
He flashes through the corridor like a spirit.
We enter the vestibule of the audience chamber, we pass through an outer
apartment, we stand in the presence of Slim Lim, Lord of the Peacock
Feather!
Slim Lim was at home.
He was seated in the centre of the spacious apartment, sipping a cup of
very fragrant tea, the aroma of which was so fascinating that I paused
and inhaled it with all the gusto of a fine taster.
Two ladies, clad in robes of great beauty and richness, were busy
brewing tea and spreading before the Lord Taou-tai an infinite number of
delicate viands and toothsome tid-bits.
But he ate nothing.
He was evidently somewhat disturbed by my sudden appearance, and I could
see that one thought, to the exclusion of all others, was occupying his
mind. It was: “How did this stranger pass the guards? True he is small;
but if he can calmly walk into my apartment why may not an evil-disposed
person do likewise?”
Determined to convince Slim Lim and the ladies of his household of my
noble lineage and refined manners, I kowtowed with all the grace of a
veteran courtier, and began the enumeration of their various virtues,
excellencies, and charms of body and mind. When I had reached number one
hundred and seventeen, the victory was complete.
They smiled.
But Slim Lim remained obdurate. He gazed into vacancy for several
moments and then pretended to fall asleep.
I recited the purpose of my visit and waited patiently for the Lord of
the Peacock Feather to deign to reply.
He did so at last; but without opening his eyes, speaking as if half in
a dream:
“Barbarian, son of a barbarian, grandson of a barbarian,
great-grandson of a barbarian, great-great-grandson of a barbarian,
great-great-great-grandson of a barbarian——”
Well knowing that this was a mere ruse to waste the night in words, I
resolved to put an end to it at once.
I sat down and interrupted Slim Lim’s long and dreary list by pretending
to snore with that regularity which proves the accomplished sleeper.
He came to a sudden halt.
A deep silence now settled upon the scene, only broken by the nervous
rattle of the ladies’ fans.
Slim Lim now began to realize that he had no ordinary mortal before him.
For the first time he looked me squarely in the face.
The ladies grew alarmed at the dark cloud gathering on the brow of their
liege lord, and withdrew to the other end of the room.
The Taou-tai was now wide awake.
So was I!
“Bold, thoughtless, and ill-counselled stranger,” he cried out, “by the
decree of the Child of the Sun, him of the Sacred Countenance, it is not
lawful to punish a rash petitioner like thee, provided his prayer be one
that may be granted. But what thou askest is impossible, for at this
hour there is neither paper, ink nor brush within the palace! Thou must
suffer for thy rash conduct. Thou hast been cunning enough to pass the
guards in coming hither: but already a score of pikes are leveled at thy
breast. Escape is impossible. Prepare for death or imprisonment in
dungeon cell which knows neither light nor warmth!”
To speak the truth, my legs bent beneath the weight of my body as these
cruel words made clear to me the danger I was in.
I could see that tears had gathered in the eyes of the two gracious
ladies, standing near me.
“Paper—ink—brush!” I murmured, half dazed, “brush—paper—ink—or death!”
“It must not be!” I glanced about me. I closed my eyes. I fixed my gaze
on Bulger, but all in vain—no help came to me.
A cold perspiration stood on my brow.
Suddenly, a huge parrot which was perched on a bamboo cage at one end of
the room, uttered a harsh cry.
Quicker than it takes to tell it, I called Bulger to my side and set him
teasing the bird.
He was not averse to enter upon the sport.
When it was well under way, I approached the bird from the rear, and as
he bent forward to repel Bulger’s familiarity, I deftly laid hold of one
of his longest tail-feathers and pulled it out. An ear-splitting yell
went up, and the two ladies threw themselves towards their pet with a
thousand tearful expressions of pity and endearment.
I now turned my attentions to Slim Lim.
Drawing a pair of tiny shears from my pocket, I caught at the end of his
cue and snipped off an inch of it.
My audacity struck him dumb. He could only stare at me with wide opened
mouth.
I set to work now in good earnest.
Drawing some silk threads from my sleeve, I fitted the hair into the
quill with such nimble, cunning fingers that Slim Lim looked on quite
awe-struck.
“The brush is ready, Lord of the Peacock Feather!” I cried, laying it
down in front of him. “And the paper too!” I continued, drawing out a
paper mat from under a curio and turning up the white underside.
He followed my movements as a child would those of a necromancer.
Ink now was only lacking!
With one of my most winning smiles I drew near the ladies, and thus
addressed them:
“Fasten forever the images of your beautiful faces upon the pages of my
memory by lending me the jar of ebon pigment with which you add lustre
to those matchless arches that shade your eyes!”
They returned my smile with entrancing grace and sweetness. But what was
more pleasing still, they granted my request.
Halting for a moment at the cage of my friend, the parrot, who ruffled
his feathers and eyed me most suspiciously, to moisten the pigment from
his drinking vessel, I then strode with an air of triumph back to the
table where Slim Lim sat nervously fanning himself, and said:
“Most noble Lord of the Peacock Feather, thy dull-witted, misshapen and
worthless slave hath prepared brush, ink and paper; deign to set thy
most honorable sign-manual to this paper so that he may withdraw his
poor, miserable body and limbs from beneath thy sacred roof!”
So saying, I held out the brush to Slim Lim.
With trembling hand he took hold of it and rapidly traced the mysterious
characters which were destined to open every gate and unbar every door
until I stood once more on shipboard bound for my native land.
Folding up the precious document, I thrust it into my sailor’s pouch.
But while I was flushed with victory, Slim Lim showed only too plainly
that he was nearly beside himself with chagrin and vexation.
The ladies of his household approached him with most profound obeisances
and with loud and deep-drawn sighs at every step. But Slim Lim repulsed
them in the rudest manner. He would have none of their sympathy, none of
their pity or tender offices.
They redoubled their efforts; their sighs became more tender and louder.
It was all in vain.
Slim Lim was determined not to be propitiated.
Turning to me, he cried out:
“Let the barbarian, the son of a barbarian, the grandson of a barbarian,
the great-grandson of a barbarian, the great-great-grandson of a
barbarian, the great-great-great-grandson of a barbarian, the
great-great-great-great-grandson of a barbarian inscribe his wretched,
worthless, mean, common, ordinary, insignificant and despicable name
upon a sheet of paper ere he goes forth, so that I and my children, and
my children’s children, and my children’s children’s children, and my
children’s children’s children’s children may speak it with contempt!”
And then, in order to prove to me that he considered himself disgraced
to sit in my presence, he threw himself full length upon the floor.
Bulger got it into his head that this strange proceeding was in some way
a menace to me, for he walked cautiously around Slim Lim, sniffing at
him and growling in a threatening way, as if to say: “Don’t play any
tricks on my little master, or it will go hard with you!”
The ladies of Slim Lim’s household were nearly crazed with grief and
anxiety.
I assured them of my protection, but this only seemed to increase their
solicitation.
To tell the truth, however, I was not half so calm as I appeared to be.
Cruel fate seemed to have woven her meshes about me once again.
Slim Lim, with deep cunning, had set another task for me which seemed so
impossible of performance that he doubtless was already congratulating
himself and applauding his own skilfully devised plan for holding me
prisoner.
He had demanded that I should “write my name” before going forth; he had
been most careful to use the word “write” so that I should not be
permitted to use a brush after the manner of his people; but must have
recourse to a pen after the manner of my own.
Feeling pretty confident in his mind that I would not have a pen in my
possession, he had ground for flattering himself that I was still in his
power.
Bulger caught a glimpse of the shadow that had settled upon my face, and
whined nervously.
A thought struck me!
A quill will save me!
I looked towards the parrot.
Ah! deep-laid plan to rob me of my liberty!
[Illustration: BULGER HOLDING SLIM LIM DOWN, WHILE I CUT A PEN ON HIS
LITTLE FINGER NAIL.]
The bird had been removed from the room.
The brush I had fashioned—the pigment, too, were gone!
I could feel my knees grow weak.
My breath came short and quick.
A cold chill crept over me.
There lay the Lord of the Peacock Feather flat on his back, but as I
turned my glance quickly upon him, I was sure that one of his eyes was
half open and fixed upon me, while a faint ripple of a smile played in
the corners of his mouth most maliciously.
“Ah! man of guile!” thought I, “thou shalt not triumph, for I am about
to shatter this last one of thy fetters, which thou dost think is
already so firmly riveted upon my wrists. Thou art wise and thou art
subtle, but not so wise and not so subtle as the little baron who stands
beside thee!”
“To me, Bulger!” I cried.
With a single bound he reached my side.
“Take thy place there!” I continued, pointing to Slim Lim’s breast, “and
if my enemy moves but the poor space of a narrow inch, do thy duty!”
Bulger sprang lightly upon Slim Lim’s breast, and with a low growl gave
him to understand that there must be no trifling.
Then my turn came to act.
Whipping my pocket-knife out, I laid hold of Slim Lim’s hand, and in
less than a minute’s time I cut a fine pen, with an excellent nib, on
the end of the long nail of his little finger.
Bulger looked on very much interested, giving a low growl every time
Slim Lim showed the slightest indication of resenting the treatment to
which I was subjecting him.
My ink?
That was a simple matter. Pricking my thumb with the point of my knife,
I let a few drops of the crimson fluid collect on the palm of my hand.
Then, reaching out for one of the paper mats, I dipped the pen which now
graced the little finger of the Lord of the Peacock Feather, and set my
signature on the uncolored side of the mat in a neat, round hand.
Bidding Bulger descend from his post of honor, I now held out my hand to
his excellency, the Taou-tai, with these words:
“Rise, Sir Knight of the Plain Red Button; be generous as thou art
noble; I have triumphed! Forgive my audacity. In my place, thou wouldst
have done likewise. Let thy enemy become thy friend. In birth, noble; in
letters, learned; in arts, skilled; he is more worthy of thy friendship
than deserving of thy enmity!”
Slim Lim seized my hand, and sprang to his feet with a good-humored
smile on his broad face.
“By the sacred countenance of the Child of the Sun, Lord of all the
Orders, thou art very clever for thy size!” he exclaimed, as he
conducted me to a seat.
The ladies of the Taou-tai’s household, who had retreated
horror-stricken to their apartments, were now summoned to appear.
Tea was brewed and the Lord of the Peacock Feather insisted upon serving
me with his own hands.
I was almost crazed with joy at thought of setting out for home under
such happy auspices.
Bulger made friends with Slim Lim, and everybody forgave everybody.
His excellency, the Taou-tai, prevailed upon me to pass the night under
his roof, assuring me that in the morning I should have a special
escort, his own porte-chaise, and hampers packed in his own kitchen for
my refreshment while on my journey to the seaport.
Until a late hour Slim Lim, the ladies of his household, Bulger and I
gave ourselves up to feasting and merrymaking. In the morning I took my
leave of the Taou-tai and his household in the happiest frame of mind.
A short week found me on board of a good staunch vessel bound for home
again.
As the sails filled and we sped out of the harbor, I drew Bulger to my
breast and the tears fell thick and fast. He licked my hands and face,
and fixed his large, lustrous eyes full upon me.
He could not, and I would not, speak.
CHAPTER IX.
How I grew weary of travel and resolved to settle down for a long
rest. A quiet life however soon tires me, and I desire to set out
again. Bulger’s opposition. How I deceived him. We take our
departure. Encounter a terrible storm. Are shipwrecked on a
beautiful Island. Made prisoners by the Round Bodies. Description of
this strange people. We are condemned to die. Saved by Rōlâ-Bōlâ,
the Roundbody Princess. More about the strange beings. The Princess
falls in love with me. Preparations for marriage. The ceremony on
the Great Plain. The sudden storm. Consternation of the Round
Bodies. I lash Bulger and myself to a platform. The storm-king
catches up the wooden structure and bears it away. Transported to
the main land on the wings of the wind. We are gently dropped in a
grain field not a thousand miles from home. Our unspeakable joy.
[Illustration: A GOOD MOTHER ROUNDBODY AMUSING HER CHILDREN.]
At this period of my life I had firmly resolved to settle down and enjoy
a good, long rest.
Bulger and I both needed it. We were tired of strange sights, strange
lands and strange people.
“Why should we not,” thought I, “enjoy our world-wide fame?”
From the very ends of the earth, visitors flocked in thousands to my
House Wonderful to see my treasures, my extraordinary curiosities, and
above all, my remarkable dog, Bulger, the sole companion of my strange
and eventful life, my guide, my friend, my counsellor, my all. Scarcely,
however, were the valleys green again after a long and bitterly cold
winter—so cold in fact that I drank nothing but iced tea for full three
months, as it was utterly impossible to carry the pot from the stove to
the table quickly enough to prevent its freezing,—than my thoughts
turned to the pleasures and dangers of a roving life, and I longed to be
up and off again in quest of new adventures.
As I roused myself from my reverie I found Bulger sitting at my feet
with his kind, lustrous eyes fixed full upon my face. He had read my
thoughts as correctly and easily as I might the words of a child’s
primer, and as he saw that I was wide awake and in full possession of my
faculties, he seized hold of my sleeve and whined most piteously.
Dear, faithful animal! Oh, that I had heeded thy remonstrance!
But no, it was not to be.
Unwilling to fret and worry good Bulger, I now resolved to make use of a
faculty which had no place in his nature—namely hypocrisy.
When he was in my presence I pretended to be perfectly happy and
contented, going about laughing, singing and dancing; but the very
moment he had quitted the room I set to work making ready for another
journey.
At last all was ready.
When Bulger entered the house and set eyes upon boxes and packages, he
lifted his head and gave one long, dismal howl of entreaty; but seeing
that my purpose was fixed, like a true and faithful servitor, he bounded
to my side and licked my outstretched hand, as much as to say: “Thy road
is my road, thy fate is my fate!”
In a few hours we were on our way to the sea-board.
My heart was light, my spirits buoyant and gay.
“What is life?” I cried. “Am I a worm to vegetate in mold and darkness?
Nay! I am a creature of intelligence, of mind, of soul; the air, the
sunlight, the boundless universe, are mine; I will enjoy them.”
Luckily I had not long to wait in the seaport, for a good, staunch
vessel was nearly loaded.
Learning that she was bound for the Southern ocean, I at once ordered my
effects to be set on board, and before the new moon had lost its
crescent I was on the high seas with my faithful Bulger by my side and a
bounding heart beating joyful music in my breast.
For a while all went well.
Bulger seemed to have gotten over his strange presentiment of evil and
romped about the deck with all his old-time love of mirth and jollity.
But upon me, however, after our good vessel was a few days out, there
came a strange feeling never experienced before.
In my dreams, light and darkness alternately oppressed me; the one more
dazzling than the electric flash, the other deeper than earthly night.
Our seventh day out, at high noon, suddenly it seemed as if some mighty
hand had drawn a vast and impenetrable curtain of inky blackness over
the entire sky. It almost appeared as if some terrible demon of the
skies had suddenly blown out the very sun itself.
Bulger, with one bound, gained my side, and, fastening his teeth in my
sash, moaned piteously, as was his custom when he thought my life in
danger. I stooped and stroked his head. The palm of my hand felt the hot
tears that were streaming from his eyes. Just then the vessel gave a
lurch, and Bulger’s weight tore his teeth from their hold in my sash,
and in an instant he was separated from me. I heard his supplicating
bark in a distant part of the ship.
“Bulger! Bulger!” I cried, “here! here! this way, to me, to me!” and in
my desperation at thought of losing my loved companion, I darted in the
direction of the barking, regardless of the black night which enveloped
us, and stumbling over some object fell headlong on the deck.
My fall stunned me.
I rose upon my elbow and passed my hand over my eyes like a person just
waking from a deep sleep.
Sulphurous flames now darted from the four quarters of the heavens, and
crash upon crash of deafening thunder rattled and pealed over our heads.
A terrific blast of wind caught up our ship like a cockle shell and
hurled it along through the seething, bubbling, maddened waters at such
a fearful rate that every instant it seemed as if she must go to the
bottom.
I know not how long we were driven along at this furious speed, for I
was half dazed by the roar of the warring elements and blinded by the
continuous flashing of the lightning. To my horror, the sound of
terrible blows, dull but awful in their energy, now fell upon my ears.
We had struck upon the rocks, and our ship was pounding out her own life
beneath my very feet.
Instinctively I called upon my faithful Bulger.
But not the voice of brazen throat and lungs could overcome the din of
that tempest.
The intense darkness was now dissipated by showers of meteoric fire,
which fell like ten times ten thousand bursting rockets as far as the
eye could reach. And then deep rifts broke in the inky mantle of the
heavens and showers of hail stones, each as large as a goose egg,
rattled with the fury of musketry upon the deck.
At that moment a lurch of the vessel had rolled me under a huge copper
kettle or my life would have been beaten out of me.
“Farewell, dear Bulger!” I cried, in a tear-strangled voice, “this
terrible discharge from heaven’s frozen artillery will surely end thy
life! Farewell, faithful dog; a long farewell!”
Gradually this terrifying shower of huge hail-stones lessened its fury,
and strange to say, in doing so the falling stones drew most wonderful
music from the great copper kettle which covered me like a huge buckler.
The wind moaned a deep bass and the pounding of the vessel kept time
like some gigantic drum.
Although half-dead with fear, I listened with ecstatic pleasure to this
awful concert played by the warring forces of nature. When it had
ceased, I looked out from my hiding-place.
Not a living soul was in sight. Every seaman and officer had perished
beneath the strokes of the lightning, been crushed by the fall of hail,
or swept by the resistless gale into the seething ocean.
So calm did it grow that I was beginning to take heart, when with a
terrific swish and whirr, as if slit by some gigantic knife, the clouds
parted and from the rent rushed blinding drifts of snow with such a wild
and startling sweep and whirl that my knees swote together and I fell
upon my face in utter despair.
But look! Had heaven slain the monster of the storm?
The snow was blood-red.
The sight froze the very marrow of my bones.
I rolled over upon my back; my senses fled; death seemed to have
overtaken me.
How long I lay in this stupor I know not, but when I awoke the storm had
spent its fury, the sun was sending down its brightest rays, the air was
pleasantly cool and bracing.
Slowly my strength came back to me, and I emerged from my hiding-place,
crawling on my hands and feet, for I was too weak to stand upright at
first. Little by little, however, I took heart, and, as I felt my blood
go tingling thro’ my veins, I made an effort and rose to my feet.
Yes, my worst fears had been realized.
Not a living being had survived the storm.
As I walked upon the blood-red snow, every foot-fall brought forth most
piteous sighs and groans.
“What dread warning,” thought I, “does this mysterious murmuring give
me? What is the meaning of these sobs and moans which issue from these
crimson crystals beneath the pressure of my feet? Am I walking upon the
blood of my ancestors?”
Clinging to the frozen sheets, I crept slowly along the red-encrusted
deck.
But stay!
Hark!
Are my ears playing me still more fantastic tricks?
No! I’m wholly and entirely myself now, and as sure as the blood of the
Trumps’ courses through my veins, that bark came from my faithful dog!
“Bulger lives! Bulger lives!” I cried out in accents of the wildest joy;
and breaking away from the hold of fear and trepidation, I rushed boldly
forward, calling out “I’m coming, Bulger, I’m coming!” With reckless
courage I sprang from one frozen plank to another, until I stood upon
the quarter-deck. There, upon the hatch, sat, or rather lay, Bulger, for
his life was almost extinct. His teeth were locked upon the straps of a
life-preserver which he, ever thoughtful of my safety, was about to
bring to me at the first outbreak of the storm, when its fury forced him
to seek refuge under a water-cask, as his tracks on the snow indicated.
As quickly as my stiffened limbs would permit, I bounded forward, and
throwing myself on my knees, in the crimson snow,—which sent forth most
heart-rending groans and sighs at the pressure of my body upon its
blood-red surface—I clasped Bulger in my arms and our cries of joy
mingled,—our tears ran together.
All my suffering was forgotten in that moment, for Bulger was alive, his
head was clasped to my breast.
The winds had now fallen, the sea had grown calm again, and I determined
at once to quit the wreck if possible, for the setting sun revealed to
me the shores of a beautiful land at the mouth of a small but extremely
picturesque river, whose banks were rich in palm-trees, fruit-trees and
flowering shrubs.
I lost no time in lowering one of the boats which had happily escaped
with slight injuries, and being an expert seaman, I found no difficulty
in rigging a tackle and lowering first, Bulger, and then myself into the
boat, and paddling leisurely towards the shore.
Here I drew the boat high and dry on the beach, and calling out gayly to
faithful Bulger to follow me, I clambered up the bank and pushed boldly
forward to survey the fair land upon which a strange fate had set our
feet.
Now, for the first, I became conscious of the terrible hunger that was
gnawing at my vitals—a fact which proved to me that I must have lain in
an unconscious state beneath the huge kettle for at least two days if
not more.
Bulger raised his kind eyes to me, and then bounding off to one of the
fruit trees, ran around it, barking joyfully.
I shook one of the branches and the ripe fruit fell in abundance to the
ground.
Its odor was so delicious that although it was unknown to me, I had no
hesitation in partaking of it most freely, Bulger following my example,
a fact which convinced me that it could not be otherwise than wholesome.
A long, deep draught from a limpid spring refreshed us both greatly; but
as the sun was sinking rapidly, and as I now began to feel the effects
of the rack, strain and weariness resulting from the terrible experience
of the past day or so, I called out to Bulger:
“Come, dear, faithful fellow, let us seek out a fit place to pass the
night; some nook shielded by wide-spreading branches, where there is
plenty of soft boughs to make a bed with.”
As the country was quite level, I sighted a grove at some distance, and
thither we directed our steps.
It had now grown quite dark. We quickened our pace, for I was too
prudent a traveler to care to expose myself to the night dew.
As we drew near the grove there appeared to be a low wall on one side of
it.
“This way, Bulger,” said I, “this long line of boulders will protect us
from the night winds, if any should rise. Let us creep under its edge
and lay our tired limbs down on the soft grass.” He looked up with
softened gaze and gave one or two consenting wags to his tail.
Nestling close under the edges of several of the largest of the
boulders, at a point where they formed a sort of sheltered nook, we soon
fell into a deep sleep, I sitting half upright and Bulger pillowing his
head upon my lap.
Once or twice in the course of the night I awoke to find my brow beaded
with perspiration. I put my hand on Bulger; he too was awake, and his
tongue was lolling from his mouth. Both of us seemed to have been seized
with a strange fever. The direst forebodings took possession of me. Had
we landed upon a shore along which lurked some deadly miasm? Possibly we
might not live to see the light of another day. It required all my
self-control to banish such terrible thoughts from my mind. But so tired
was I to the very bone that I soon fell asleep again, reassured as I was
by the example set me by Bulger. It was, however, a fitful slumber, for
the heat of our bodies had now become so great that the very ground upon
which we were lying felt warm to my touch. At length, to my joy, I
caught the first, faint glimpse of the dawn. I was now in a perfect glow
from head to foot. And so was Bulger. Suddenly it burst upon my mind
that possibly we might have lain down in a volcanic region; that,
mayhap, fierce, subterranean fires were raging beneath our very heads. I
rose to my knees with a bound, and placed both of my hands upon the
nearest boulder. Fancy my horror upon feeling that its surface was not
only hot, but that it yielded to the pressure of my hands, and gave
forth groans, hissings and rumblings. In an instant I was on my feet.
Bulger did not wait to be called. Determined to verify my
suspicions,—for discretion was always a reasonable part of my valor, I
hastened from one boulder to another within the circle where we had been
lying, and pressed my hands upon them with all my strength. Deep,
rumbling and hissing sounds came forth from the ground everywhere about
me, and seemed to awaken responsive cries far and near, as if one giant
tossing in his sleep disturbed the slumbers of his fellows.
“Bulger!” I cried, “we stand upon the ground of death; this is but the
outer wall of a crater, it is aglow with subterranean heat; only the
merest shell—so thin that it yields to my pressure—is between us and
destruction. Fly, fly, faithful dog!”
The morning sun now burst forth with a flood of golden light.
As far as my eye could reach, extended this same boulder-like parapet,
shutting out my gaze from the abyss through which the volcano was now
about to spout its liquid fire; for all at once the boulders began to
rock from side to side, giving forth such dreadful rumblings that I knew
the eruption was to be preceded by an earthquake.
A sickening fear seized hold of me; my legs bent like pipe stems,
beneath the weight of my body.
Bulger saw that his loved master was chained to the ground.
He refused to abandon me.
The whole wall, as far as my eye could reach, now trembled and rocked,
threatening to engulf us every instant.
With a mighty effort I pulled myself together, and, followed by Bulger,
darted away.
The measure of my horror was not complete.
With terrific rumblings, gurglings, hissing and groaning, the whole row
of rocks now danced in violent agitation, and then, like so many
gigantic balls, rolled by huge monsters at play, these boulders,
propelled with fearful violence by the outburst of the volcano—as I
supposed—came thundering down after our retreating forms, threatening us
with a terrible death.
Bulger, running at my side, ever and anon sent out a mournful whine, as
if to bid me an eternal farewell.
“Fly, Bulger! Faster, faster, good Bulger!” I called to him, as the roar
and rumble of the advancing wall increased.
Now each and every boulder seemed urged on its course by some mysterious
force of its own.
As I glanced over my shoulder, I could see that they were gaining in
velocity, bounding, springing, now in single file, now three abreast,
while the frightful and unearthly din and rumble went ever on
increasing.
They were gaining upon us.
My legs again threatened to bend under the weight of my body and topple
it over to certain and awful death, when a last glance revealed to me
the terrible truth.
“Bulger! they are alive!”
A sharp, despairing yelp came from my poor dog.
“They’re alive, I tell you! Some legion of monsters, devils, for aught I
know, escaped from the depths of Tartarus, intent to roll over us and
crush the life from our puny bodies!”
Again we redoubled our efforts.
“For your life, Bulger!” I gasped, “for your life! Look! the wood, the
wood!”
He caught my meaning, and gave a sharp, encouraging bark.
But no, it was useless.
My strength had been used to its last poor throb.
It grew dark before my eyes.
A palsying fear laid hold of my heart.
My limbs stiffened.
[Illustration: BULGER’S AND MY WILD FLIGHT WHEN PURSUED BY THE
ROUNDBODIES.]
I threw one last glance upon Bulger.
He answered me with a look of most tender affection, and then we both
tripped, staggered, stumbled, fell headlong, side by side, while
seemingly ten thousand living boulders, with awful shrieks, groans, and
gurgling sounds, hung like a shadow over us for an instant, and all was
black as night.
I felt my protuberant brow ground into the earth and the last bit of
life crushed out of me.
My last though was:
“Bulger! O, Bulger! What a terrible death! But O, what a kind Providence
to let us die together!”
* * * * *
“Rise! stunted, misshapen thing! Rise! thou wafer man, thou slice of
humanity with cleft edges!”
It was not so much the thundering tones of this strange, human monster
which caused me to sit bolt upright, rub my eyes and make a superhuman
effort to collect my sadly scattered senses, as it was the caresses of
my faithful Bulger, who was running from one side of me to the other,
showering kisses upon my face and hands and whining piteously.
After a hard struggle the shadows were lifted from my eyes. My heart
sank within me at sight of that wall of living boulders encircling us,
with their fierce visages turned, half in wonder, half in rage, upon
the, to them, two funny beings as utterly unlike themselves as each
other.
But love is always stronger than fear.
Stretching out my arms and drawing Bulger close to my breast, I cried
out:
“O, Bulger! do I really live? Am I not still the object of some demon’s
sportive malice?”
At sound of my voice the round-bodied monsters broke out into a hideous
chorus of deep, rumbling laughter, during which their bodies rolled from
side to side.
Then, as they pressed wildly forward, with fierce ejaculations of anger
or impatience, it seemed as if Bulger and I had been only saved from one
death to be set face to face with another.
“Alas! is there no power,” thought I, “to save us from the furious
impatience of these reckless monsters?”
Suddenly a terrible voice sounded loud above the din:
“Roll backward, Round bodies! What meaneth this unseemly impatience in
the presence of your King?”
In an instant, the round-bodied monsters rolled silently backwards.
All was calm again.
Turning to his neighbor, the King exclaimed, with a gurgling laugh:
“Why, by my royal girth, its voice is all the world like one of the toy
pipes of our baby prince!”
“‘Its? Its?’” I repeated, with fire flashing from my upturned eyes.
“Know, Sir Monster, that I am not a ‘thing,’ but a perfect man; a baron
by birth, a scholar by profession, a traveler by choice.”
At this outburst on my part, the crowd of living balls again sent up a
deep, rumbling peel of laughter.
“Silence!” commanded the King, and then he continued: “Well, well, then,
baron,—whatever that may be—but I think I ought to say ‘little baron,’
for by my royal roundness, thou art a wee, puny being! Let it be as thou
sayest, but tell me, I implore thee, what is this walking box on four
legs, which nature seems to have left unfinished?”
And so saying, he raised his terrible hand with fingers strong enough to
crush me as I might a puff-ball, and waved it toward Bulger.
This contemptuous sneer did not escape Bulger.
He broke out into a volume of sharp, angry barks, and showed his white
teeth in the most threatening manner.
Upon which the monsters rolled back in mock terror and consternation,
crying out:
“The King! The King! Save the King! The walking box is filled with
explosives; it may fly into pieces!”
When the hubbub was over, and the King had commanded silence, I stepped
boldly forward and exclaimed:
“Unfinished! What meanest thou, thou globe-shaped monster?”
The term “globe” seemed to please his majesty very much.
A great, wrinkled smile overran his huge countenance.
“Mean?” he ejaculated, with a deep, gurgling, chuckling laugh. “Mean?
why, little baron—whatever that may be—see for thyself. Has not Nature
left useless flaps at one end of the box, and a still more useless bit
of rope hanging down from the other?”
This insulting allusion to Bulger’s ears and tail seemed to be perfectly
understood by him, for he fairly bristled with rage, and advanced upon
the round-bodied monster, snapping, snarling, and showing his teeth.
Whereupon the deep, rumbling laughter again broke forth, and the cry,
“Save the King! Save the King!” went up in mock earnestness.
Having succeeded in appeasing Bulger’s anger by means of a few
affectionate words and tender caresses, I determined to make inquiry as
to our whereabouts, and to ascertain who the strange beings were among
whom capricious fate had so unceremoniously cast Bulger and me.
“Where are we, ball-shaped giant?” I inquired in my strongest voice,
“and who are you?”
Again the monster screwed his leathery face up in a deep, wrinkled
smile. The reason of his good will, as I afterwards learned, arose from
the fact that I had bestowed the terms “globe,” “round,” “ball-shaped,”
etc., upon him, for it seemed that these wonderfully formed beings were
extremely vain of their roundness, and that nothing could be uttered
more pleasing and complimentary to them than to make use of such words
and expressions as “ball,” “orb,” “sphere,” “round-bodied,”
“bullet-shaped,” etc.; that in their land, the greatest dignities honors
and titles of nobility were awarded those whose bodies showed most
perfect roundness; that in proportion as one’s body deviated from the
shape of a true sphere, he became degraded and excluded from society.
To such wretched subjects the King assigned the performance of all mean
labor. They were the “squares,” or outcasts, whom anybody might insult
or even enslave with impunity. The richer ones were sometimes able to
hide their deformity by means of padding, and in this manner conceal
their uneven motion in rolling from the keen eyes of the King; but the
poor ones, by their inability to correct their physical defects, at once
attracted the King’s attention, when he caused his people to roll up and
down before him, while he kept up a searching lookout for “wabblers” or
uneven rollers.
“Well, little baron—whatever that may be,” replied the King, “or shall I
call thee Wafer-man with cleft edges? Know, then, that I am King
Bô-gôô-gôô, Monarch of the Roundbodies; that these, are some of my
subjects.
“Know, furthermore, little baron—whatever that may be—that this island
is my kingdom, in which no one rules saving me, and that unless it may
please my royal daughter Rōlâ-Bōlâ to keep thee and thy attendant, the
walking box with cord and flaps, as curiosities to amuse her, thou and
thy companion perish at sundown, for, little baron—whatever that may
be—it is my royal will, and so it was my father’s, and his father’s, and
so back a thousand years, that no living creature shall set foot upon
the shores of my domain and not pay for his temerity by being crushed to
death, literally ground into the soil, until he become a very part of
it!”
Bulger appeared to grasp the meaning of this fierce speech, which was
delivered in thundering tones, and accompanied by hideous contortions of
the speaker’s great, round visage, flaming as the crimson disc of a
tropical sun in the western sky, and followed by an outburst of grunts,
groans and gurglings from the assembled Roundbodies; and, in spite of
his inborn courage, his tail fell between his legs and he slunk nearer
to me with a low, anxious whine.
But when good Bulger saw the calm expression of my countenance, he
quickly recovered himself; his tail resumed its graceful curl, and as I
faced King Bô-gôô-gôô with an unruffled exterior, to make reply to the
latter’s horrible threat, Bulger, too, placed himself at my side with a
defiant air.
“Most gracious Sphere! Most royal Globe! Roundest monarch of the great,
round world! true, I have set foot on the shores of thy domain, but it
was not, most majestic Sphericity, through choice. A fearful storm, in
which the warring elements seemed bent upon the destruction of the
universe, during which the great ocean hurled itself against the walls
of heaven as if to beat out the very stars, while the wide-mouthed gale
swooped down upon this petty earth with seeming intent to swallow it and
all it contained—?”
I could speak no further.
The Roundbodies broke in upon me with such dismal groans and cries that
I stood as if rooted to the earth.
“Ah!” thought I, “they, too, felt the terrible blows of that storm-demon
which so nearly beat out the life from mine and from Bulger’s bodies!”
Waving my hand as a signal for silence, I proceeded:
“I bow before the will of thy spherical Majesty, whatever it may be! At
the same time, I would beg to call the attention of your Imperial
Roundness to the fact that, in the systems of law of all the nations of
the globe, a man may not be held responsible for an act which he is made
to commit by a force or strength greater than his own.”
I saw that my flattery was telling upon King Bô-gôô-gôô, so I proceeded
to make a still further application of the same remedy:
“However, most Royal Globe and perfect Sphere of Strength and Beauty,
if, in thy great wisdom, thou dost decide that we must die, crushed
beneath the weight of thy people’s bodies, so be it! Great ball-shaped
monarch, I am but a bit and shred of humanity, and how may I dare to
oppose the will of your right royal Sphericity?”
King Bô-gôô-gôô smiled till his huge double teeth could be seen
glittering in his cavernous mouth, like white rocks in a half-lighted
pit, and his body swayed from one side to another in his gigantic glee.
“Send for the royal princess!” he roared.
In a few seconds, in answer to his command, a Roundbody came rolling
across the plain with the swiftness of the wind.
The crowd of retainers fell back, and the new-comer arrested her flight
by the side of King Bô-gôô-gôô.
I could not see that she was a bit more beautiful than those about her,
although she was a royal princess.
True, she was a globe of smaller girth, her face was somewhat less
repellent and beneath a long and heavy fringe of lashes, I caught
glimpses of a pair of good-natured, roguish eyes, and my perfect
knowledge of human and brute nature told me at a glance that if I could
but gain the good will of that strange being, Bulger and I would be
safe!
“My dear, little round papa,” cried Rōlâ-Bōlâ—for such proved to be her
name, “Where did those funny things come from? Are they really alive?
Wont they bite or sting? What do they eat? What shall I keep them in?
Will you make me a cage for them? Oh, I am so, so, so, so, so, so, so,
so, so glad!” and she bounded about, now this way, now that, now into
the air like an animated rubber ball, drumming like a partridge all the
while.
Behold us, then, Bulger and me, prisoners in the land of the
Roundbodies, with the Princess Rōlâ-Bōlâ as our keeper!
Hope sank low within our poor hearts.
I dared not breathe a word in opposition to the will of King Bô-gôô-gôô
or the caprice of Rōlâ-Bōlâ lest the order should be revoked.
At least, in the keeping of the Princess Rōlâ-Bōlâ, we would be more
likely to receive gentle treatment, and, what was almost a matter of
life and death, we should have great chances of making our escape from
the island of King Bô-gôô-gôô.
We were commanded to follow the Princess.
As Bulger and I started after Rōlâ-Bōlâ, with a brisk gait, the very
clouds fairly snapt asunder, so great was the shout of laughter which
the Roundbodies sent up.
Seemingly, it had not occurred to them until that moment how
ridiculously different our mode of locomotion was from theirs.
“Look! look! O, King!” they cried, “he can neither roll nor hop! See how
he edges along, leaning first on one foot and then on the other! He
walks on his toe nails! Mark his companion, too! What monsters of
clumsiness! How they rock and wabble! Why doth he not spring? Why doth
he pound the earth as if he were beating flax?”
To all this mocking and jeering, Bulger and I turned a deaf ear,
following our mistress, who ever and anon, turned her soft, black,
mischievous eyes encouragingly upon us, as her head came uppermost.
Imagine our surprise when Rōlâ-Bōlâ halted at the beginning of a path
having a gentle descent, and said:
“This is the entrance to the royal habitation. Follow me and fear
nothing.”
In a few moments we found ourselves in the outer room of a vast
underground dwelling, consisting of corridors, chambers, dormitories,
banquet-halls and arenas.
All the habitations of the Roundbodies are subterranean.
Why?
This you shall know anon.
Bulger and I were conducted to very pleasant quarters—well-lighted, as
were all the rooms of the palace, by means of vast slabs of rock
crystal, of which the roof was made, by a “square” or “lôb-bô” as he is
called in the language of the Roundbodies, that is, one not perfectly
round in form, and hence degraded to the position of serving man.
Doubtless, long before this, the reader has grown impatient at my
silence concerning the strange beings among whom Bulger and I now found
ourselves prisoners.
Who were the Roundbodies?
Know then, gentle reader, that they were—mark well my words—the sole
living creatures on the island of Gô-gû-lâh, upon which a strange fate
had cast us. Whether or not any other beings had ever inhabited the
island was unknown to them.
I found, upon conversing with their learned men, that there was a legend
in existence among them—dim and shadowy in its details, from the long
flight of centuries that it had come down through—that many thousands of
years ago they had been quite like human beings, who walk upright, with
bodies almost, if not quite, as long as mine; but that owing to the
unvarying recurrence of terrible storms, of wind, rain, hail and snow,
accompanied by the bursting of deafening thunderbolts, in fact, such as
I had experienced, which swept over the island twelve times in the year,
coming and going with a regularity as astonishing as their force is
terrific, everything upright had long ago been swept from the land; that
their ancestors, yielding to the irresistible forces of Nature, had
gradually bent their bodies before these resistless winds, until even
the time when they walked upright had been forgotten.
This was but the first change wrought by the forces which surrounded
them. When overtaken by these wild winds, they soon learned that their
only safety lay in rolling themselves up as much into the shape of balls
as possible, so that the tornado would be powerless to pick them up and
hurl them to destruction.
Another transformation now began to make itself apparent.
Their bodies, as centuries came and went, little by little, took on the
rounded form they then had.
Still clinging to the desperate chance for life on these storm-swept
plains, they drew down their heads and pressed in their limbs until
these had made recesses for them, as some tortoises draw their legs so
closely to their bodies that the eye fails to distinguish even the
outline of the limb.
The last change that came upon these globe-shaped people was a very
natural one: their arms took on a greater development of superhuman
strength, while their legs grew shorter and shorter, until they
consisted of little more than two broad, flexible feet, which they made
use of mainly to propel their round bodies like huge balls across the
vast plains of their island home.
Now, while they still dread the terrible blasts, yet is it rather an
inherited fear, for at last they have become the true children of the
gale.
If it should happen to blow in the direction of their homes, they simply
allow it to help them on their way by rolling them across the plain.
While, now and then, a lôb-bô, or “square” Roundbody, so to speak, would
be blown into the ocean, yet for nearly a century not a single, genuine
Roundbody had been caught up in the pitiless blast. As well might the
wind attempt to pick up the round stones of the ocean strand.
One of the things which early attracted my attention in King
Bô-gôô-gôô’s palace, was the hangings, apparently of the softest
leather, worked in mosaic patterns of transcendent beauty.
Imagine my surprise when told by the gentle princess Rōlâ-Bōlâ that they
were simply the natural leaves from the various trees growing on the
island, untouched by dye or stain of any kind.
They were so tough that my strength sufficed not to tear one in two.
Noticing my wide-opened eyes turned inquiringly upon her, the gentle
Rōlâ-Bōlâ cried out with a soft, low gurgle:
“Go into the royal garden, Tôô-tôô-lō; that is, little ‘flute-man,’ and
see for thyself.”
Now, for the first, I learned the secret of the presence of such
beautiful trees and shrubs upon this storm-swept land. Every leaf was as
thick and as strong as leather, and the trunks and boughs were exactly
of the nature of India rubber, so that, with a small bit which I brought
home with me in one of my pockets, I could erase pencil-marks with the
greatest ease.
To such foliage as this a tornado had no terrors.
When the storm struck these trees they went to the ground, until it had
spent its fury. In a few hours the tropical sun lifted them again, and
the beauty of their foliage was quite unharmed.
To return to the poor princess Rōlâ-Bōlâ:
Bulger began to fret and worry beneath the strain of our captivity.
I was constantly on the alert for a chance to escape, but none offered.
In fact, we were, I began to fear, prisoners for life.
True, it was a pleasant captivity, for the gentle Rōlâ-Bōlâ almost
killed us with dainty feeding, and our only toil was dancing, singing
and capering for her amusement.
Night and day, the sole gateway of the royal habitation was guarded by a
triple row of round-bodied sentinels, so fierce-visaged, so
mighty-handed, that my heart grew sick as I gazed upon them.
To add to my despair, I now made a discovery which seemed to seal my
fate forever—the princess Rōlâ-Bōlâ had become enamored of me!
What to me, at first, had seemed but a playful trick, to wit, her
pinching my little toe ever and anon, had, as I was casually informed by
one of the learned Roundbodies, in the course of a discussion with him,
a terrible significance.
It was a solemn declaration of love!
Oh! miserable me!
And a declaration, too, which, coming from a woman to a man, it was
certain, sure, inevitable death to ignore!
And yet I might be saved!
For the custom—made sacred by the observance of long ages—required the
man to pursue the woman, who pretended to be frightened and extremely
solicitous of escaping him, and while revolving with the same velocity
as she, to pinch her little toe in return.
This ended the matter.
The couple was now betrothed.
It was not in the power of man to publish bans of greater strength.
If the man gave one pinch, the marriage was solemnized the following
day; if two, the second day after, and so on.
But I was not a Roundbody!
How could I possibly comply with the ancient custom of the land?
Ah! Woman! Woman! it matters not whether thou belongest to the
Roundbodies or to the Longbodies, in affairs of the heart thy ingenuity
and subtlety overmatch the philosophy of man!
When it was made known to the princess Rōlâ-Bōlâ that the royal
counselors had, after mature deliberation, reached the conclusion that
the laws of the land—made sacred by the observance of ages—forbade any
such union contemplated by her, she flew into a towering or, rather, I
should call it, a bounding passion, for, from one end of her spacious
salon to the other, sidewise and lengthwise, she bounded about like a
great ball bouncing under the play of an invisible bat.
Alternately she wept, laughed, scolded and threatened.
But it made little difference how she began her tirades, they all had
the same ending:
“I say, I shall marry Tôô-tôô-lō!”
King Bô-gôô-gôô, thinking to pacify his daughter, sent her messengers
bearing the most beautiful presents; but she received them with disdain,
scattering them on the floor.
Things went on this way for several days.
King Bô-gôô-gôô was horrified to find that the princess had eaten
nothing for forty-eight hours, and that she was actually losing her
beautifully round shape, for which she had so justly been famous.
Bulger saw plainly that something awful was going on, and he, too,
became so worked up that he refused to eat or drink.
I passed most of my time going from his room to the princess
Rōlâ-Bōlâ’s, endeavoring to persuade them to take food.
But all in vain.
One morning the King’s daughter met me with demonstrations of the
wildest delight, laughing, singing, bounding and rolling about like mad.
So beside herself was she that, forgetting her great weight and my puny
build, she rolled against me and sent me flying like a little ten-pin
struck by a monstrous ball.
By actual measurement I was thrown thirty feet, but, fortunately, struck
against a heavy hanging which broke my fall.
Bulger gave a piteous howl.
He seemed to get an idea that Rōlâ-Bōlâ had struck me purposely.
Well, in a word, the cause of this frantic joy was simply this: The
princess had finally thought out a solution to the terrible problem
which had been for weeks torturing her mind.
Briefly stated, it was as follows:
I should be placed in the boughs of a tree just high enough to clear her
body. She then was to roll under me, and at the right moment, I was to
lean downward and pinch her little toe when it came uppermost.
In vain I assured her that I should grow dizzy and fall headlong to the
ground, breaking my neck, or, at very least, dislocating it.
But no, I need have no fear.
She would watch over me.
She would turn and catch me in time.
The royal counsellors were at once called together.
The plan of the princess Rōlâ-Bōlâ was laid before them.
At first they sent up a deep and ominous rumble of disagreement.
But Rōlâ-Bōlâ’s messengers were at hand with most costly presents, and
it all ended in their finding an almost similar case in their books,
where a wounded prince, who was quite unable to roll an inch, had been
placed upon an elevated platform in order that his round-bodied
sweetheart might pass beneath and he be enabled to pinch her little toe
while it was in the air at the highest point from the ground.
Seeing that it would be useless to make further opposition, I now
submitted with a good grace, for it was plain to me that once the
husband of the princess Rōlâ-Bōlâ I should become, to a certain extent,
one of the family and be accorded greater liberty, by means of which I
confidently hoped to make my escape from the land of the Roundbodies.
Preparations for the marriage were now begun with extraordinary haste,
in order to have all things ready for the first feast-day in the
calendar.
As the time drew near, however, I somewhat lost my courage.
“Was I not,” I asked myself, “simply lending my aid in forging my own
fetters, in laying chains upon my neck, which would render it impossible
for Bulger and me ever to set eyes again upon our beloved home?”
I became very nervous, and found it impossible to catch a wink of sleep.
At last I resolved to postpone my fate, at least for several days.
And this was my scheme:—
I should explain to the fair Rōlâ-Bōlâ how utterly impossible it would
be for me, in my fright and anxiety, to get my thumb and finger upon her
little toe at all, as she revolved swiftly beneath me.
I therefore would implore her to roll very slowly.
And then my scheme would be to seize her foot, hold it fast, and pinch
the little toe a score of times at least!
Each pinch would be a clear gain of a day!
Our wedding-day dawned at last.
The King’s wine was dealt out to the people with liberal hand.
Mirth and gayety resounded on all sides.
The skies were one vast expanse of cloudless blue.
The flowering shrubs breathed out the most delightful odors.
The air was deliciously balmy.
The painted foliage hung in graceful festoons, unmoved by even a breath
of air.
To his evident disgust, Bulger was decorated with a necklace of leaf
mosaic of most delicate workmanship.
Had I not reproved him with a shake of the head, he would quickly have
shaken off this useless adornment.
Vast crowds of the Roundbodies covered the plain as far as the eye could
reach.
Children rolled in troops after their parents, like marbles chasing up a
cannon ball.
At times I observed that the mothers, in order to amuse their little
ones, or to quell some discussion which had broken out among them,
halted by the wayside, and catching up three or four of them, tossed
them into the air as a juggler does his balls, sometimes keeping three
or more of them on the fly and one in each hand.
It was a strange sight, and amused me so much that I quite insisted upon
halting the wedding procession in order that I might observe it more
closely.
But the fair Rōlâ-Bōlâ was very impatient, and chided me in unmeasured
terms for my lack of dignity.
In fact, I now began to notice a very evident desire on the part of the
managers of the wedding arrangements to hurry things up.
King Bô-gôô-gôô ever and anon turned an anxious eye toward the horizon.
And then there would follow a whispered consultation with the
soothsayers and magicians.
Behold me at last mounted upon my—scaffold, I had almost said—for such
it seemed to be.
A terrible, tightening sensation took hold of my heart.
The air seemed too heavy to breathe.
I gasped like a fish thrown up on dry land.
“Let the marriage ceremony begin this instant, and move apace!” roared
Bô-gôô-gôô.
“Make ready, Tôô-tôô-lō!” cried one of the royal councillors.
I turned to survey the multitude, and then prostrated myself upon the
platform under which the princess Rōlâ-Bōlâ was to pass.
“She has started! She comes like the wind! She is here!” Such were the
cries which arose from the vast multitude.
With head and shoulders thrust through the opening in the platform, I
awaited my bride with bated breath and thumping heart.
Imagine my amazement when I saw her flash beneath me and disappear in
the crowd of Roundbodies, almost like a ball from a cannon.
I had scarcely felt her body as it had rolled beneath me.
As for pinching her toe, that was certainly out of the question, seeing
that I had only caught a hurried glimpse of her white feet, and then all
was gone!
In an instant I was on my legs, and, advancing to the edge of the
platform, I raised my hand to signify to King Bô-gôô-gôô that I desired
to be heard:
“O, King with the globe-shaped body, hearken unto me! I have been
wronged! There is vile treachery here! The judges of the land of
Gô-gû-lâh have been corrupted! I demand their blood! Not only have I not
pinched the little toe of the royal princess Rōlâ-Bōlâ, but I—”
At this instant, a deep, rumbling noise like a burst of distant
artillery, cut short my harangue, by setting the air into such violent
vibration that my lips moved without making the slightest sound.
The effect of this terrific “boom” upon the Roundbodies was astounding.
The wildest confusion came upon them.
In vain did King Bô-gôô-gôô command silence.
They rocked like the waves of the sea when struck by a sudden blast.
The most deafening groans and sighs rolled over the plains in a sort of
half tuneful unison. Their faces blanched and they pressed together in
the most abject fear.
At last King Bô-gôô-gôô was himself again, and, with a terrific voice,
awed his people into silence, crying out:
“Ughgō! Raûlag pad Oüistimgâr!” (My people, the storm is upon us!
Protect yourselves!)
More quickly than it takes me to tell it, the dreaded roar broke in upon
the stilly air.
The Roundbodies gathered their children and aged people into a group,
and then formed double and triple walls about them.
“Tôô-tôô-lō! Tôô-tôô-lō!”
It was Rōlâ-Bōlâ’s voice.
But other thoughts were in my mind at this dread moment.
Again it sounded forth in most piteous accents:
“Tôô-tôô-lō! Tôô-tôô-lō!”
To that voice, now, the ears of the dead would have given more heed than
mine!
The storm-fiend was galloping amain.
Quicker than thought I swung myself down from the platform, and,
encircling Bulger with my left arm, made my way back again.
The good dog was delighted to be with me again, although he was
trembling like an aspen leaf at the distant sound of the winds.
He well knew what was coming.
But look! The sunlight is gone!
The very air seems affrighted.
A terrifying tremor of the ground beneath us causes the soles of our
feet to tingle and prickle.
“Tôô-tôô-lō! Tôô-tôô-lō!”
It was Rōlâ-Bōlâ calling her lover away from the impending death with
which the storm-cloud was fraught.
He was busy with one dearer to him than the weeping princess of the
Roundbodies.
Happily the platform had been constructed by lashing together the
uprights and flooring by means of hempen cords. To loosen one of these
and bind Bulger and myself securely to the wooden structure was the work
of a moment.
The Roundbodies had followed my movements in silence, fairly stricken
dumb with amazement at what seemed to them the work of a madman.
When they could find their tongues, they motioned to me fiercely to
leave the platform, crying:
“Pôô-döeg! Pôô-döeg!” (What madness! What madness!)
But I was not mad!
What is death but a thought?
One may live and yet be dead!
Look! the terrible storm-king is coming! He is a greater monarch than
thou, O mighty Bô-gôô-gôô!
“Tôô-tôô-lō! Tôô-tôô-lō!”
It was the kind, good Rōlâ-Bōlâ’s last farewell!
From that moment the roar of the coming gale drowned every sound of
earth or its puny creatures.
Look again! See the black monster, how he draws nearer and nearer, his
huge, shapeless, terrible body rolling and swaying as he rides along on
his black wings, while, like a gigantic serpent, his tail drags over the
fair earth, hissing, writhing and curling, now on this side, now on
that, now coiling upward to gather strength, now beating and threshing
the plain with a roar mighty enough to plunge the stoutest heart into
despair.
Ah, Bulger! It comes! ’Tis here! We move! It lifts us! Away! Away! We
ride on the bosom of the gale! What a roar! How dark! How black! The
storm-king strangles me! Bulger, I die—
* * * * *
“Where am I? Ah, Bulger, good dog! Has the princess called us yet?
“King Bô-gôô-gôô comes to-day.
“We must amuse him!”
I made an effort to rise.
The cords held me down.
By degrees the shadows lifted from my mind, and thoughts of the
storm-king’s coming flashed through my brain, and how he had lifted the
platform upon which we were bound, and borne it away, away, as if it
were a feather caught up by the wind in play!
Something tickled my cheek.
I raised my head.
Oh! joy unutterable! It was grain! Ay, golden grain!
Wheat, ready for the sickle!
We are saved! We must be near the habitations of man!
And so we were.
Nay, more; we were not a thousand miles away from home.
Thus it was a mightier king than Bô-gôô-gôô, one to whom in my despair,
I had appealed for aid, caught up my loved Bulger and me and bore us
away from Gô-gû-lâh, the Land of the Roundbodies.
* * * * *
And here I end my story.