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