________________________________________________
_ 'To the very last moment, till the full day came upon them with
a spring, the fires on the west bank blazed bright and clear; and
then Brown saw in a knot of coloured figures motionless between
the advanced houses a man in European clothes, in a helmet, all
white. "That's him; look! look!" Cornelius said excitedly. All
Brown's men had sprung up and crowded at his back with lustreless
eyes. The group of vivid colours and dark faces with the white
figure in their midst were observing the knoll. Brown could see
naked arms being raised to shade the eyes and other brown arms
pointing. What should he do? He looked around, and the forests
that faced him on all sides walled the cock-pit of an unequal contest.
He looked once more at his men. A contempt, a weariness, the
desire of life, the wish to try for one more chance--for some other
grave--struggled in his breast. From the outline the figure presented
it seemed to him that the white man there, backed up by all the power
of the land, was examining his position through binoculars. Brown
jumped up on the log, throwing his arms up, the palms outwards. The
coloured group closed round the white man, and fell back twice before
he got clear of them, walking slowly alone. Brown remained standing
on the log till Jim, appearing and disappearing between the patches of
thorny scrub, had nearly reached the creek; then Brown jumped off and
went down to meet him on his side.
'They met, I should think, not very far from the place, perhaps
on the very spot, where Jim took the second desperate leap of his
life--the leap that landed him into the life of Patusan, into the trust,
the love, the confidence of the people. They faced each other across
the creek, and with steady eyes tried to understand each other
before they opened their lips. Their antagonism must have been
expressed in their glances; I know that Brown hated Jim at first
sight. Whatever hopes he might have had vanished at once. This
was not the man he had expected to see. He hated him for this--
and in a checked flannel shirt with sleeves cut off at the elbows,
grey bearded, with a sunken, sun-blackened face--he cursed in
his heart the other's youth and assurance, his clear eyes and his
untroubled bearing. That fellow had got in a long way before him!
He did not look like a man who would be willing to give anything
for assistance. He had all the advantages on his side--possession,
security, power; he was on the side of an overwhelming force! He
was not hungry and desperate, and he did not seem in the least
afraid. And there was something in the very neatness of Jim's
clothes, from the white helmet to the canvas leggings and the
pipeclayed shoes, which in Brown's sombre irritated eyes seemed to
belong to things he had in the very shaping of his life condemned
and flouted.
' "Who are you?" asked Jim at last, speaking in his usual voice.
"My name's Brown," answered the other loudly; "Captain Brown.
What's yours?" and Jim after a little pause went on quietly, as If he
had not heard: "What made you come here?" "You want to know,"
said Brown bitterly. "It's easy to tell. Hunger. And what made
you?"
' "The fellow started at this," said Brown, relating to me the
opening of this strange conversation between those two men, separated
only by the muddy bed of a creek, but standing on the opposite
poles of that conception of life which includes all mankind--"The
fellow started at this and got very red in the face. Too big to be
questioned, I suppose. I told him that if he looked upon me as a
dead man with whom you may take liberties, he himself was not a
whit better off really. I had a fellow up there who had a bead drawn
on him all the time, and only waited for a sign from me. There was
nothing to be shocked at in this. He had come down of his own free
will. 'Let us agree,' said I, 'that we are both dead men, and let us
talk on that basis, as equals. We are all equal before death,' I said.
I admitted I was there like a rat in a trap, but we had been driven
to it, and even a trapped rat can give a bite. He caught me up in a
moment. 'Not if you don't go near the trap till the rat is dead.' I
told him that sort of game was good enough for these native friends
of his, but I would have thought him too white to serve even a rat
so. Yes, I had wanted to talk with him. Not to beg for my life,
though. My fellows were--well--what they were--men like himself,
anyhow. All we wanted from him was to come on in the devil's
name and have it out. 'God d--n it,' said I, while he stood there as
still as a wooden post, 'you don't want to come out here every day
with your glasses to count how many of us are left on our feet.
Come. Either bring your infernal crowd along or let us go out and
starve in the open sea, by God! You have been white once, for all
your tall talk of this being your own people and you being one with
them. Are you? And what the devil do you get for it; what is it
you've found here that is so d--d precious? Hey? You don't want
us to come down here perhaps--do you? You are two hundred to
one. You don't want us to come down into the open. Ah! I promise
you we shall give you some sport before you've done. You talk
about me making a cowardly set upon unoffending people. What's
that to me that they are unoffending, when I am starving for next
to no offence? But I am not a coward. Don't you be one. Bring
them along or, by all the fiends, we shall yet manage to send half
your unoffending town to heaven with us in smoke!' "
'He was terrible--relating this to me--this tortured skeleton of
a man drawn up together with his face over his knees, upon a
miserable bed in that wretched hovel, and lifting his head to look
at me with malignant triumph.
' "That's what I told him--I knew what to say," he began again,
feebly at first, but working himself up with incredible speed into a
fiery utterance of his scorn. "We aren't going into the forest to
wander like a string of living skeletons dropping one after another
for ants to go to work upon us before we are fairly dead. Oh no! . . .
'You don't deserve a better fate,' he said. 'And what do you
deserve,' I shouted at him, 'you that I find skulking here with your
mouth full of your responsibility, of innocent lives, of your infernal
duty? What do you know more of me than I know of you? I came
here for food. D'ye hear?--food to fill our bellies. And what did
_you_ come for? What did you ask for when you came here? We don't
ask you for anything but to give us a fight or a clear road to go
back whence we came. . . .' 'I would fight with you now,' says he,
pulling at his little moustache. 'And I would let you shoot me, and
welcome,' I said. 'This is as good a jumping-off place for me as
another. I am sick of my infernal luck. But it would be too easy.
There are my men in the same boat--and, by God, I am not the
sort to jump out of trouble and leave them in a d--d lurch,' I said.
He stood thinking for a while and then wanted to know what I had
done ('out there' he says, tossing his head down-stream) to be hazed
about so. 'Have we met to tell each other the story of our lives?'
I asked him. 'Suppose you begin. No? Well, I am sure I don't want
to hear. Keep it to yourself. I know it is no better than mine. I've
lived--and so did you, though you talk as if you were one of those
people that should have wings so as to go about without touching
the dirty earth. Well--it is dirty. I haven't got any wings. I am here
because I was afraid once in my life. Want to know what of? Of a
prison. That scares me, and you may know it--if it's any good to
you. I won't ask you what scared you into this infernal hole, where
you seem to have found pretty pickings. That's your luck and this
is mine--the privilege to beg for the favour of being shot quickly,
or else kicked out to go free and starve in my own way.' . . ."
'His debilitated body shook with an exultation so vehement, so
assured, and so malicious that it seemed to have driven off the death
waiting for him in that hut. The corpse of his mad self-love uprose
from rags and destitution as from the dark horrors of a tomb. It is
impossible to say how much he lied to Jim then, how much he lied
to me now--and to himself always. Vanity plays lurid tricks with
our memory, and the truth of every passion wants some pretence
to make it live. Standing at the gate of the other world in the guise
of a beggar, he had slapped this world's face, he had spat on it, he
had thrown upon it an immensity of scorn and revolt at the bottom
of his misdeeds. He had overcome them all--men, women, savages,
traders, ruffians, missionaries--and Jim--"that beefy-faced
beggar." I did not begrudge him this triumph in articulo mortis, this
almost posthumous illusion of having trampled all the earth under
his feet. While he was boasting to me, in his sordid and repulsive
agony, I couldn't help thinking of the chuckling talk relating to
the time of his greatest splendour when, during a year or more,
Gentleman Brown's ship was to be seen, for many days on end,
hovering off an islet befringed with green upon azure, with the dark
dot of the mission-house on a white beach; while Gentleman Brown,
ashore, was casting his spells over a romantic girl for whom
Melanesia had been too much, and giving hopes of a remarkable conversion
to her husband. The poor man, some time or other, had been heard
to express the intention of winning "Captain Brown to a better way
of life." . . . "Bag Gentleman Brown for Glory"--as a leery-eyed
loafer expressed it once--"just to let them see up above what a
Western Pacific trading skipper looks like." And this was the man,
too, who had run off with a dying woman, and had shed tears over
her body. "Carried on like a big baby," his then mate was never
tired of telling, "and where the fun came in may I be kicked to
death by diseased Kanakas if _I_ know. Why, gents! she was too far
gone when he brought her aboard to know him; she just lay there
on her back in his bunk staring at the beam with awful shining
eyes--and then she died. Dam' bad sort of fever, I guess. . . ." I
remembered all these stories while, wiping his matted lump of a
beard with a livid hand, he was telling me from his noisome couch
how he got round, got in, got home, on that confounded, immaculate,
don't-you-touch-me sort of fellow. He admitted that he couldn't be
scared, but there was a way, "as broad as a turnpike, to get in and
shake his twopenny soul around and inside out and upside down--by God!" ' _
Read next: CHAPTER 42
Read previous: CHAPTER 40
Table of content of Lord Jim
GO TO TOP OF SCREEN
Post your review
Your review will be placed after the table of content of this book