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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Working my Way Around the World, by
-Lena M. Franck and Harry Alverson Franck
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Working my Way Around the World
-
-Author: Lena M. Franck
- Harry Alverson Franck
-
-Release Date: July 16, 2017 [EBook #55129]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WORKING MY WAY AROUND THE WORLD ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- WORKING MY WAY
- AROUND THE WORLD
-
-
-[Illustration: HARRY A. FRANCK]
-
-
-
-
- WORKING MY WAY AROUND THE WORLD
-
- REWRITTEN BY
- LENA M. FRANCK
- FROM
- HARRY A. FRANCK’S “VAGABOND JOURNEY AROUND THE WORLD”
-
-
- ILLUSTRATED WITH PHOTOGRAPHS AND WITH MAPS
-
-[Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK
- THE CENTURY CO.
- 1918
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1918, by
- THE CENTURY CO.
-
- _Published, September, 1918_
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATED TO
- ALL YOUNG FIRESIDE TRAVELERS
-
- Still, as my Horizon grew,
- Larger grew my riches, too.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I “CROSSIN’ THE POND WI’ THE BULLOCKS” 3
-
- II “ON THE ROAD” IN THE BRITISH ISLES 7
-
- III IN CLEAN HOLLAND 12
-
- IV NOT WELCOME IN THE FATHERLAND 17
-
- V TRAMPING THROUGH FRANCE 24
-
- VI CLIMBING OVER THE ALPS 29
-
- VII IN SUNNY ITALY 32
-
- VIII AMONG THE ARABS 56
-
- IX A LONELY JOURNEY 75
-
- X CITIES OF OLD 82
-
- XI THE WILDS OF PALESTINE 106
-
- XII CAIRO AND THE PYRAMIDS 129
-
- XIII A TRIP UP THE NILE 146
-
- XIV STEALING A MARCH ON THE FAR EAST 164
-
- XV IN THE LAND OF THE WANDERING PRINCE 180
-
- XVI THE MERRY CIRCUS DAYS 194
-
- XVII THREE WANDERERS IN INDIA 204
-
- XVIII THE WAYS OF THE HINDU 216
-
- XIX IN THE HEART OF INDIA 224
-
- XX BEYOND THE GANGES 242
-
- XXI TRAMPING THROUGH BURMA 250
-
- XXII IN THE JUNGLES OF BURMA 265
-
- XXIII IN SIAM 276
-
- XXIV HUNGRY DAYS 287
-
- XXV FOLLOWING THE MENAM RIVER TO BANGKOK 304
-
- XXVI ON THE WAY TO HONG-KONG 316
-
- XXVII WANDERING IN JAPAN 322
-
- XXVIII HOMEWARD BOUND 332
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Harry A. Franck _Frontispiece_
-
- PAGE
-
- A baker’s cart of Holland on the morning round 14
-
- Boundary line between France and Germany 21
-
- My entrance into Paris 22
-
- The Bridge of Sighs 39
-
- My gondolier on the Grand Canal 41
-
- Country family returning from market 49
-
- Italian peasants returning from the vineyards to the
- village 53
-
- The lonely, Bedouin-infected road over the Lebanon 76
-
- On the road between Haifa and Nazareth I met a road
- repair gang 98
-
- The shopkeeper and traveling salesman with whom I spent
- two nights and a day on the lonely road to
- Jerusalem 117
-
- The Palestine beast of burden 119
-
- A woman of Alexandria, Egypt, carrying two bushels of
- oranges 130
-
- An abandoned mosque outside the walls of Cairo 132
-
- An Arab café in Old Cairo 134
-
- Sais or carriage runners of Cairo, clearing the streets
- for their master 138
-
- An Arab gardener 140
-
- Egypt—A young Arab climbing down the pyramid 142
-
- On the top of the largest pyramid 143
-
- A trip to the pyramids 144
-
- “Along the way shadoofs were ceaselessly dipping up the
- water” 147
-
- The Egyptian fellah dwells in a hut of reeds and mud 156
-
- Soudan steamer on the Nile 160
-
- Arab passengers on the Nile steamer 162
-
- A Singhalese woman stops often to give her children a
- bath 182
-
- The yogi who ate twenty-eight of the bananas at a
- sitting 187
-
- The thatch roof at the roadside 190
-
- I take a last ’rickshaw ride before taking the steamer
- for India 205
-
- “Haywood” snaps me as I am getting a shave in
- Trichinopoly 209
-
- The Hindu street-sprinkler does not lay much dust 228
-
- I do a bit of laundry work 235
-
- A lady of Delhi out for a drive in a bullock cart 240
-
- The chief of a jungle village agrees to guide us for one
- day’s journey 267
-
- A freight carrier crossing the stream that separates
- Burma from Siam 277
-
- My companion, Gerald James of Perth, Australia, crossing
- the boundary line between Burma and Siam 279
-
- The sort of jungle through which we cut our way for
- three weeks 292
-
- Myself after four days in the jungle, and the Siamese
- soldiers who invited us to eat a frog and lizard
- supper 297
-
- An elephant, with a Mahout dozing on his head, was
- advancing toward us 307
-
- Bangkok is a city of many canals 317
-
- My ’rickshaw man 322
-
- Numadzu 323
-
- Some street urchins near Tokio 325
-
- Osaka 326
-
- Horses are rare in Japan 328
-
- Japanese children playing in the streets of Kioto 329
-
- Women do most of the work in the rice-fields of Japan 330
-
- Yokohama decorated in honor of Secretary Taft’s party 334
-
- A Yokohama street decorated for the Taft party 338
-
-
-
-
- WORKING MY WAY AROUND THE WORLD
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- “CROSSIN’ THE POND WI’ THE BULLOCKS”
-
-
-After spending some sixteen years in schools and colleges, I decided,
-one spring, to take a year off and make a trip around the world. I had
-no money for such a journey; but that didn’t matter for I meant to “work
-my way” from place to place. I spoke French and German, and had some
-knowledge of Spanish and Italian. I believed that if I had to work among
-the people of foreign countries I would learn more of them and of their
-languages than in any other way. So I was not sorry that I had to start
-my journey with only my camera and one hundred and four dollars for
-films.
-
-As a beginning I had arranged to cross the Atlantic on a cattle-boat in
-the employ of a company in Walkerville, Canada. This company ships
-thousands of cattle to the markets of England every year. When I asked
-for a job as cattleman, they employed me at once. So it happened that on
-the eighteenth of June, 1904, I crossed the Detroit River to Canada, and
-walked two miles to the Walkerville cattle-barns. From the long rows of
-low brick buildings sounded now and then a deep bellow, or the song or
-whistle of a stock feeder at his labor. I left my bag at the office and
-joined the crew in the yard.
-
-The cattlemen had already begun driving the cattle from the stables. It
-was no easy task. As soon as they were free, the sleek animals began to
-prance, to race, and to bellow, leading the stockmen a merry chase all
-around the yard. Little by little, however, the men managed to urge them
-slowly up the chute into the waiting cars. The setting sun had reddened
-the western sky, and darkness had fallen in the alleyways between the
-endless stables, before the last bull was tied and the last car door
-locked. The engine gave a warning whistle. We who were to care for the
-stock on the way raced to the office for our bundles, tossed them on top
-of the freight-cars, and climbed aboard after them.
-
-The train began to move. The stockmen left behind called out farewells
-to their friends who were “crossin’ the pond wi’ the bullocks”: “So
-long, Jim.” “Don’t fergit that smokin’ tobacco for me, Bob.” And we were
-off.
-
-After a short run we came to the main line of the Canadian Pacific. Here
-our cars were joined to a long train that was being made up. We were to
-travel in the caboose. As we came into the glare of the tail lights,
-carrying our bundles and long poles, the trainmen saw us, and began
-growling: “Huh! more cow-punchers!”
-
-We rode for thirty-six hours. When we reached Montreal at last, we left
-the stock to the care of the feeders at the railroad pens, and went at
-once to the “Stockyards Hotel”—a building filled from bar-room to garret
-with the odor of cattle.
-
-Where were we going, and when? Up to this time I had not even learned on
-what ship we were to sail. Then I heard some one say “Glasgow,” and soon
-the news leaked out that we were to sail on the _Sardinian_ two days
-later.
-
-On the second evening I went on board the _Sardinian_ with the rest of
-our crew, and wandered around among the empty cattle-pens built on the
-four decks. Toward midnight loads of baled straw were brought on board,
-and we began to “bed down” the pens. When this was finished, we threw
-ourselves down in the empty stalls and fell asleep.
-
-We were awakened before daylight by a rush of excited cattle and the
-cries of their drivers. The hubbub lasted for three hours. By that time
-the animals were securely tied in their stalls, the winch had yanked up
-on deck three bulls that, having been killed in the rush, were to be
-dumped in the outer bay, and we were off down the St. Lawrence. The crew
-fell to coiling up the shore lines and joined the cattlemen in a glad
-chorus:
-
- “We’re homeward bound, boys, for Glasgow town;
- Good-by, fare thee well; good-by, fare thee well!”
-
-The passage across was like other cattle-boat trips. There were a few
-quarrels, a free-for-all fight now and then, among the cattlemen: the
-work was hard, the food poor, and the sailors’ quarters in the
-forecastle unfit to live in. But the voyage was no worse than I had
-expected.
-
-On the tenth day out, we came on deck to see, a few miles off, the
-sloping coast of Ireland. Patches of growing and ripening grain made the
-island look like a huge tilted checkerboard. Before night fell we had
-left Ireland behind, and it was near the mouth of the Clyde River that
-we fed the cattle for the last time.
-
-A mighty uproar awakened us at dawn. Glasgow longshoremen, shouting at
-the top of their voices, were driving the cattle, slipping and sliding,
-down the gangway. We had reached Europe at last! An hour later the
-cattlemen were scattering along the silent streets of Sunday morning
-Glasgow.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- “ON THE ROAD” IN THE BRITISH ISLES
-
-
-At noon the next day I received my wages and a printed certificate
-stating that I had been a sailor on the cattle-boat. I kept it, for the
-police would surely demand to know my trade while I was tramping through
-the countries of Europe.
-
-Tucking my camera into an inside pocket, I struck out along the Clyde
-River toward the Highlands of Scotland. I passed through Dumbarton, a
-town of factories, and at evening reached Alexandria. A band was
-playing. I joined the crowd on the village green, and watched the young
-Scots romping and joking, while their elders stood apart in gloomy
-silence. A church clock struck nine. The concert ended. The sun was
-still well above the horizon. I went on down the highway until, not far
-beyond the town, the hills disappeared, and I saw the glassy surface of
-a lake, its western end aglow in the light of the drowning sun. It was
-Loch Lomond.
-
-By and by the moon rose, casting a pale white shimmer over the Loch and
-its little wooded islands. On the next hillside stood a field of
-wheat-stacks. I turned into it, keeping well away from the owner’s
-house. The straw was fresh and clean, and made a soft bed. But the
-bundles of wheat did not protect me from the winds of the Scottish
-Highlands. With a feeling that I had not slept soundly, I rose at
-daybreak and pushed on.
-
-Two hours of tramping brought me to Luss, a pretty little village on the
-edge of Loch Lomond. I hastened to the principal street in search of a
-restaurant; but the village was everywhere silent and asleep. Down on
-the beach of the Loch a lone fisherman was preparing his tackle. He was
-displeased when I said his fellow townsmen were late risers.
-
-“Why, mon, ’tis no late!” he protested; “’tis no more nor five—and a
-bonny morning it is, too. But there’s a mist in it,” he complained as he
-looked at the sky.
-
-I glanced at the bright morning sun and the unclouded sky. I could see
-no mist, nor any sign of rain. Trying to forget my hunger, I stretched
-out on the sands to wait for the morning steamer. Ben Lomond, a mountain
-I had read of in Scott’s “Lady of the Lake,” stood just across the Loch,
-and I had made up my mind to climb it.
-
-About six, a heavy-eyed shopkeeper sold me a roll of bologna and a loaf
-of bread. The steamer whistle sounded before I got back to the beach. I
-bought a ticket at the wooden wharf, and hurried out to board the
-steamer.
-
-A big Scot stepped in front of me and demanded “tup’nce.”
-
-“But I’ve paid my fare,” I said, holding up the ticket.
-
-“Aye, mon, ye hov,” rumbled the native, straddling his legs and
-thrusting out his elbows. “Ye hov, mon. But ye hovna paid fer walkin’
-oot t’ yon boat on our wharf.”
-
-Ten minutes later I paid again, this time for being allowed to walk off
-the boat at Renwardenen.
-
-Plodding through a half mile of heath and marsh, I struck into the
-narrow white path that zigzagged up the face of the mountain. The mist
-that the fisherman had seen began to settle down, and soon turned to a
-drenching rain. For five hours I scrambled upward, slipping and falling
-on wet stones and into deep bogs, and coming at last to a broad, flat
-rock where the path disappeared. It was the top of old Ben Lomond, a
-tiny island surrounded by whirling gray mist. The wind blew so hard that
-it almost bowled me off my feet into the sea of fog.
-
-I set off down the opposite slope. In the first stumble down the
-mountain I lost my way, and came out upon a boggy meadow, where I
-wandered for hours over low hills and through swift streams. Now and
-then I scared up a flock of shaggy highland sheep that raced away down
-wild looking valleys. There was neither road nor foot-path. For seven
-miles I dragged myself, hand over hand, through a thick growth of shrubs
-and bushes; and once I fell head first into an icy mountain river before
-I reached the highway.
-
-At the foot a new disappointment awaited me. There was a hotel, but it
-was of the millionaire-club kind. I turned toward a group of board
-shanties at the roadside.
-
-“Can you sell me something to eat?” I inquired of the sour-faced
-mountaineer who opened the first door.
-
-“I can no!” he snapped. “Go to the hotel!”
-
-There were freshly baked loaves plainly in sight in the next hovel where
-I stopped.
-
-“Have you nothing to eat in the house?” I demanded.
-
-“No, mon; I’m no runnin’ a shop.”
-
-“But you can sell me a loaf of that bread?”
-
-“No!” bellowed the Scot. “We hovna got any. Go to the hotel. Yon’s the
-place for tooreests.”
-
-I tried at the other huts; but nobody would sell me any bread. So,
-though I had already tramped and climbed twenty-five miles, I struck off
-through the sea of mud that passed for a road, toward Aberfoyle, fifteen
-miles distant. The rain continued. There was another lake, and then the
-road stretched away across a dreary field. I became so weary that I
-forgot I was hungry—then so drowsy that I could hardly force my legs to
-carry me on. Dusk fell, then darkness. It was past eleven when I
-splashed into Aberfoyle, too late to find an open shop. I hunted until I
-found an inn, rang the bell until I awoke a servant, and went supperless
-to bed.
-
-Late the next morning I hobbled out into the streets of Aberfoyle to the
-station, and took the train for Sterling. Two days later, in the early
-afternoon, I reached Edinburgh. Following the signs that pointed the way
-to the poor man’s section, I brought up in Haymarket Square, a place
-well known in history. Many places in Europe that were once the palaces
-of kings and queens are the slums of to-day. A crowd of careless-looking
-men, in groups and in pairs, sauntered back and forth at the foot of a
-statue in the center of the square. One of them, as ragged and uncombed
-as his hearers, was making a speech. Another, in his shirt sleeves,
-wandered from group to group, trying to sell his coat for the price of a
-night’s lodging.
-
-A sorry-looking building in front of me bore the sign: “Edinburgh Castle
-Inn. Clean, capacious beds, 6 shillings.”
-
-I went inside, and found the place so dirty that I was glad to escape
-again into the street. A big policeman marched up and down with an air
-of importance.
-
-“Where shall I find a fairly cheap lodging-house?” I asked him.
-
-“Try the Cawstle Inn h’over there,” replied “Bobby,” grandly waving his
-Sunday gloves toward the place I had just left.
-
-“But that place is not clean,” I objected.
-
-“Not clean! Certainly it is clean! There’s a bloomin’ law makes ’em keep
-’em clean,” shouted Bobby, glaring at me.
-
-I entered another inn facing the square, but was thankful to escape from
-it to the one I had first visited. Here I paid for my lodging, and
-passed into the main room. It was furnished with benches, tables, and
-several cook-stoves.
-
-Men were crowded around these stoves, getting their own supper. Water,
-fuel, and dishes were furnished free to all who had paid their lodging.
-On the stoves were sputtering or boiling many kinds of cheap food,
-tended by tattered men who handled frying-pans with their coat-tails as
-holders, and cut up cabbages or peeled potatoes with knives that had
-half-inch layers of tobacco on their blades. Each ate his mixture with
-the greatest enjoyment, as soon as it showed the least sign of being
-cooked, often without giving it time to cool, as I could tell by the
-expression on the faces about me.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- IN CLEAN HOLLAND
-
-
-Three days later I took passage to London, and that same afternoon
-sailed for Rotterdam. At sunrise the next morning I climbed on deck, and
-found the ship steaming slowly through a peaceful canal. On all sides
-were flat plains, stretching as far as the eye could see. Far below us
-were clusters of squat cottages with the white smoke of kindling fires
-curling slowly upward from their chimneys. Here and there a peasant,
-looking very tiny from our high deck, crawled along over the flat
-meadows. In the distance clumsy windmills were turning slowly in the
-morning breeze.
-
-Our canal opened out into the busy harbor of Rotterdam. A customs
-officer asked me where I was going, slapped me on the back in a fatherly
-fashion, and warned me in German to look out for the “bad people” who
-lay in wait for seamen ashore.
-
-I quickly tired of the city, and turned out along the broad, flat
-highway to Delft. The road ran along at the side of a great canal, and
-at times crossed branch waterways half hidden by boats, filled with
-cargo, toiling slowly by on their way to market and by empty boats
-gliding easily homeward. On board, stout men bowed double over the poles
-they use to push their craft along. On the bank, along the gravel path,
-women strained like oxen at the tow-ropes around their shoulders.
-
-In the early afternoon I passed through Delft, and pushed on toward The
-Hague. Beyond Delft I turned into a narrow cobblestone roadway running
-between two canals. It was a quiet route. I went on my lonely way,
-thinking of many things and gazing off across the flat green country.
-
-Suddenly a galloping “rat-a-tat” sounded close behind me. A runaway
-horse! To pause and glance behind might cost me my life; for the crazed
-brute was almost upon me. With a swiftness born of fear, I began to run!
-Luckily, ahead of me I spied a foot-bridge over one of the canals. I
-made one flying leap toward it, and reached it in safety just as there
-dashed by me at full speed—a Hollander of some six summers, bound to
-market with a basket on his arm!
-
-After spending only a few hours in the interesting city of The Hague, I
-looked for the highway to Leiden. I was not very successful in my search
-for it, for the mixed language of German, English, and deaf-and-dumb
-show with which I tried to make myself understood did not get me clear
-directions. A road to Leiden was finally pointed out to me right enough,
-but it was not a public highway. By some mistake, I set out along the
-Queen’s private driveway, which led to the boyhood home of Rembrandt,
-the great Dutch artist.
-
-It was a pleasure to travel by the Queen’s own highway, of course,
-especially as it led through a fragrant forest park. But, unfortunately,
-there was no chance of finding an inn when hunger and darkness came on
-me. There was not even a cross-road to lead me back to the public
-highway, where I could find a place to eat and sleep. So I plodded on
-deep into the lonely forest until night overtook me. Just what hour it
-was when I reached Leiden, I could not tell. But it was certainly late;
-for, except a few drowsy policemen, the good people, and even the bad,
-were sound asleep. With a painful number of miles in my legs, I went to
-bed on a pile of lumber.
-
-[Illustration: A baker’s cart of Holland on the morning round.]
-
-The warm sun awoke me early—before the first shopkeeper was astir. It
-was Sunday, so I was not able to buy any food. Still hungry, I set off
-toward Haarlem. On those flat lowlands it was disagreeably hot. Yet the
-peasants, in their uncomfortable Sunday clothes, plodded for miles along
-the dusty highway to the village church.
-
-The men marched along sadly, as if they were going to prison. The women,
-stout, and painfully awkward in their stiffly starched skirts, tramped
-perspiringly behind the men. Even the children, the frolicking, romping
-youngsters of the day before, were imprisoned in home-made
-strait-jackets, and suffered discomfort in uncomplaining silence. Yet
-one and all spoke a pleasant word to me as they passed.
-
-Ever since leaving Rotterdam, I had noticed that there were no wells in
-country places. I had so far been able to quench my thirst only in the
-villages. But toward noon on this hot Sunday I became so thirsty that I
-finally turned in at the only place in sight, a farm cottage. Beside the
-road ran the ever-present canal. A narrow foot-bridge crossed it to the
-gateway leading to the cottage. Around the house ran a branch of the
-main waterway, giving the farmer a place to moor his canal-boat. I could
-not open the gate, and I had to shout again and again before any one in
-the house heard me. At last, from around the corner of the building a
-very heavy woman came into view, bearing down upon me like an ocean
-liner sailing into a calm harbor. I could not speak Dutch, but I did the
-best I could. Perhaps the lady spoke some German, so I said: “Ein Glass
-Wasser, bitte.”
-
-“Vat?”
-
-It could do no harm to give my mother tongue a trial:
-
-“A glass of water.”
-
-“Eh!”
-
-I tried a mixture of the two languages:
-
-“Ein glass of vater.”
-
-This time she understood.
-
-“Vater?” shrieked the lady, with such force that the rooster in the back
-yard leaped sidewise a distance of six feet. “Vater!”
-
-“Ja, Vater, bitte.”
-
-A deep silence followed—a silence so intense that one could have heard a
-fly pass by a hundred feet above. Slowly the lady placed a heavy hand on
-the gate between us. Perhaps she was wondering if it were strong enough
-to keep out the madman on the other side. Then, with a snort, she
-wheeled about and waddled toward the house. Close under the eaves of the
-cottage hung a tin basin. Snatching it down, she sailed for the canal
-behind the house, stooped, dipped up a basinful of that very same
-weed-clogged water that flowed by at my feet, and moved back across the
-yard to offer it to me with a patient sigh. After that, whenever I
-became thirsty, I got my drink from roadside canals after the manner of
-beasts of the field—and Hollanders.
-
-Long before I reached Haarlem, I came upon the great flower farms. I saw
-more and more of these as I neared the town. I passed through the city
-of tulips and out onto the broad, straight highway that leads to
-Amsterdam. It ran as straight as a bee line to where it disappeared in a
-fog of rising heat-waves. Throughout its length it was crowded with
-vehicles, horseback riders, and, above all, with wheelmen who would not
-turn aside an inch for me, but drove me again and again into the wayside
-ditch.
-
-I reached Amsterdam late in the afternoon; and, after much wandering in
-and out among the canals, I found a room in a garret overhanging the
-sluggish waterway. The place was clean, as we have heard all places are
-in Holland, and there was a coffee-house close at hand, where eggs,
-milk, cheeses, and dairy products of all kinds were served at small cost
-and in cleanly surroundings.
-
-I visited parks, museums, and the laborers’ quarters in Amsterdam, and
-every evening spent a long time searching for my canal-side garret,
-because it looked so much like other canal-side garrets.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- NOT WELCOME IN THE FATHERLAND
-
-
-One afternoon, while in my favorite coffee-house, I heard some one say
-that a cargo-boat was to leave for a town in Germany on the Rhine, and
-that passengers could go along for a song. It was to leave at four. I
-thrust a lunch into a pocket, and hurried down to the boat. She was a
-big canal-boat, as black as a coal-barge, but not so clean. Her
-uncovered deck was piled high with boxes, barrels, and crates, holding
-everything from beer mugs to noisy chickens. I scrambled over the cargo,
-and found a seat on a barrel of oil.
-
-I left the cargo-boat at the German town of Arnheim, and walked along
-the Rhine, stopping at the towns along the way. Partly on foot and
-partly by steamer, I made my way to the city of Mainz. From there I
-turned eastward and tramped along the highway to Frankfurt.
-
-It was late at night when I reached Frankfurt. The highway ended among
-the great buildings of the business blocks. After hunting for some time
-I found, on a dingy side street, a building on which there was a sign
-offering lodging at one mark. Truly it was a high price to pay for a
-bed; but the hour was late, the night stormy, and I was tired. I entered
-the drinking-room. The bartender was busy quieting the shouts of “Glas
-Bier” that rose above the rest of the noise. As soon as I could get his
-attention, I told him that I wanted lodging.
-
-“Beds?” cried the _Kellner_, too busy with his glasses to look up at me.
-“To be sure—we have always plenty of beds. One mark.”
-
-But mein Herr, the proprietor, was staring at me from the back of the
-hall. Slowly he shuffled forward, cocked his head on one side, and
-studied me closely from out his bleary eyes.
-
-“What does he want?” he demanded, turning to the bartender.
-
-I told him that I wanted a night’s lodging.
-
-“Where do you come from?”
-
-Knowing that he would ask other questions, I explained fully why I was
-there, and told him that I was an American sailor on a sight-seeing trip
-in the Fatherland. The drinkers clustered about us and listened. I could
-see that they did not believe me. While I was talking, they began
-exchanging glances and nudging one another with looks of disbelief on
-their faces. Perhaps they distrusted me because I talked like a
-foreigner and wore the dress of a wanderer.
-
-The proprietor blinked his pudgy eyes, glanced once more into the faces
-of those about him to see what they thought about it. It may be that he
-wanted to let me stay; but what would the police inspector say in the
-morning when he saw the name of a foreigner on the register? He
-scratched his grizzly head as if to bring out an idea with his stubby
-fingers. Then he glanced once more at the tipplers, and said, with a
-blink:
-
-“It gives me pain, young man—I am sorry, but we have not a bed left in
-the house.”
-
-I wandered out into the night, and told my story to five other
-inn-keepers. None of them would take me in. One proprietor told me the
-best way for me to preserve my good health was to make a quick escape
-into the street. As he was a creature of immense size, I lost no time in
-following his advice. It was midnight when I finally induced a policeman
-to tell me where to stay. He pointed out an inn where wanderers were not
-so much of a curiosity, and I was soon asleep.
-
-The next morning I set out to find the birthplace of the German poet
-Goethe. When I reached a part of the city where I thought he had lived,
-I asked a policeman to show me the house.
-
-“Goethe?” he said. Why, yes, he believed he had heard that name
-somewhere. He was not sure, but he fancied the fellow lived in the
-eastern part of the city, and he told me how to get there. The route led
-through narrow, winding streets. Now and then I lost my way, and was set
-right by other keepers of the law. At last, after tramping most of the
-morning and wearing out considerable shoe-leather, I found the place
-directly across the street from the inn at which I had slept.
-
-The next morning I made up my mind to go by rail to Weimar. The train
-was to start at nine o’clock. I reached the station at eight-forty,
-bought a fourth-class ticket, and stepped out upon the platform just in
-time to hear a guard bellow the German words for “All aboard!” The
-Weimar train stood close at hand. As I stepped toward it, four
-policemen, strutting about the platform, whooped and sprang after me.
-
-“Where are you going?” shrieked the first to reach me.
-
-“I go to Weimar.”
-
-“But the train to Weimar is gone!” shouted the second officer.
-
-As I had a hand on the car door, I became so bold as to contradict him.
-
-“But yes, it has gone!” gasped a third sergeant, who stood behind the
-others. “It is gone! The guard has already said ‘All aboard.’”
-
-The train stood at the edge of the platform long enough to have emptied
-and filled again; but, as it was gone ten minutes before it started, I
-was obliged to wait for the next one at ten-thirty.
-
-I managed to board the next one. It was a box car with wooden benches
-around the sides and a door at each end. Almost before we were well
-started, the most uncombed couple aboard stood up and began to yell. I
-was alarmed at first, for I did not know what was the matter with them.
-But after a time I realized that they thought they were singing. Many of
-the passengers seemed to think so too, for before the pair left at the
-first station they had gathered a handful of pennies from the listeners.
-
-We stopped at a station at least every four miles during that day’s
-journey. At the first village beyond Frankfurt the car filled with
-peasants and laborers in heavy boots and rough smocks, who carried farm
-tools of all kinds, from pitchforks to young plows. Sunburned women, on
-whose backs were strapped huge baskets stuffed with every product of the
-country-side, from cabbages to babies, packed into the center of the
-car, turned their backs on those of us who sat on the benches and
-peacefully leaned themselves and their loads against us. The car filled
-until there was not room for one more.
-
-A guard outside closed the heavy door with a bang, then gave a mighty
-shout of “Vorsicht!” (“Look out.”) The station-master on the platform
-raised a hunting-horn to his lips, and blew such a blast as echoed
-through the ravines of all the country round. The head guard drew his
-whistle and shrilly repeated the signal. The engineer whistled back. The
-guard whistled again; the driver gave forth another wild shriek to show
-that he was ready to start; the man on the platform whistled once more
-to cheer him on; a heroic squeal came from the cab in answer; and, with
-a jerk that sent peasants, baskets, farm tools, lime-pails, and cabbages
-all in a struggling heap at the back of the car, we were off. To
-celebrate the start the engineer shrieked again and gave a second yank,
-lest some sure-footed person among us had by any chance kept his
-balance.
-
-[Illustration: Boundary line between France and Germany. It runs through
-wheat fields on either side. The nearest sign post bears the German
-eagles and the further one reads “Frontière.”]
-
-There were times during the journey when the villages seemed to be too
-far apart to suit the engineer. For, having given all the toots, he
-would bring the car to a sudden stop in the open country. But, as German
-railway laws forbid passengers to step out, crawl out, or peep out of
-the car at such times, there was no way of learning whether the engineer
-had lost his courage or had merely caught sight of a wild flower that
-took his fancy.
-
-I arrived at Weimar late at night. Next day I set out on foot toward
-Paris, on the old national road. It wound its way over rolling hills and
-among the ravines and valleys where was fought a great battle between
-Germany and France in the Franco-Prussian War. For miles along the way,
-dotting the hillsides, standing alone or in clusters along lazy brooks
-or half hidden among the green of summer, were countless simple white
-crosses marking the graves of fallen soldiers and bearing only the
-simple inscription, “Here rests Krieger——1870.” At one place I came upon
-a gigantic statue of a soldier pointing away across a deep wooded glen
-to the vast graveyard of his fallen comrades.
-
-[Illustration: Plodding early and late, I reached Paris a few days after
-crossing the boundary.]
-
-A mile farther on, in the open country, two iron posts marked the
-boundary between the two countries. A farmer, with his mattock, stood in
-Germany, grubbing at a weed that grew in France.
-
-I expected to be stopped when I tried to pass into France, for I knew
-that the two countries were not on the most friendly terms. The customs
-house was a mere cottage, the first building of a straggling village
-some miles beyond the boundary. When I came within sight of it, a
-friendly-looking Frenchman, in a uniform worn shiny across the shoulders
-and the seat of the trousers, wandered out into the highway to meet me.
-Behind him strolled a second officer. But they did not try to delay me.
-They cried out in surprise when I told them I was an American walking to
-Paris. They merely glanced into my bundle, and as I went on they called
-out after me, “Bon voyage!”
-
-I had to wait for some time whenever I came to a railway crossing. Ten
-minutes before a train was due, the gate-woman would close both gates
-and return to the shades of her cottage close by. If the train happened
-to be an hour late, that made no difference. That was the time that
-Madame was hired to lock the gates, and locked they must remain until
-the train had passed. It was useless to try to climb over them, for
-Madame’s tongue was sharp and the long arm of the law was on her side.
-
-Plodding early and late, I reached Paris a few days after crossing the
-boundary.
-
-A month of tramping had made me an awful sight. Moreover, it was August,
-and my woolen garments had been purchased with the winds of the Scottish
-Highlands in mind. For fifteen francs I bought an outfit more suited to
-the climate. Then I rented a garret, and roamed through the city for
-three weeks.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- TRAMPING THROUGH FRANCE
-
-
-The month of August was drawing to a close when I started southward. At
-first I had to pass through noisy, dirty villages filled with crying
-children and many curs. Beyond, travel was more pleasant, for the
-national highways are excellently built. The heaviest rain raises hardly
-a layer of mud. But these roads wind and ramble like mountain streams.
-They zigzag from village to village even in a level country, and where
-hills abound there are villages ten miles apart with twenty miles of
-tramping between them.
-
-I passed on into a pleasant rolling country. Beyond Nemours, where I
-spent the second night, I came upon two tramps. They were sitting in the
-shade of a giant oak, enjoying a breakfast of hard bread which they
-dipped, now and then, into a brook at their feet. They invited me to
-share their feast, but I explained that I had just had breakfast. After
-finishing they went on with me. They were miners on their way to the
-great coal-fields of St. Etienne. We were well acquainted in a very
-short time. They called me “mon vieux,” which means something like “old
-man” in our language, and greeted every foot-traveler they met by the
-same title.
-
-There are stern laws in France against wandering from place to place. I
-knew that the three of us, traveling together, would be asked to explain
-our business. We were still some distance off from the first village
-when I saw an officer step from the door of a small building and walk
-out into the middle of the road to wait for us.
-
-“Where are you going?” he demanded sternly.
-
-“To St. Etienne.”
-
-“And your papers?”
-
-“Here!” cried the miners, each snatching a worn-looking book from a
-pocket under his coat.
-
-The gendarme stuffed one of the books under an arm, and began to look
-through the other. Between its greasy covers was a complete history of
-its owner. It told when he was born and where; where he was baptized;
-when he had been a soldier, and how he had behaved during his three
-years in the army; and so on, page after page. Then came pages that told
-where he had worked, what his employer thought of him, with wages,
-dates, and reasons why he had stopped working at that particular place.
-It took the gendarme a long time to look through it.
-
-He finished examining both books at last, and handed them back with a
-gruff “Well!”
-
-“Next yours,” he growled.
-
-“Here it is,” I answered, and pulled from my pocket a letter of
-introduction written to American consuls and signed by our Secretary of
-State.
-
-With a puzzled look, the gendarme unfolded the letter. When he saw the
-strange-looking English words he gasped with astonishment.
-
-“What!” he exclaimed. “What is this you have here?”
-
-“My passport,” I answered. “I am an American.”
-
-“Ha! American! Zounds! And that is really a passport? Never before have
-I seen one.”
-
-It was not really a passport, although it was as good as one; but as the
-gendarme could not read it, he was in no position to dispute my word.
-
-“Very good,” he went on; “but you must have another paper to prove that
-you have worked.”
-
-Here was a difficulty. If I told him that I was a traveler and no
-workman, he would probably put me in jail. For a moment I did not know
-what to do. Then I snatched from my bundle the paper showing that I had
-worked on a cattle-boat.
-
-“Bah!” grumbled the officer. “More foreign gibberish. What is this
-villain language that the evil one himself could not read?”
-
-“English.”
-
-“_Tiens_, but that is a queer thing!” he said thoughtfully, holding the
-paper out at arm’s length, and scratching his head. However, with some
-help he finally made out one date on the paper, and, handing it back
-with a sigh, allowed us to pass on.
-
-“Wait!” he cried before we had taken three steps. “What country did you
-say you came from?”
-
-“America,” I answered.
-
-“L’Amérique! And, being in America, you come to France? Oh, my soul,
-what idiocy!” And, waving his arms above his head, he fled to the shade
-of his office.
-
-We journeyed along as before, showing our papers at each village, and
-once being stopped in the open country by a gendarme on horseback. By
-the time we reached Briare in the early afternoon, the miners looked so
-lean with hunger that I offered to pay for a meal for three. They needed
-no second invitation, and led the way at once to a place that looked to
-me like nothing but an empty warehouse. The miners pushed open a door,
-and we entered a low room, gloomy and unswept. Around the table to which
-we made our way, through a forest of huge wine barrels, were gathered a
-dozen or more peasants.
-
-The keeper of the place set out before us a loaf of coarse bread and a
-bottle of wine, and then went back to his seat on a barrel. His shop was
-really the wine cellar of a restaurant that faced the main street. The
-fare would have cost us twice as much there. One of the miners asked me
-if he might order two _sous’_ worth of raw salt pork. Having obtained my
-consent, he did so, and he and his companion ate it with great relish.
-
-I left my companions behind soon after, for they could not walk the
-thirty miles a day that I had planned for myself, and passed on into the
-vineyard and forest country. In the fields left bare by the harvesters,
-peasant women were gathering with the greatest care every overlooked
-straw they could find, and, their aprons full, plodded homeward.
-
-The inhabitants were already lighting their lamps when I entered the
-village of La Charité. The bells of a gray church began to ring out the
-evening angelus. Squat housewives gossiped at the doors of the stone
-cottages that lined the road. From the neighboring fields heavy
-ox-carts, the yokes fastened across the horns of the animals, lumbered
-homeward. In the dwindling light a blacksmith before his open shop was
-fitting with flat iron shoes a spotted ox tied up on its back in a
-frame.
-
-I inquired for an inn, and was directed to a ramshackle stone building,
-one end of which was a stable. Inside, under a sputtering lamp, huddled
-two men, a woman, and a girl, around a table that looked as if it had
-held too much wine in its day and was for that reason unsteady on its
-legs. The four were so busy eating bread and soup that they did not see
-me come in.
-
-Walking forward to attract attention in the dim light, I stepped on the
-end of a loose board that supported two legs of the tipsy table, causing
-the bowl of soup to slide into the woman’s arms and a loaf to roll to
-the earthen floor. That was unlucky but it made them notice me. One of
-the men was the proprietor, the other a tramp who spoke very queer
-French. All the evening, waving his arms above his head, he talked
-excitedly of the misfortunes he had lived through.
-
-At last the girl agreed to show me to a room. She led the way out of
-doors, up an outside stairway, to a hole about four feet high over the
-stable. Here I spent the night, and at daybreak I resumed my journey.
-
-At that season half the highways of France were lined with hedges heavy
-with blackberries. At first I was not sure they were blackberries, and I
-was afraid to eat them; for I had noticed that the thrifty French
-peasant never touched them, letting them go to waste. But, coming one
-morning upon a hedge fairly loaded with large, juicy fruit, I tasted
-one, discovered that it was a real blackberry, and fell to picking a
-capful. A band of peasants, on their way to the fields, stopped to gaze
-at me in astonishment, and burst into loud laughter.
-
-“But, _mon vieux_,” cried a plowman, “what in the world will you do with
-those berries there?”
-
-“Eat them, of course,” I answered.
-
-“Eat them!” roared the countrymen. “But those things are not good to
-eat.” And they went on, laughing louder than before.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- CLIMBING OVER THE ALPS
-
-
-I tramped through several villages, and came to the bank of the Upper
-Loire River. A short distance beyond, the road began winding up the
-first foot-hills of the Alps. Along the way every rocky hillside was cut
-into steps to its very top, and every step was thickly set with
-grape-vines.
-
-As I continued climbing upward I left the patches of grape-vines below
-me, and came to waving forests where sounded the twitter of birds and
-now and then the cheery song of a woodsman or shepherd boy.
-
-At sunset I reached the top. The road led downward, the forests fell
-away, the tiny fields appeared once more, and the song of the
-mountaineer was silent. Lower still, I spent the night at a barracks
-half filled with soldiers.
-
-The next day was Sunday. As I tramped down the mountains I met groups of
-people from Lyon, chattering gaily as, dressed in their Sunday clothes,
-they climbed to the freer air of the hills. I continued my downward
-journey, stopping now and then to look about me. The grape-vines
-disappeared, to give place to mulberry trees. From my height I could see
-the city of Lyon at the meeting-place of the rivers Soane and Rhône.
-Even on this day of merrymaking the whir of silk-looms sounded from the
-wayside cottages, well into the suburbs of the city.
-
-From Lyon I turned northeastward toward the Alps. A route winding like a
-snake climbed upward. Often I tramped for hours around the edge of a
-yawning pit, having always in view a rugged village and its vineyards
-far below, only to find myself at the end of that time within a stone’s
-throw of a sign-post that I had passed before. But I kept on, passed
-through Geneva, and in a few days’ time came to the town of Brig, at the
-foot of the Simplon Pass which crosses the Alps.
-
-The highway over the Simplon Pass was built by Napoleon in 1805. It is
-still, in spite of the railways built since, a well traveled route,
-though not by foot travelers. The good people of Brig cried out against
-it when I told them I was going to cross on foot.
-
-With a lunch in my knapsack, I left Brig at dawn. Before the sun rose
-the morning stage-coach rattled by, and the jeering of its drivers
-cheered me on. With every turn of the route up the mountain the picture
-below me grew. Three hours up, Brig still peeped out through the slender
-pine trees far below, yet almost directly beneath. Across the pit sturdy
-mountain boys scrambled from rock to boulder with their sheep and goats.
-Far above the last shrub, ragged peaks of stone stood against the blue
-sky like figures of curious shapes, peaks aglow with nature’s richest
-coloring, here one deep purple in the morning shade, there another of
-ruddy pink, changing like watered silk in the sunshine that gilded its
-top. Beyond the spot where Brig was lost to view began the roadside
-cottages in which the traveler, tired out or overcome by the raging
-storms of winter, may seek shelter. In this summer season, however, they
-had been changed into wine-shops, where children and stray goats
-wandered among the tables.
-
-Higher up I found scant footing on the narrow ledges. In several places
-the road burrowed its way through tunnels. High above one of these, a
-glacier sent down a roaring torrent right over the tunnel. Through an
-opening in the outer wall I could reach out and touch the foaming stream
-as it plunged into the abyss below.
-
-Light clouds, that had hidden the peaks during the last hours of the
-climb, almost caused me to pass by without seeing the hospice of St.
-Bernard that marks the summit. It is here that those wonderful St.
-Bernard dogs are trained to hunt for and give aid to travelers lost in
-the snow. I stepped inside to write a postal card to the world below,
-and turned out again into a drizzling rain that soon became a steady
-downpour. But the miles that had seemed so long in the morning fairly
-raced by on the downward trip, and a few hours later I reached the
-boundary line between France and Italy.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- IN SUNNY ITALY
-
-
-The next morning I continued my tramp into sunny Italy. The highway was
-covered with deep mud, and my garments were still wet when I drew them
-on. But the day was bright with sunshine. The vine-covered hillside and
-rolling plains below, the lizards basking on every shelf of rock,
-peasant women plodding barefoot along the route, made it hard to realize
-that the weather of the day before had been dismal and chilling.
-
-As I walked on I met countless poor people. Ragged children quarreled
-for the possession of an apple-core thrown by the wayside; the rolling
-fields were alive with barefooted women toiling like slaves. A sparrow
-could not have found a living behind them. In wayside orchards men armed
-with grain-sacks stripped even the trees of their leaves—for what
-purpose I did not know until the bed I was assigned to in the village
-below offered a possible explanation. All along the highway were what
-looked from a distance like walking hay-stacks. But when I came nearer I
-saw beneath them the tired faces of women or half grown girls.
-
-Nightfall found me looking for lodging in a lake-side village half way
-between Como and Lecco. I found an inn after a long and careful search;
-but, as it had no door opening on to the street, I was puzzled as to
-where to enter it. There was a dark passageway and a darker stairway
-before me, leading downward into a pit. I plunged down the passage with
-my hands out in front of me—which was fortunate, for I brought up
-against a stone wall. Then I stealthily approached the stairway,
-stumbled up the stone steps over a stray cat and a tin pan, and into the
-common room of the village inn—common because it served as kitchen,
-dining-room, parlor, and office.
-
-I asked for supper and lodging. The proprietor half rose to his feet,
-sat down again, and motioned me to a seat. I took a place opposite him
-on one of the two benches near the fireplace, partly because it had been
-raining outside, but chiefly because there were no chairs. A long
-silence followed. The keeper sat on his bench, staring long and hard at
-me without saying a word. His wife wandered in and placed several pots
-and kettles around the fire that toasted our heels.
-
-“Not nice weather,” grinned the landlord at last, and after that we were
-soon engaged in lively conversation. Too lively, in fact, for my host at
-one time became so earnest about something he was telling that he kicked
-over a kettle of macaroni, and was banished from the chimney-corner by
-his angry wife. Not being in the habit of making gestures with my feet,
-I kept my place and tried to answer the questions that the exile fired
-at me from across the room.
-
-When drowsiness fell upon me, the hostess led the way to a large, airy
-room. The coarse sheets on the bed were remarkably white, although the
-Italian housewife does her washing in the village brook, and never uses
-hot water. Such labor is cheap in Italy, and for all of this I paid less
-than ten cents.
-
-Early next day I pushed on toward Lecco. A light frost had fallen in the
-night, and the peasants, alarmed by the first breath of winter, sent
-into the vineyards every man, woman, and child able to work. The pickers
-labored feverishly. All day women plodded from the fields to the
-roadside with great buckets of grapes to be dumped into barrels on
-waiting ox-carts. Men wearing heavy wooden shoes jumped now and then
-into the barrels and stamped the grapes down. When full, the barrels
-were covered with strips of dirty canvas, the farmer climbed into his
-cart, turned his oxen into the highway, and promptly fell asleep. When
-he reached the village, he drew up before the chute of the village
-wine-press, and shoveled his grapes into a slowly revolving hopper. Here
-they were crushed to an oozy pulp, and then run into huge tanks and left
-to settle.
-
-After stopping for a morning lunch I tramped through and beyond Bergamo,
-where a level highway led across a vast plain covered with grape-vines
-and watered by a network of canals. Behind me only a ghostlike range of
-the Alps wavered in the haze of the distant sky-line.
-
-About the time I arrived in northern Italy the butchers had gone on a
-strike. That did not trouble me much, for I had eaten nothing but bread
-for weeks. The bread was made into loaves of the size, shape, and
-toughness of baseballs. Still, hard loaves soaked in wine, or crushed
-between two wayside rocks, could be eaten, in a way; and as long as they
-were plentiful I could not suffer from lack of food.
-
-A few miles farther on, however, at each of the bakeries of a village I
-was turned away with the cry of:
-
-“There is no bread! The strike! The bakers have joined the strike and no
-more bread is made.”
-
-To satisfy that day’s appetite I had to eat “paste,” a mushy mess of
-macaroni.
-
-I was returning next morning from an early view of the picturesque
-bridges and the ancient buildings of Verona, when I came upon a howling
-mob, quarreling, pushing, and scratching in a struggle to reach the
-gateway leading to the city hall. Behind this gate above the sea of
-heads I could just see the top of some heavy instrument, and the caps of
-a squad of policemen. I asked an excited neighbor the cause of the
-squabble. He glared at me and howled something in reply. The only word I
-understood was _pane_ (bread). I turned to a man behind me. Before I
-could speak to him, he shoved me aside and crowded into my place, at the
-same time shouting, “Pane!” I tried to crowd past him. He jabbed me
-twice in the ribs with his elbows, and again roared, “Pane!” In fact,
-everywhere above the howl and noise of the multitude one word rang out,
-clear and sharp—“Pane! pane! pane!” My hunger of the day before, and the
-thought of the long miles before me, aroused my interest in that
-product. I dived into the human whirlpool and battled my way toward the
-center.
-
-Reaching the front rank, I paused to look about me. Behind the iron
-gate, a dozen perspiring policemen were guarding several huge baskets of
-those baseball loaves. Beyond them stood the instrument that had
-attracted my attention. It was a pair of wooden scales that looked big
-enough to give the weight of an ox. Still farther on, an officer, who
-seemed to feel the importance of his position, sat over a huge book, a
-pen the size of a dagger behind each ear, and one resembling a young
-bayonet in his hand.
-
-One by one, the citizens of Verona were pushed through the gate into the
-space where the policemen guarded the bread, to be halted suddenly with
-the shouted question, “Pound or two pounds?” Once weighed out, his
-loaves were passed rapidly from one to another of the officials, so
-rapidly that the citizen had to run to keep up with them. When he
-reached the officer sitting before the big book, he had to pause while
-the latter asked him questions and wrote down the answers. Then he ran
-on until he reached the receiving table of another official, where he
-caught his flying loaves and made his escape.
-
-Almost before I had time to see how it was done, the pushing crowd sent
-me spinning through the gate. “Two pounds!” I shouted as I rushed on in
-my journey toward the book. In a very short time I had reached the last
-official, dropped ten _soldi_, gathered up my bread, and left by a gate
-that opened into an alley.
-
-Perhaps you think it was easy to carry two armfuls of baseball loaves.
-Take my word for it that it was no simple task. A loaf rolled into the
-gutter before I had taken a dozen steps. The others tried to squirm out
-of my grasp. With both hands full, I had to disgrace myself by squatting
-on the pavement to fill my pockets; and even then I had a hard time
-keeping them from jumping away from me. People must have taken me for a
-traveling juggler. I made up my mind that I must either give or throw
-some of those loaves away.
-
-He who longs to give alms in Italy has not far to look for some one
-willing to benefit by his kindness. I glanced down the alley, and my
-eyes fell on a mournful-looking beggar crouched in a gloomy doorway.
-With a kind-hearted smile, I bestowed upon him enough of my load to
-enable him to play the American national game until the season closed.
-The outcast wore a sign marked, “Deaf and dumb.” Either he had picked up
-the wrong card in hurrying forth to business that morning, or my
-generous gift surprised him out of his misfortune; for as long as a
-screeching voice could reach me I was flooded with more blessings than I
-could possibly have found use for.
-
-I plodded on toward Vincenza. All that day, while I sat in village inns,
-groups of discouraged-looking men sat scolding against the bakers, and
-watching me enviously as I soaked my hard-earned loaves in a glass of
-wine.
-
-When morning broke again, I decided to test the third-class cars of
-Italy to see if they were more comfortable than walking; so I took the
-train from Vincenza to Padua. At least, the ticket I purchased bore the
-name Padua, though the company hardly lived up to the printed agreement
-thereon. At the end of several hours of slow jolting and bumping, we
-were set down in the center of a wheat-field. The guard shouted,
-“Padua!” It seemed to me I had heard somewhere that Padua boasted
-buildings and streets, like other cities. It was possible that I had not
-been informed correctly. But I could not rid myself of the idea, and I
-wandered out through the lonely station to ask the first passer-by how
-to get to Padua.
-
-“Padova!” he snorted. “Certainly this is Padova! Follow this road for a
-mile. Just before you come in sight of a white-washed pig-sty, turn to
-the left, walk straight ahead, and the city cannot escape you.”
-
-I followed his directions, and in due time came to the city gate.
-
-I never saw such a sleepy town. The sun is certainly hot in Italy in the
-summer months, but I had not expected to find a place where the people
-slept all the time. The city seemed lost in slumber. The few horses
-dragged their vehicles after them at a snail’s pace, the drivers nodding
-on their seats. Many of the shop-keepers had put up their shutters and
-gone home to rest. Those who had not could with difficulty be aroused
-from their midday naps to attend to the wants of yawning customers. The
-very dogs slept in the gutters or under the chairs of their drowsy
-masters. Even many of the buildings were crumbling away and seemed to be
-falling asleep like the inhabitants.
-
-However, I had a chance to look at the famous statues and architecture
-in peace, and, leaving the sleepy city to slumber on, I set off at
-noonday toward Venice. Away to the eastward stretched land as flat and
-unbroken as the sea. Walking was not so easy, however, as it had been
-among the mountains behind, for a powerful wind from the Adriatic Sea
-pressed me back like an unseen hand at my breast. Although I had been
-certain that I would reach the coast town, Fusiano, before evening,
-twilight found me still plodding across barren lowlands. With the first
-twinkling star a faint glow of light appeared afar off to the left.
-Steadily it grew until it lighted up a distant corner of the sky, while
-the wind howled stronger and louder across the unpeopled waste.
-
-Night had long since settled down when the lapping of waves told me that
-I had reached the coast-line. A few rickety huts rose up out of the
-darkness; but still far out over the sea hovered that glow in the sky—no
-distant fire, as I had supposed, but the reflected lights of the island
-city, Venice. I had long been thinking of the cheering meal and the soft
-couch that I would have before boarding the steamer that would take me
-to the city of the sea; but I had to do without them. For there was no
-inn among the hovels of Fusiano. I took shelter in a shanty down on the
-beach, and waited patiently for the ten o’clock boat.
-
-By ten o’clock there had gathered on the crazy wharf enough dark-faced
-people to fill the steamer. On the open sea the wind was wild. Now and
-then a wave spat in the faces of the passengers huddled together on the
-deck. A ship’s officer jammed his way among us to collect the six-cent
-tickets.
-
-[Illustration: The Bridge of Sighs, so-called because it leads from the
-Justice Court in the Palace of the Doges on the left to the prison on
-the right. It crosses the Grand Canal of Venice.]
-
-By and by the steamer stopped tossing about and began to glide smoothly.
-I pushed to the rail to peer out into the night. Before me I saw a
-stretch of smooth water in which twinkled the reflection of thousands of
-lights of smaller boats, and the illuminated windows of a block of
-houses rising sheer out of the sea. We glided into port. A gondola
-lighted up by torches at both ends glided across our path. A wide canal
-opened on our left, and wound in and out among great buildings faintly
-lighted up by lamps and lanterns on the mooring-posts. It was the Grand
-Canal of Venice. The steamer nosed its way through a fleet of gondolas
-and tied up at a landing before a marble column.
-
-I went ashore and looked about me. There were no streets, and the hotels
-that faced the canals were all too expensive for me. I did not know
-where to look for the poor man’s section of the city. For two full hours
-I tramped through squares and dark, narrow alleys, only to turn up at
-last within a stone’s throw of my landing-place. I finally spent the
-night outdoors, sitting on the edge of the canal.
-
-After spending a few days in Venice, I walked down to the Grand Canal
-one morning, with my mind made up to ride in a gondola. I had difficulty
-in attracting the attention of the water cabman. They are not in the
-habit of asking men wearing corduroys and flannel shirts to be their
-passengers. A score of them had just recovered from a rush made on a
-tow-head wearing the regular tourist clothes. They did not seem to see
-me. When I boldly called out to them, they crowded around me to jeer and
-laugh at the laborer trying to play the lord. For some time they thought
-I was joking. I had to show them my purse with money in it before one of
-them offered to take me aboard.
-
-Along the Grand Canal passing gondoliers, without passengers to keep
-them in proper conduct, flung cutting taunts at my boatman.
-
-“Eh, Amico!” they called out, “what’s that you’ve got?”
-
-[Illustration: My gondolier on the Grand Canal.]
-
-“Ch’è un rico colui quà, eh?” (“Pretty rich wine that, eh?”)
-
-“Sanque della Vergine, caro mio, dove hai accozzato quello?” (“But, my
-dear fellow, where did you pick that one up?”)
-
-But my guide finally lost his grin and became respectful, pointing out
-objects of interest with a face as solemn as an owl, and shaking his
-head sternly at his fellow boatmen when they began to joke.
-
-Fear drove me away from Venice before I had rested the miles from Paris
-out of my legs—fear that in a few days more the mosquitoes would finish
-their wicked work and devour me entirely. On a Sunday evening I made my
-way to the station and bought a third-class ticket to Bologna.
-
-Under a lowering sun our train crawled slowly into Bologna—so slowly
-that I was glad to get off and walk. I struck off along the ancient
-highway to Florence. The country was mountainous, so that when I was not
-climbing up I was climbing down. The people in this section were very
-poor, earning their living by tending cattle or by making wine. A few
-miles from the town the highway began to wind up among lonely mountains.
-Here and there a vineyard clung to a wrinkled hillside. At such spots
-tall cone-shaped buckets holding about two bushels each stood by the
-roadside, some filled with grapes, others with the floating pulp left by
-the crushers.
-
-What kind of crusher was used I did not learn until nearly nightfall.
-Then, suddenly coming round a huge boulder, I stepped into a group of
-bare-legged women who were slowly treading up and down in as many
-buckets of grapes.
-
-Darkness overtook me when I was high among the lonely mountains, far
-from any hut or village. A half hour later a mountain storm burst upon
-me.
-
-For what seemed an endless length of time I plunged on. Then before me I
-noticed a faint gleam of light flickering through the downpour. I
-splashed forward, and banged on a door beside a window through which the
-light shone. The door was quickly opened, and I fell into a tiny
-wine-shop. Three drinkers sat in the room. They stared stupidly for some
-time while the water ran away from me in little rivers along the floor.
-Then the landlord remarked, with a silly grin:
-
-“You are all wet.”
-
-“Also hungry,” I answered. “What’s to eat?”
-
-“Da mangiare! Ma! Not a thing in the house.”
-
-“The nearest inn?”
-
-“Six miles on.”
-
-“I suppose I must go to bed supperless, then,” I sighed, drawing my
-water-soaked bundle from beneath my coat.
-
-“Bed!” cried the landlord. “You cannot sleep here. I keep no
-lodging-house.”
-
-“What!” I exclaimed. “Do you think I am going on in this flood?”
-
-“I keep no lodging-house,” repeated the host stubbornly.
-
-I sat down on a bench, determined that no three Italians should throw me
-out without a struggle. One by one, they came forward to try coaxing,
-growling, and shouting at me, shaking their fists in my face. I stuck
-stubbornly in my place. The landlord was ready to weep, when one of his
-countrymen drew me to the window and offered to let me stay in his barn
-across the way. I made out through the storm the dim outline of a
-building, and, catching up my bundle, dashed with the native across the
-road and into a stone hovel. I could feel under my feet that the floor
-was nothing but the bare ground. An American cow would balk at the door
-of the house of a mountain peasant of Italy; she would have fled
-bellowing if she had seen the inside of the barn that came to view when
-my companion lighted a lantern. He pointed to a heap of corn husks in a
-corner behind the oxen and donkeys. Then, fearful of losing a moment
-over the wine with his fellows, he gave the lantern a shake that put out
-the light, and, leaving me in utter darkness, hurried away.
-
-I felt my way toward the husks, narrowly missed knocking down the last
-donkey in the row, and was about to throw myself down on the heap, when
-a man’s voice at my feet shouted a word that I did not catch. Being in
-Italy, I answered in Italian:
-
-“Che avete? Voglio dormire qui.”
-
-“Ach!” groaned the voice in German. “Only an accursed Italian.”
-
-“Here, friend,” I shouted in German, poking the form with my foot. “Whom
-are you calling accursed?”
-
-The man in the husks sprang to his feet with a wild shout.
-
-“Lieber Gott!” he shrieked, clutching at my coat and dancing around me.
-“Lieber Gott! You understand German. You are no cursed Italian. God be
-thanked. In three weeks have I heard no German.”
-
-Even the asses were complaining by the time he had finished shouting and
-settled down to tell his troubles. He was only another German on his
-_Wanderjahr_ (year of wandering), who had strayed far south in the
-peninsula, and, after losing his last copper, was struggling northward
-again as rapidly as he could on strength gained from a crust of bread or
-a few wayside berries each day. One needed only to touch him to know
-that he was as thin as a side-show skeleton. I offered him half of a
-cheese I carried in a pocket, and he snatched it with the hungry cry of
-a wolf, and devoured it as we burrowed deep into the husks.
-
-All night long the water dripped from my elbows and oozed out of my
-shoes, and a bitter mountain wind swept through the cracks of the
-building. I had just begun to sleep when morning broke. I rose with
-joints so stiff that I could hardly move. I pounded and rubbed them for
-a half hour before they were in working order. Outside a cold drizzle
-was falling; but, bidding farewell to my companion of the night, I set
-out along the mountain highway.
-
-Two hours beyond the barn, I came upon a miserable group of huts crowded
-together on the top of a hill. Among them was an even more miserable
-inn, where I stopped for a bowl of thin soup in which had been drowned a
-lump of black bread. Then still hungry, I plodded on in the drizzle.
-
-A night of corn-husks had made me look more like a beggar than I knew.
-Two miles beyond the village, I passed a ragged road-repairer and a boy
-who were breaking stone at the wayside. Near by was a hedge weighted
-down with blackberries, to which I hastened and fell to picking my late
-dinner. The workman stared a moment, open-mouthed, laid aside his
-sledge, and mumbled something to the boy. The boy left his place,
-wandered down the road a short distance beyond me, and idled about as if
-waiting for someone. With a half filled cap, I set off again. The boy
-edged nearer to me as I approached, and, brushing against me, thrust
-something under my arm and ran back to the stone-pile. In my
-astonishment I dropped the gift on the highway. It was a quarter loaf of
-black bread left over from the ragged workman’s dinner.
-
-The next afternoon found me looking down upon the city of Florence, in a
-vast valley where the winding Arno was bluish silver under the setting
-sun. By evening I was housed in the city of the poet Dante and the
-artist Michelangelo.
-
-During my four days in Florence I lived with the poorest working class,
-but spent hours each day in cathedral and galleries. Beggars were
-everywhere. I paid half a franc a day for a good sized room, and bought
-my food of a traveling restaurant. At night there appeared at street
-corners in the unwashed section of the city men with pushcarts laden
-with boiled tripe. Around them gathered jostling crowds, who continued
-pushing until the last morsel had been sold. Each customer seemed to
-possess but a single cent which he had carefully guarded through the
-day, waiting for the coming of the tripe man. Never did the peddler make
-a sale without a quarrel arising over the size of the morsel; and never
-did the buyer leave until a second strip about the size of a match had
-been added to his share to make up what he claimed to be the fair
-weight.
-
-I spent most of my fourth day in Florence looking at her works of art.
-Late that afternoon I decided not to return to my lodging, and wandered
-off along the highway to Rome. The country was still mountainous, but
-the ranges were not so steep and there were more huts than to the north.
-When night settled down, I could see before me a country inn on a
-hilltop.
-
-I wandered on, reached the inn, went inside, and sat down. At first the
-groups of men seated before the fireplace and around the table scarcely
-looked my way. When I began to speak, however, they turned to stare, and
-began nodding and glancing at one another as if they said:
-
-“Now where do you suppose he comes from?”
-
-I did not offer to tell them, though they squirmed with curiosity.
-Finally one of them, clearing his throat, hinted timidly:
-
-“Hem, ah—you are a German, perhaps?”
-
-“No.”
-
-The speaker rubbed his neck with a horny hand and turned awkwardly to
-look at his fellows.
-
-“Hah, you are an Austrian!” charged another, with a scowl.
-
-“No.”
-
-“Swiss?” suggested a third.
-
-“No.”
-
-They began to show greater interest. A traveler from any but these three
-countries is something to attract unusual attention in the country inns
-of Italy.
-
-“Ah!” tried a fourth member of the group. “You are a Frenchman?”
-
-“No.”
-
-The geographical knowledge of the party was used up. There followed a
-long wrinkled-browed silence. The landlady wandered in with a pot,
-looked me over out of a corner of her eye, and left slowly. The silence
-grew intense. A native opened his mouth twice or thrice, swallowed his
-breath with a gulp, and purred with a frightened air:
-
-“Er, well—what country does the signore come from?”
-
-“From America.”
-
-A chorus of exclamations woke the cat dozing under the fireplace. The
-hostess ran in, open-mouthed, from the back room. The landlord dropped
-his pipe and exclaimed “Ma!” in astonishment. The slowest of the party
-left their games and stories and crowded closely around me.
-
-One man began telling what he knew of America. Among other things, he
-said the railway trains of America run high up in the air above the
-houses. When the others did not seem to believe it, he tried to prove it
-by shouting at them. He said he had read about it in a newspaper. Then
-he mentioned “Nuova York,” and asked me if it were not also true that
-its buildings were higher than the steeple of the village church, and
-whether the railroads were not built high to enable the people to get
-into such high houses. He seemed to think that Americans never come down
-to earth. When he gave me a chance to speak, I explained that what he
-had read was about the New York Elevated and not about the railways of
-the whole country.
-
-Moreover, “Nuova York” meant America to the whole party. Not a man of
-them knew that there were two Americas; not one had ever heard the term
-“United States.” Many country people of Italy think of America as a land
-somewhere far away,—how far or in what direction they have no
-idea,—where wages are higher than in Italy. Countless times questions
-like these were asked:
-
-“Is America farther away than Switzerland?”
-
-“Did you walk all the way from America?”
-
-“Who is king of America?”
-
-“Why! Are you a native American? I thought Americans were black!”
-
-Finally a woman added insult to injury by asking:
-
-“In America you worship the sun, _non e vero_?”
-
-One evening, at a country inn, I remarked that the United States as a
-whole is as large, if not larger, than Italy. My hearers were deafening
-me with shouts of scorn and disbelief when a newcomer of the party came
-to my assistance.
-
-“Certainly that is right!” he cried. “It is larger. I have a brother in
-Buenos Ayres, and I know. America, or the United States, as this signore
-chooses to call it, has states just like Italy. The states are Brazil,
-Uruguay, Republica Argentina, and Nuova York.”
-
-The roadway between Florence and Siena winds through splendid scenery
-and over mountains, from the top of which I had a complete view in every
-direction of the surrounding hills and valleys. But I had little chance
-to admire the scenery, for again and again I had to jump aside and vault
-over roadside hedges before a team of oxen driven round a hill. These
-oxen had horns that measured at least six and even seven feet from tip
-to tip, so when I met two of them yoked together there wasn’t much room
-left for me. Moreover, their drivers were frequently sound asleep, and
-the animals wandered this way and that as they pleased all over the
-highway, tossing their horns toward me. As I met them at almost every
-quarter mile, I had to be watchful and quick.
-
-I came upon Siena at last. Before me lay a broad, fertile valley with a
-rocky hill rising from the center of it. The houses were scattered over
-the hill, some of them on the very top, others clinging to the sides as
-if fearful of falling to the bottom into the valley itself. It was
-another of those up-and-down towns whose streets should be fitted with
-ladders; where every householder is in danger, every time he steps out
-of doors, of falling into the next block, should he by any chance lose
-his hold on the front of his dwelling. I managed to climb into the city
-without actually crawling on my hands and knees; but more than once I
-kept my place only by clutching at the nearest building.
-
-[Illustration: A country family returning from market. The grape casks
-being empty the boys do not need to walk home.]
-
-Two days after leaving Siena I was tramping along a highway that wound
-over low mountains, between whispering forests, in utter loneliness.
-Where the woods ended stretched many another weary mile, with never a
-hut by the wayside. Now and then I came upon a shepherd clad in
-sheepskins, sitting among his flocks on a hillside.
-
-The sun sank while I was plodding through an endless marsh. All about me
-were the whispering of great fields of reeds and grasses, and the dismal
-croaking of countless frogs. Twilight faded to black night. Far away
-before me the lights of Rome brightened the sky; yet hours of tramping
-seemed to bring them not a yard nearer.
-
-Forty-one miles had I covered, when three hovels rose up by the wayside.
-One was a wine-shop. I went inside and found it filled with traveling
-teamsters. One of them offered me a bed on his load of straw in the
-stable.
-
-He rose at daybreak and drove off, and at that early hour I started once
-more on my way to Rome. The lonely road led across a windy marsh,
-rounded a low hill, and brought me face to face with the ancient city
-that was once the center of the civilized world.
-
-To the right and left, on low hills, stood large buildings like those in
-American cities. From these buildings a mass of houses sloped down the
-hills and covered the broad valleys between them. The Tiber River wound
-its way among the dull gray dwellings. Here and there a dome shone
-brightly in the morning sunshine. But, towering high above all, dwarfing
-everything else, stood the vast dome of St. Peter’s.
-
-As I looked I thought of how, hundreds of years ago, people had caught
-their first glimpse of Rome from this very hilltop. Before the days of
-railroads, travelers had come by this same road, millions of them on
-foot, and entered the city by this same massive western gateway. I
-watched the steady stream of peasants, on wagons, carts, donkeys, and
-afoot, pouring through this same entrance; while officers stood there,
-running long slim swords through bales and baskets of farm produce.
-Finally I joined the noisy, surging crowd, and was swept within the
-walls.
-
-I spent nearly a week wandering through St. Peter’s, the Vatican Art
-galleries, and among the chapels, ruins, and ancient monuments of Rome.
-Then I turned southward again on the road to Naples. For three days the
-route led through a territory packed with ragged, half-starved people,
-who toiled constantly from the first peep of the sun to the last waver
-of twilight, and crawled away into some hole during the hours of
-darkness. They were not much like the people of northern Italy.
-Shopkeepers snarled at their customers, false coins of the smallest sort
-made their appearance, and had I not looked so much like the natives
-themselves I should certainly have won the attention of those who lived
-by violence.
-
-In this section the language changed rapidly. The tongue spoken in
-Florence and Siena was almost foreign here. A word learned in one
-village was not understood in another a half day distant. The villages
-were perched at the summits of the steepest hills, up which each day’s
-walk ended with a weary climb by steep paths of stones that rolled under
-my feet.
-
-For three nights after leaving Rome I had to sleep out of doors. On my
-fourth day I found lodging at the wayside, in a building that was one
-fourth inn and three fourths stable. The keeper, his wife, and their
-many children all were barefooted. The father sat on a stool, bouncing
-the baby up and down on his broad feet. Another child squatted on top of
-the four-legged board that served as a table, and in a fit of
-bashfulness thrust his fingers into his mouth.
-
-“You have lodgings for travelers?” I inquired.
-
-“Yes,” growled the owner.
-
-“How much for bed?”
-
-“Two cents.”
-
-I demanded to see the lodging that could be had at such a price.
-
-“Giovanni,” bawled the head of the house, “bring in the bed!”
-
-A moth-eaten youth flung open the back door, and threw at my feet a
-dirty grain-sack filled with crumpled straw that peeped out here and
-there.
-
-After I had rested awhile, the father bawled once more to his son, and
-motioned to me to take up my bed and walk. I followed the youth out to
-the stable, picking my way by the light of the feeble torch he carried.
-Giovanni waded inside, pointed out to me a long, narrow manger of slats,
-and fled, leaving me alone with the problem of how to rest nearly six
-feet of body on three feet of stuffed grain-sack. I tried every way I
-could think of, but decided at last to sleep on the bare slats and use
-the sack as a pillow.
-
-I had just begun to doze, when an outer door opened and let in a great
-draft of night air, closely followed by a flock of sheep that quickly
-filled the stable to overflowing. Some of the animals tried to overflow
-into the manger, sprang back when they found me in it, and made their
-discovery known to their companions by several long “b-a-a-s.” The news
-awakened a truly Italian curiosity. The sheep started a procession, and
-the whole band filed by the manger, every animal poking its nose through
-the slats for a sniff. This over, each of the flock expressed its
-opinion of my presence in trembling, nerve-racking bleats. They kept
-this up until the youth came to tell me that it was morning, and carried
-off my bed, fearful, no doubt, that I would run off with that valuable
-piece of property.
-
-[Illustration: Italian peasants returning from the vineyards to the
-village.]
-
-In spite of bruises and aches, I plodded on at a good pace, hoping by
-this early start to reach Naples before the day was done. But I was
-still in the country when the gloom, settling down like a fog, drove
-into the highway bands of weary people and four-footed beasts, toiling
-homeward from their day’s work. The route led downward. The fields
-between tumble-down villages grew shorter and shorter until they
-disappeared entirely, and I found myself between an unbroken row of
-stone houses. The bands of home-going peasants increased to a crowd,
-through which I struggled to make my way.
-
-It was impossible to stop long enough to look about me. I finally
-cornered a workman and asked how to get to Naples.
-
-“Napoli! Ma! This is Napoli!” he bellowed, shoving me aside.
-
-I plunged on, certain that the road must lead to the harbor and its
-sailors’ lodgings. Ragged, cross-looking laborers swept against me.
-Donkeys, with and without loads, brayed when their masters struck them.
-Heavy ox-carts, massive wagons, here and there a horseman, fought their
-way up the hill amid shrill shouts, roaring oaths, screaming yeehawing
-of asses, the rumble of wheels on cobblestones, the snap of whips, the
-whack of heavy sticks. I moved along with the bawling multitude before
-and behind me, and a long time afterward reached level streets, and was
-dragged into a miserable lodging-house by a boarding-house runner.
-
-In Naples the business people do not wait for you to come into the shop
-to ask for what you want. They come out to the street after you, or send
-their runners out to invite you in. The barber walks up and down the
-street, watching for men who need a shave; the merchant stands before
-his door and shouts and beckons to the passing crowd to come in and see
-his goods; the ticket agent tramps up and down the wharves, trying to
-sell a ticket to everyone who passes; and the boarding-house runners are
-everywhere, looking for the stranger within the city who has not yet
-found a lodging-place.
-
-I spent a few days in Naples, then went to Marseilles, where I lived a
-month, tramping sorrowfully up and down the break-water waiting for a
-chance to get work on some ship eastward bound. On the last day of
-November my luck changed. The _Warwickshire_, an English steamer sailing
-to Burma, put in at Marseilles and sent out a call for a sailor. I was
-the first man on board, showed them my discharge from the cattle-boat,
-and was “signed on” at once.
-
-The next day I watched the familiar harbor of Marseilles grow smaller
-and smaller until it faded away on the distant sky-line.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- AMONG THE ARABS
-
-
-On a peaceful sea the _Warwickshire_ sped eastward. My work was
-“polishin’ ’er brasses,” and I can say without boasting that the ship
-was brighter because I was there.
-
-On the morning of the fifth day out, I was ordered into the hold to send
-up the trunks of Egyptian travelers. When I climbed on deck after the
-last chest, the deep blue of the sea had turned to a shabby brown, but
-there was no land in sight. Suddenly there rose from the sea a
-flat-topped building, then another and another, until a whole village
-lay spread out on the water before us. The houses appeared to sit like
-gulls on the ruddy sea. It was Port Said. Beyond the town we could see a
-stretch of reddish desert sand. Slowly the _Warwickshire_ nosed her way
-into the canal, the anchor ran out with a rattle and roar, and there
-swarmed upon our decks a multitude of strange-looking people who seemed
-to belong to another world.
-
-Darkness soon fell. I had signed on the _Warwickshire_ under a promise
-that I might leave her at Port Said. Through all the voyage, however, my
-shipmates had spent the hours of the dog-watch telling me tales of the
-horrors that had befallen white men who became penniless among the
-Arabs. Perhaps my shipmates spoke truly. It seemed as if they might have
-done so as I sat gazing off into the blackest of nights, listening to
-the shrieks that rose from the maze of buildings ashore, and the
-snarling, scowling mobs that raced about our decks. Perhaps I should be
-murdered if I ventured ashore among these black tribes. Or, if I escaped
-murder, I might be left to die of starvation on this neck of sand.
-
-The captain had given me leave to go on to Rangoon. An Englishman, who
-was returning to the Burmese district he governed, had promised me a
-position with good pay. It seemed foolhardy to halt in this land of
-rascals, when in a few days I might complete half my journey around the
-globe and find ready employment.
-
-For an hour I sat staring into the black night, trying to decide whether
-to risk going ashore or to go on with the ship. I finally decided that I
-must see Palestine and Egypt, countries I had read much of in the Bible.
-They were lands too famous to be lightly passed by. I bade farewell to
-my astonished shipmates, collected my few days’ wages, and, with about
-nine dollars in my pocket, dropped into a boat and was rowed ashore.
-
-At the landing I paid the dusky boatman the regular fare—the amount was
-posted in plain sight on the wharf. But he was not satisfied. For an
-hour he dogged my footsteps, howling threats or whining in a
-high-pitched voice, now in his native Arabic, now in such English as he
-could put together. But I shook him off at last, and set out to find a
-lodging.
-
-It was not an easy thing to do. To be sure, I passed several hotels
-before which well dressed men lounged at little tables, and barefooted
-black waiters flitted back and forth carrying cool drinks. But to stop
-at such a hotel would take more money than I had had for some time.
-There must have been dozens of native inns among the maze of hovels into
-which I plunged at the first step off the avenue. But how could I tell
-where they were, when the only signs I could see were as meaningless to
-me as so many spatters of ink? Even in Holland I had been able to guess
-at shop names. But Arabic! I had not the least idea whether the signs I
-saw announced a lodging-house or the quarters of an undertaker! A long
-evening I pattered in and out of crooked byways, bumping now and then
-into a dark Arab who snarled at me and made off, and bringing up here
-and there in some dismal blind alley. Fearful of wandering too far from
-the lighted square, I turned back toward the harbor. Suddenly I caught
-sight of a sign in English: “Catholic Sailors’ Home.” I dashed joyfully
-toward it.
-
-The Home was little more than a small reading-room. Half hidden behind
-the stacks of ragged magazines, sat the “manager,” a Maltese boy,
-huddled over paper and pencil and staring in a discouraged manner at an
-Italian-English grammar. I stepped forward and offered to help him, and
-together we waded through a very long lesson. Before we had ended, six
-tattered white men wandered in and carefully chose books over which to
-fall asleep.
-
-“You must know,” said the young manager, as he closed the grammar, “that
-there am no sleepings here. And we closes at eleven. But I am fix you
-oop. I am shelter all these seamens, while I lose my place when the
-Catholic society found it out.”
-
-He peered out into the night and locked the doors. Then he blew out the
-lights and awoke the sleepers. We groped our way through a long
-stone-paved passageway to the back of the building.
-
-“You are getting in here,” said the Maltese, pulling open what appeared
-to be a heavy pair of shutters; “but be quietness.”
-
-I climbed through after the others. A companion struck a match that
-lighted up a stone room, once the kitchen of the Home. Closely packed
-though we were, it soon grew icy cold on the stone floor. Two of the
-ragged men rose with cries of disgust, and crawled out through the
-window to tramp up and down the hall. I felt my way to a coffin-shaped
-cupboard in one corner, laid it lengthwise on the floor, pulled out the
-shelves, and, crawling inside, closed the doors above me. My sleep was
-unbroken until morning.
-
-On my second afternoon in Port Said, one of my room-mates at the Home—an
-Austrian—wandered with me out to the break-water. We lay stretched out,
-watching the coming and going of the pilot-boats and the sparkle of the
-canal, that narrowed to a thread far away on the yellow desert.
-
-A portly Greek approached, and asked in Italian if we wanted work. We
-did, of course. We followed him back to land and along the beach until
-we came to a hut in the native part of the city. On the earth floor sat
-two widemouthed stone vessels. The Greek motioned to us to seat
-ourselves before them, poured into them some kind of small nut, and
-handed each of us a stone pestle. When we had fallen to work pounding
-the nuts, he sat down on a stool, prepared his water-bottle pipe, and,
-except for a wave of the hand now and then as a signal to us to empty
-the vessels of the beaten mass and refill them, remained utterly
-motionless for the rest of the day.
-
-Like machines we pounded hour after hour. The pestles were heavy when we
-began; before the day was over mine weighed at least a ton. What we were
-beating up, and what we were beating it up for, I do not know to this
-day. The Austrian said that he knew the use of the product, but fell
-strangely silent when I asked him to explain. Night sounds were drifting
-in through the door of the hut when the Greek signed to us to stop. Then
-he handed each of us five small piasters (12½ cents). We hurried away
-across the beach to a native shop where mutton sold cheaply.
-
-Two days later I took a “deck-passage” for Beirut, and boarded an old
-ship flying the English flag. A crowd of Arabs, Turks, and Syrians,
-Christians and Mohammedans, men and women, squatted on the half-covered
-deck. In one place were piled a half hundred wooden gratings. What these
-were for was a mystery to me until my fellow passengers fell to pulling
-them down, one by one, and spreading their bed-clothes on them! I was
-the only one of all the multitude without bedding; even the lean, gaunt
-Bedouins, dressed in tattered filth, had each a roll of ragged blankets
-in which, after saying their evening prayers with many bowings toward
-the city of Mecca, they rolled themselves and lay down together. When I
-stretched out on a bare grating, the entire throng was lying huddled in
-a dozen separate groups.
-
-Morning broke bright and clear. Far off to the right rose the
-snow-capped range of the Lebanon Mountains. I strolled anxiously about
-the deck. In a group of Turks I came upon two who spoke French. I began
-to talk with them, chiefly because I wanted to ask them questions. I
-told them a few of my experiences on the highways of Europe. These
-stories amused them greatly. Then I spoke of my intention of walking to
-Damascus. They shouted with astonishment. It was plain that some of them
-did not believe me.
-
-“What!” cried one of the French-speaking Turks, waving a flabby hand
-toward the snow-banks that covered the wall-like range of mountains. “Go
-to Damascus on foot! Impossible! You would be buried in the snow. This
-country is not like Europe! There are thousands of murderous Bedouins
-between here and Damascus who would glory in cutting the throat of a dog
-of an unbeliever! Why? I have lived years in Beirut, and no man of my
-acquaintance, native or Frank [European], would ever undertake such a
-journey on foot.”
-
-“And you would lose your way and die in the snow,” put in the other.
-
-Throughout the morning the pair were kept busy translating for me what
-the others of the group said about the absolute foolishness of such an
-undertaking. It was a story I heard again and again while traveling in
-the Far East; but it was new to me then, and as I ran my eye along the
-snow-hooded wall that faded into hazy distance to the north and south, I
-half believed it.
-
-The coast-line drew nearer. On the plain at the foot of the mountains I
-could see here and there well cultivated patches between dreary
-stretches of blood-red sand. A few minutes later we dropped anchor well
-out in the harbor of Beirut. Down the gangway tumbled a mighty landslide
-of Asiatics, men and women, large and small, dirty and half dirty,
-pushing, kicking, scratching and biting one another, hopelessly
-entangled with bundles of every thinkable shape. Shouting boatmen rowed
-us ashore. As we swung in against the rock, I caught a proud-looking
-Bedouin trying to separate me from my knapsack. A well directed push
-landed him in the laps of several heavily veiled women, and I sprang up
-a stairway cut in the face of the rock.
-
-The city itself was miles away from the landing-place. One of the
-officials called an evil-looking native, clothed in a single garment
-that reached to his knees, and ordered him to guide me to the town. We
-set off through the night, heavy with the smell of oranges, along a
-narrow road six inches deep in the softest mud. On the outskirts of the
-city the native halted and began talking to me in Arabic. I shook my
-head. He seemed to think that I was unable to understand him because of
-some fault in my hearing. So he asked the question again and again,
-louder and more rapidly each time he repeated it. I let him shout until
-breath failed him and he gave up and splashed on. He halted once more,
-in a square reeking with mud in the center of the city, and burst forth
-excitedly in a jumble of words more difficult to understand than before.
-
-“Ingleesee?” he shrieked, with his last gasp.
-
-“No,” I answered, understanding this one word; “Americano.”
-
-“Ha!” shouted the Arab. “Americano?” And once more he began his
-shouting. He seemed to be trying to explain something about my fellow
-countrymen, for he repeated the word “Americano” again and again. Once
-more he gave up trying to make me understand and struck off to the
-southward. I shouted “hotel” and “inn” in every language I could call to
-mind; but, after a few mumbles, he fell silent, and only the splash of
-our feet in the muddy roadway could be heard.
-
-We left the city behind, but still the Arab plodded steadily and
-silently southward. Many a story of white men led into Arabic traps
-passed through my mind. Far out among the orange groves beyond the city,
-he turned into a small garden, and pointed to a lighted sign above the
-door of a building among the trees. It was the home of the American
-consul. Not knowing what else to do with a Frank who did not understand
-the loudest Arabic, the native had led me to the only man in Beirut whom
-he had heard called “Americano.”
-
-When I had paid my bill next morning at the French inn to which I had
-been sent, I stepped into the office of that great tourist agency, Cook
-& Son, and exchanged a sovereign for so many iron and tin coins that I
-could hardly carry them. Then I ate a native breakfast, and, strolling
-down to the harbor, sat on a pier.
-
-For a time the uproar made by shrieking Arabs, braying camels, and the
-rattle of ships discharging their freight, drowned all other sounds.
-Then suddenly I caught faintly a shout in English behind me, and turned
-around. A lean native in European dress and fez cap was beckoning to me
-from the opening of one of the narrow streets. I dropped from the pier
-and turned shoreward. The native ran toward me. “You speak Eengleesh?”
-he cried. “Yes? No? What countryman you?”
-
-“American.”
-
-“No? Not American?” shrieked the native, dancing up and down. “You not
-American? Ha! ha! ver’ fine. I American one time, too. I be one time
-sailor on American warsheep _Brooklyn_. You write Engleesh too? No? Yes?
-Ver’ fine! You like job? I got letters write in Engleesh! Come, you!”
-
-He led the way through the swarming streets, shouting answers to the
-questions I asked him. He said his name was Abdul Razac Bundak and his
-business that of “bumboat man.” That is to say, he sold supplies to
-ships, acted as guide for officers ashore, led tourists on sight-seeing
-trips, and in the busy season ran a sailors’ boarding-house.
-
-Some distance back from the harbor, in a shoe-shop kept by his uncle, I
-sat down to write three letters for him. By the time these were finished
-he had discovered that I knew other languages, and I wrote three more,
-two in French and one in Spanish. They were business letters to ship
-captains who often put in at Beirut. The bumboat man paid me two unknown
-coins and invited me to dinner in a neighboring shop.
-
-In the days that followed, our “company,” as Abdul called it, was the
-busiest in Beirut. I wrote many letters for him and for other Arabs in
-the city who had heard of me. Had those men been less indolent they
-might have doubled their business. But they did not like to hurry. Again
-and again, while telling me what to write, they would drift away into
-the land of dreams with a sentence left half finished on their lips. The
-palm of the left hand was the writing-desk, and it was always with
-difficulty that I stirred them up to clear a space on their littered
-stands. I did not get much pay for this work; but I added something each
-day to the scrap iron in my pocket.
-
-When business was slow, Abdul could think of nothing better to do than
-to eat and drink. Let his cigarette burn out, and he rose with a yawn,
-and we rambled away through the windings of the bazaars to some tiny
-tavern. The keepers were always delighted to be awakened from their
-dreams by our “company.” While we sat on a log or an upturned basket and
-sipped a glass of some native drink, Abdul spun long tales of the
-_faranchee_ world. Some of these stories could not have been true; but,
-with a live _faranchee_ to serve as illustration, the shop-keepers were
-satisfied and listened open-mouthed.
-
-With every drink the keeper served a half dozen tiny dishes of
-hazelnuts, radishes, peas in the pod, cold squares of boiled potatoes,
-berries, and vegetables known only in Arabia. But Abdul was gifted with
-an unfailing appetite, and at least once after every business deal he
-led the way to one of the many eating-shops facing the busiest streets
-and squares. In a gloomy, cave-like shop, the front of which was all
-door, stood two long, rough tables, with long, rough benches beside
-them. The proprietor sat near the entrance behind a great block of brick
-and mortar over which simmered a score of black kettles. I read the bill
-of fare by raising the cover of each kettle in turn, chose a dish that
-seemed less mysterious than the rest, picked up a large ring-shaped loaf
-and a bottle of water from a bench, and withdrew to the back of the
-shop. Whatever I chose, it was almost certain to contain mutton. The
-Arabian cook, however, sets nothing over the fire until he has cut it
-into small pieces. Each dinner was a stew of some kind, of differing
-tastes and colors.
-
-Abdul did not often concern himself with the contents of the kettles,
-for his prime favorite was a dish prepared by running a row of tiny
-cubes of liver and kidneys on an iron bar, and turning them over and
-over above glowing coals. I too should have ordered this delicacy more
-often, had not Abdul, with his incurable “Eengleesh,” persisted in
-calling it “kittens.”
-
-With all its mud and careless disorder, there was something very
-pleasing about this corner of the Arab world: the lazy droning of its
-shop-keepers, the roll of the incoming sea, the twitter of birds that
-spoke of summer and seemed to contradict the calendar—above all, the
-picturesque orange trees bending under the ripening fruit that perfumed
-the soft air, with the snow-drifts almost within stone’s throw on the
-peaks above.
-
-For all that, I should not have remained so long in Beirut by choice,
-for the road was long before me, and I had planned to cover a certain
-part of it each day. But my friends in the East could not understand why
-I was anxious to go at once. “To-morrow is as good as to-day; wait until
-to-morrow,” they would say, when some small matter had kept me from
-starting on the day I had planned. But when to-morrow came, they
-repeated the same words. They could not understand my hurry.
-
-There was no one in Beirut who could tell me which road led to Damascus.
-Abdul threw up his hands in horror when I spoke to him of my intended
-journey. “Impossible!” he shrieked. “There is not road. You be froze in
-the snow before the Bedouins cut your liver. You no can go. Business
-good. Damascus no good. Ver’ col’ in Damascus now.”
-
-One afternoon, however, while in unusually good spirits, he admitted
-that there was a road leading to Damascus, and that caravans had been
-known to pass over it. But even then he insisted that the journey could
-not be made on foot.
-
-The bumboat man left me next morning just outside the city, and a bend
-in the road soon hid him from view. For an hour the highway was
-perfectly level. On each side were rich gardens and orange groves,
-thronged with dusky men and women clad in flowing sheets. Soon all this
-changed. The road wound upward, the delicate orange tree gave place to
-the sturdy olive, instead of fertile gardens there were now rocky
-hillsides all about, and the only persons to be seen were now and then
-an Arab, grim and scowling, leading or riding a swaying camel.
-
-The way was lonely and silent. A rising wind sighed mournfully through
-the gullies and trees. The summer breeze of the sea-level turned chilly.
-I hunted until I found the sunny side of a large rock before attempting
-to eat the lunch in my knapsack. Farther up the cedar forests began.
-Here and there groups of peasants were digging on the wayside slopes. To
-the north and south I could see flat-roofed villages clinging to
-mountain-sides.
-
-How strange and foreign seemed everything about me! The dress and tools
-of the peasants, the food in my knapsack, everything was so different
-from the world I had lived in. If I spoke to those I met, they answered
-back in a strange jumble of words, wound the folds of their queer
-garments about them, and hurried on. If I caught sight of a village
-clock, its hands pointed to six when the hour was noon. Even the
-familiar name of the famous city to which I was bound was meaningless to
-the natives, for they called it “Shaam.”
-
-My pronunciation of the word must have been at fault; for, though I
-stood long at a fork in the road in the early forenoon, shouting “Shaam”
-at each passer-by, I took the wrong branch at last. I tramped for some
-hours along a rapidly disappearing highway before I suspected my
-mistake. Even then I kept on, for I was not certain that I was going in
-the wrong direction. At last the route led forth from a cutting in the
-hills, and the shimmering sea almost at my feet showed me that I was
-marching due southward.
-
-Two peasants appeared above a rise of ground beyond. As they drew near I
-pointed off down the road and shouted, “Shaam?” The pair halted
-wonderingly in the center of the highway some distance from me. “Shaam!
-Shaam! Shaam!” I repeated, striving to give the word a pronunciation
-that they could understand. The peasants stared open-mouthed, drew back
-several paces, and peered down the road and back at me a dozen times, as
-if they were not sure whether I was calling their attention to some
-wonder of nature, or trying to get them to turn around long enough to
-pick their pockets. Then a slow, half-hearted smile broke out on the
-features of the quicker-witted. He stood first on one leg, then on the
-other, squinted along the highway once more, and began to repeat after
-me: “Shaam! Shaam! Shaam!”
-
-“Aywa, Shaam!” I cried.
-
-He turned to his companion. They talked together so long that I thought
-they had forgotten me. Then both began to shake their heads so forcibly
-that the muscles of their necks stood out like steel cords. Two broad
-grins wrinkled their leathery faces. They stretched out their arms to
-the southward and burst forth in unmusical duet: “La! la! la! la! la!
-Shaam! La! la! la! la! la!” The Arab says “la” when he means “no.” I
-turned around and hurried back the way I had come.
-
-Dusk was falling when I came a second time to a two-row village facing
-the highway. As I expected, there was not an inn, or anything like one,
-in the place. I had seen enough of the Arabian, however, to know that he
-has his share of curiosity. So I sat down on a large rock at the end of
-the village.
-
-In three minutes a small crowd had collected. In ten, half the
-population was swarming around me and roaring at my useless effort to
-make myself understood. They stood about me, grinning and chattering,
-for a good half hour before one of the band motioned to me to follow
-him, and turned back into the village. The crowd followed me, closely
-examining every part of my clothing, grinning, smirking, running from
-one side to the other, lest they lose some point in the make-up of so
-strange a creature, and babbling the while like an army of apes.
-
-The leader turned off the highway toward the largest building in the
-village. Ten yards from the door, he halted. The crowd formed a half
-circle, leaving me in the center, and then one and all began to shout
-something at the top of their lungs.
-
-A girl of some sixteen years appeared at the door. “Taala hena!” (“Come
-here!”) roared the chorus. The girl ran down the steps. A roar as of an
-angry sea burst forth, as every member of the company stretched out an
-arm toward me. Plainly each was determined that he, and not his
-neighbor, should be the one to introduce this strange being.
-
-“Sprechen Sie Deutsch?” (“Do you speak German?”) shrieked the girl in my
-ear.
-
-“Ja wohl.” (“Yes, indeed”), I answered.
-
-The rabble fell utterly silent at the first word, and I asked to be
-directed to an inn.
-
-“There is no hotel in our city of Bhamdoon,” replied the girl, with
-flashing eyes. “We should be insulted. In this house with my family
-lives a German missionary lady. You must stop here.”
-
-She led the way to the door. The missionary met me on the steps with a
-cry of delight. She explained that she had not seen a European in many
-months.
-
-“What would supper and lodging cost me here?” Luckily, the German lady
-was hard of hearing. The girl gave me a quick glance, half scornful,
-half astonished, which reminded me that such a question is an insult in
-the land of Arabs.
-
-“The lady is busy now,” said the girl. “Come and visit my family.” She
-led the way along a hall and threw open a door. I pulled off my cap.
-
-“Keep it on,” said my guide, “and leave your shoes there.”
-
-She stepped out of her own loose slippers and into the room. It was
-square and low. The stone floor was half covered with mats and cushions.
-In the center glowed a small sheet-iron stove; and around three of the
-walls ran a long cushioned seat. Two men, two women, and several
-children were seated in a half circle on the floor, their legs folded
-under them. They rose without a word as I entered. The girl placed a
-cushion for me on the floor. The family sat down again and carefully and
-slowly folded their legs as before. Then, after they were firmly seated,
-one and all in turn, according to age, cried “Lailtak saeedee” (Good
-evening).
-
-In the center of the group were three large bowls, one of lentils and
-another of chopped-up potatoes in oil. A third contained a delicacy made
-of sour milk, half soup and half pudding, that is a great favorite among
-the Arabs. On the floor, beside each member of the family, lay several
-sheets of bread, half a yard wide and as thin as cardboard. The head of
-the house pushed the bowls toward me, ordered a stack of bread to be
-placed beside my cushion, and motioned me to eat. I stared helplessly at
-the bowls, for there was neither knife, fork, nor spoon in sight. The
-girl, however, knowing the ways of _faranchees_ from years in a mission
-school in Beirut, explained my difficulty to her father. He cast a
-scornful look at me, begged my pardon, through his daughter, for being
-so impolite as to eat a morsel before his guest had begun, tore a few
-inches from a bread-sheet, and, folding it between his fingers, picked
-up a pinch of lentils and ate. I lost no time in following his example.
-
-A wonderful invention is this Arab bread. If one buys food in a native
-bazaar, it is wrapped in a bread-sheet, and a very good wrapper it is,
-for it requires a good grip and a fair pair of muscles to tear it. A
-bread-sheet takes the place of many dishes. It makes a splendid cover
-for pots and pans; it does well as a waiter’s tray. Never have I seen it
-used to cover roofs, nor as shaving paper; but, then, the Arab is slow
-and he may not have thought of making use of it in those ways yet. As an
-article of food, however, this bread is not an entire success. The taste
-is not unpleasant, but ten minutes’ chewing makes far less impression on
-it than on a rubber mat. The bread I ate that night must have been very
-old, for it would fall into pieces when I used it as a spoon. My host
-picked up one of my sheets, held it against the glowing stove with the
-flat of his hand, and returned it. It bent as easily as cloth and was
-much more agreeable to the taste than before.
-
-The younger man rolled cigarettes for himself and his father. They asked
-me questions, which the girl repeated to me in German. She was about to
-tell them my answers, when there came a tap at the door and a few words
-in Arabic that caused the family to jump hurriedly to their feet.
-“Sheik! sheik!” they whispered excitedly. The children were whisked into
-one corner.
-
-The door was flung open, and there entered the room an under-sized man
-of about sixty. Long, flowing robes enveloped his form, a turban-wound
-fez perched almost merrily on his head, and his feet were bare, for he
-had dropped his slippers at the door. His face, deeply wrinkled, with a
-long scar across one cheek, was browned and weather-beaten by the wild
-storms that sometimes rage over the Lebanon.
-
-The sheik greeted the head of the family, took a seat near me on the
-divan, bowed low to each person present, bowed again when they each
-returned his greeting, and then with a wave of his hand invited them to
-be seated. The newcomer had quite plainly been attracted to the house
-because he had heard that a _faranchee_ was visiting the family. He was
-asking questions about me, as I could tell by his gestures and the few
-words I understood. The family began eagerly explaining and telling him
-how they supposed I happened to be in that part of the world. For a time
-the sheik listened without showing the least surprise. He sat there
-puffing at a cigarette as quietly as if it were nothing new to have
-_faranchees_ wander into his town on foot at night.
-
-At the end of his story, however, the head of the house remarked that I
-was on my way to “Shaam” on foot. This news was as astonishing as he
-could have wished. The sheik fairly bounded into the air, threw his
-cigarette at the open stove, and burst forth excitedly. The girl
-explained his words. He said it was “impossible,” it “couldn’t be done”;
-and at the close of his speech he declared that, as village mayor or
-sheik, he would not permit me to continue on such a foolhardy
-undertaking. How many weapons did I carry? None? What—no weapon? Travel
-to far-off Damascus without being armed? Why, his own villagers never
-ventured along the highway to the nearest towns without their guns! he
-would not hear of it! And he was still talking excitedly when the
-missionary came to invite me to a second supper.
-
-I bade farewell to the family early next morning, swung my knapsack over
-my shoulder and limped down to the road. But Bhamdoon was not yet done
-with me. In the center of the highway, in front of the little shop that
-he kept, stood the sheik and several of his townsmen. With great
-politeness he invited me to step inside. My feet were still swollen and
-blistered from the long tramp of the day before, for the cloth slippers
-of Port Said offered no more protection from the sharp stones of the
-highway than a sheet of paper; so I accepted the invitation. The village
-head placed a stool for me in front of the shop, where everybody walking
-up or down the road could see me.
-
-It soon began to look as if I were on exhibition as some strange animal
-that had been discovered, for the sheik pointed me out with delight to
-every passer-by. It was plain, too, that he was making use of the moment
-to collect some village tax. For on the floor beside me stood an
-earthenware pot, and as soon as the visitors had looked me over from all
-sides, the sheik invited them to drop into it a _bishleek_ (ten cents).
-Not a man passed without giving something; for the command of a sheik of
-a Syrian village is a law to all its people.
-
-After I had sat there for some time, a villager I had not yet seen
-appeared and began talking to me in English. I learned that he had once
-lived in Maine, where he had earned money enough to live in ease in his
-native country, to which he had returned years before. He insisted that
-I visit his house near by. While I was there he fell to tucking
-bread-sheets, black olives, raisins, and pieces of sugar-cane into my
-knapsack, shouting all the while of his undying love for America and
-things American. Out of mere pride for his dreary country, he took care,
-on his way back to the shop, to point out a narrow path that wound up
-the steep slope of the neighboring range of mountains.
-
-“That,” he said, “leads to the Damascus road; but no man can journey to
-Damascus on foot.”
-
-The earthenware pot was almost full when I took my seat again on the
-stool. I turned to my new acquaintance.
-
-“What special taxes is the sheik gathering this morning?” I demanded.
-
-“Eh! What?” cried the former New Englander, following the direction of
-my finger. “The pot? Why, don’t you know what that’s for?”
-
-“No,” I answered.
-
-“Why, that is a collection the sheik is taking up to buy you a ticket to
-Damascus on the railroad.”
-
-I picked up my knapsack from the floor, and stepped into the highway.
-The sheik and several bystanders threw themselves upon me to hold me
-back. It was no use trying to escape from a dozen horny hands. I
-permitted myself to be led back to the stool, and sat down with the
-knapsack across my knees. The sheik addressed me in soothing tones, as
-if he were trying to coax me to wait, pointing to the pot with every
-third word. The others went back to their seats on the floor, rolled new
-cigarettes, and became quiet once more. With one leap I sprang from the
-stool into the street, and set off at top speed down the highway, a
-screaming, howling, ever-increasing, but ever more distant crowd at my
-heels.
-
-Half an hour later I reached the top of a neighboring range of
-mountains, and slid down the opposite slope on to the highway to
-Damascus.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- A LONELY JOURNEY
-
-
-For miles the road climbed sharply upward, or crawled along the face of
-a mountain at the edge of a yawning pit. The villages were far apart,
-and as they were low and flat, and built of the same rock as the
-mountains, I did not notice them until I was almost upon them. In every
-such place one or more of the householders marched back and forth on the
-top of his dwelling, dragging after him a great stone roller and
-chanting a mournful tune that seemed to cheer him on in his labor.
-
-At first sight these flat roofs seemed to be of heavy blocks of stone.
-But they were really made of branches and bushes, plastered over with
-mud. If the rolling had been neglected for a fortnight in this rainy
-season, the roofs would soon have sagged and fallen in of their own
-weight.
-
-Most of the way was lonely. At one time I met a line of proud and
-scornful-looking camels plodding westward. Some time later a company of
-villagers on horseback appeared, and a long moment afterward I came upon
-a straggling band of evil-eyed Bedouins astride lean asses. Never a
-human being alone, never a man on foot, and never a traveler without a
-long gun slung across his shoulders. The villagers stared at me
-open-mouthed; the camel-drivers leered wickedly; and the scowling
-Bedouins halted to watch me, as I went on, as if they were trying to
-decide whether I was worth the robbing.
-
-The highway wound upward through a narrow rocky passage between tall
-hills. As I went on I noticed how lonely the pass was. I began to think
-that wandering Bedouins could not choose a better spot in which to lie
-in wait for the victims they meant to rob. Suddenly a shot rang out at
-the top of the pass. I started in alarm.
-
-[Illustration: Beyond the pass stretched mile after mile of rocky
-country, the loneliest I had ever seen.]
-
-The command came from no highwayman, however. Before a ruined hut on the
-hill above stood a man in khaki uniform, the reins of a saddled horse
-that grazed at his feet over one arm. “Teskereh!” he bawled.
-
-I climbed the hillside, and handed over my Turkish passport. The officer
-grew friendly at once, and invited me into his hut. Its only furnishings
-were a mat-covered bench that served as a bed, and a pan of coals. I
-drew out a few coins and ate an imaginary breakfast. The officer could
-not or would not understand my acting. He motioned me to a seat, offered
-a cigarette, and poured out a cup of muddy coffee from a pot over the
-coals; but food he would not bring forth.
-
-After we had sat grinning speechlessly at each other for a while, I drew
-him out of the hut, and, once in the sunshine, opened my camera. He gave
-one wild shriek, and stumbled over himself in his haste to get back into
-the hovel. Nor could any amount of coaxing lead him to come out again
-until I had closed the camera.
-
-Beyond the pass stretched mile after mile of rocky country, the
-loneliest that I had ever seen. Hills upon hills sank down behind each
-other, rocky and drear. Here and there a single olive tree added to the
-loneliness of the surroundings. It was truly a “waste place of the
-earth.”
-
-All through the day I tramped on, with never a sight or sound of any
-living thing. Darkness fell over the same bare and rocky wilderness. The
-wind howled across the lonely waste. On this blackest of nights I could
-not have made out a ghost a yard away, and the unknown highway led me
-into many a pitfall. Long hours after sunset I was plodding blindly on,
-my cloth slippers making not a sound, when I ran squarely into the arms
-of some kind of person whose native footwear had made his approach as
-noiseless as my own. Three startled male voices rang out in hoarse
-shrieks of “Allah!” as the trio sprang back in terror.
-
-Before I could pass on, one of them struck a match. The howling wind
-blew it out instantly, but in that brief flicker I caught sight of three
-ugly faces under the headdress that belongs to the roving Bedouin.
-“Faranchee!” they screamed, and flung themselves upon the particular
-corner of the darkness where the match had shown me standing.
-
-In the excitement of the moment I jumped aside so hastily that I fell
-off the highway. The rattling of stones under my feet told them my
-whereabouts, and they charged upon me again. A dozen times, in the game
-of hide-and-seek that followed, I felt the breath of one of the
-flea-bitten rascals in my face.
-
-The Arabic rules of the game, fortunately, made the players keep up a
-continual howling, while I moved silently, after the fashion of the
-West. Helped in this unfair way, I managed to escape them until they
-stopped to whisper together. Then, creeping noiselessly on hands and
-knees, I lay hold on the highway and sped silently away, by no means
-certain whether I was headed toward Damascus or the coast.
-
-An hour later the howling of dogs told me that I was near a village.
-Once I halted to listen for sounds of human voices. Everybody, it
-seemed, was asleep, for what Syrian could be awake and silent? The
-lights that shone from every hovel proved nothing, for Arabs are afraid
-of the evil spirits that lurk in the darkness and leave their lamps
-burning all night. I beat off the snapping curs and started on again.
-
-Suddenly sounds of laughter and excited voices sounded from a building
-before me. I hurried toward it and knocked loudly on the door. The
-merriment ceased. For several moments there was not a sound. Then there
-came the slapping of slippered feet along the passageway inside, and a
-woman’s voice called out to me. I called back in the few Arabic words I
-knew: “M’abarafshee arabee! Faranchee! Fee wahed locanda? Bnam!” (“I
-don’t speak Arabic! Foreigner! Is there an inn? Sleep!”)
-
-Without a word, the unknown lady slapped back along the hall. A good
-five minutes passed. I knocked once more, and again there came the
-patter of feet. This time a man’s gruff voice greeted me. I repeated
-what I had said before. Then I heard the sliding of many bolts and bars,
-the heavy door opened ever so slightly, and the muzzle of a gun was
-thrust out into my face. The eyes above the musket peered cautiously out
-into the darkness.
-
-A moment later the door was flung wide open, and a very giant of a
-native, with a mustache that would have made the Kaiser jealous, stepped
-out, holding his clumsy gun ready for instant use. I had to laugh at his
-frightened look. He smiled shamefacedly, and, going back into the house,
-returned in a moment without his gun, and carrying a lamp and a rush
-mat. At one end of the building he pushed open a door that hung by one
-hinge, and lighted me into a room with earth floor and one window from
-which five of the six panes were missing. A heap of dried branches at
-one end showed it to be a wood-shed.
-
-A starved-looking cur wandered in at our heels. The native drove him
-off, spread the mat on the ground, and brought from the house a pan of
-live coals. I called for food. When he returned with several
-bread-sheets, I drew out my handkerchief containing the coins, and began
-to untie it. My host shook his head fiercely and pointed several times
-at the ceiling to show that the missionaries had made a Christian of him
-and that he would not accept pay.
-
-Barely had the native disappeared when the dog poked his ugly head
-through the half-open door and snarled viciously at me. He was a wolfish
-animal, the yellow cur so common in Syria, and in his eye gleamed a
-wickedness that gave him a startling likeness to the thieving nomads
-that rove over that drear land. I drove him off and made the door fast,
-built a roaring fire of twigs, and rolling up in the mat, lay down
-beside the blaze.
-
-I woke from a doze to find that cur sniffing at me and showing his ugly
-fangs within six inches of my face. A dozen times I fastened the door
-against him—in vain. Had he merely bayed the moon all night it would
-have mattered little, for with a fire to tend I had small chance to
-sleep, but his silent skulking and his muffled snarls kept me wide-eyed
-with uneasiness until the gray of dawn peeped in at the ragged window.
-
-The village was named Hemeh. I left it and continued my journey. The
-dreary hills of the day before fell quickly away. The highway sloped
-down a narrow, fertile valley in close company with a small river. On
-the banks of the river grew willows and poplars in great masses.
-
-A bright morning sun soon made the air agreeable, although the chill of
-night and the mountains still hovered in the shadows. Travelers became
-frequent. I met peasant families driving their asses homeward from the
-morning market, bands of merchants on horseback, and well-to-do natives
-in clothes that made me think of the unlucky coat of Joseph. Here passed
-a camel caravan whose drivers would, perhaps, purchase just such a slave
-of his brothers this very day. There squatted a band of Bedouins at
-breakfast. Beyond rode a full-bearded sheik who reminded me of Abraham
-of old.
-
-The road continued downward. The passing crowd became almost a
-procession. I swung, at last, round a group of hills that had hidden
-from view an unequaled sight. Two miles away, across a vast level plain,
-crossed by the sparkling river, and peopled by a battalion of soldiers
-drilling in the sunlight, the white city of Damascus stood out against a
-background of dull red hills, the morning sun gleaming on its graceful
-domes and slender towers. I passed on with the crowd, and was soon
-swallowed up in “the street called Straight”—which isn’t.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- CITIES OF OLD
-
-
-The whistle of the locomotive is now heard in the suburbs of Damascus;
-for, besides the railway to the coast, a new line brings to the ancient
-city the produce of the vast and fertile plain beyond Jordan. A few
-single telegraph wires, too, connect “Shaam” with the outside world, and
-the whir of the American sewing-machine is heard in her long,
-tunnel-like streets. But these few modern improvements make the ancient
-ways of the city seem stranger still.
-
-Here is a man with a stone hammer, beating into shape a vessel of brass
-on a flat rock. There a father and son are turning a log into wooden
-shoes with a very old-fashioned buck-saw, the man standing on the log,
-the boy kneeling on the ground beneath. Beyond them is a strange-looking
-turning-lathe. The workman squats on the floor of his open shop, facing
-the street; for no Damascan can carry on his business with his back
-turned to the sights and sounds made by the passing crowd. With his
-right hand he holds a sort of Indian bow which has its cord wound once
-around the stick he is shaping. As he moves this bow back and forth, the
-stick, whirling almost as rapidly as in a steam lathe, is whittled into
-shape by a chisel which he holds with his left hand and his bare toes.
-
-Mile after mile through the endless rows of bazaars, such old-fashioned
-trades are carried on. Every foot of space on either side of the narrow
-streets is in use. Wherever the overdressed owners of great heaps of
-silks and rugs have left a pigeonhole between their shops, sits a ragged
-peddler of sweetmeats and half-inch slices of cocoanut.
-
-Stores selling the same kind of article are found together in one part
-of the city, and nowhere else. In one section are crowded a hundred
-manufacturers of the red fez cap of the Mohammedan. In another a colony
-of brass-workers makes a deafening din. Beyond sounds the squeak of
-hundreds of saws where huge logs are slowly turned into lumber by hand
-power. The shopper who wants to buy a pair of slippers may wander from
-daylight to dusk among shops overflowing with every other imaginable
-ware, to come at last, when he is ready to give up, into a section where
-slippers of every size, shape, and color are displayed on either side of
-the street, as far as he can see.
-
-To try to make headway against the pushing crowd is much like attempting
-to swim up the gorge of Niagara. Long lines of camels splash through the
-human stream, caring nothing for the small boys under their feet.
-Donkeys all but hidden under great bundles of fagots that scrape the
-building on either side, asses bestraddled by shouting boys who guide
-the beasts by kicking them behind the ears and urge them on by a queer
-trilling sound, dash out of darkened and unexpected side streets. Not an
-inch do they turn aside, not once do they slacken their pace. The
-_faranchee_ who expects them to do so is sure to receive many a jolt in
-the ribs from the donkey, or from his load, and to be sent sprawling—if
-there is room to sprawl—as the beast and his driver glance back at him
-with a wicked gleam in their eyes.
-
-Hairless, scabby curs, yellow or gray in color, prowl among the legs of
-the throng, skulking through the byways, devouring the waste matter they
-find, or lie undisturbed in the puddles that abound in every street. The
-donkey may knock down a dozen foot travelers an hour; but he takes good
-care to step over the dogs in his path. Often these beasts gather in
-bands at busy corners, yelping and snarling, snapping their yellow
-fangs, and raising a din that puts a stop to bargainings a hundred yards
-away. If a by-stander wades among them with his stick and drives them
-off, it is only to have them collect again five minutes after the last
-yelp has been silenced.
-
-A _metleek_ is only a cent. Yet, as you pass through the streets of
-Damascus, the constant calling for it sounds like a multitude searching
-the wilderness for a lost child. “Metleek!” cries the seller of flat
-loaves, on the ground at your feet. “Metleek!” screams the wandering
-bartender, jingling his brass disks. The word is shouted commandingly
-from the peddler whose novelty has attracted a crowd, fiercely from the
-angry-looking fellow whose stand has been deserted, pleadingly from the
-crippled beggar, who threads his way with astonishing swiftness through
-the human whirlpool. Unendingly the word echoes through the openings and
-windings of the bazaars.
-
-When night came on I was wandering dismally through the winding streets
-where long lines of merchants were setting up the board shutters before
-their shops. It mattered not in what European language I inquired for an
-inn of those I met. Each one muttered, “M’abarafshee” (“I don’t
-understand”), and hurried on.
-
-I sat down before a lighted tobacco booth and pretended I was asleep.
-The proprietor came out to drive off the curs sniffing at my feet, and
-led the way to a neighboring caravan inn, where the keeper spread me a
-bed of blankets on the cobblestone floor.
-
-The next day I discovered the Hotel Stamboul, facing the stable that
-serves Damascus as post-office. I went in with little hope either of
-making my wants known or of finding the price within my means. The
-proprietor, strange to say, spoke a little French, and, stranger still,
-assigned me to a room at eight cents a day.
-
-I spent four days in Damascus before I began to make plans for getting
-out of it. I had intended to strike southwestward through the country to
-Nazareth. On the map the trip seemed easy. But I had found, on my
-journey from the coast, that maps do not show the distance to be covered
-in this little-known country. It was late in December, and the rainy
-season was at hand. Several violent downpours that made me think of the
-flood described in the Bible had already burst over Damascus. These
-storms were sure to have made Palestine a muddy marsh, and to have
-turned its summer brooks into roaring torrents.
-
-The trip, however, could not have been more difficult than it was to
-find out about it. The people in the cities of Asia Minor are the most
-incurable stay-at-homes on the globe. They know no more of the country a
-few miles outside their walls than they do of the other side of the
-earth.
-
-I spent a day inquiring about it, and learned nothing. Toward evening I
-came across a French-speaking tailor who claimed to have made the first
-few miles of the journey. Gleefully I jotted down his directions in my
-note-book. An hour’s walk next morning brought me out on a wind-swept
-stretch of grayish sand beyond the city. For some miles a faint path led
-across the dreary waste. Wild dogs growled and snarled over the dead
-bodies of horses and sheep that lined the way. The wind whirled on high
-tiny particles of sand that bit my cheeks and filled my eyes. A chilling
-rain began to fall, sinking quickly into the desert. The storm was
-becoming violent, when the path ceased at the brink of a muddy torrent
-that it would have been madness to try to cross.
-
-A lone shepherd was plodding along the bank of the stream. I pointed
-across it and shouted, “Nazra?” The Arab stared at me a moment, tossed
-his arms above his head, crying to Allah to note the madness of a roving
-_faranchee_, and sped away across the desert.
-
-I plodded back to the city. In the iron-workers’ bazaar a sword-maker
-called out to me in German, and I halted to ask him about the road to
-Nazareth. The workman paused in his task of pounding a queer-looking
-sword, to tell me that the tailor was a fool and that the road to
-Nazareth left the city in exactly the opposite direction. “’Tis a broad
-caravan trail,” he went on, “opening out beyond the shoemakers’ bazaar.”
-
-The next morning I struck out in the direction the sword-maker had
-pointed out to me. The morning was cloudy and the air biting. Before I
-had passed the last shoemaker’s shop a cold drizzle set in. On the
-desert it turned to a wet snow that clung to bushes and rocks like
-shreds of white clothing. The sword-maker certainly had played a joke on
-me. A caravan track there was beyond the last wretched hovel—a track
-that showed for miles across the bleak country. But, though it might
-have taken me to Bagdad or to the steppes of Siberia, it certainly did
-not lead to the land of the chosen people.
-
-I turned and trotted back to the city, cheered by the hope of sitting
-before such a fire as roars up the chimneys of American homes on the
-well remembered days of the first snow. The hope showed how little I
-knew of Damascan customs. The hotel proprietor and his guests were
-shivering over a pan of coals that could not have heated a doll’s house.
-
-I fought my way into the huddled group, and warmed first a finger and
-then a toe. But the chill of the desert would not leave me. A servant
-called the landlord to another part of the building. He picked up the
-“stove” and marched away with it, and I left my shivering fellow guests
-and went to bed, as the only possible place where I could get the chill
-out of my bones.
-
-The next day I spent Christmas in a stuffy car on the cogwheel railway
-over the Lebanon hills, and stepped out at Beirut shortly after dark, to
-run directly into the arms of Abdul Razac Bundak.
-
-On the afternoon of December twenty-seventh I set out on foot for Sidon.
-Here, at least, I could not lose my way, for I had but to follow the
-coast. Even Abdul, however, did not know whether the ancient city was
-one or ten days distant. A highway through an olive grove soon broke up
-into several narrow paths. The one I chose led over low hills of sand,
-where the misfit shoes that I had picked up in a pawn-shop of Beirut
-soon filled to overflowing. I swung them over a shoulder and plodded on
-barefoot. A roaring brook blocked the way. I crossed it by climbing a
-willow on one bank and swinging into the branches of another opposite,
-and plunged into another wilderness of sand.
-
-Toward dusk I came upon a peasant’s cottage on a tiny plain, and halted
-for water. A youth in the much patched uniform of the Turkish soldier,
-sitting on the well-curb, brought me a basinful. I had started on again,
-when a voice rang out behind me: “Hé! D’ou est-ce que vous venez? Ou
-est-ce que vous allez?” In the doorway of the hovel stood a slatternly
-woman of some fifty years of age. I told her my nationality.
-
-“American?” she cried, this time in English, as she rushed out upon me.
-“Oh, my! You American? Me American, too! Oh, my!”
-
-I could hardly believe her, for she looked decidedly like a Syrian, both
-in dress and features.
-
-“Yes,” she went on. “I live six years in America, me! I go back to
-America next month. I not see America for one year. Come in house!”
-
-I followed her into the cottage. It was the usual dwelling of the
-peasant class—dirt floor, a kettle hanging over an open fire in one
-corner, a few ears of corn and bunches of dried grapes suspended from
-the ceiling. On one of the rough stone walls was pinned a newspaper
-portrait of McKinley.
-
-“Oh, my!” cried the woman, as I glanced toward the portrait. “Me
-Republican, me. One time I see McKinley when I peddle by Cleveland,
-Ohio. You know Cleveland? My man over there”—she pointed away to the
-fertile slopes of the Lebanon hills—“my man go back with me next month,
-vote one more time for Roosevelt.”
-
-The patch-work youth poked his head in at the door.
-
-“Taala hena [Come here], Maghmood,” bawled the noisy Republican. “This
-American man! He no have to go for soldier, fight long time for greasy
-old Sultan. Not work all day to get bishleek, him! Get ten, fifteen,
-twenty bishleek day! Bah! You no good, you! Why for you not run away to
-America?”
-
-The woman kept a sort of lodging-house in a near-by stone hut, and
-insisted that I spend the night there. Chattering about one thing and
-another she prepared a supper of lentils, bread-sheets, olives, and
-crushed sugar-cane, and set out a bottle of _beet_ (native wine). The
-meal over, she lighted a cigarette, leaned back in a home-made chair,
-and blew smoke at the ceiling with a far-away look in her eyes.
-
-“Oh, my!” she cried suddenly. “You sing American song! I like this
-no-good soldier hear good song. Then he sing Arab song for you.”
-
-I undertook to play the wandering minstrel with uncertainty. At the
-first lines of “The Swanee River” the soldier burst forth in a roar of
-laughter that doubled him up as if he were having a fit.
-
-“You great fool, you,” shouted the woman, shaking her fist at the
-property of the Sultan, who was lying at full length on the floor. “You
-no know what song is! Shut up! I split your head!”
-
-This gentle hint made the youth sit up and listen most attentively, with
-set teeth, until the concert of the Western world was ended.
-
-When his turn came, he struck up a mournful chant that sounded like the
-wailing of a lost soul, and sang for nearly an hour on about three
-notes, shaking his head from side to side and rocking his body back and
-forth as his voice rose to an ear-splitting yell.
-
-The mournful tune was interrupted by a shout from the darkness outside.
-The woman called back in answer, and two ragged, bespattered Bedouins
-pushed into the hut. The howling and shouting that followed made me
-wonder whether murder or merely highway robbery had been committed. The
-men shook their fists, and the woman almost cried. The quarrel lasted
-for a full half hour, and then there was quiet again. The woman took
-from the wall a huge key, and stepped out, followed by the Bedouins.
-
-“You know for what we fight?” she demanded, when she returned. “They
-Arabs. Want to sleep in my hotel. They want to pay only four coppers. I
-say must pay five coppers—one _metleek_. Bah! This country no good.”
-
-Four fifths of a cent was perhaps as great a price as she should have
-asked from any lodger in the “hotel” to which she led me a half hour
-later.
-
-All next day I followed the faintly marked path that clung closely to
-the coast. Here and there a care-worn peasant toiled behind the wooden
-plow that the tiny oxen dragged back and forth across the fields. At
-times, when the peasant turned to look at me, his plow struck a root or
-a rock, and he was obliged to pick himself up out of the mire. Nineteen
-showers flung their waters upon me during that day. Sometimes these
-showers were separated from each other by periods of the brightest
-sunshine.
-
-Late in the afternoon the sun was smiling bravely, when the path turned
-into a well kept road winding through a forest of orange trees, where
-countless natives were stripping the overloaded branches of their fruit.
-I had reached the ancient town of Sidon. From the first shop in the
-outskirts of the place, the bazaar was one long orange-colored streak.
-
-I spent the night at a caravan inn. The next day I went on southward,
-guided by the booming of the Mediterranean. Mile after mile the way led
-over slippery ridges of the mountain chain, through streams and across
-marshes in which I sank half way to my knees.
-
-The gloomy day was drawing to a close when I began to look for shelter.
-But I found none, and a gnawing hunger made me hurry on. I was crossing
-a crumbling stone bridge that humped its back across a wandering stream
-when an unhoped-for sight caught my eye. Miles away, at the end of a low
-cape, rose the slender tower of a Mohammedan church, surrounded by a
-jumble of flat buildings. I hurried toward it.
-
-Dusk turned to utter darkness. Far ahead twinkled a few lights, that
-seemed to move on before me as fast as I tried to draw near them. The
-flat sand gave way to rocks and boulders against which I barked my shins
-repeatedly.
-
-I had almost given up trying to reach the village that night, when the
-baying of dogs fell on my ear.
-
-In the dim moonlight I noticed a faintly marked path up the sloping
-beach. I followed it across sand-hills, and came up against a fort-like
-building, pierced in the center by a gateway. Two flickering lights
-under the archway cast wavering shadows over a group of Arabs huddled in
-their blankets near the gate. When I stepped before them out of the
-blackness of the night, they sprang to their feet with excited cries.
-
-I pushed through the group, and plunged into crooked alleyways filled
-with wretched hovels. All was silent in the bazaars; but the keeper of
-one shop was still dozing over his pan of coals between a stack of aged
-bread-sheets and a simmering kettle of sour-milk soup. I prodded him
-until he was half awake, and gathering up the bread-sheets sat down in
-his place. He dipped up a bowl of soup from force of habit; then,
-catching sight of me for the first time, spilled the jelly-like mixture
-over my outstretched legs.
-
-The second serving reached me in the proper manner. A group of Arabs
-gathered outside in the circle of light cast by the shop lamp, and
-watched me eat. I finished the bowl of soup and called for a second.
-They stared, astonished. Again I sent the bowl back. The bystanders
-burst into a roar of laughter, and the boldest stepped forward to pat
-their stomachs mockingly.
-
-I inquired for an inn. A ragged giant stepped into the arc of light, and
-crying “Taala,” set off to the westward. Almost at a trot he led the way
-by cobbled streets, down the center of which ran an open sewer, up hill
-and down. The corners we turned were so many that I could not count
-them.
-
-We came, at last, to a brightly lighted café, where a dozen jolly Arabs
-sat smoking cigarettes and drinking coffee. My guide began calling out
-mournfully in the darkness, and drew me into the circle of light. A roar
-went up from the men in the café, and they tumbled pell-mell out upon
-us.
-
-My guide explained my presence in a trumpet-like voice. From every
-dwelling around poured forth dark, half-dressed men who, crowding
-closely about, began talking all together. Some one said that we ought
-to go inside the café. We did so, and the keeper, with his best company
-smile, placed a chair for me in the center of the room. The older men
-grouped themselves about me on more chairs, and the younger squatted on
-their heels around the wall. We were trying to talk in the language of
-signs, when a native pushed into the circle and addressed me in French.
-Through him they asked me where I came from, and why I was there, and
-were not satisfied until I had told them the entire history of my
-wanderings.
-
-I ended my story with the statement that I had left Sidon that morning.
-
-“Impossible!” shouted the one who could speak French. “No man can walk
-from Sidon to Soor in one day.”
-
-“Soor?” I cried, recognizing the native name for Tyre, and scarcely
-believing my ears. “Is this Soor?”
-
-“Is it possible,” gasped the native, “that you do not know you are in
-the ancient city of Tyre? Yes, indeed, my friend; this is Soor. But if
-you left Sidon this morning you have slept a night on the way without
-knowing it.”
-
-I inquired about the men in the room. The interpreter introduced them,
-one by one: the village clerk, the village barber, the village
-carpenter, the village tailor, and—even thus far from the land of
-chestnut trees—the village blacksmith. They every one decided that I
-could not be allowed to continue on foot. Some days before, they said,
-between Tyre and Acre, a white man had been found murdered by some blunt
-instrument, and nailed to the ground by a stake driven through his body.
-They told the story, leaving out none of the horrors. Then they told it
-again to each other in Arabic, and acted it out for me. The village
-carpenter was the white man, a fisherman and the clerks were the
-assassins, and a piece of water-pipe was the stake.
-
-Midnight had long since passed. I promised the good citizens of Tyre to
-remain in their city for a day, to think it over. The keeper offered to
-let me sleep on a rush mat in a back room of the café. I accepted the
-invitation, and the men put up the shutters and marched away.
-
-The ancient city of Tyre is to-day a collection of stone and mud huts
-covering less than a third of the sandy point that was once filled with
-the life of a great city. Its four thousand humble people are now
-without education, art, or ambition. To the north, in the wretched
-harbor, were a few old fishing-boats, far different from the fleets
-whose sailors once made merry and sang in the streets of Tyre. Down on
-the encircling beach, half buried under the drifting sands and worn away
-by the lapping waves, lay the ruins of what must long ago have been
-great business blocks. The Tyreans of to-day have carried away these
-ruins, stone by stone, to build their own humble dwellings. Even as I
-looked, half a dozen ragged Arabs were prying off the top of a great
-pillar, and loading the pieces into an old sailing-vessel.
-
-The next morning I passed through the city gate and continued my journey
-on foot. From a short distance the gloomy group of huts behind looked
-pitifully small and mean, huddled together on the great plain near the
-vast blue sea.
-
-I came to the “Ladder of Tyre,” a steep hill, which I climbed with many
-bruises. Beyond, range after range of rock-covered hills stretched out
-from the top of the ladder. Half climbing, half sliding, I went down the
-southern slope, and struggled on across a trackless country in a
-never-ceasing downpour.
-
-Night came on. The sun was settling to his bath in the Mediterranean.
-Across the throbbing sea, stretched a wavering ribbon of orange and red.
-Away to the eastward, in the valleys of the Lebanon, darkness already
-lay. Here and there on the rugged peaks, a tree, swaying in a swift
-breeze, stood out against the evening sky. Near by a lonely shepherd
-guarded a flock of fat-tailed sheep. Beyond him lay a sea of darkness.
-The level plain soon changed to row after row of low sand-hills,
-unmarked by a single footprint, over which my path rose and fell with
-the regularity of a tossing ship.
-
-The last glint of the blazing sun sank beneath the waves, leaving an
-unbroken plain of black water. The swaying trees became dim; the very
-peaks blended into the darkening sky of evening. It became difficult to
-see where the hills ended and the trough began.
-
-I stumbled half way up every slope. The shifting sands made walking
-difficult. On the summit of the ridges sounded the low moaning of the
-wind, rising and falling like far-off sobbing. It was easy to imagine
-the surrounding blackness peopled with murderous nomads. Somewhere among
-these never-ending ridges the “staked _faranchee_” had been done to
-death.
-
-Mile after mile the way led on. My path rose and fell so frequently that
-it seemed like crossing the same sandy billow over and over. The rain
-had ceased, but not a star broke through the darkened sky, and only the
-hoarse boom of the sea guided my steps.
-
-Once, when coming down a ridge with my feet raised high at each step in
-expectation of another hill in front of me, I plunged into a hole in
-which I sank almost to my knees in the mire. From force of habit I
-plowed on. The booming of the waves grew louder, and the wind from off
-the sea blew stronger and more chilling. Suddenly there sounded at my
-feet the rush of water. I moved forward cautiously, and felt the edge of
-what seemed to be a broad river pouring seaward. I could not cross it on
-a black night. I drew back from the brink, and, finding a spot that
-seemed solid enough, threw myself down.
-
-But I sank, inch by inch, into the wet earth. Fearful of being buried
-before morning, I rose and wandered toward the sea, stumbling over a
-heap of cobblestones probably piled there by peasants. I built a bed of
-stones on the side of the pile sheltered from the wind, tucked my camera
-in a hole among them, and, pulling my coat over my head, lay down. A
-patter of rain sounded on the coat; then another, and another, faster
-and faster; and in less than a minute there began a downpour that lasted
-all night.
-
-The heap of stones gave small protection against the piercing wind. My
-bed was short and like a half-circle in shape, so that I had to lie
-motionless on my right side, in order to protect my camera and films
-beneath. The rain quickly soaked through my clothing and ran in streams
-along my skin. The wind turned colder and whistled through the chinks of
-the pile. Through it all the sea boomed constantly, and in the
-surrounding marshes unwearying frogs croaked a dismal chorus.
-
-I was certainly awake at the first gleam of day. The new year was
-peering over the Lebanon when I rose to my feet. My left leg, though
-creaking like rusty armor, held me up all right; but I had no sooner
-shifted my weight to my right than it gave way like a thing of straw and
-let me down suddenly into the mud. After rubbing it for some time I
-recovered the use of the limb: but even then an attempt to walk in a
-straight line sent me round in a circle from left to right.
-
-Daylight showed the river to be lined with quicksands. Some distance up
-the stream I managed to cross without sinking below my arm-pits. Far off
-to the southeast lay a small forest. Thinking that a village might be
-hidden in its shade, I pushed eagerly forward through a sea of mud.
-
-When I reached the forest I found it to be a large orange grove
-surrounded by a high hedge and a ditch filled with water. There was not
-a house in sight. The trees were loaded with fruit. I emptied my
-knapsack, plunged through ditch and hedge, and tore savagely at the
-tempting fare. With half-filled bag I got back to the plain, caught up
-my scattered belongings, and struck southward, peeling an orange. The
-skin was close to an inch thick; the fruit inside looked juicy enough to
-make anybody hungry. Greedily I stuffed a large piece into my mouth, and
-stopped stock-still, feeling as if I had been struck a sudden blow in
-the back of the neck. The orange was as green as the Emerald Isle, its
-juice more sour and bitter than half and half of vinegar and gall. I
-peeled another, and another. Each was more sour and bitter than the
-last. Tearfully I dumped the golden treasure into the mire and stumbled
-on.
-
-In the early afternoon I fell in with a band of roving Bedouins, and
-traveled on with them, splashing long hours through surf and stream
-along the narrow beach. Night had fallen before we parted in the Haifa
-market-place.
-
-At a Jewish inn in Haifa I made the acquaintance of a fellow countryman.
-He was born in Nazareth, of Arab blood, and had never been outside Asia
-Minor. But his grandfather had lived for a few years in New York, and,
-though the good old gentleman had long since been resting in his grave,
-his descendants were considered citizens of the United States in their
-native land, and did not have to pay taxes to the Turkish officials.
-They had the right to greet travelers from the new world as fellow
-countrymen. Nazry Kawar was overjoyed at meeting a man from his own
-country. He spent the afternoon drawing sketches of the routes of
-Palestine for me, and took his leave, promising to write me a letter of
-introduction to his uncle, a Nazarene dentist.
-
-Early the next morning I started out on the road to Nazareth. Toward
-noon, in the lonely hills beyond the first village, two Bedouins, less
-bloodthirsty than hungry, fell upon me while I ate my lunch by the
-wayside. They bombarded me with stones from opposite sides; but they
-threw like girls, and dodged like ocean liners, so that I caused more
-injury than I received. Finally I started a race down the highway. They
-were no mean runners; but, when over the hill, they caught sight of a
-road-repair gang of bronze-faced and muscular women, and were forced to
-stop.
-
-An hour later I reached the highest point of the route. Far beyond,
-colored by the delicate blue air that trembled and wavered in the
-afternoon sunshine, stretched a vast plain, walled by mountain ranges,
-that seemed many miles away. I followed the route along the top of the
-western wall, now passing between two mountain-peaks, now coming out on
-a plateau; and, rounding at last a gigantic rock, I burst into Nazareth,
-the city where Christ spent his boyhood.
-
-[Illustration: On the road between Haifa and Nazareth I met a road
-repair gang, all women but the boss.]
-
-Nazareth was a mere village in the time of Christ. To-day it covers the
-bowl-shaped valley in which it is built, and climbs to the summits of
-the surrounding hills. Seen from a distance, it looks like the
-amphitheater of a circus.
-
-I went on down into the city. In the crowded, babbling bazaars, I tried
-in vain to find the dentist Kawar to whom my letter was addressed. When
-my legs grew a-weary of wandering through the winding streets, and my
-tongue could no longer misshape itself in attempts to pronounce the
-peculiar sounds of the Arabic language, I sat down on a bazaar stand and
-leaned back carelessly, knowing that I should soon be taken care of.
-Near me on all sides rose a whisper, in the hoarse voice of squatting
-shop-keepers, in the high-pitched voice of passing children: “Faranchee!
-Fee wahed faranchee!”
-
-Hardly a moment had passed before a scared-looking boy stopped near by
-to stare at me, in the manner of one ready to run in terror at the first
-sign of an unfriendly move on the part of this strange creature, whose
-clothes were so queer, whose legs were clothed in separate garments.
-Here, surely, was one of those dread bogey men who are known to dine on
-small Arabs, and so near that—perhaps he had better edge away and take
-to his heels before—But no; here are a dozen men of familiar look
-collecting in a half-circle back of him! And there comes his uncle, the
-camel-driver. Perhaps the bogey man is not so fearful, after all, for
-the men crowd close around, calling him _faranchee_ and _efendee_, and
-appearing not in the least afraid.
-
-The camel-driver is doubly brave,—who would not be proud to be his
-nephew?—for he actually begins to speak to the strange being, while the
-crowd behind him grows and grows.
-
-“Barhaba!” says the camel-driver in greeting. “Lailtak saeedee! Where
-does the efendee hail from? Italiano, perhaps?”
-
-“No; American.”
-
-“Amerikhano!” The word runs from mouth to mouth, and the faces of all
-hearers light up with interest. “America?” Why, that is where Abdul el
-Kassab, the butcher, went long years ago. It is said to be far away,
-further than El Gkudis (Jerusalem) or Shaam (Damascus). But the
-camel-driver has found out something else about this _faranchee_.
-Listen: “Bahree! The faranchee is a bahree, a sailor, a man who works on
-the great water, the ‘bahr’ that any one can see from the top of yonder
-hill and on the shores of which this same camel-driver claims to have
-been. It is even said that to reach this America one must travel on the
-great water! Indeed, ’tis far away, and were the faranchee not a bahree,
-how could he have journeyed from far-off America to this very Nazra?”
-
-But the few words of the Arabic that I knew were soon spent. I sat
-there, unable to tell them more. To the simple Nazarenes I was as much
-to be pitied as a deaf-mute, and they burst forth in pitying cries of
-“Meskeen” (“poor devil”). The camel-driver was still trying to find out
-more about me, when a well dressed native pushed through the crowd and
-spoke to me in English. I held up the letter.
-
-“Ah,” he cried, “the dentist Kawar?” And he took the note out of my hand
-and tore it open.
-
-“But here,” I cried. “Are you the dentist?”
-
-“Oh, no, indeed,” said the native, without looking up from the reading.
-
-“Then what right have you to open that letter?” I demanded, grasping it.
-
-The native gazed at me a moment, astonished and hurt.
-
-“Oh, sir,” he said, “the Kawar is my friend. If it is my friend’s letter
-it is my letter. If it is my letter it is my friend’s letter. Arabs make
-like that, sir. I am Elias Awad, cook to the British missionary and
-friend to the dentist. Very nice man, but gone to Acre. But Kawar family
-live close here. Please, you, sir, come with me.”
-
-Ten minutes later I had been welcomed by the family Kawar like a
-long-lost friend. Their dwelling showed them to be people of Nazarene
-wealth and importance. The father, keeper of a dry-goods store, had once
-been sheik, or mayor, of Nazareth, and was a man of most agreeable
-manners. He spoke only Arabic. His sons ranged from bearded men to a boy
-of nine. They had been distributed among the different mission schools
-of the town. Two of them spoke English; a third spoke German; the fourth
-spoke French, and the fifth Italian; the youngest was already beginning
-to learn Russian. While I was bombarded with questions in four
-languages, I found a moment here and there to congratulate myself on my
-ignorance of the tongue of the Cossacks.
-
-While the evening meal was preparing, the family, a small army of all
-sizes, went forth to show me the sights. They pointed out Mary’s Well,
-the workshop of Joseph, and other things that we read of in the Bible.
-
-After supper three of the sons of the family persuaded me to go to a
-little church on the brow of the valley, although I was very tired. The
-sermon was preached in Arabic, but I had heard the tunes of the hymns
-before. The worshipers in the church behaved quite differently from any
-I had seen. The men, who sat in the front pews, wore fezes in the latest
-style; while the women, dressed all alike in white gowns, sat silently
-in the back seats, scarcely daring to breathe. Now and then one of the
-men kicked off his loose slippers and folded his legs on his seat. And
-even the most religious among them could not keep from turning to stare
-at a _faranchee_ who sat bare-headed in church. At the close of the
-service the ladies hurried home, but not one of the men was missing from
-the crowd that waited to greet us as we left the church. My companions
-told them all they knew of me—and more. Among the hearers were two young
-men, Shukry Nasr and Nehmé Simán, teachers of English in the mission
-school. Being eager for a chance to practice talking the English
-language, and touched with the curiosity of the Arab, they would not go
-until I had promised to be their guest after my stay with the Kawars.
-
-The next day I learned something of the customs and ways of the
-better-class Arab. Shukry Nasr and Nehmé Simán called early and led me
-away to visit their friend, Elias, the cook. On the way, if I chanced to
-want to buy something at the shops we passed, one or the other of my
-companions insisted on paying for it. “You are our guest, sir,” said
-Nehmé; “we are very glad to have you for a guest and to talk English.
-But, even if we did not like, we should take good care of you; for
-Christ said ‘Thou shalt house the stranger who is within thy gates.’”
-
-“Why,” said the cook, when we began talking about the same subject after
-reaching the mission, “in the days of my father, for a stranger to pay
-for a place to live would have been an insult to all. A stranger in
-town! Why, let _my_ house be his—and _mine!_—and _mine!_ would have
-shouted every honorable citizen!”
-
-“But Nazareth is getting bad,” sighed Shukry. “The faranchees who are
-coming are very proud. They will not eat our food or sleep in our small
-houses. And so many are coming! So some inns have been built, where they
-take pay. Very disgraceful.”
-
-“Did you give any policeman a nice whipping?” asked Elias suddenly.
-
-“Eh?” I cried.
-
-“If a faranchee comes to our country,” he explained, “or if we go to
-live in America and come back, the policeman cannot arrest.”
-
-“Yes, I know,” I answered.
-
-“If a policeman touches you, then, you must give him a nice whipping,”
-continued the cook. “If my father had been to America I would give nice
-whippings every day. Many friends I have the policeman dare not touch.”
-
-“If they only refuse to obey the soldiers,” said Nehmé, “that is
-nothing. Everybody does that. But here is the wonderful! They do not
-have even to give backsheesh!”
-
-“Do you have backsheesh in America?” demanded Shukry.
-
-“Ah—er—well, the name is not the same,” I stammered.
-
-“To-morrow,” said Shukry, as I stropped the razor which the cook had
-invited me to use, “you are coming to live with me.”
-
-“Look out, sir!” said the cook; “you are cutting your moustaches.”
-
-“Why not?” I asked.
-
-“Aah!” shrieked the cook, as I scraped my upper lip clean. “Why
-faranchees make that? So soon I my moustaches would shave, so soon would
-I cut my neck.”
-
-The next morning, shod in a pair of Nazarene slippers, heelless and as
-thin as Indian moccasins, I set out with the teachers for the home of
-Shukry. It was a simple dwelling half way up a hill, and from its roof
-spread out the bowl-shaped village at our feet. The death of the father
-a short time before had left the youth to rule over the household.
-Although he was only seventeen years old, he seemed like a man, boasting
-already a bristling moustache, for human beings grow up early in the
-East.
-
-It was January seventh, a holiday among the Greek churchmen, and a day
-for visiting among all Christians. We had our shoes off, and were
-sitting on a divan, when the guests began to appear. They were all men,
-of course. Shukry stood erect in the center of the room, and bowed low
-to each guest as he appeared. The visitor returned his bow. There was no
-hand-shaking. After the greeting each arrival slid out of his slippers,
-and squatted on the long divan. When all were firmly seated everybody
-said “Naharak saeed” (“good evening”), and bowed again to everybody else
-in turn.
-
-If the newcomer were a priest, Shukry’s small brother slid forward to
-kiss his hand, and ran back to some out-of-the-way corner. After all the
-greetings had been given, each guest was served with cigarettes and a
-tiny cup of coffee. Visitors who attended the same church as Shukry
-broke into a lively talk with him. Others—the Greek priests
-especially—sipped their coffee in absolute silence, puffed at a
-cigarette, and, with another “Naharak saeed” glided into their slippers
-and departed.
-
-Later in the day we went to call on all the Christian families in the
-village, finally stopping at the Kawar home. The former mayor, dressed
-in _faranchee_ clothes, with a broad white vest, sat cross-legged in his
-white stocking-feet, a fez perched on his head. He talked long and
-pleasantly of things American, then wrote me four letters of
-introduction to friends in towns I meant to visit.
-
-“Without these letters,” he explained, “you would not dare to stay in
-Gineen or Nablous; for my friends are the only Christians there, and
-those are very bad towns. My friends in Jerusalem and Jaffa—if you ever
-get there alive—may be able to find you work.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- THE WILDS OF PALESTINE
-
-
-The sun rose clear and red the next morning. It was the best sort of day
-for continuing my journey. The teachers set out to accompany me to the
-foot of the Nazarene mountains. They struck off through the village as
-the crow flies, paying no attention to the run of the streets. Down
-through the market, dodging into tiny alleys, under covered passageways,
-through spaces where we had to walk sidewise, they led the way. Where a
-shop was in the way they marched boldly through it, stepping over the
-merchandise and even over the squatting keeper, who returned their “good
-morning” without losing a puff at his cigarette. On they went, stopping
-for nothing, straight up the wall-like slope of a tall hill and out upon
-a well marked path that led over the brow of the hill.
-
-At the foot of the mountain they paused. To the north rose a snow-capped
-peak. Between the hills, to the west, peeped the sparkling
-Mediterranean. Eastward, as far as the eye could see, stretched a wall
-of mountains. We could see a dozen villages, tucked away in long, narrow
-valleys clinging to steep slopes, or lying bent over sharp ridges like
-broken-backed creatures. Shukry named these villages for me, and many of
-them were places I had read of in the Bible. The teachers pointed out a
-tall peak far across the trackless plain, which they said rose above the
-bad town of Gineen, where all Christians were hated. Then, bidding me
-good-by almost tearfully, they turned back up the mountain pass.
-
-Late in the afternoon I passed through a country that looked like a
-garden, with graceful palms and waving pomegranates, and perfumed with
-the fragrance of orange and lemon groves, which covered the lower slope
-of the peak that had been pointed out to me. Back of the garden stood
-the bad town of Gineen. When I appeared among its people I met with
-scowls and curses. A few stones from a group of youngsters at a corner
-of the bazaar rattled in the streets behind me.
-
-My letter was addressed in Arabic. The squatting shopkeeper to whom I
-showed it scowled at me long and fiercely, but finally called a
-passing-boy, and, mumbling a few words to him, bade me follow. The
-urchin climbed up the sloping street, made several unexpected turnings,
-and pointed out a large house surrounded by a stern-looking wall. Then
-he scampered away as fast as he could go.
-
-I clanged the heavy knocker again and again, until the sound echoed up
-and down the street. But, receiving no answer, I sat down on the curb. A
-well dressed native wandered by. I showed him the letter. He glared at
-it, muttered, “Etnashar saa” (“Twelve o’clock at night”), and went on
-his way. From time to time visitors paused at neighboring gates or
-house-doors, and, standing in the center of the street, lifted up their
-voices in mournful wails, and the doors were finally opened to them.
-Beggars came past, wailing longer and more mournfully than the others;
-nor did they stop until a few bread-sheets or coppers were tossed out to
-them. Bands of women, whose faces were covered, drew up in a circle
-around me to talk about me and to fill me with the creepy feeling one
-might experience at a visit of the Ku-Klux Klan.
-
-I had been squatting against the wall for fully two hours when an old
-man in European dress came slowly down the street, mumbling to himself
-as he ran through his fingers a string of yellow beads. He paused at the
-gate and pulled out a key. I sprang to my feet and handed him the
-letter. He read it with something of a scowl, and, motioning me to wait,
-went inside. I waited a long time.
-
-At last the gate groaned and made way for the ugliest creature in the
-Arab world. He was a youth of about twenty, as long as a day without
-bread, and so thin that the light seemed to shine through him. His
-shoulders were bowed until his head stuck out at right angles to his
-body. Long yellow teeth protruded from his lips. In his one eye was a
-wicked gleam. His behavior at once showed him to be one who hated
-_faranchees_ with a deadly hatred. He wore the headdress of the Bedouin
-and half a dozen long flowing garments, which hung from his lank form as
-from a hat-rack.
-
-I understood enough of his snarling remarks to know that he was a family
-servant, and that he had been sent to lead me to the servants’ quarters.
-He led the way to a hovel on the opposite side of the street, unlocked a
-battered door, and let me into a hut furnished with a moth-eaten divan
-and a pan of live coals. A smartly dressed young native came in soon
-after, and spoke to me in good French.
-
-“My family is in an unfortunate position,” he explained. “We are friends
-of the Kawar, and so always the friends of his friends. As we are the
-only Christians in Gineen, we can give you only servants’ quarters. But
-you must not stay in Gineen to-night. If you wait until to-morrow you
-will have to go on alone, and in the mountains are Bedouins who every
-day catch travelers and fill their eyes and mouths and noses with sand,
-and drag them around by a rope, and cut them up in small pieces and
-scatter them all around. You must go to-night with the mail caravan.
-Then you will be safe.”
-
-“I’ve tramped all day,” I answered; “I will find lodgings in the town if
-I am troubling your family.”
-
-“Great heavens!” shrieked the young man. “There you would be cut to
-pieces in an hour! Gineen hates Christians. If you stop here they will
-beat my family.”
-
-He seemed so worried that I decided to do as he advised. He ordered the
-crooked servant to bring me supper, and went out.
-
-The queer creature followed his master, and returned with a bowl of
-lentils. He brought back with him two companions who did not look much
-better than he did. No sooner had he placed the food on the floor than
-all three squatted around it, and, clawing at it with both hands, made
-way with the meal so rapidly that I had to go hungry. When the last
-scrap had disappeared, the newcomers fell to licking the bowls.
-
-The long and crooked servant began the mournful wail that is the Arab
-notion of a song. Rocking back and forth where he sat, and thrusting out
-his long yellow teeth, he fixed a sidewise look upon me and howled for
-an unbroken two hours. I could tell by the roars of laughter from his
-mates that the words he sang were no compliment to _faranchees_.
-
-At about nine o’clock in the evening he turned the other two into the
-street; then, motioning me to take up my knapsack, he dived out into the
-night. I managed to keep at his heels, although he dodged among the
-huts, and even ran around some of them twice in his efforts to shake me
-off. At last we reached the station for caravans. The keeper of the inn
-was a bitter enemy of unbelievers, and at first did not want to let me
-in. He finally made way, however; but he shouted abusive language at me
-as long as I remained in the building. The servant settled his misshapen
-form on a heap of straw, and took up his song of mockery where he had
-left off, while he cast sidelong looks of hatred at me.
-
-At last the caravan appeared. It was a train of four mules and three
-drivers. The snarls of the servant and the keeper were friendly
-greetings compared with the vicious language and looks cast toward me by
-the newcomers when they were told I would go on with them. It looked to
-me as if they were more to be feared than capture by sand-stuffing
-Bedouins.
-
-One of the four mules was saddled with the mail-sacks, and, at a signal
-from the leader, the drivers sprang astride the others. The caravansary
-door opened, letting in a cutting draught of January air. I followed the
-party outside, fully expecting to be offered a mount on one of the
-mules. The train, however, kept steadily on. The hindmost Arab signed to
-me to grasp a strap on the back of his mule; then he suddenly cut the
-animal across the flanks dangerously near my fingers, and they started
-off, while I trotted behind like a Damascus donkey-boy. I fancied I
-heard several chuckles of delight, half smothered in loud curses.
-
-The night was as black as a Port Said coaling negro. In the first few
-rods I lost my footing more than once, and barked my shins on a dozen
-large rocks. The joke the drivers played upon me, however, was not
-ended. Once, far enough from the caravansary to make return difficult,
-the leader shouted an order, the three struck viciously at the animals,
-and, with a rattle of small stones against the boulders, away went the
-party at full gallop. I lost my grip on the strap, broke into a run in
-an attempt to keep up, slipped and slid on the stones, struck up a slope
-that I had not seen in the darkness, and, stumbling half way up it on my
-hands and knees sprawled at full length over a boulder.
-
-I sat up and listened until the tinkle of the pack-mule’s bell died away
-on the night air; then I rose to feel my way back to the caravansary. It
-was closed and locked. Luckily, I managed to find my way to the street
-in which the Christian lived, and pushed open the door of the hovel. No
-one was in the room, although the lighted wick of a tallow lamp showed
-that the servant had returned. I spread out three of the four blankets
-folded on the divan, and lay down. A moment later the walking skeleton
-entered, leaped sidewise as if he saw a ghost, and, spreading the
-remaining blanket in the most distant corner, curled up with all his
-flowing garments upon him. I rose to blow out the light; but the Arab
-set up a howl of cowardly terror that might have been heard in Nazareth,
-so I left it lighted.
-
-The next day I went on toward Nablous. The route was rocky and wild. I
-crossed range after range of rocky peaks covered with tangled forests of
-oak and turpentine trees. Here and there, against a mountainside, clung
-a black-hide tent village of roving Bedouins. These were the tribes that
-were believed to catch lone Christians and scatter their remains along
-the wooded valleys. To-day, however, they were doing nothing more
-terrible than tending a few flocks of fat-tailed sheep.
-
-Late in the morning I came in sight of the mud village of Dothan. It was
-a crowded collection of hovels—made of mud and shaped like those of the
-Esquimaux—perched on several shelves of rock that rose one above
-another. The well marked path that I had been following for some time
-led boldly up to the first hut, ran close along its wall, swung round
-the building, and ended. There was no other path in sight.
-
-A score of giant dogs, coming down upon me from the hill above, gave me
-little time to think. Luckily, there lay within reach a long-handled
-kettle, which I grabbed for self-protection; and the unwashed population
-that came tumbling down the slope after the dogs, to gaze upon the
-strange sight of a lone _faranchee_ in their midst, saw him laying about
-right merrily. Not one of the villagers made any attempt to call off the
-curs. It was the usual case of every man’s dog no man’s dog.
-
-I went on up the slopes and shelves of rock. I could not find the path.
-Wherever a narrow passage-way looked like the trail, I scrambled up the
-jagged faces of the rock, only to find, after I had walked a long time,
-that each passage brought me into back yards where several huts choked
-the air with their smoke.
-
-At last I caught sight of a peasant astride an ass moving back and forth
-across the slope, but mounting steadily higher. I followed him, and came
-out upon a broad platform of rock. Beyond this was a path so steep that
-it seemed almost straight up and down. But that path merely showed me
-what the day’s journey would be like. I overtook the peasant in a narrow
-valley; and not far beyond, a second horseman burst out of another cut
-in the earth, and joined us.
-
-The peasant carried a club and a long blunt knife. He seemed quite
-anxious to keep both in plain sight. The second horseman, who wore the
-garb of a soldier, carried two pistols and a dagger in his belt, a sword
-at his side, and a long slim gun across his shoulders. The countryman
-offered to let me ride his beast; but, as the animal was too small, I
-continued to trudge at its heels.
-
-About noon, on a narrow plateau, we came upon an open well surrounded by
-a party of wicked-looking Bedouins. They scattered quickly at sight of
-the officer. My companions tied their animals near a patch of grass, and
-drew out their dinners. The officer knelt beside the well with a pot;
-but he was so stout that he couldn’t reach the water. The peasant was a
-Tom Thumb in size. So I reached down and dipped up the water for them.
-They were both grateful to me, and thrust food upon me from both sides
-so fast that I was unable to take it all.
-
-The officer seemed to be a man of wide experience. He did not appear
-much astonished at the _faranchee_ way of eating; but, more than that,
-he owned a strange machine at which the peasant gazed in speechless
-wonder. The strange thing was an alcohol lamp! The peasant seemed afraid
-of it, for he could not be coaxed within ten feet of it until the coffee
-was prepared. Then, after he had once become bold enough to touch the
-apparatus, he fell upon it like a child upon a strange toy, and examined
-its inner workings so thoroughly that the officer spent half an hour in
-fitting it together again.
-
-In the afternoon the peasant turned aside to his village, and not far
-beyond the soldier lost his way. What a small chance I should have had
-alone on a route that puzzled even a native acquainted with the country!
-We had followed for some distance a wild cut between the mountains.
-Suddenly this ended against the wall of another cliff. On one side of us
-was an impassable jungle of rocks and trees, and on the other a slope
-leading upward almost as steep as the side of a house, and covered for
-hundreds of feet with loose slaty rock and rough stones.
-
-The officer dismounted and squatted contentedly at the foot of the
-slope. For an hour at least he sat there without moving, except to roll
-several cigarettes. At last a native, spattered with mud, appeared. The
-officer asked him a question, and he replied by pointing up the wooded
-slope. Three times the horse tried to climb up, only to slide helplessly
-to the bottom. The officer handed me his gun: then, dismounting, he
-tried to lead the steed up by walking back and forth across the slope.
-Several times the animal fell on its haunches and tobogganed down the
-hill, dragging the cavalryman after him. The gun soon weighed me down
-like a cannon; but we reached the top at last, and were glad to stretch
-ourselves out on the solid rock surface of the wind-swept peak.
-
-The officer spread out food before us. Far below, to the southward, lay
-a wonderful scene. Two ranges of sharp and broken mountain-peaks raced
-side by side to the southeast. Between these ranges lay a wild tangle of
-rocks and small forests, through which a swift stream fought its way to
-the Mediterranean Sea, bending far out of its course in its struggle to
-get around the base of the mountain on which we stood. The place was as
-silent and lonesome as if it were some undiscovered world.
-
-For an hour we followed the run of the stream far below, for we knew it
-would finally lead us to lower, more level land. We rounded several
-peaks, climbing down little by little. The path became somewhat more
-plainly marked, but the scene remained wild and savage. Suddenly the
-cavalryman, who had just rounded a monstrous rock before me, reined in
-his horse with an excited jerk, grasped his sword, and pointed with it
-across the valley. “Nablous!” he shouted. I hastened to his side. On a
-small plateau far below us, backed by a rocky waste of mountains and
-surrounded by a rushing river, stood a city, a real city, with straight
-streets and closely packed stone buildings like those of the Western
-world!
-
-We wound our way down the mountain path to an old stone bridge that led
-directly into the city. At the gate a company of ragged, half-starved
-Turkish soldiers tried to stop me; but my companion drove them off with
-a wave of the hand. We plunged at once into the noisy, crowded streets
-which were as narrow and as numerous as those of Damascus. They were
-covered with arch-shaped roofs almost their entire length, so that we
-seemed to be walking through a dark, cool tunnel. The shoes of the horse
-rang sharply against the cobblestones as the animal plowed its way
-through the jabbering crowd, and by keeping close at its heels I escaped
-being jostled and pushed about.
-
-The shops looked very much alike. The cavalryman dismounted before one
-of them, handed the reins to the keeper who came forward to meet him,
-and, turning to me, earnestly invited me to spend the night in the inn
-above. But my Nazarene friends had given me letters to one Iskander
-Saaba, a Nazarene teacher, and I thought I ought to deliver them.
-
-I had a hard time finding the home of the teacher. In the cities of
-western Asia the streets are not named, nor the houses numbered. Mr.
-Smith, you learn, lives near the house of Mr. Jones. If you inquire
-further you may be told that Mr. Jones lives not far from the house of
-Mr. Smith, and so on; and you gain nothing by getting impatient or
-angry.
-
-A short distance from the inn, a water-carrier and a baker’s boy struck
-me in the ribs at the same time with the burdens they carried. A runaway
-donkey, bestrided by a mean-looking fellow, ran me down. A tradesman
-carrying a heavy beam turned the corner just in time to make me see a
-starry sky in the covered passage-way. These things, of course, were
-merely accidents. But when three stout rascals caught hold of the
-knapsack across my shoulders, and hung on to it until I had kicked one
-of them into a neighboring shop, and a corner street peddler went out of
-his way to step on my heels, I could not so easily excuse them. As long
-as I remained among the crowded shops these sneaking injuries continued.
-Whenever I stopped, a crowd quickly gathered about me to show their
-dislike by purposely jostling against me, by making insulting remarks
-about my race, and even by spitting on my clothes.
-
-I found the home of Iskander Saaba at last, and spent a pleasant evening
-there. The next morning a steady rain was falling, and the young teacher
-urged me to stay over, with the old saying, “To-morrow is just as good
-as to-day.” When I satisfied him that this was not a common saying in
-the Western world, he set out to show me the way through the city. On
-the way he stopped often to buy fruits, which he stuffed into my
-knapsack. When I objected, he said: “It is far to Jerusalem, and some
-day I will come to America.”
-
-Since the oldest times Nablous has carried on much trade with Jerusalem;
-but only until very lately has the lazy Turk begun to build a road
-connecting the two towns. That part of the road beyond the southern gate
-was well built; but in this rainy season it was a river of mud, which
-clung to my shoes in great cakes, and made walking more difficult than
-it had been in the pathless mountains to the north.
-
-[Illustration: The shopkeeper and traveling salesman with whom I spent
-two nights and a day on the lonely road to Jerusalem. Arabs are very
-sensitive to cold, except on their feet and ankles.]
-
-About noon I came to the end of the highway. I had been warned that the
-road was not finished. “It is all complete,” Shukry had said, “except
-over the mountain, the highest mountain of Palestine, and over that it
-runs not.” And it was true. Before me rose a high mountain almost as
-steep as a wall. A path was cut diagonally to the top, but I had to
-crawl up on my hands and knees with the greatest care, in the fear of
-losing my footing. At the top I came again upon the road. It was wide
-and well built, yet as it stood, it must have been utterly useless: for
-no carriage or other wheeled vehicle could ever have been dragged up
-that wall-like hillside; and the sure-footed ass which still carries
-merchandise between the two cities would make the journey exactly as
-well had the new road never been thought of.
-
-Long after nightfall I stumbled upon a lonely shop. Inside were the
-keeper and a traveling salesman of tobacco. The building was no more
-than a wooden frame covered over with sheet-iron; and soon after I had
-gone to bed on one of the shelves that served as bunks, the rain began
-to thunder on the roof near my head. This continued all through the
-night. Sleep was as impossible as it would have been inside a bass drum
-at a concert. In the morning a downpour more violent than I had ever
-known held us prisoners; and, as the weather was bitterly cold, I stayed
-on my shelf and listened to the roaring of the tin shack through the
-longest day that ever rained or blew itself into the past tense.
-
-The next day the storm was not so bad; so I set out again. In all the
-dreary country round I came across only one stone village. It was the
-ancient Bethel, lying among the sharp hills. Beyond it the highway
-side-stepped to the eastward. The air of Palestine was filled with
-moisture that morning. The hills ahead were somewhat veiled by the mist;
-in the valleys lay a thick gray fog; while overhead the sky was dull and
-lead-colored.
-
-[Illustration: The Palestine beast of burden carrying an iron beam to a
-building in construction.]
-
-Before me, well above the sky-line, hung a long, dark cloud. As I looked
-at this cloud it began to take on the shape of a distant line of
-buildings; yes, it was a city in the sky that I saw, with a wide strip
-of sky beneath it. It grew plainer and plainer, until there appeared in
-the heavens a dull gray city, a long city, bounded at one end by a great
-tower, at the other shading off into nothing. Then suddenly it
-disappeared. Black clouds, scurrying westward from across the Jordan
-River, erased the image from the sky as if it had been a lightly
-penciled line.
-
-Yet it was Jerusalem that I saw. Miles beyond, the fog lifted and showed
-the city plainly, and it was that same long city bounded on the east by
-a great tower; but this time it had footing on the solid earth—on a
-dull, drear hill that sloped to the west. I went on down the highway,
-and across the hills and the dreary fields,—past the tombs of the Kings
-and Judges, where to-day shivering shepherd boys seek shelter from the
-winds,—and on into the crowded bazaars of the city where Christ was
-crucified.
-
-Great, howling crowds swept me through markets dirtier than those of
-Damascus, up and down slimy stone steps, jostling, pushing, trampling
-upon me at every turn. They did not do this because they wanted to be
-disagreeable to me: It was merely carelessness on their part, for they
-had seen so many _faranchees_ that they did not notice me when I got in
-their way. But I was very tired from my long day’s tramp; so when I
-reached the end of a street I turned to an open doorway in order to get
-out of the crowd. Through the doorway I caught a glimpse of a long
-stretch of green grass and of a great mosque, or Mohammedan church.
-
-I had no sooner stepped inside this yard than a shout arose from a
-rabble of men and boys at one side of the square. But that did not
-surprise me, for in Damascus the people had shouted every time I entered
-the grounds belonging to a mosque. So I marched on, pretending I did not
-notice that they were howling at me. The shouting became louder. Men and
-boys came down upon me from every direction, howling like demons, and
-firing stones at me from every side. Some of them struck me on the legs;
-others whistled dangerously near my head. I left hurriedly.
-
-Later in the day I learned that I had trespassed into the sacred grounds
-of the mosque of Omar. It is named for Caliph Omar, the leader of the
-Mohammedans who captured Jerusalem from the Christians in the year 1636.
-One who does not worship Mohammed may not enter this mosque or the
-grounds belonging to it without a guard of paid soldiers.
-
-I got back into the crowded streets, and was pushed and jostled as
-before. To escape this I went down more slimy steps and along a narrow
-alley until I came to a towering stone wall. Here I saw a strange sight.
-Hebrews, rich and poor, some dirty and ragged, others wearing diamonds,
-by turns kissed and beat with their fists the great blocks of stones,
-shrieking and moaning with tears streaming down their cheeks. I did not
-have to be told where I was. This time I had fallen upon the “Jews’
-Wailing Place.”
-
-I wandered here and there, and at noonday remembered that a sum hardly
-equal to forty cents jingled in my pockets. It was high time to look for
-work. So I turned toward the office of the American consul. If there
-were work to be had by _faranchees_ in the city, the consul, surely,
-would know it. I fought my way through the gazing crowd of doorkeepers
-and others into the outer office. A moment later I was admitted to the
-inner office. The kindly white-haired consul asked me to give him a full
-account of my journey in Palestine.
-
-“I shall give you a note to the Jewish hotel across the way,” he said,
-when I had finished, “and you may pay the bill when you earn the money.
-For you will find work, you may be sure. See me again before you leave
-the city.”
-
-I mounted an outdoor stairway on the opposite side of David Street to a
-good inn. From the window of the room assigned to me there was a
-far-reaching view. To the north, east, and south spread a jumble of
-small buildings, with their dome-shaped roofs of mud or stone outlined
-against a few houses covered with red tiles. Here and there rose the
-slender minarets or steeples of Mohammedan mosques, and in about the
-center of the city was the great Christian Church, which is said to be
-built to cover the spot where the Saviour was buried. At the farther
-edge of the city, yet so near that I could see it from base to dome,
-stood the beautiful mosque of Omar where I had but recently caused so
-much excitement. Back of it was a forest of olive trees, and farther on
-the Mount of Olives. Beyond, miles of dreary hills stretched away to the
-great wall of the mountains of Moab.
-
-While I was taking a walk after dinner, I came upon an Englishman who
-lived in Jerusalem. The Englishman wanted some letters translated into
-French. I began on them at once, and worked late into the night. For the
-three days following I spent my time in writing and in sight-seeing. The
-bazaars were half deserted at this period; for on Friday the Mohammedans
-held a festival, Saturday was the Jewish Sabbath, and Sunday the day of
-rest for Christians. So among them all there was little going on in the
-business section during those three days.
-
-On Saturday, at the hotel, there was nothing to eat but meat. It was
-served cold, for what Jew could order his servants to build a fire on
-the Sabbath? The day grew wintry cold, however. The hotel-keeper sent
-for a servant, and gave orders in a language that sounded much like
-German, ending with the unnecessary remark: “I believe this is one of
-the coldest days we have had this year.”
-
-The servant scratched his moth-eaten head, shuffled off, and returned
-with a bundle of twigs that were soon crackling in the tiny sheet-iron
-stove.
-
-On Sunday I had nothing much to do; so I pushed through the howling mob
-of peddlers at the gate of the city, and strolled southward along a road
-from which I could see, now and then, the sparkling waters of the Dead
-Sea. A few hours later I climbed into the wind-swept village of
-Bethlehem.
-
-Standing like a fortress at the center of the town is the Church of the
-Nativity, built over the site of the manger where Christ was born. The
-rough stone walls on each side of the low doorway of this church are so
-blackened by the hands of centuries of pilgrims that the entrance looks
-like a huge rat-hole. Had it been Christmas Eve while I was there, I
-should have seen a great procession of priests, clergymen, and Turkish
-soldiers carrying waxen candles and marching to the basement of the
-church, where a waxen baby to represent the infant Jesus lies in a
-marble manger, on cushions of red silk with a layer of straw beneath. I
-should have heard the oldest priest of the procession sing the story of
-Christ’s birth, while outside in the streets the people feasted and sang
-merry songs until morning. As it was, however, I went inside to see
-nothing more exciting than Christians of many beliefs worshiping in
-different parts of the church.
-
-That afternoon I returned to Jerusalem. The Englishman came next morning
-with another letter, which I wrote in French and returned to him at
-noon. Then, having paid my bill at the hotel, I went to tell the consul
-that I was about to leave the city.
-
-“How much money have you?” he asked.
-
-“About two dollars.”
-
-“Good! Now, my lad, take my advice. There is a steamer leaving Jaffa for
-Egypt to-night. Take the afternoon train,—ten francs will more than pay
-your fare,—and once in Jaffa perhaps you can get work on the steamer to
-pay your passage across. Ask the American consul there to give you his
-assistance.”
-
-“I can save money by walking,” I had the courage to say.
-
-“Impossible!” cried the consul. “It is forty miles to Jaffa. The ship
-leaves at noon, and there is not another for ten days. Take the train;
-you can’t walk there in time.”
-
-In spite of the consul’s advice, I spent half my money for a roll of
-films, and struck out on foot to the coast. Long after dark I found a
-place to sleep in Latron, the home of the thief who was crucified with
-Christ.
-
-I put off again before daylight, in a pouring rain, across a marshy
-plain. It was nearly noon when I reached port; but the sea was running
-mountain-high, and the task of loading the steamer was going on slowly.
-A native offered for a few coppers to guide me to the American consul.
-Together we rushed through the streets, ankle-deep in soft mud, and
-stopped at last before a large hotel. I dashed into the office and
-called for the consul.
-
-“Impossible!” cried the clerk. “The consul is at dinner.”
-
-I started toward the dining-room. The clerk snatched wildly at my
-dripping garments, and sent a servant to tell the consul I wanted to
-speak to him.
-
-A moment later a very tall American consul stood framed in the doorway
-before me—though, to be sure, the frame was a good six inches too short
-and wrinkled the picture sadly. He was a Frenchman, and so excited
-because he had been disturbed “before the wine” that he could think of
-no words but those in his own language. While he scolded me violently he
-tore at his hair. It was long before I could induce him to listen to me.
-When he finally understood that I wanted merely a note to the ship’s
-agent, he became more friendly and said he would write it at once.
-
-A moment later the clerk handed me an unfolded note, and I rushed away
-to the wharf a half mile distant. The ship was still there. I hurried to
-the office window, and thrust the letter through the opening. Even in my
-hurry I could not fail to notice that the agent who peered out at me
-wore a glass eye—and a celluloid nose!
-
-His face puckered up as he read the note. “Ah!” he said, drawing a
-ticket from the rack. “Very well! The fare is twelve francs.”
-
-“The fare? But doesn’t the consul ask you to let me work for my passage
-as a sailor?”
-
-He pushed the note toward me. It was in French. I heard a warning
-whistle from the harbor! The letter was written in a scrawl:
-
- _Dear Friend:_
-
- The bearer, Harris Franck, is an American sailor who wishes to go
- to Egypt. Will you kindly sell him a ticket and oblige your
- humble, etc., etc.
-
- —— ——,
- _American Consular Agent_.
-
-A letter giving the company the right to sell me a ticket that it would
-have been delighted to sell to any sort of man or ape that had the
-money! It was of no value whatever.
-
-Caring nothing for the rain, I sat down against a pillar outside the
-office. Only four miserable francs rattled in my pocket. I now saw that
-I would have to spend long, penniless days on the Jaffa beach. The
-loading and unloading of the steamer were still going on. Boatmen were
-struggling to row across the mountain-like waves. Now and then a giant
-billow overturned a freight-filled rowboat high on the beach. Barefooted
-natives waded into the surf with tourists in their arms. Each warning
-whistle seemed to thrust Egypt farther and farther away. If only—
-
-I felt a tap on the shoulder. A young native in the uniform of the
-ship’s company was bending over me.
-
-“Go on board anyway,” he advised me.
-
-“Eh?” I cried.
-
-“The captain is English. If you are a sailor he will give you work.”
-
-“But I can’t get on board,” I answered.
-
-For reply the native pointed to his company’s boat, loaded with baggage
-and mails, at the edge of the wharf. I snatched up my belongings and
-dropped into it.
-
-The steamer was about to start when I scrambled on board. I fought my
-way through a jumble of tumbled baggage, seasick natives, and shouting
-seamen, and tried to make my way to the captain. A huge seaman pushed me
-back. When darkness fell on an open sea I had not yet succeeded in
-reaching him. Squirming natives covered every spot on the open deck. I
-crawled under a canvas, used my bundle for a pillow, and fell asleep.
-
-In what seemed about half an hour later I awoke to find the ship gliding
-along as smoothly as on a river. I crawled out on deck. A bright morning
-sun was shining, and before my astonished eyes lay Port Said.
-
-The ship glided on. It was bound for Alexandria. I went to find the
-captain once more—and once more was pushed back by the brawny seaman.
-
-I returned to the deck and sat down. To my horror, the Arabian purser
-began to collect the tickets. He came near me and held out his hand.
-
-“Where can I see the captain?” I demanded.
-
-“M’abarafshee” (“I cannot understand”), he answered in Arabic, shaking
-his head. “Bilyeto!” (“ticket!”)
-
-Certainly I must give some excuse for being on board without a ticket. I
-rummaged through my pockets for the consul’s note, spread it out, and
-laid it in the purser’s hand. Its yellow color looked disturbingly out
-of place on the collection of dark blue tickets. The officer poured
-forth his astonishment in a torrent of Arabic.
-
-“M’abarafshee!” I mocked.
-
-He opened his mouth to send forth another torrent, paused, scratched his
-head, and, with a shrug of his shoulders, went on gathering _bilyetos_
-from the native passengers.
-
-Some time later he climbed down from the upper deck, and, beckoning to
-me, led the way to the captain. The latter, a huge Briton, stormed back
-and forth across the ship, striving to give orders to the native crew in
-such Arabic as he could call to mind—but breaking into violent English
-with every fourth word to rage at the sailors for their stupidity. His
-eye fell upon me.
-
-“Here!” he roared furiously. “What is all this?” And he waved the now
-ragged note in my face.
-
-“Why, that’s a note from the American consul in Jaffa, sir. I asked him
-to write that I wanted to work for my passage to Egypt.”
-
-The purple anger on the skipper’s face, caused partly by the strain of
-trying to make himself understood in Arabic, disappeared somewhat at the
-sound of his own language.
-
-“But,” he went on more quietly, “this note asks the company to _sell_
-you a ticket. It’s written in French, and this is what it says—” And he
-translated it.
-
-“American sailor, are you?” he went on.
-
-I handed him my papers stating that I had been a sailor.
-
-“I’m ready to turn to with the crew, sir,” I put in.
-
-“N—no. That’ll be all right,” said the skipper, stuffing the note into
-his pocket, as he turned to see what the seamen on the deck below were
-about.
-
-“Cover that hatch before a sea fills her!” he shouted.
-
-Early next morning I went ashore in Alexandria.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- CAIRO AND THE PYRAMIDS
-
-
-In all of north Africa there was no place that I wanted to visit more
-than Cairo. I had heard, too, that I might find work there easily. At
-any rate, I felt that I must get there soon, before my money was
-entirely gone.
-
-I went to the railway station in Alexandria, and found that the fare to
-Cairo was just three piasters more than I had. Should I go by train as
-far as my money would take me, and finish the journey on foot and
-penniless? Or should I save the few coins I had for food on the way, and
-tramp the entire distance?
-
-While I was thinking it over I dropped on a bench in a park, and fell to
-whittling a stick. A countryman in fez cap and gown, strolling by,
-stopped and stared at me. Then he sat down on the far end of my bench,
-and watched my movements closely. Inch by inch he slid along the bench.
-
-“Very good knife,” he murmured.
-
-“Aywa” (“Yes”), I answered, tossing away the stick and closing the
-knife.
-
-The Arab gave a gasp of delight.
-
-“But it shuts up like a door,” he cried.
-
-I opened and closed it several times for him to see, then slid down in
-my seat, my thoughts elsewhere.
-
-“You sell it?” grinned the peasant.
-
-“What?” I gasped, sitting up in astonishment.
-
-[Illustration: A woman of Alexandria, Egypt, carrying two bushels of
-oranges.]
-
-“I give you five piasters,” he coaxed.
-
-“Take it!” I cried, and, grasping the coin he held out to me, dashed
-away to the station.
-
-Half an hour later I was speeding southward across the fertile delta of
-the Nile. How different was this land from the country I had so lately
-left behind! Every few miles the train halted at a busy city. Between
-these cities were the mud villages of the Egyptian peasant, and many
-well cultivated fields. Inside the car, which was much like our own in
-America, well dressed natives read the latest newspapers with the easy
-manners of Paris business men. There were several half blind Egyptians
-in the car, victims of an eye disease common in this country; but even
-they leaned back in their seats contentedly. An eyeless one in one
-corner roared with laughter at the lively talk of his companions. Far
-more at ease was he, for all of his misfortune, than I, with neither
-friend nor acquaintance in all the length and breadth of the continent.
-
-Evening came on. The changing scenery grew dim. The land near and far
-was so flat that in the dusk I could hardly tell the difference between
-a far-off village and a water-buffalo lying down near at hand. The
-western sky turned red for a moment, dulled to a brown, and then the
-darkness that suddenly spread over the land left me to stare at my own
-face beyond the window. The sight was not encouraging. Who would give
-work to the owner of such a face and figure? The lights that began to
-twinkle here and there over the black plain were of villages where
-strangers were very probably disliked and unwelcome. Every click of the
-wheels brought me nearer to the greatest city of Africa, of which I knew
-little more than the name. Yet I would soon be wandering alone there in
-the darkness, with only ten cents in my pockets! Perhaps in all Cairo
-there was not another penniless adventurer of my race! Even if there
-were, and a lodging for vagabonds somewhere in the great city, what
-chance had I of finding it? For who would understand my words, and even
-if they did who could direct me to such an out-of-the-way place?
-
-The train halted in a vast domed station. A great crowd swept me through
-the waiting-rooms and out upon a brightly lighted square. There the
-screaming mass of hackmen, porters, donkey-boys, and hotel runners drove
-me to seek shelter behind a station pillar. I swung my knapsack over my
-shoulder, and gazed at the human sea about me, hopelessly undecided as
-to what to do or where to go.
-
-[Illustration: An abandoned mosque (Mohammedan church) outside the walls
-of Cairo, and a caravan off for a trip across the desert.]
-
-Suddenly a voice sounded above the roar: “Heh! Landsmann, wohin?”
-(“Comrade, where are you going?”) I stared eagerly about me. Under a
-near-by arc-light stood a young man of sunburned face, in a stout,
-somewhat ragged suit, and a cloth cap. When he saw me look at him he
-dived into the crowd and fought his way to my side.
-
-“Ah!” he shouted in German. “I knew only one of the boys would blow into
-town with a knapsack and a corduroy suit! Just got in from Zagazig
-myself. How long have you been away? Business any good down at the
-coast? Don’t believe it is. Cairo’s the place for easy winnings.”
-
-As he talked we left behind the howling crowd. No need to ask where he
-was taking me.
-
-“You’ll meet all the comrades where we’re going,” continued my
-companion.
-
-We crossed a corner where street-cars clanged their way through a great
-crowd, and turned down a street faced by brightly lighted shops.
-
-“This street is the Moosky,” said the German. “Good old lane. Many a
-piaster I’ve picked up in her.”
-
-He dodged into a side alley, jogged over a street, and entered the
-lodging of “the comrades.” It was a wine-shop with a kitchen in the
-rear, on the lowest floor of a four-story building. A shuffling Jew was
-drawing beer and wine for several groups of noisy Europeans at the
-tables. The Jew kept up a continual jabber in Yiddish, to which the
-drinkers replied now and then in German. A woman wandered in from the
-back room with a steaming plate of meat and potatoes.
-
-“The place has lodgings,” said my companion, pointing at the ceiling.
-“They cost three piasters. You can still eat a small piaster worth.” For
-I had told him how much money I had.
-
-By the time I had finished eating, the “comrades” were demanding that I
-tell them who I was and where I came from. As all the party spoke
-German, I gave them a short account of myself in that language.
-
-“And what countryman are you?” asked a youth at the next table.
-
-“I am an American.”
-
-The entire party, including the Jew, burst into a roaring laugh so
-suddenly that two black boys who had been peering in upon us scampered
-away down the street.
-
-[Illustration: An Arab café in Old Cairo.]
-
-“Amerikaner! Ja! Ja!” shrieked the merry-makers. “Certainly! We are all
-Americans. But what are you when you tell the truth to your good
-comrades? Amerikaner! Ha! Ha!”
-
-The first speaker beat a tattoo on the table with his cane, and the
-others became quiet. Plainly he was the leader of the company.
-
-“Now, then,” he cried, as if I had the right by the rules of “the union”
-to give two answers, “what country are you from?”
-
-I repeated that I was an American.
-
-“So you are an American really?” he demanded suddenly in clear English.
-
-He thought I would not understand him; but a long reply in my own
-language proved that I did. The others, however, grinned unbelievingly
-and fell to chattering again.
-
-“Why doesn’t the crowd believe me?” I asked of the youth who had spoken
-to me in English.
-
-“Ah!” he burst out, “here in Cairo all the boys are Americans. We have
-Germans, Austrians, Poles, Hungarians, Norwegians—all sorts—in our
-union; and every one is an American—except when they are together. And
-not one of them ever saw the United States! It is because, of all the
-foreign travelers in Egypt, the Americans are most ready to give
-money—to their own countrymen, of course. The Germans will help us. Yes!
-but how? By giving us a loaf of bread or an old pair of shoes or two
-piasters. Bah! But the Americans—they give pounds and whole suits! The
-tourists are your rich harvest, mein Freund! If you are a real
-Amerikaner, you can live in Cairo until you grow a beard!”
-
-So I had fallen among the beggars of Cairo! It was too late, however, to
-find another lodging-place. I leaned back, and finally fell asleep amid
-the fumes of tobacco that filled the room.
-
-A whining voice sounded in my ear: “H’raus, hop!” (“Wake up!”) I opened
-my eyes to find the Jew bending over me. The room was almost empty, but
-the youth who had spoken to me in English still sat there. I paid my
-lodging, and followed him up a narrow winding stairway at the back of
-the shop. On the third floor he pushed open a door which was much like
-the drop of a home-made rabbit-trap. This let us into a small room
-containing six beds. Four of these were already occupied. It needed only
-one long-drawn breath to prove that the bed-clothes had not seen the
-wash-tub for months. But he who is both penniless and particular should
-stay at home. I took the bed beside that of the German, and soon fell
-asleep.
-
-The next morning I arose early, hoping to find work before noon. But my
-new acquaintance of the evening before was awake. He asked me where I
-was going.
-
-I told him I was going to look for work.
-
-“Work!” he shouted, springing to his feet. “A fellow who can talk
-English—and German too—wants to _work_ in Cairo? Why, you—you’re a
-disgrace to the union.”
-
-I went down to the street and set out to look for a job. Long after
-dark, footsore and half starved, covered with the dust of Cairo, I
-returned to the lodging-place of the comrades, and sat down at one of
-the tables. It was easy to see that the comrades were not footsore. They
-had told a hard-luck story somewhere, and returned with enough money to
-enable them to sit around for the rest of the day. Apparently that was
-all they expected or cared to do for the rest of their lives.
-
-The leader of the union watched me, with a half-smile on his face, for
-some time after I had entered. “Lot of work you found, eh?” he began.
-Then he raised his cane and rapped on the table for silence.
-
-“Ei! Good comrades!” he cried. “I have something to show you! Look once!
-Here is a comrade who is an American—do you hear?—a real American, not a
-patched-up one. And this real American—in Cairo—wants to work!”
-
-“_Work?_” roared the chorus. “_Work_ in Cairo—and a real American—Ist’s
-denn ein Esel?” (“Is he a jackass?”)
-
-I ate a tiny supper and crawled away to bed. For two days following I
-tramped even greater distances, without success. But, in a side street
-in which sprawled and squalled so many Arabian babies that I couldn’t
-count them, I came upon the mission building called the Asile Rudolph.
-Glad to escape from the beggar colony at last, I tugged at a bell-rope
-that hung from a brick wall. A bare-legged Arab let me in. The
-superintendent, seated in the office, welcomed me. He was a lively
-Englishman about fifty years old. He had long been a captain on the
-Black Sea, and was still known to everybody as “Cap” Stevenson.
-
-There was something more than bed and board for the lucky lodgers of the
-Asile Rudolph. The mission had a new shower bath! It was closed during
-the day; but, as I was never the last to finish the evening meal, I
-would get inside the wooden closet first; and it was only the argument
-that the stream could be put to even better use among my companions that
-saved me from a watery grave.
-
-I looked for work for five days longer. No tourist ever peeped into half
-the strange corners to which my wanderings led me. I learned the Arabic
-language rapidly, too; for the servants of Cairo seemed to hate workmen
-of my race; and the necessity of speaking my mind to them made me learn
-new words every day.
-
-Rich or penniless, however, there must be something wrong with any one
-who does not enjoy the winter in Cairo. Here one never has to change his
-plans on account of the weather, for Egypt is always flooded with joyous
-sunshine. There is much to see, too, in this city of the Nile. If you
-take a walk to the Esbekieh Gardens, you can hear a band concert at any
-time, and Arabians are always performing queer tricks out there. At all
-hours of the day, people of great wealth are driving about in the
-gardens, while the crowds stand watching them. At times the Khedive and
-his guard thunder by. Now and then the shout of Cairo’s most famous
-runner tells us that the Khedive’s master, Lord Cromer, is coming near.
-There is always enough to see—but not enough to eat.
-
-[Illustration: Carriage runners of Cairo, clearing the streets for their
-master.]
-
-One day, while wandering sadly away across the city, I stumbled upon the
-offices of the American ambassador. I managed to fight my way into the
-presence of the consul-general himself, and told him of my experiences
-in Cairo.
-
-“If you are willing to do any kind of work,” he said, “I can give you
-employment at once.”
-
-I told him that any kind of work would be welcome.
-
-The consul chose a card from his case, turned it over, and wrote on the
-back:
-
- _Tom_: Let Franck do it.
-
-“Take this,” he said, “to my home; it is opposite that of Lord Cromer,
-near the Nile. Give it to my butler.”
-
-“Tom,” the butler, was a young American. I came upon him dancing blindly
-around the ball-room of Mr. Morgan’s residence, and shouting himself
-hoarse in Arabic at the servants under his charge. The consul, I was
-told, was to give a dinner, with dancing, to the society people
-wintering in the city. In the two days that were left before the evening
-of the party, the ball-room floor must be properly waxed. Twelve Arabic
-workmen had been puttering around in the dance-hall doing almost nothing
-since early morning. About them was spread powdered wax; in their hands
-were long bottles; above them towered the dancing butler.
-
-“Put some strength into it!” he shouted, as I stepped across the room
-toward him.
-
-A thirteenth “workman,” who had been hired to squat in a far corner and
-furnish musical encouragement, began to sing. For the next three strokes
-the dozen bottles, moving together in time with the tune, nearly crushed
-the powdered wax under them. But this unusual show of energy did not
-last long.
-
-I delivered the written message. Tom read it. “I’ll fire ’um!” he
-bellowed. The Arabs bounded half across the room at his shriek. “I’ll
-fire ’um _now!_ An American? I’m delighted, old man! Get after this job
-while I chase these fellows downstairs. Had any experience at this
-game?”
-
-I thought of a far-off college gymnasium, and nodded.
-
-“Take your own time, only so you get it done,” cried the butler, chasing
-out the fleeing Arabs.
-
-I tossed aside the bottles, and fixed up a tool of my own with which to
-rub the floor. By evening the polishing was half done. When I turned my
-attention to the dust-streaked windows, late the next afternoon, the
-ball-room floor was too slippery to be safe for any but sure-footed
-dancers.
-
-[Illustration: An Arab gardener on the estate of the American consul of
-Cairo, for whom I worked two weeks.]
-
-On the evening of the entertainment I helped to look after the dinner.
-We were separated only by a Japanese screen from the guests of the
-evening. Among them were Lord Cromer and the ex-Empress Eugénie, once
-Queen of France, who was driven from the throne by the Germans in 1870;
-the Crown Prince of Sweden was there, and the brother of the Khedive,
-ruler of Egypt.
-
-It was long after midnight when I returned to the Asile. Captain
-Stevenson let me in. I found the inmates there still, all up and awake
-at that late hour, waiting for me. They were as excited as so many
-schoolgirls, and asked me question after question about whom I had seen
-at the party, what they had done, how they had danced, what they had
-talked about. I was sorry I did not have something interesting to tell
-them. As it was, the dancing had not been especially graceful, and the
-conversation of the great people had been commonplace. By arrangement
-with Tom, I continued to “do it” long after the ball. The food at the
-servants’ table was excellent, and I kept my cot at the Asile at a cost
-of two piasters a day.
-
-One evening while sitting in the office at the mission I saw in a Cairo
-newspaper the following paragraph:
-
- Suez, February 2nd, 1905.
-
- The French troop-ship ——, outward bound to Madagascar with five
- hundred recruits, reports that while midway between Port Said and
- Ismailia, on her way through the Canal, five soldiers who had been
- standing at the rail suddenly sprang overboard and swam for shore.
- One was carried under and crushed by the ship’s screw. The others
- landed, and were last seen hurrying away into the desert. All five
- were Germans.
-
-I showed the paragraph to the superintendent. “Aye,” said Cap; “I’ve
-seen it; that happens often. They’ll be here for dinner day after
-to-morrow.”
-
-They arrived exactly at the hour named, the four of them, sunburned and
-bedraggled from their swim and the tramp across the desert. Two of the
-four were very friendly fellows. I was soon well acquainted with them.
-One of the two had spent some months in Egypt before.
-
-On the Friday after they arrived, the one who had been in Egypt on a
-former occasion met me at the gate of the Asile as I returned from my
-day’s labor.
-
-“Heh! Amerikaner,” he began, “do you get a half holiday to-morrow?”
-
-“Yes,” I answered.
-
-“I’m going to take Hans out for a moonlight view of the Pyramids. It’s
-full moon, and all the companies are sending out tally-ho parties. Want
-to go along?”
-
-I did, of course. The next afternoon I left the Asile in company with
-the two. At the door of the office I stopped to pay my lodging for the
-coming night.
-
-“Never mind that,” said Adolph, the man who had invited us. “We’ll sleep
-out there.”
-
-“Eh?” cried Hans and I.
-
-[Illustration: Egypt—A young Arab climbing down the pyramid.]
-
-Adolph pushed open the gate, and we followed.
-
-“Suppose you’ll pay our lodging at the Mena House out there?” grinned
-Hans, as we crossed the Kasr-el-Nil bridge.
-
-“Don’t worry,” cried Adolph.
-
-We pushed through the throng of donkey-boys beyond the bridge. There was
-a street-car line running along an avenue lined with trees, out to the
-Pyramids in the desert; but we covered the eight miles on foot.
-
-Darkness fell soon after we reached the place, and with it arose the
-moon, large and red. The Pyramids were monstrous. They looked like
-mountains. Adolph led the way in and out among them, and pointed out the
-most charming views, like a guide. We climbed to the top of the Pyramid
-of Cheops. Cheops was once a king of Egypt, you know. The Pyramid that
-was built for his tomb still covers thirteen acres. It seems to run to a
-peak when viewed from a distance, but we found the “peak” three yards
-square when we reached the top. Some of the huge blocks of stone that we
-had to pull ourselves over, in making the climb, weigh over fifty tons.
-
-[Illustration: On top of the largest pyramid. From the ground it looks
-as sharply pointed as the others.]
-
-The desert night soon turned cold. We climbed down again. The tourist
-parties strolled away to the great hotel below the hill, and Hans fell
-to shivering.
-
-“Where’s this fine lodging you were telling about?” he chattered.
-
-“Just come here,” said Adolph.
-
-[Illustration: I take a camel ride while visiting the pyramids.]
-
-He picked his way over the huge blocks of limestone that had tumbled
-from the ancient monuments toward the third Pyramid, climbed a few feet
-up its northern side, and disappeared in a black hole. We followed, and,
-doubled up like balls, slid down, down, down a steep tunnel about three
-feet square, into utter darkness. As our feet touched a stone floor,
-Adolph struck a match. The flame showed two small cave-like rooms, and
-several huge stone coffins.
-
-“Beds waiting for us—you see?” said Adolph. “Probably you’ve chatted
-with the fellows who used to sleep here. They’re in the British museum
-in London.”
-
-He dropped the match, and climbed into one of the coffins. I chose
-another, and found it as comfortable as a stone bed can be, though a bit
-short. Our sleeping-room was warm, somewhat too warm, in fact, and Hans
-began to snore. The noise echoed through the vaults like the beating of
-forty drums. When we awoke it was still as dark as midnight, but our
-sense of time told us that morning had come. We crawled upward on hands
-and knees through the tunnel, and out into a sunlight that left us
-blinking painfully for several minutes.
-
-A crowd of tourists and Arabian rascals were surging about the
-monuments. Four British soldiers in khaki uniforms kicked their heels on
-the forehead of the Sphinx, puffing at their pipes as they told the
-latest garrison jokes. We fought our way through the Arabs who clung to
-us, took a look at the sights, and then strolled back to Cairo.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- A TRIP UP THE NILE
-
-
-One fine morning, some two weeks after my introduction to Tom, I left my
-post in the consul’s household, and set about making plans for a journey
-up the Nile. For I knew that if I once journeyed up or down this river
-with open eyes, I would know all there is to know about this long and
-narrow country.
-
-I left Cairo on foot, and, crossing the Nile, turned southward along a
-ridge of shifting sand beyond the village of Gizeh. There was an
-irrigating ditch near the ridge. Scores of natives, moving with the
-regularity of machinery, were ceaselessly dipping the water that gives
-life to the fields of Egypt. Between the canal and the sparkling Nile,
-groups of Egyptian farmers, called fellahs, deaf to the fiery sunshine,
-set out sugar-cane, or clawed the soil of the dry plain. On the desert
-wind rode the never-ceasing squawk of the Egyptian water-wheel.
-
-Beyond the Pyramids of Sakkara I found shelter in the palm groves where
-the ancient city of Memphis once stood, and took my noonday sleep on the
-statue of King Rameses which lies at full length there. When I was
-returning to the sandy road, a whole village of dark-faced people came
-running up, and tried to head me off and make me give them baksheesh.
-They forced me to run a gauntlet of outstretched arms. It is the
-national song of Egypt, this cry of baksheesh. Workmen at their labor,
-women bound for market, children rooting in the streets, drop everything
-to crowd around the traveler who may be coaxed to “sprinkle iron” among
-them. Even the unclothed infant astride a mother’s shoulder thrusts
-forth a dimpled hand to the passing white man, with a gurgle of
-“sheesh.”
-
-[Illustration: “Along the way shadoofs were ceaselessly dipping up the
-water that gives life to the fields of Egypt.”]
-
-As darkness came on I reached the town of Magoonza. I spent the night in
-a railway station. The next day I took the third-class coach, and halted
-near noonday in the wind-swept village of Beni Suef. A young Englishman
-who was called “Bromley, Pasha, Inspector of Irrigation,” agreed to meet
-me on the bank of the canal beyond the village. Long after dark he
-appeared on horseback, attended by two natives who carried flaming
-torches. After being ferried across the canal, he led the way toward his
-_dahabeah_ (winged house-boat), which was anchored at the shore of the
-Nile.
-
-“I fancied I’d find something to put you at,” he explained, turning his
-horse over to a jet-black servant who popped up out of the darkness.
-“But I didn’t, and the last train’s gone. I’ll buy you a ticket to
-Assiut in the morning.”
-
-“I have a ticket,” I put in.
-
-“Oh,” said the Englishman. “Well, you’ll stay with me here to-night,
-anyway.”
-
-He led the way across the plank into his floating residence. The change
-from the windy plain of African sand to this floating palace was as
-strange as if Bromley, Pasha, had been the owner of Aladdin’s lamp.
-Richly turbaned servants in spotless white gowns sprang forward to greet
-their master; to place a chair for him; to pull off his riding-boots and
-to put on his slippers; to slip the Cairo “daily” into his hands; and
-then to speed noiselessly away to finish preparing the evening meal.
-
-Breakfast over next morning, I returned to the village, and left on the
-south-bound train. The third-class coach was packed with natives huddled
-together with unmanageable bundles. Three gloomy Arabs, who had no room
-to squat on the floor, perched themselves on a bench at the side of the
-car like fowls on a roost. The air that swept through the open car was
-almost wintry. Only the faces of the men were uncovered. The women,
-wrapped like mummies in fold after fold of black gowns, crouched on the
-floor, so motionless that one could hardly tell which were women and
-which were bundles.
-
-At every station peddlers of food swarmed around the train. Dates,
-boiled eggs, baked fish, oranges, and soggy bread-cakes—enough to feed
-an army—were thrust upon all who dared to look outside. From the
-neighboring fields came workmen loaded down with freshly cut bundles of
-sugar-cane. They looked like a forest in motion. Three great canes, as
-long and unmanageable as bamboo fishing-rods, sold for a piaster, and
-almost every native in the car bought at least a half dozen.
-
-The canes were broken into pieces two feet long; and each native,
-grasping a piece in his hands, bit into it and, jerking his head from
-side to side like a bulldog, tore off a strip. Then, with a suckling
-that could be heard above the roar of the train, he drew out the juice
-and cast the pulp on the floor about him. The pulp dried rapidly, and by
-noonday the floor of the car was carpeted with a sugar-cane mat several
-inches thick.
-
-I spent the night at the largest city in upper Egypt—Assiut. Long before
-daylight next morning I rose and groped my way back through the darkness
-to the station. A ticket to Luxor took less than half my money. I
-boarded the train and once more started south. At break of day the
-railway crossed to the eastern bank of the river, and at the next
-station the train stood motionless while engineer, trainmen, and
-passengers went outside and performed their morning prayers in the
-desert sand. Beyond, the chimneys of great sugar factories puffed forth
-dense clouds of smoke, and at every stopping-place shivering small boys
-offered for sale cone-shaped lumps of sugar, dark-brown in color.
-
-The voice of the south spoke more clearly with every mile. We were now
-coming to the district where rain and dew were unknown. The desert grew
-more dry and parched; the whirling sand became finer, until it sifted
-through one’s very clothing. The natives, already of a darker shade than
-the cinnamon-colored Cairene, grew blacker and blacker. The chilling
-wind of two days before turned warm, then piping hot; and before we drew
-into Luxor, Egypt lay, as of old, under her glittering covering of
-gleaming sunshine.
-
-Before me were two great European hotels filled with tourists. And close
-by the station was an inn for penniless wanderers. It was a tumble-down
-shack wherein, dreaming away his old age over a cigarette, sat Pietro
-Saggharia. Pietro was a wanderer once. His stories of “the road,”
-collected during forty years of roaming about in Africa, and told in
-almost any language the listener may choose, are to be had for a kind
-word.
-
-I left my knapsack in Pietro’s keeping, and struck off toward Karnak.
-Tourists go to Karnak to see what is left of many temples there. The
-principal temple is that built in honor of Ammon, a being that the
-Egyptians once worshiped. Ammon was an imaginary creature with the body
-of a man and the head and horns of a ram. He was supposed to be very
-wise and able to answer any question asked of him. His temple was once
-magnificent, having immense columns, carvings, sculptures, and
-paintings, placed there by his worshipers.
-
-I did not expect to see the inside of the famous temples, for I had no
-ticket. The price of such a ticket is little short of a vagabond’s
-fortune. I journeyed to Karnak, therefore, with my mind made up to be
-content with a view of her row of sphinxes and a walk around her outer
-walls.
-
-Natives swarmed about me, calling for “baksheesh.” Before I had shaken
-off the last screeching youth I came upon a great iron gate that shut
-out the un-ticketed, and paused to peer through the bars. On the ground
-before the gate squatted a sleek, well fed native. He arose and told me
-he was the guard, but made no attempt to drive me off.
-
-As I turned away he said in Arabic: “You don’t see much from here. Have
-you already seen the temple? Or perhaps you have no ticket?”
-
-“No; no ticket,” I answered in Arabic. “Therefore I must stay outside.”
-
-“Ah! Then you are no tourist?” smiled the native. “Are you English?”
-
-“Aywa,” I answered, for the Arabic term “Inglesi” means all who speak
-that language; “but no tourist, merely a working-man.”
-
-“Ah,” sighed the guard: “too bad you are an Inglesi, then; for if you
-spoke French the superintendent who has the digging done is a good
-friend of working-men. But he speaks no English.”
-
-“Where shall I find him?”
-
-“In the office just over the hill, there.”
-
-I went in the direction pointed out, and came upon a small office before
-which an aged European sat motionless in a rocking-chair. About him were
-scattered many kinds of statues, broken and whole.
-
-“Are you the superintendent, sir?” I asked in French.
-
-The aged Frenchman frowned, but answered not a word. I repeated the
-question in a louder voice.
-
-“Va t’en!” shrieked the old man, grasping a heavy cane that leaned
-against his chair, and shaking it feebly at me. “Go away! You’re a
-beggar. I know you are.”
-
-I told him I had mistaken him for the superintendent. The aged Frenchman
-watched me with the half-closed eyes of a cat, clinging to his stick.
-
-“Why do you want to see the superintendent?” he demanded.
-
-“To work, if he has any. If not, to see the temple.”
-
-“You will not ask him for money?”
-
-“Certainly not.”
-
-“Well! It is there. Maghmood!” he coughed.
-
-A native appeared at the door of the shanty.
-
-“My son is the superintendent,” said the old man, showing a maze of
-wrinkles meant for a smile. “Follow Maghmood.”
-
-The son, a polite young Frenchman clothed in the thinnest of white
-trousers and an open shirt, was bowed over a small stone covered with
-ancient Egyptian figures. I told him why I had come.
-
-“Work?” he replied. “No. Unfortunately, the society allows us to hire
-only natives. I wish I might have a few Europeans to look after the
-digging. But I am pleased to find a workman interested in the ruins. You
-are as free to go inside as if you had a ticket. But it is midday now.
-How do you escape a sunstroke, with only that cap? You had better sit
-here in the shade until the heat dies down a bit.”
-
-I assured him that the Egyptian sun did not trouble me, and he stepped
-to the door to shout an order to the well fed gate-keeper just out of
-sight over the hill. That official grinned knowingly as I appeared,
-unlocked the gate, and, pushing back with one hand several small black
-boys who were racing about, let me in to the noonday quiet of the forest
-of pillars.
-
-As the shadows began to grow long, a flock of sheep rushed into the
-sacred place, and, stumbling through the ruins, awoke the sleeping
-echoes with their bleating. They were trying to get to their shepherds,
-who were calling to them in voices that sounded like phonographs. After
-they had left, there came more peaceful beings weighed down with cameras
-and note-books. Everybody was interested in one lively corner of the
-place. There, in the latest hollow dug, an army of men and boys toiled
-at the machines that raised the sand and the water which had been poured
-into the pit to loosen the soil. Other natives, naked, groped in the mud
-at the bottom, eager to win the small reward offered to the discoverer
-of each ancient treasure buried in the earth.
-
-One such prize was captured in the afternoon. A small boy, half buried
-in mud and water, suddenly stopped wallowing about, and uttered a shrill
-shriek of joy. He came dangerously near being trampled out of sight by
-his fellow workmen. In a twinkling half the band, amid a mighty roar of
-shouting and splashing, was tugging at some heavy object hidden from
-view in the mud.
-
-They raised it at last—a woman’s figure in blue stone, about four feet
-in length. The news of the discovery was quickly carried to the shanty
-on the hill. In a great white helmet that made him look like a walking
-toad-stool, the superintendent hurried down to the edge of the pit, and
-gave orders that the statue be carried to a level space, where a crowd
-of excited tourists lay in wait with open note-books. There it was
-carefully washed with sponges, while the tourists stood gazing eagerly
-at it. Then it was placed on a car of the tiny railway laid among the
-ruins. Crowds of natives grasped the long rope attached to the car, and,
-moving in time to a wild Arabic song of rejoicing, dragged the new find
-through the temple and placed it at the feet of the aged Frenchman.
-
-As evening fell I turned back to my lodging-place. Several lodgers had
-gathered, but neither they nor Pietro could tell me anything about the
-land across the Nile, which I meant to visit next day.
-
-There is another ruined temple near Luxor. Although it is a mile north
-of Karnak, it was once connected with the temples of that town by an
-avenue bordered on either side with ram-headed sphinxes. The temple is
-of sandstone, and until the digging for it was begun in 1883 it was
-entirely buried in sand and rubbish. About it six enormous statues of an
-Egyptian king are still standing.
-
-No one at the inn could tell me anything about the ruins that the
-tourists came to see. The Greek keeper of the inn knew nothing of the
-ruins of Thebes except the story of a man who had once stopped at his
-hotel. This man had tried to make the excursion, and had returned wild
-with thirst, mumbling a confused tale of having floundered about in a
-sea of sand.
-
-“For our betters,” said Pietro, in the softened Italian in which he
-chose to address me, “for the rich ladies and gentlemen who can ride on
-donkeys and be guarded by many guides, a visit to Thebes is very well.
-But common folk like you and me! Bah! We are not wanted there. They
-would send no army to look for _us_ if we disappeared in the desert.
-Besides, you must have a ticket to see anything.”
-
-I rose at dawn the next morning, and hastened away to the bazaars to get
-food for the day’s trip—bread-cakes for hunger and oranges for thirst. A
-native boatman tried to charge me ten piasters for rowing me to the
-other side; but when I refused to pay him that much, he accepted one
-instead, and set me down on the western bank. The shrill screams of a
-troop of donkey-boys, who were crossing the river with their animals,
-greeted the rising sun. A moment later a party of tourists, wearing
-veils and helmets, stepped ashore from a steamer, and, mounting the
-animals, sped away into the trackless desert. It was an interesting
-sight. The half-mile train of donkeys that trailed off across the desert
-was bestridden by every kind of European, from thin scholars and slender
-maidens to heavy women and mighty masses of men, who had to beat their
-animals continually to make them keep up with the rest.
-
-The sharp climb to the Tomb of the Kings was more difficult to an
-overburdened ass than to a man on foot. I kept pace with the band, and
-even got ahead of the stragglers, often stopping to shake the sand from
-my shoes. Even though the jeering donkey-boys kept pushing me into the
-narrow gorges between the rocks, it was I who reached the gate first. An
-Arabian policeman was on hand to help the keeper take tickets. But he
-spoke Italian, and was so delighted to find that he could talk with me
-without being understood by the rest of the crowd that he gave me
-permission to enter.
-
-I was now so used to such places that I was able to find my way about
-alone. I left the party and struck southward toward a steep cliff of
-stone and sand. To go past this, those on donkeys had to make a circuit
-of many miles; but I made up my mind to climb over it. Clinging to sharp
-edges of rock, I began the climb. Half way up, a roar of voices sounded
-from the plain below. I felt for a safer hand-hold and looked down.
-About the policeman at the foot of the cliff was grouped the party of
-Europeans, gazing upward—certain now, no doubt, of their earlier belief
-that I was a madman who had escaped from his guardians. Before they had
-gone one fourth the distance around the mountain, I had reached the top,
-while they had still many a weary mile to travel.
-
-The view that spread out from the top of that mountain was one that
-might have awakened the envy of the tourists below. North and south
-stretched sand-colored hills, deep and brilliant vermilion in the
-valleys, the highest peaks splashed blood-red by the sunshine. Below lay
-the plain of Thebes, its thick green carpet weighted down by a few farm
-villages and the great heavy playthings of an ancient people. As I
-looked off before me, an old saying came to my mind: “Egypt is the
-Nile.” Clinging tightly to the life-giving river, easily seen in that
-clear air for a hundred miles, the slender hand of Egypt looked like a
-spotless ribbon of richest green, following every curve of the Father of
-Waters. All else to the east and to the west was nothing but an endless
-sea of choking yellow sand.
-
-[Illustration: The Egyptian fellah dwells in a hut of reeds and mud.]
-
-I climbed down, and spent the afternoon among the ruins at the edge of
-the plain. I had examined almost everything before the tourists, worn
-out and drooping from a day in the saddle, overtook me, and I went on
-before them to the bank of the river. There they shook me off, however.
-The guides in charge of the party snarled in anger when I offered to pay
-for crossing the river in the company boat. There was nothing else for
-me to do, much as I disliked the idea, but to be ferried over with the
-donkeys.
-
-I left next day on the train for Assuan, and reached that place in time
-to hear the afternoon concert. I was now nearly six hundred miles from
-the last “hotel” for homeless wanderers, and I was again obliged to go
-to a native inn and to put up with the companionship of half-savage
-Arabians. But my bedroom on the roof was airy, and the bawling of the
-priest who stood on the balcony of a Mohammedan church steeple calling
-out the hour of prayer awoke me early enough to see the glorious sunrise
-of a new day.
-
-Some miles beyond Assuan lay the new dam, where there was work for any
-one who wanted it. Just how far, I could not know; neither did I know
-that it was connected with the village by rail. From morning till high
-noon I clawed my way along the ragged rocks overhanging the weakened
-falls of the river, before I came in sight of the great dam that had
-robbed them of their waters.
-
-This dam was built by the British for the purpose of irrigating the
-surrounding country. Among the rocks in what was once the bed of the
-Nile sat a dozen wooden shanties for the workmen. But I had arrived too
-late. The superintendent of the work told me that the dam had been
-completed that very day, and he and his men were going back to England
-in the morning.
-
-I still had left fifty piasters, so I decided to push on up the Nile.
-
-I came to the end of the railway. But steamers left twice a week from
-Shellal, a town above the dam. At the landing a swarm of natives were
-loading a rickety old barge, and a native agent was dozing behind the
-bars of a home-made ticket-office.
-
-“Yes,” he yawned, in answer to my question; “there is to-night leaving
-steamer. Soon be here. The fare is two hundred fifty piasters.”
-
-“Two hundred!” I gasped. “Why, that must be first-class.”
-
-“Yes, very first-class. But gentleman not wish travel second-class?”
-
-“Certainly not. Give me a third-class ticket.”
-
-The Egyptian jumped to his feet and stared at me through the bars.
-
-“What say gentleman? Third-class! No! No! Not go third-class.
-Second-class one hundred thirty piasters very poor.”
-
-“But there is a third-class, isn’t there?”
-
-“Third-class go. Forty piasters. But only for Arabs. White man never go
-third-class. Not give food, not give sleep, not ride on steamer; ride on
-barge there, tied to steamer with string. All gentlemen telling me must
-have European food. Gentlemen not sleep with boxes and horses on barge?
-Very Arab; very bad smell.”
-
-“Yes, I know; but give me a third-class ticket,” I interrupted, counting
-out forty piasters.
-
-The native blinked, sat down sadly on his stool, and with a sigh reached
-for a ticket. Suddenly his face lighted up, and he pushed my money back
-to me.
-
-“If white man go third-class,” he crowed, “must have pass. Not can sell
-ticket without.”
-
-“But how can I get a pass?”
-
-“There is living English colonel with fort the other side of Assuan. Can
-get pass from him.”
-
-I hurried away to the railroad station. The fare to Assuan was a few
-cents, and one train went each way during the afternoon. But it made the
-up trip first! I struck out on foot down the railroad, raced through
-Assuan, and tore my way to the fort, which was three miles below the
-village. A squad of black men dressed in khaki uniforms flourished their
-bayonets uncomfortably near my ribs. I bawled out my errand in Arabic,
-and an officer waved the guard aside.
-
-“The colonel is sleeping now,” he said; “come this evening.”
-
-“But I want a pass for this evening’s steamer.”
-
-“We cannot wake the colonel.”
-
-“Is there no one else who can sign the order?”
-
-“Only the colonel. Come this evening.”
-
-Pass or no pass, I would not be cheated out of a journey into the
-Soudan. I threw my knapsack over my shoulder again, and pranced off for
-the third time on the ten-mile course between Assuan and Shellal. Night
-was falling as I rushed through Assuan. When I stepped aside to let the
-down train pass, my legs wabbled under me like two rubber tires from
-which half the air had escaped. The screech of a steamboat whistle
-resounded through the Nile valley as I came in sight of the lights of
-Shellal. I broke into a run, falling now and then on the uneven ground.
-
-The sky was clear, but there was no moon, and the night was black in
-spite of the stars. The deck-hands were already casting off the shore
-lines of the barge, and the steamer was churning the shallow water. I
-pulled off my coat, threw it over my head after the fashion in which the
-Egyptian fellah wears his gown after nightfall, and dashed toward the
-ticket office.
-
-[Illustration: Soudan steamer on the Nile: A Soudanese cavalry soldier
-with whom I shared a blanket on the way up to Wady Haifa.]
-
-“A ticket to Wady Haifa,” I gasped in Arabic, trying to imitate the
-timid tone of the Egyptian peasant.
-
-For once, I saw a native hurry. The agent glanced at the money, snatched
-a ticket, and thrust it through the bars, crying: “Hurry up; the boat is
-go—” But the white hand that clutched the ticket showed him who I was.
-He sprang to the door with a howl: “Stop! It’s the faranchee! Come
-back—”
-
-I caught up my knapsack as I ran, made a flying leap at the slowly
-moving barge, and landed on all fours under the feet of a troop of
-horses.
-
-An Arab who stood grinning at me as I picked myself up seemed to be the
-only man on the craft who had noticed how suddenly I had boarded the
-vessel. He was dressed in native clothes, save for a tightly buttoned
-khaki jacket which he wore over his gown. His legs were bare, his feet
-thrust into red slippers. About his head was wound a large turban of red
-and white checks: on each cheek were the scars of three long gashes; in
-the top of his right ear hung a large silver ring.
-
-The scars and ring showed him to be a Nubian; the jacket, an officer of
-cavalry; the bridle in his hand showed him to be care-taker of the
-horses; and of course his name was Maghmood!
-
-We became great chums, Maghmood and I, before the journey ended. By
-night we shared the same blanket; by day he would have divided the lunch
-in his saddle-bag with me had I been without food. But the black men who
-trooped down to each landing with baskets of native food kept me
-supplied with all I needed. Maghmood told me tales of the time he was in
-the battle-field with Kitchener, in a clear-cut Arabic that even a
-_faranchee_ could understand; and, except for the five periods each day
-when he stood barefoot at his prayers, he was as pleasant a companion as
-any one from the Western world could have been.
-
-When morning broke I climbed a rickety ladder to the upper deck. It was
-so closely packed from rail to rail with Arabs huddled together that a
-poodle could not have found room to sit on his haunches. I climbed still
-higher, and came out upon the roof of the barge. No one else was there.
-From that height I could view the vast moving picture of the Nile.
-
-[Illustration: Arab passengers on the Nile steamer. Except when saying
-their prayers, they scarcely move once a day.]
-
-There was nothing growing on its banks. The fertile strips of green fed
-by the dippers and the squawking waterwheels had been left behind.
-Except for a few tiny oases, the desert had pushed its way to the very
-water’s edge, here sloping down in beaches of the softest sand, there
-falling sheer into the stream in rugged, rocky cliffs. Yet somewhere in
-this yellow wilderness a hardy people found a living. Now and then a
-dark-faced peasant waved a hand or a tattered flag from the shore, and
-the steamer ran her nose high up on the beach to pick up the bale of
-produce that he rolled down the slope. At every landing a troop of dark
-barbarians sprang up from a sandy nowhere, making in the gorgeous
-sunlight wild-looking shadows as black as their leathery skins.
-
-We tied up at Wady Haifa after nightfall. I landed the next morning. In
-two days I saw everything there was to see in Wady Haifa, and decided to
-return to Cairo.
-
-On a Monday morning I boarded the steamer _Cleopatra_ as a deck
-passenger, and drifted lazily down the Nile for five days, landing here
-and there with the tourists of the upper deck to visit a temple or a mud
-village. In Cairo, at the Asile Rudolph, Captain Stevenson welcomed me
-with open arms. A day later I called on the superintendent of the
-railway, and, armed with a pass to Port Said, bade the capital farewell.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- STEALING A MARCH ON THE FAR EAST
-
-
-All through that month of February in Cairo I studied the posters of the
-steamship companies to learn what ships were sailing eastward; for I
-hoped to get work on one of them as a sailor, and continue my trip
-around the world. While I was in the train on my way to Port Said, I saw
-four giant steamers gliding southward through the canal, so close that I
-could read from my window the books in the hands of the passengers under
-the awnings. How fortunate those people seemed to me! They were already
-on their way east, while I was still crawling slowly along the edge of
-the desert. Gladly would I have exchanged places with the dirtiest
-workman on board.
-
-I wanted to go to Bombay; but I should have been glad to escape from
-that neck of sand in almost any direction. Not that there weren’t ships
-enough—they passed the canal in hundreds every week. But their sailors
-were yellow men or brown, and they anchored well out in the middle of
-the stream, where a white sailor might not go to ask for work.
-
-All this I thought of as I crawled through the African desert behind a
-wheezing locomotive. But one solemn promise I made to myself before the
-first hut of Port Said bobbed up across the sand—that I would escape
-from this place somehow, on something, be it coal-barge or raft, before
-its streets and alleys became such eye-sores as had once those of
-Marseilles.
-
-I reached Port Said. After dinner I hurried away to the shipping
-quarter. As I had expected, no sailors were wanted. I went to ask advice
-of the American consul.
-
-“A man without money in this place,” he said, “is here to stay, I fear.
-We haven’t signed on a sailor since I was sent here. If you ever make a
-get-away, it will be by hiding on one of the steamers. I can’t advise
-you to do it, of course. But if I were in your shoes I’d stow away on
-the first boat homeward bound, and do it at once, before summer comes
-along and sends you to the hospital.”
-
-Early the next morning I saw a great steamer nosing her way among the
-smaller boats that swarmed about the mouth of the canal. She looked so
-much like the _Warwickshire_ that I half expected to see my former
-mess-mates peering over her rail. I made out the name on her bow as she
-dropped anchor in the middle of the canal. Then I turned to a near-by
-poster to find out more about her.
-
-“_S. S. Worcestershire_,” ran the notice. “Largest, fastest steamer
-sailing from England to British Burma. First-class passengers only. Fare
-to Colombo, one hundred eighty dollars.”
-
-A sister ship of the vessel that had brought me from Marseilles! The
-very sight of her made me think of the prime roasts we had had while
-crossing the Mediterranean. I hurried down to the landing-stage, and
-spoke to the officers as they left the ship with the tourists for a run
-ashore.
-
-“Full up, Jack,” answered one of them.
-
-I thought of the advice the American consul had given me. A better craft
-to hide on would never drop anchor in the canal. Bah! I could never get
-on board. The blackest night could not hide such rags as mine! Besides,
-the steamer was sure to load on coal and be gone within a couple of
-hours.
-
-A native fair was going on at the far end of town. I became so
-interested in watching the snake-charmers and dancers that I soon forgot
-all about the ship I had seen that morning.
-
-Darkness was falling when I strolled back toward the harbor. At the shop
-where mutton sold cheaply I stopped for supper; but the keeper had put
-up his shutters. Hungrily I wandered on toward the main street that
-bordered the canal, and stopped stock-still in astonishment. There
-before me, cutting off the view of the buildings across the canal, the
-vast bulk of the _Worcestershire_ was still standing.
-
-What a chance—if I could once get on board! Perhaps I might! But an
-official would be sure to halt me if I tried to do it. I must have some
-good excuse to offer him for being rowed out to the steamer. If only I
-had something to be delivered on board: a basket of fruit, or—exactly!—a
-letter of introduction.
-
-Breathlessly I dashed into the reading-room of the Catholic Sailors’
-Home, snatched a sheet of paper and an envelope, and scribbled a letter
-asking for work of any kind on board the ship. Then I sealed the
-envelope and addressed it in a bold hand to the chief steward of the
-ship.
-
-But my knapsack? Certainly I could not carry that on board! I dumped its
-contents on the floor, snatched my camera and papers, and thrust them
-into an inside pocket. There was nothing else. With my faded clothes in
-the shadow, I would look like one of the passengers. Many an English
-lord, traveling in the East, wears a cap after nightfall.
-
-In high excitement I rushed down to the dock. The _Worcestershire_ was
-still there. Two Arab boatmen squatted under a torch on one corner of
-the landing-place, waiting to row passengers out to the steamer. They
-charged sixpence. I had three. It cost me some precious moments to beat
-down one of them. He stepped into his boat at last, and pushed off
-cautiously toward the row of lighted port-holes.
-
-As we drew near the steamer I made out a figure in uniform on the lowest
-step of the ship’s ladder. The game was lost! I certainly could not pass
-this bridge officer.
-
-My oarsman swung his boat against the ladder with a sweep of the oar. I
-held up the note.
-
-“Will you kindly deliver this to the chief steward?” I asked. “The
-writer wants an answer before the ship leaves.”
-
-“I really haven’t time,” apologized the mate. “I’ve an errand ashore,
-and we leave in fifteen minutes. You can run up with it yourself,
-though. Here, boatman, row me to the landing.”
-
-I sprang up the ladder. Except for several East Indian workmen who
-jumped aside as I appeared, there was no one on the deck. From somewhere
-below came the sound of waltz music and the laughter of merry people. I
-strolled carelessly around to the other side of the deck, and walked aft
-in the shadow of the upper cabins. For some moments I stood alone in the
-darkness, gazing at the streaks of light from the lower port-holes
-sparkling in the canal. Then a step sounded behind me—a heavy British
-step that came toward me for several paces, and then halted. One could
-almost tell by his walk that he was an officer of the ship; one could
-certainly hear it in the gruff “Ahem!” with which he cleared his throat.
-I waited in fear and trembling.
-
-A minute passed, then another. I turned my head, inch by inch, and
-peered over my shoulder. In the dim light stood a man in faultless
-evening dress, gazing at me through the darkness between us. His dress
-looked like that of a passenger, but the very set of his feet on the
-deck proved that he was no landsman. It was the captain himself, surely!
-What under officer would dare appear out of uniform on a voyage?
-
-I turned away my head again, determined to bear the coming blow bravely.
-The dreaded being cleared his throat once more, stepped nearer, and
-stood for a moment without speaking. Then a hand touched me lightly on
-the sleeve.
-
-“Beg pahdon, sir,” murmured a very polite voice; “beg pahdon, sir, but
-’ave you ’ad dinner yet? The other gentlemen’s h’ all been served, sir.”
-
-I swallowed my throat and turned around, laying a hand over the place
-where my necktie should have been.
-
-“I am not a passenger, my man,” I replied scornfully; “I have a message
-for the chief steward.”
-
-The servant stretched out his hand.
-
-“Oh, I cawn’t send it, you know,” I objected. “I must deliver it myself,
-for it requires an answer before the ship leaves.”
-
-“Goodness, you can’t see _’im_,” gasped the Briton; “we’re givin’ a
-dance, and ’e’s in the ball-room.”
-
-The sound of our voices had attracted the quartermaster on duty. Behind
-him appeared a young steward.
-
-“You’d best get ashore quick,” said the sailor; “we’re only waitin’ for
-the fourth mate. Best call a boatman or you’ll get carried off.”
-
-“Really!” I cried, looking anxiously about me. “But I must have an
-answer, you know!”
-
-“I couldn’t disturb _’im_,” wheezed the older steward.
-
-“Well, show me where he is,” I argued.
-
-“Now, we’re off in a couple o’ winks,” warned the quartermaster.
-
-“’Ere, mate,” said the youth; “I’ll take you down.”
-
-I followed him to the deck below, and along a lighted passageway. My
-make-up would never stand the bright glare of a ball-room. I thrust the
-note into the hands of my guide.
-
-“Be sure to bring me the answer,” I cautioned.
-
-He pushed his way through a group of his mess-mates and disappeared into
-the drawing-room. A moment later he returned with the answer I had
-expected.
-
-“So you’re on the beach?” he grinned. “’Ard luck. The chief says he has
-enough sailors, and the company rules don’t allow ’im to take on a man
-to work ’is passage. S’y, you’ve made a mistake anyway, though, ayn’t
-you? We’re not ’omeward bound; we’re going out. You’d best rustle it and
-get ashore.”
-
-He turned into the cook-room of the ship. Never had I dared to hope that
-he would let me out of his sight before I left. His carelessness was
-due, probably, to his certainty that I had “made a mistake.” I dashed
-out of the passageway as if fearful of being carried off; but, once
-hidden in the kindly night, I paused to peer about me.
-
-Where was there a good place to hide? Inside a mattress in the steerage?
-But there was no steerage. The ship was first-class only. Down in the
-hold, where the cargo was stored? The doors covering the stairways
-leading to it were all nailed down. In the coal-bunkers? That would do
-very well in the depth of winter, but would be sure death in the heat of
-this country. In the forecastle, where the sailors live? Sure to be
-found in a few hours by tattletale natives. In the chain-locker? The
-anchor and chain might be dropped anywhere in the canal, and I should be
-dragged piecemeal through the hawse-hole.
-
-Still thinking rapidly, I climbed to the spot where I had first been
-seen. From the starboard side, forward, came the voice of the fourth
-mate, clambering on board. In a few moments officers and men would be
-flocking up from below. Noiselessly I sprang up the ladder to the
-highest deck. There was no one in sight. I crept to the nearest
-life-boat, and dragged myself along the edge that hung well out over the
-canal. I tugged at the canvas cover on the boat for a minute that seemed
-a century before I succeeded in making an opening. When it had loosened
-for a space of four feet, I thrust my head through. Inch by inch, I
-squirmed in, fearful of making the slightest noise. Only my feet
-remained outside when my hand struck an oar inside the boat. Its rattle
-could have been heard in Cairo. Drenched with perspiration, I waited for
-my discoverer. But the music, it seemed, held the attention of everybody
-on the ship. I drew in my feet by doubling up like a pocket-knife, and,
-thrusting a hand through the opening fastened the canvas cover back in
-place.
-
-The space inside was too small. Seats, kegs, oars, and boat-hooks left
-me barely room to stretch out on my back without touching the canvas
-above me. Two officers brushed by, and called out their orders within
-six feet of me. I heard the rattle of the anchor-chain, and knew that
-the long trip through the canal had begun.
-
-When I could breathe without opening my mouth at every gasp, I was
-forced to remember that I had had nothing to eat that afternoon. Within
-an hour my hunger was forgotten. The sharp edge of a keg under my back,
-the oars under my hips, the seat that my shoulders barely reached, began
-to cut into my flesh, sending sharp pains through every limb. I dared
-not move for fear of sending some unseen article clattering. Worst of
-all, there was hardly room for my head, while I kept my neck strained to
-the utmost. The tip of my nose touched the canvas. To have stirred that
-ever so slightly would have landed me back on shore at the first canal
-station.
-
-The position grew more painful hour by hour; but after some time my body
-grew numb and I sank into a half-conscious state that was not sleeping.
-
-Daylight did not help matters, though in the sunshine that filtered
-through the canvas I could see the objects about me. There came the
-jabbering of strange tongues as the sailors quarreled over their work on
-the deck. Now and then there was a shout from a canal station that we
-were passing. Passengers climbing to the upper deck brushed against the
-life-boat as they took their walks. From time to time I heard them
-talking—telling what they were going to do when they reached India.
-
-It became so hot that all but the officers returned to the shade below.
-By noon the Egyptian sun, pouring down upon the canvas, had turned my
-hiding-place into an oven. A raging thirst had long since silenced my
-hunger. In the early afternoon, as I lay motionless, there sounded a
-splash of water close at hand. Two natives had been sent to wash the
-life-boat. For an hour they dashed bucketful after bucketful against it,
-splashing, now and then, even the canvas over my head.
-
-The gong had just sounded for afternoon tea when the ship began to rock
-slightly. Then came a faint sound of waves breaking against her side. A
-light breeze moved the canvas ever so little, and the throb of the
-engines became louder. Had we passed out of the canal? I was about to
-tear at the canvas and bellow for water. But had we really left the Suez
-Canal behind? Was this, perhaps, only the Bitter Lakes? Or, if we had
-reached the Red Sea, the pilot might still be on board! To be set ashore
-now would mean an endless tramp back through the burning desert to Port
-Said.
-
-I held myself quiet, and listened intently for any word that might show
-me our whereabouts. None came, but the setting sun and falling darkness
-brought coolness. The ship did not pitch as it did in the open sea. I
-made up my mind to wait a little longer.
-
-With night the passengers came again, to lean against my boat and tell
-their secrets. A dozen schemes, ranging from a plan for making
-Christians of all the Indias to the arrangement of a tiger hunt in the
-Assam hills, were told within my hearing during that motionless evening.
-But when music sounded from below they left the deck deserted, and I
-settled down to listen to the faint tread of the second mate, who paced
-the bridge above me.
-
-The night wore on. Less fearful, now, of being discovered, I moved, for
-the first time in thirty hours, and, rolling slowly on my side, fell
-asleep. It was broad daylight when I awoke to the sounding of two bells.
-The ship was rolling and pitching, now, in a way that indicated plainly
-that we were on the open sea. I tugged at the canvas cover and peered
-out. My muscles were so stiff that I could not move for some moments.
-Even when I had wormed myself out, I came near losing my grip on the
-edge of the boat before my feet touched the rail. Once on deck, I waited
-to be discovered. No land-lubber could have mistaken me for a passenger
-now.
-
-Calmly I walked toward the stairway, and climbed down to the second
-deck. A score of bare-legged brown men were “washing down.” Near them,
-their overseer, in all the glory of embroidered jacket and rubber boots,
-strutted back and forth, fumbling at a silver chain about his neck. I
-strolled by them. The low-caste fellows sprang out of my way like
-startled cats; their overseer gazed at me with an uncertain smile. If
-they were surprised they did not show it. Probably they were not. What
-was it to them if a _sahib_ (white man) chose to turn out in a ragged
-hunting costume in the early morning? Stranger things than that they had
-seen among these queer beings with white skins. For some time I paced
-the deck without catching sight of a white face. At last a small son of
-Britain clambered unsteadily up the stairway, clinging tightly to a pot
-of tea.
-
-“Here, boy,” I called. “Who’s on the bridge—the mate?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” stammered the boy, sidling away; “the mite, sir.”
-
-“Well, tell him there’s a stowaway on board.”
-
-“W’at’s that, sir? You see, sir, I’m a new cabin-boy, on me first trip—”
-
-“And you don’t know what a stowaway is, eh?”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“If you’ll run along and tell the mate, you’ll find out soon enough.”
-
-The boy mounted to the upper deck, clutching now and then at the rail.
-Judging from the grin on his face as he came running back, he had added
-a new word to his vocabulary.
-
-“The mite says for you to come up on the bridge quick. ’E’s bloomin’
-mad.”
-
-I climbed again to the hurricane-deck. The mate’s anger had so overcome
-him that he had left his post and waited for me at the foot of the
-bridge-ladder. He was burly and heavy-jawed, bare-headed, bare-footed,
-his hairy chest showing, his duck trousers rolled up to his knees, and
-his thick tangle of disordered hair waving in the wind. With a ferocious
-scowl and set jaw, he glared at me in silence.
-
-“I’m a sailor, sir,” I began. “I was on the beach in Port Said. I’m
-sorry, sir, but I had to get away—”
-
-The mate gave no other sign of having heard than to push his heavy jaw
-farther out.
-
-“There was no chance to sign on a ship there, sir. Not a man shipped in
-months, sir, and it’s a tough place to be on the beach—”
-
-“What has that got to do with me and my ship!” roared the officer,
-springing several yards into the air, and coming down to shake his
-sledge-hammer fist under my nose. “I’ll give you six months for this
-directly we get to Colombo. You’ll stow away on my ship, will you? Get
-down off this deck before I brain you with this bucket!”
-
-Not certain as to what part of the _Worcestershire_ he wanted me to go,
-I started forward. Another bellow brought me to a halt.
-
-“You—” But never mind what words he used. The new order was that I was
-to wait in the waist until the captain had seen me.
-
-I went down, snatched a swallow of lukewarm water at the pump, and
-leaned against the side of the ship. Too hungry to be greatly terrified,
-I had already taken new heart at the mate’s words. “Colombo,” he had
-said. Until then I had feared that the _Worcestershire_, like most ships
-bound for East India, would put in at Aden in Arabia, and that I would
-be set ashore there.
-
-An hour, two hours, three hours, I stood in the waist, returning the
-stares of everybody on board, Hindu or English, who passed by me. With
-the sounding of eight bells a steward came by with a can of coffee. Once
-started, an endless procession of bacon, steaks, and ragoûts filed by
-under my nose. It was almost more than I could bear. To snatch at one of
-the pans would have been my undoing. I thrust my head over the railing,
-where the sea breezes blew, and stared at the sand billows on the
-Arabian coast. Not until the last of the dishes had passed by did I dare
-to turn around once more.
-
-“Peggy,” the steward’s cook, peered cautiously out upon me. “Eh, mite,”
-he whispered; “’ad anything to eat yet?”
-
-“Not lately.”
-
-“Well, come inside. There’s a pan o’ scow left to dump.”
-
-Very little of it was dumped that morning.
-
-I had barely returned to my place when four officers came down a ladder
-to the waist. They were led by the mate, carefully dressed now in a
-snow-white uniform. His language, too, had improved. A “sir” falling
-from his lips showed me which of his companions was the captain. My
-hopes rose at once at sight of the latter. He was a very different sort
-of man from his first officer. Small, neat, and quick of movement, his
-iron-gray hair gave setting to a face that showed both kindliness and
-strength. I knew I should be treated with fairness.
-
-The officers pretended they didn’t see me. They mounted the ladder and
-strolled slowly along the deck, examining as they went. Peggy came to
-the door of the kitchen with the dish-cloth in his hands.
-
-“Morning h’inspection,” he explained in a husky whisper. “They’ll be
-back here directly they’ve looked over the other side. The little
-feller’s the captain. ’E’s all right.”
-
-“Hope he lives out the voyage,” I muttered.
-
-“The fat jolly chap’s the chief steward,” went on Peggy. “Best man on
-the ship. The long un’s the doctor.”
-
-The officers continued examining the ship for things that needed
-repairing. They came back toward the waist, and halted several times
-within a few feet of me to look over some part of the ship’s machinery
-or furnishings. When the scuppers had been ordered cleaned and the pump
-had been pronounced in proper condition, the mate turned to the captain
-and pointed angrily at me:
-
-“There he is, sir.”
-
-“Ah,” said the captain. “What was your object, young man, in stowing
-yourself away on this vessel?”
-
-I began the story I had tried to tell the first officer. The captain
-heard it all without interrupting me.
-
-“Yes, I know,” he said, when I had finished. “Port Said is a very
-unfortunate place in which to be left without money. But why did you not
-come on board and ask permission to work your passage?”
-
-“I did, sir!” I cried. “That’s just what I did! I brought a letter to
-the chief steward. That’s how I came on board, sir.”
-
-“That’s so!” put in the “fat jolly chap”; “he sent a note to me in the
-drawing-room. But I sent back word that we had all the men we needed.”
-
-“I see,” replied the captain thoughtfully. “You’re the first man that
-ever stowed away on a vessel under my command,” he went on almost sadly.
-“You make yourself liable to severe punishment, you know?”
-
-“I’d put him in irons and send him up, sir,” burst out the mate.
-
-“N—no,” returned the captain; “that wouldn’t be right, Dick. You know
-Port Said. But you know you will have to work on the voyage,” he added,
-turning to me.
-
-“Why, certainly, sir,” I cried, suddenly beginning to fear that he might
-see through my coat the camera that contained a likeness of his ship.
-
-“You told the chief officer you were a sailor, I believe?”
-
-“A. B., sir—and steward.”
-
-“Have you anything you can put him at, Chester?” he asked the steward.
-
-“I’ve more men than I can use now,” replied the steward.
-
-“Beg pardon, sir,” put in the mate; “but the chief engineer says he can
-use an extra man down below.”
-
-He was a kindly fellow, was the mate. He wanted to force me to shovel
-coal into the furnace. Not only was the place an oven in that climate,
-but the Hindu firemen would have made life very disagreeable for me had
-I been sent to work among them.
-
-“No, no,” answered the commander. “The man is a sailor and a steward; he
-is not a stoker. You had better take him on deck with you, Dick.”
-
-He started up the ladder.
-
-“Huh,” muttered the mate, “I know what I’d do with him if I was in
-command.”
-
-“Take him on board with you, Dick,” repeated the captain, from above.
-“Get something to eat now, my man, and report to the chief officer,
-forward, when you have finished.”
-
-“I’ll send you down a couple of cotton suits,” whispered the steward,
-before he followed the captain up the ladder; “you’ll die with that
-outfit on.”
-
-I stayed in the kitchen long enough to eat breakfast, and then hurried
-forward. The mate, scowling, began asking me question after question as
-rapidly as he could. Perhaps he wanted to find out whether I had told
-the truth when I said I had been a sailor.
-
-“Box the compass,” he snarled suddenly.
-
-I did so. For an hour he gave me a severe examination.
-
-“Umph!” he growled at last. “Take that holy-stone with the handle”—it
-weighed a good thirty pounds—“and go to polishing the poop. You’ll work
-every day from six in the morning till seven at night, with a half-hour
-off for your meals. From four to six in the morning, and from eight to
-ten at night, you’ll keep watch in the crow’s-nest, and save us two
-natives. On Sunday you’ll keep watch from four to eight, nine to twelve,
-two to seven, and eight to ten. Look lively now, and see that the poop
-begins to shine before I get there.”
-
-From that time on, the mate rarely gave me a word. Without a break I
-toiled at the task he had given me as long as the voyage lasted. The
-holy-stone took on great weight, but the view I had from the crow’s-nest
-of every tropical sunrise and sunset I would not have exchanged for a
-seat at the captain’s table. My mess-mates were good-hearted, and the
-chief steward was friendly and kind. But the Hindu crew tried to make
-life unpleasant for me. Few were the moments when a group of the brown
-rascals were not hovering about me, chattering like apes and grinning
-impudently. The proudest man on board was the overseer; for it was
-through him that the mate sent me his orders. Since the days when he
-rolled naked and unashamed on the sand floor of his native hut, he had
-dreamed of no greater happiness than the power to give commands to a
-_sahib_.
-
-Ten days the _Worcestershire_ steamed on through a motionless sea, under
-a sun that became more torrid every hour. The kitchen became too hot to
-live in. Men who had waded through the snow on the docks of Liverpool
-two weeks before took to sleeping on the deck in the thinnest of
-clothing. On the eleventh evening we were certain that there was an odor
-of land in the air. Before morning broke I had climbed again to the
-crow’s-nest. With the first gray streak of dawn I could see the dim
-outline of a low mountain range, colored by the gleam of sunrise behind
-it. Slowly the mountains faded from view as the lowlands beneath them
-rose up to greet us.
-
-By eight bells we could see a score of naked black-brown islanders
-paddling boldly seaward in their queer outrigger canoes. The
-_Worcestershire_ glided past a far-reaching break-water, and, steaming
-among a school of smaller boats and vessels, rode to an anchorage in the
-center of the harbor. A crowd swarmed on board, and in the rush and
-noise I left my stone and hurried below to pack my “shore bundle.”
-Through the kindness of the chief steward, I was well supplied with
-cotton suits. I returned to the captain, got his permission to leave,
-tossed my bundle into the company launch, and, with one English
-half-penny jingleless in my pocket, set foot on the green island of
-Ceylon.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- IN THE LAND OF THE WANDERING PRINCE
-
-
-The scenery that met my gaze as I moved through the streets of Colombo
-seemed much like that of some great painting. The golden sunshine, the
-rich green, the dark bodies moving here and there among figures clad in
-snowy white, were more colorful than I had ever imagined. At noonday the
-fiery sun beat down on me so unmercifully that I sought shelter in a
-neighboring park. There I dreamed away my first day’s freedom from the
-holy-stone. A native runner awoke me toward nightfall, and thrust into
-my hands a card. On it was printed an advertisement of a “Sailors’
-Boarding House of Colombo, Proprietor Almeida.” I found it easily. It
-was a two-story building, with stone floor, but otherwise of the
-lightest wooden material. The dining-room, in the center of the
-building, had no roof. Narrow, windowless rooms in the second story
-faced this open space. These housed the sailors who stayed there.
-
-Almeida, who kept the boarding-house, was a Singhalese who belonged to a
-higher class or caste than certain other natives of Ceylon. In proof of
-this he wore tiny pearl earrings and a huge circle comb. His hair was
-gray, and being thin did not hold the comb in position very long at a
-time. It dropped on the floor behind him so often that he had a little
-brown boy follow him about all day with nothing else to do but to pick
-it up for him. Almeida wore a white silk jacket decorated with red braid
-and glistening brass buttons, and a skirt of the gayest plaid. His feet
-were bare, and his toes spread out so that they pointed in five
-different directions.
-
-I signed a note promising to pay for my room and board after I had
-earned the money, and was made a guest in the Sailors’ Boarding House.
-Four white men and as many black leaned their elbows on the board used
-for a table, and waited for the evening meal. In a cave near by, two
-brown men were sitting on their heels, stirring something in a kettle
-over a fire of sticks. After a time they ceased stirring, and began
-chattering like monkeys in high, squeaky voices. Suddenly they became
-silent, dashed through the smoke in the cave, and dragged the steaming
-kettle forth into the dining-room. One of them scooped out the steaming
-rice and filled our plates. The younger ran back into the smoky cave and
-snatched up a smaller pot containing chopped fish. Besides this, we had
-bananas and drinking water that was saltish, discolored, and lukewarm.
-
-The cooks gave us each a tin spoon, then filled a battered basin with
-rice, and, squatting on their heels, began eating their own supper with
-their fingers. The wick that floated in a bottle of oil lighted up only
-one corner of the table, and the rising moon, falling upon the naked
-figures, cast strange shadows across the uneven floor.
-
-I laid my head on a hand to show that I was getting sleepy, and one of
-the cooks led the way to the second story and into one of the narrow
-rooms. It was furnished with three low wooden tables having queerly
-curved legs. I asked for my bed. But the cook spoke no English, and I
-sat down and waited for my room-mates.
-
-A long hour afterward two white men stumbled up the stairs. The first
-carried a candle high above his head. He was lean, gray-haired, and
-clean-shaven. The other man was a heavy, yellow-haired Swede.
-
-“Oho! Ole,” grinned the older man, “here’s a new bunkie. Why don’t you
-turn in, mate?”
-
-“I haven’t found my bed yet,” I answered.
-
-[Illustration: A Singhalese woman stops often to give her children a
-bath.]
-
-“Your bed!” cried the newcomer. “Why, you’re sitting on it.”
-
-I followed the example of the others—undressed and put on a thin garment
-that I found hanging over my “bed.” Then, using my bundle of clothing
-for a pillow, I lay down upon the table and sweated out the night.
-
-Over the tea, bananas, and cakes of ground cocoanut that we had for
-breakfast, we told each other how we happened to be in that part of the
-world. The Swede was merely a sailor. But the older man was an Irishman
-named John Askins, once a professor in the Dublin University, who had
-been obliged to give up his work because of poor health.
-
-Before many days had passed I had found work. An Englishman had
-advertised for a carpenter, and for three days following I superintended
-the labors of a band of coolies in laying a hardwood floor in his
-bungalow.
-
-After the work was finished I set off early one morning for a trip into
-the interior of the island. At about noon I reached the open country.
-Tropical plant life ran wild over all the land. In the black shadows
-swarmed naked human beings. But the highway was wide, as well built as
-those in Europe, and closely bordered on both sides by thick forests of
-towering palm trees. Here and there bands of coolies repaired the
-roadway or fought back the war-like vegetation with ax-like knives.
-
-Clumsy, heavy-wheeled carts, covered like a gypsy wagon, creaked slowly
-by behind humped oxen. At first sight the roof seemed made of canvas,
-but as the vehicle came nearer I saw that it was made of thousands of
-leaves sewn together. Under it the scrawny driver grinned cheerily and
-mumbled some strange words of greeting. The glare of sunshine was
-dazzling; a wrist uncovered for a moment was burned as red as if it had
-been branded, and my face shone browner in the mirror of each passing
-stream.
-
-In the forest there were the slim bamboo, the broad-leafed banana tree,
-and most of all the cocoanut-palm. Natives armed with heavy knives
-clasped the trees like monkeys and walked up the slender trunks. Then,
-hiding themselves in the bunch of leaves sixty feet above, they chopped
-off the nuts, which struck the soft spongy earth and rebounded high into
-the air. All through the forest sounded this dull, muffled thump, thump,
-thump of falling cocoanuts.
-
-In the middle of the afternoon, as I lay resting on a grassy slope under
-shady palms, I heard a crackling of twigs; and, turning around, I met a
-pair of eyes peering wonderingly at me. I nodded encouragingly. A
-native, dressed in a ribbon and a tangle of oily hair, stepped from
-behind a great drooping banana leaf and came slowly and timidly toward
-me. Behind him tiptoed about twenty naked men and boys. They moved
-toward me smilingly like stage dancers, but pausing often to make signs
-meant to encourage one another. How different was their behavior from
-that of the quarrelsome Arab! It seemed as if a harsh word or cross look
-on my part would send these simple countrymen scampering away through
-the forest. A white man is a tin god in Ceylon.
-
-When they saw that I was not ill-natured, the natives gurgled some words
-of greeting and squatted in a half-circle at the foot of the slope on
-which I lay. We chatted in the language of signs. They seemed to be
-interested in my pipe. When it had burned out I turned it over to the
-leader. He passed it on to his companions. To my horror, they began
-testing the strange thing by thrusting the stem half way down their
-throats and sucking fiercely at it. After that they fell to examining
-the articles in my knapsack. When I took my camera from them, they
-begged me with tears in their eyes to allow them to open it. To turn
-their attention from it I began inquiring about their tools and
-betel-nut pouches. They offered to give me every article that I asked to
-see; and then sneaked round behind me to carry off the gift while I was
-examining another.
-
-I rose to continue my way, but the natives burst out begging me to stay,
-and, sending three boys on some unknown errand, squatted about me again
-and fell to preparing new chews of betel-nuts. The boys soon returned,
-one carrying a jack-fruit, another a bunch of bananas, and the third
-swinging three green cocoanuts by their rope-like stems. The leader laid
-the gifts, one after another, at my feet. Two men with jungle knives
-sprang forward, and, while one hacked at the hard jack-fruit, the other
-caught up a cocoanut, chopped off the top with one stroke, and invited
-me to drink. The milk was cool and refreshing, but the meat of the green
-nut was as tough as a leather strap. The jack-fruit, which looked much
-like a watermelon, was at last split into long slices. These in turn
-split sidewise into dozens of parts like those of an orange. The meat
-itself was white and rather tasteless. The bananas were small, but
-delicious. When I had sampled each of the gifts, I distributed them
-among the givers and turned down to the highway.
-
-Night had no terrors for me in Ceylon. When it grew too dark for
-tramping, I had only to lie down on the grass under my feet, sleep
-peacefully in the warm breeze that blew over me, and rise refreshed with
-the new dawn.
-
-I was twenty miles from the city when I rose from my first forest
-lodging and set out on my second day’s tramp before the country people
-were astir. Now and then the road left the encircling palm trees and
-crossed a small rolling plain. I came upon little villages with every
-mile—rambling two-row hamlets of bamboo. Between them lonely cottages
-with roofs made of grasses and reeds peeped from beneath the trees.
-
-As the sun climbed higher, grinning groups of countrymen pattered by.
-Half the houses along the way offered the fruits of the forest and tea
-and cocoanut cakes for sale. Before every hut, however wretched, stood
-an earthenware vessel of water, beside which hung, for use as a
-drinking-vessel, the half of a cocoanut-shell. So I did not have to go
-hungry or thirsty long at a time.
-
-Bathing seemed to be the national sport of Ceylon. Every stream I passed
-was alive with splashing natives. Mothers, walking from one village to
-another, halted at every stream to roll a banana leaf into a cone-shaped
-bucket and pour gallons of water on their sputtering babies, crouched
-naked on the bank. Travelers on foot or by oxcart took a dip every hour
-or so along the way. The farmer left his plowing often to plunge into
-the nearest water-hole. His wife, instead of calling on her neighbors,
-met them at the brook, and gossiped with them as she splashed about in
-cool and comfort. The men, wearing only a loin-cloth, paid no attention
-to their clothing. The women, wound from their knees to their arms in
-sheets of snowy white, came out of the water, and after turning
-themselves round and round in the blazing sunshine, marched home in dry
-garments.
-
-On the third day I came to foot-hills covered with tea plantations.
-Beyond these hills the highway climbed up some low mountains. At the top
-I paused at a little wayside shop built of rubbish picked up in the
-forest. A board, stretched like a counter across the open doorway, was
-heavily laden with bananas. Near at hand a brown woman was spreading out
-grain with her feet. Unfortunately, I had forgotten to ask my friends at
-the Sailors’ Boarding House the Singhalese words for “How much?” I
-pointed at the fruit and tossed on the counter a coin. It was a copper
-piece worth one and three fourths cents—enough surely, to pay for half a
-dozen bananas, I thought. The woman carefully picked up the coin, and,
-turning it over and over in her hand, stared at me with wide-open eyes.
-Had I been stingy? I was thrusting my hand into my pocket for another
-copper, when the woman motioned to me to open my knapsack. Then she
-dropped into it three dozen bananas, paused a moment thoughtfully, and
-added another bunch.
-
-[Illustration: The yogi who ate twenty-eight of the bananas at a
-sitting.]
-
-A short distance beyond, I sat down in the shade and began eating the
-fruit in order to lighten my burden. An old man, blacker than anybody I
-had met that day, came wandering past. A strip of cloth covered with red
-and yellow stripes was wrapped round his waist and fell to his knees.
-Over his head was folded a sheet of orange color. In each hand he
-carried a bundle tied with green vines. The upper part of his face
-looked shy. The lower half was totally covered with a heavy tangled
-beard deeply streaked with gray.
-
-He limped painfully to the roadside, and squatted on his heels at the
-edge of the shade. Plainly, he too was “on the road.”
-
-“Have a bite?” I invited, pushing the fruit toward him.
-
-A child’s voice squeaked within him. Gravely he rose to his feet and
-began bowing, expressing his thankfulness in every motion possible
-except that of standing on his head. This over, he fell to eating with
-both hands so willingly that, with never a pause or a choke, he made
-away with twenty-eight bananas. Small wonder he slept awhile in the edge
-of the shade before going on.
-
-I rose to plod on, and he would not be left behind—far behind, that is.
-I could not induce him to walk beside me; he pattered always two paces
-in the rear. From the motions and signs he made in answer to my
-questions, I learned that he was journeying to some place of worship in
-the mountains. Two hours beyond our meeting-place, he halted at a branch
-road, knelt in the highway, and, before I knew what he was going to do,
-pressed a loud kiss on the top of one of my Nazarene slippers. Only a
-quick movement on my part saved the other from the same fate. He stood
-up slowly, almost sadly, as if he were grieved to part from good
-company,—or bananas,—shook the dust of the road out of his beard, and,
-turning into the forest-choked path, was gone.
-
-Night falling over the mountains overtook me just as I came near a
-thatched roof at the roadside. The owner took no pay for my lodging, and
-the far-off howling of dogs lulled me to sleep.
-
-With dawn I was off once more. Sunrise waved greetings over the leafy
-trees as I entered the ancient city of Kandy.
-
-Hundreds of years ago this mountain city was the seat of the native
-king. To-day the ruler of Ceylon is a bluff Englishman who lives in a
-stone mansion within sight of the harbor of Colombo. Nevertheless, a
-descendant of the native king still lives in the capital of his
-forefathers. But his duties have narrowed down to that of keeping alive
-the religion of Gautama, the Buddha, or the wandering prince.
-
-This prince lived more than twenty-four hundred years ago. He taught
-that if men are not very good indeed while living, after death they will
-have to live again and again in the shape of some animal, and later of
-some human being, until they at last learn to be pure. For thousands of
-years the natives of Ceylon and India have followed his teaching. That
-explains why they worship animals, and why there are so many classes or
-castes of people in India.
-
-Although Buddha did not consider himself holy, his followers have built
-temples in his honor and worshiped him since his death. Hundreds of
-years ago, it is said, there was found in Burma one of the teeth of this
-prince. This was sent a long distance to the egg-shaped island of
-Ceylon, and over it was built the famous “Temple of the Tooth.” It was
-this temple that I had come to visit, although I was not sure that I
-should be allowed to enter.
-
-[Illustration: The thatch roof at the roadside, under which I slept on
-the second night of my tramp to Kandy.]
-
-The keeper of the inn where I stopped had two sons who spoke English.
-The older was a youth of fifteen. We became friends at once.
-
-“Have you, I wonder, visited our Temple of the Tooth?” he asked.
-
-“Outside,” I answered. “Are sahibs allowed to enter?”
-
-“Surely!” cried the youth. “We are joyed to have white men visit our
-temples. To-night we are having a service very important in the Temple
-of the Tooth. With my uncle, who keeps the cloth-shop across the way, I
-shall go. Will you not forget your religion and honor us by coming?”
-
-“With pleasure,” I answered.
-
-Two flaring torches threw fantastic shadows over the chattering crowd of
-natives that lifted us bodily up the broad stairway to the outer temple.
-At the top of the stairs surged a noisy multitude, each and every one of
-them carrying a candle, a bit of cardboard, or the lotus-flower, to lay
-in the lap of his favorite statue. From every nook and corner, the image
-of the wandering prince looked on with sadness.
-
-Of all the crowd I alone was shod. I dropped my slippers at the landing,
-and, half expecting a stern command to remove my socks, walked into the
-brighter light of the interior.
-
-A whisper arose beside me, and swelled louder as it passed quickly from
-mouth to mouth: “Sahib! sahib!” I had dreaded lest my coming should
-cause them to turn angrily upon me; but Buddha himself, arriving thus
-unexpectedly, could not have won more boisterous welcome. The worshipers
-swept down upon me, shrieking gladly. Several thrust into my hands the
-blossoms they had meant for Buddha. One pressed upon me a badly rolled
-cigar of native make. From every side came candles and matches.
-
-At the tinkle of a far-off bell the natives fell back, leaving a lane
-for our passing. Two priests in yellow robes, smiling and bowing low at
-every step, advanced to meet me, and led the way to a balcony
-overlooking the lake.
-
-In the dim light of a corner, three natives in scanty breech-clouts and
-great turbans squatted before what appeared to be large baskets. I
-remained near them with the priests, and waited for “the service very
-important.”
-
-Suddenly the three in the corner, each grasping two weapons that looked
-like clubs, stretched their hands high above their heads and brought
-them down with a crash that made me jump to my feet. What I had taken
-for baskets were tom-toms! Without losing a single beat, the drummers
-began to blow vigorously on long pipes from which came a sad wailing. I
-spoke no more with my guide, for the “musicians” made noise that drowned
-all other sounds for the next two hours.
-
-I marched on with the monks, who had given me a place of honor in their
-ranks, from one statue to another. Behind us surged a murmuring
-multitude who fell on their knees again and again. No one sat during the
-service, and there was nothing like a sermon. The priests spoke only to
-the dreamy-eyed Buddhas.
-
-It was late when the service ended. The boiler-factory music ceased as
-suddenly as it had begun, the worshipers poured forth into the soft
-night, and I was left alone with my guides and a dozen priests.
-
-“See,” whispered the innkeeper’s son. “You are honored. The head man of
-the temple comes.”
-
-An aged father drew near slowly. In outward appearance he looked exactly
-like the other priests. A brilliant yellow robe was his only garment.
-His head was shaved; his arms, right shoulder, and feet were bare.
-Having joined the group, he studied me a moment in silence, then said
-something to me in his native language.
-
-“He is asking if you are liking to see the sacred tooth?” translated my
-guide.
-
-I bowed my thanks. The high priest led the way to the innermost room of
-the temple. In the center of this room he halted, fell on his knees,
-and, muttering a prayer, touched his forehead to the stone floor three
-times. The attendant priests imitated every movement he made.
-
-He then rose and drew forth a large gold casket. From it he took a
-second a bit smaller, and handed the first to one of his companions.
-From the second he drew a third, and from the third a fourth. This was
-kept up until nearly every priest held a casket, some fantastically
-carved, some inlaid with precious stones. With the opening of every
-third box, all those not holding anything fell on their knees and
-repeated their prayers and bowings. Finally the head priest came to the
-innermost casket, not over an inch in length and set with diamonds and
-rubies. At sight of this all fell on their knees and murmured prayers.
-Then the head priest opened it carefully. Inside, yellow with age, was a
-tooth that certainly never grew in any human mouth. The fitting together
-of the box of boxes required as much ceremony as was necessary in taking
-them apart.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- THE MERRY CIRCUS DAYS
-
-
-I returned to Colombo by train, reaching the city in the late afternoon.
-I made my way at once to Almeida’s. In the roofless dining-room sat
-Askins and the Swede, highly excited over the news that Colombo was to
-be visited by a circus.
-
-“That means a few chips a day for some of us,” said Askins. “Circuses
-must have white workmen. Natives won’t do.”
-
-“Huh! Yank,” roared the Swede half a minute later, “you get burn some,
-eh, playing mit der monkeys in der jungle? Pretty soon you ban
-sunstroke. Here, I make you trade.” He pointed to a helmet on the table
-before him. “He ban good hat,” went on Ole proudly; “I get him last week
-from der Swede consul. Min he too big. What you give?”
-
-I went upstairs, and returned with a cotton jacket that I had left in
-the keeping of Askins.
-
-“How’s this?” I demanded.
-
-“He ban all right,” answered Ole, slipping into it; “der oder vas all
-broke by der sleeves.”
-
-I put on the helmet, and strolled down toward Gordon Gardens, where I
-had taken up sleeping quarters. It was a park rich in fountains, gay
-flowers, and grateful shade. Under the trees the night dew never fell,
-the ocean breeze was the coolest in Colombo, the fountains were good
-bathrooms, and the ground was a softer bed than any short-legged table
-could be.
-
-One by one, there drifted into Colombo four fellow countrymen of mine,
-who, following my example, took up their lodgings in Gordon Gardens. It
-soon became known as the “American Park Hotel.” One of the newcomers was
-Marten, from Tacoma, Washington. He was a boy who had spent two seasons
-in the Orient, diving for pearls.
-
-Another American in our party claimed New York as his birthplace. He
-said that if we wanted a name for him, “Dick Haywood” would do well
-enough for a time. But I will tell more of him later.
-
-One day, as dawn was breaking, I climbed the fence of the “American Park
-Hotel,” and strolled away toward the beach for a dip in the sea, to take
-the place of breakfast; for my last coin was spent. As I lay stretched
-on the sands after my bath, I heard someone shout my name. I sprang up,
-to see the Swede rushing toward me, waving his arms wildly above his
-head.
-
-“Circus!” he cried. “Der circus is coom, Franck! Creeket-ground!” And,
-turning about, he dashed off faster than most white men dare to run in
-Ceylon.
-
-I dashed after the flying Norseman, and overtook him at the entrance to
-the public playground.
-
-The center of the cricket-field was a wild jumble of animal-cages, rolls
-of canvas, scattered tent-poles, clowns, jockeys, snake-charmers, and
-everything else that goes to make up a traveling show. Around it a
-growing crowd of natives were peering, pushing, chattering, falling back
-in terror when the angry circus men shook their tent-stakes at them, but
-sweeping out upon the scattered trappings again as soon as the latter
-had passed.
-
-We fought our way through the crowd into the center of the mass. “Do you
-want help?” we shouted to the circus manager. He was a powerful
-Irishman, with a head like a cannon-ball, and a face and jaw that looked
-as if he were ready for a fight. Tugging at a heap of canvas, he peered
-at us between his outstretched legs and shouted: “Yes! I want four min!
-White wans! If ye want the job, bring two more.”
-
-We turned to look at the sea of faces about us. There was not a white
-man in the crowd.
-
-“Ve look by Almeida’s!” shouted the Swede, as we battled our way through
-the mob. Before we could escape, however, I caught sight of a familiar
-slouch hat well back in the crowd. A moment later Askins stood beside
-us. Behind him came Dick Haywood. The four of us dashed back to the
-boss.
-
-“Well!” he roared, “I pay a quid a week! Want it?”
-
-“A pound a week,” muttered Askins. “That’s more’n two chips a day. Aye!
-We’ll take it.”
-
-“All right! Jump on to that center pole an’ get ’er up. If these natives
-get in the way, thump ’em with a tent-pole. Step lively, now!”
-
-We soon had a space roped off. The boss tossed a pickax at me and set me
-to grubbing holes for the poles that were to hold up the seats.
-Carefully and evenly I swung the tool up and down, like an old lady; for
-the natives pressed around me so closely that the least slip would have
-broken a Singhalese head. To them the sight of a white man doing such
-work was as astonishing as any of the wonders of the circus. Few of them
-had ever before seen a European using heavier tools than a pen or
-pencil. Within an hour the news spread through the city that the circus
-had brought some “white coolies” to town; and all Colombo and his wife
-did without the afternoon nap and trooped down to the cricket-field to
-gaze upon the odd sight of white men doing muscular labor.
-
-The mob followed me as I went from hole to hole. My mates, too, were
-hindered in their work by the crowd as they carried seat-boards, or
-sawdust for the ring. Haywood, of the untamed temper, taking the boss at
-his word, snatched up a tent-pole and struck two natives. Even after
-that they still crowded around him.
-
-I heard two natives at my elbow talking in English:
-
-“This sight is to me astounding!” shrieked a high-caste youth to his
-older companion. “I have never before known that Europeans can do such
-workings.”
-
-“Why, indeed yes!” cried his companion. “In his home the sahib does just
-so strong work as our coolies; but he is play cricket and tennis he is
-doing even stronger. He is not rich always and sitting in shade.”
-
-“But do the white man not losing his caste when he is working like
-coolies?” demanded the youth. “Why is this man work at such? Is he
-perhaps prisoner, that he disgraces himself lower than the keeper of the
-arrack-shop?”
-
-“Truly, my friend, I not understand,” admitted the older man a bit
-sadly; “but I am reading that in sahib’s country he is make the workings
-of coolie and yet is not coolie.”
-
-There were others besides the natives who stood in the crowd watching
-the “white coolies.” Here and there I caught sight of a European
-scowling darkly at me. I wondered what I had done to displease them.
-
-When night fell all was in readiness for the show. The circle of seats
-was built; the tents were stretched; rings, ropes, and lights were ready
-for use. Half a thousand chairs had been placed for Europeans. We had
-worked so hard under the blazing sun that we agreed we would not dare to
-do so more than once a year, not even for “more than two chips.” The
-boss gave a last snarl, called a ’rickshaw, and drove off to his hotel.
-We went to a shop across the way, ate our curry and rice, and returned
-to stretch out on the grass near an entrance.
-
-That night, at the circus, we found greater amusement in watching the
-people on the circle of benches than in watching the ring. First we
-acted as ushers. The crowds that swarmed in upon us belonged to every
-caste on the island. In seating them we had to settle important
-questions that never trouble circus men of the Western world. It was
-difficult to determine where to put them. A company of priests wearing
-cheesecloth robes began to scream at us because we seated them where
-there was no room for their betel-nut boxes. Light-colored islanders
-began to shout angrily when we tried to seat them near darker natives.
-Merchants refused to sit in the same section with shop-keepers.
-Shop-keepers cried out in rage when we made the mistake of placing them
-near clerks. Clerks cried out hoarsely when we seated them among
-laborers. Skilled workers screamed in frenzy whenever we tried to make
-room among them for common coolies.
-
-The lowest class native, called the sudra, who wears nothing but a scant
-cloth about as big as a pocket handkerchief, is the most despised of
-all. When I ushered in one of these, row after row of natives raised an
-uproar against him as he passed. He shrank timidly behind me as we
-journeyed through the tent, looking for a seat. Most of the natives
-refused to sit as circus seats are meant to be sat on, but squatted on
-their heels, hugging their scrawny knees. We had much trouble trying to
-keep tricky ’rickshaw runners from crawling in among the chairs when we
-weren’t looking. And through it all certain native youths, in order to
-show that they understood English, kept bothering us by asking
-unnecessary and unanswerable questions.
-
-Toward the last, when the Europeans came in, quiet and proud in manner,
-the natives began to behave themselves a little better. And when the
-bicyclers appeared for the first act, they forgot that the despised
-_sudra_ sat under the same tent with them. The mixed crowd settled down
-into a motionless sea of strained, astonished faces. When “The Wonderful
-Cycle Whiz” was over, we hurried to pull down the bicycle track and
-carry the heavy pieces outside the tent. While we lowered a trapeze with
-one hand, we placed and held the hurdles with the other. We had to make
-tables and chairs for a “Hand Balancing Act” appear as if by magic.
-Breathlessly we led the trick ponies on, cleared the ring for the
-performing elephant, set it up again for the “Astounding Bareback
-Rider,” and cleared it again for the “Hungarian Horses.”
-
-Then “Mlle. Montgomery” capered out into the ring to perform her “Daring
-Horsemanship Act.” We did our best to strike the fair rider squarely on
-the head with paper hoops—not so much because we wished to charm the
-audience with our skill as to escape the words of scorn that
-“mademoiselle” flung back at us when we blundered.
-
-Away with hoops and ribbons! We rushed to get the place ready for the
-clown act. After the clowns came an act to show “The Wonderful Power of
-Man Over Ferocious Beasts,” during which a thin and moth-eaten tiger,
-crouched on a horse, rode twice around the ring with a sad and
-hen-pecked expression on his face.
-
-Then came ten minutes’ recess that was no recess for us: for we had to
-bring on more hoops and rings of fire, tables and chairs, performing
-dogs that had to be held in leash, and at last to set up the elephant’s
-bicycle and drive the lion out for a spin on the huge animal’s back. How
-we did work! We must have left streams of sweat behind us. Although our
-tasks were not finished by the time the last stragglers left the tent,
-we lost no time in tearing off the heavy uniforms the boss had provided
-for us.
-
-When everything had been put away, we made our beds by setting several
-chairs side by side, and turned in. Although we were disturbed in the
-night by prowling natives, we slept part of the time.
-
-The circus had been nearly a week in Colombo when I was unexpectedly
-advanced to a position of importance. It was in an idle hour late one
-afternoon. The four of us were showing what tricks we could perform in
-the empty ring, when the ring-master and the manager walked in upon us
-and caught me in the act of “doing a hand-stand.” I quickly righted
-myself.
-
-The ring-master looked me over from my shaved head to my bare feet,
-turned to scowl at the manager a moment, and then began talking to me in
-a voice that sounded as if it came from a phonograph:
-
-“Know any other stunts?”
-
-“One or two,” I answered.
-
-“Where’d ye learn ’em?” snapped the ring-master.
-
-I told him I had been a member of a gymnasium for a few years.
-
-“Gymnasium on shipboard?” asked the owner.
-
-“Why, no, sir; on land.”
-
-“Could you do a dive over that chair into the ring, a head-stand, a
-stiff-fall, and a roll-up?” rasped the ring-master.
-
-I heard my companions chuckle and snort behind me. They seemed to think
-it was funny.
-
-“Yes, sir; I can work those,” I stammered.
-
-“You’re a sailor?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“Then a few tumbles won’t hurt you any. Can you hold a man of twelve
-stone on your shoulders?”
-
-My fellow workmen snorted again.
-
-I figured it up quickly: twelve times fourteen pounds—one hundred and
-sixty-eight pounds.
-
-“Yes,” I answered.
-
-“Well,” snapped the ring-master savagely, “I want you to go on for
-Walhalla’s turn.”
-
-“Whaat!” I gasped. “Walha—!” I was so astonished that I almost took to
-my heels. Walhalla and Faust were our two funniest clowns, who kept the
-natives roaring with delight for more than an hour each day. My
-companions were so overcome that they laughed aloud behind me.
-
-“Here, you!” cried the ring-master, whirling upon them. “Go over and
-brush the flies off that elephant! An’ keep ’em brushed off! D’ye hear
-me!”
-
-“Now, then, Franck,” he went on to me, “Walhalla has a fever. Now—”
-
-“But I’m no circus man!” I argued.
-
-“Oh, nonsense!” said the ring-master. “You’ve been with us long enough
-to know Walhalla’s tricks, and you can learn how to do them in a couple
-of rehearsals.”
-
-“There’ll be ten chips a day in it,” put in the manager.
-
-“Eh—er—ten rupees!” I choked. (That was more than three dollars and a
-quarter.) “All right, sir. I’ll make a try at it.”
-
-“Of course,” said the manager. “Now go and get tiffin, and be back in
-half an hour. I’ll have Faust here for a practice.”
-
-I sprang for the door, but stopped suddenly as a thought struck me.
-
-“But say,” I wailed, “we’re aground! The clothes—!”
-
-“Stretch a leg and get tiffin!” cried the ring-master. “Walhalla’s rags
-are all here.”
-
-That evening, before the show began, I worked feverishly with Faust. We
-practiced jokes, tumbles, tripping each other up, pretending we were
-knocked down, and so on, while the manager tried to give us more time by
-holding back the audience. When the natives finally stormed the tent and
-forced their way inside, I scurried away to the dressing-tent to put on
-my clown’s outfit and have my face painted.
-
-We had to leave out some of the acts until the next day gave more time
-for practice; but the natives didn’t seem to notice it, and the
-Europeans didn’t care, so I got through the performance with nothing
-worse happening to me than one rather bad fall that was a little too
-real.
-
-We gave two performances a day because the natives enjoyed our act. But
-one day, while back in the dressing-tent where I scraped dried paint off
-one side of my face, while my fellow clown daubed fresh colors on the
-other, while I was jumping out of one foolish costume into another more
-idiotic, turning the place topsy-turvy in a mad scramble to find my
-dunce-cap and a lost slap-stick, I began to lose my love for the clown’s
-life.
-
-And when I went to bed on my row of chairs that night, I found myself
-wishing that the time would soon come when I could earn my living in
-some other way.
-
-One long week I wore the cap and bells on the cricket-field of Colombo.
-Then the day dawned when our tent was quickly taken down and bundled
-into the hold of a ship by naked stevedores. On the forward deck the
-moth-eaten tiger peered through the bars of his cage at the jungle
-behind the city and rubbed a watery eye; at the rail an unpainted Faust
-stared gloomily down at the water. But we four wanderers shed no tears
-as we stood at the far end of the break-water and watched the circus
-carried off until it sank below the sky-line. As we straggled back at
-dusk to join the homeless wanderers under the palms of Gordon Gardens, I
-caught myself feeling now and then in the band of my trousers for the
-money I had sewed there.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- THREE WANDERERS IN INDIA
-
-
-The merry circus days had left me so great a fortune that I decided to
-sail to the peninsula of India at once. Marten, of Tacoma, offered to go
-with me, and I agreed; for the ex-pearl-fisher could speak the Hindu
-language freely and he knew the country well.
-
-On the morning of April fourth we bought our tickets for passage on the
-afternoon steamer, and set out to bid farewell to our acquaintances in
-the city. It was almost time to sail, when Haywood burst in upon us at
-Almeida’s.
-
-“I hear,” he shouted, “that you fellows are off for India.”
-
-We nodded.
-
-“I’m going along,” he declared.
-
-We scowled. We didn’t want him to go with us. But how could we stop him?
-He had the same right to travel on that steamer that we had. We kept
-silent, therefore; and, determining to shake off our unwelcome companion
-as soon as we landed, marched down to the dock with him, and tumbled
-with a crowd of coolies into a barge that soon set us aboard the
-steamship _Kasara_.
-
-We landed in the early morning in a village of mud huts and bamboo
-bazaars. Here we waited only long enough to catch the train that,
-rumbling through the village, carried us northward.
-
-I settled back in my seat and looked out of the window at the flying
-landscape. It was not much like the country of Ceylon. On either hand
-stretched treeless flat-lands, as parched and brown as Sahara, a desert
-blazed by a fiery sun, and unwatered for months. A few naked farmers
-toiled over the baked ground, scratching the dry soil with worthless
-wooden plows. A short distance beyond, we flew past wretched mud huts,
-too low to stand in, where the farmers burrow by night and squat on
-their heels by day.
-
-[Illustration: I take a last ’rickshaw ride before boarding the steamer
-for India.]
-
-A hundred miles north of the sea-coast we halted to visit the famous
-Brahmin temple of Madura. Brahminism is another religion of India—older
-than Buddhism and much like it. Its followers believe in caste. In
-ancient times they inflicted severe punishment on themselves for the
-purification of the soul.
-
-The temple proved to be a great stone building surrounded by a massive
-wall. Four thousand statues of Hindu gods—so our guide-book told
-us—adorned each gateway. They were hideous-faced idols, each pouring
-down from four pairs of hands his blessings on the half-starved humans
-who crawled and lay flat on the ground to worship them.
-
-Inside the gates swarmed crowds of pilgrims wearing rags as a punishment
-for their sins. A sunken-eyed youth wormed his way through the crowd and
-offered to guide us through the temple for a coin or two. We followed
-him down a narrow passage to a lead-colored pond in which not very neat
-pilgrims washed away their sins. Then he led us out upon an open space
-from which we could see the golden roofs.
-
-“High up within one of those domes lives a god,” whispered the youth,
-while Marten translated. But when I asked him to lead us up so that we
-could see the god, he said that white men were never allowed to enter
-the temple.
-
-He took us, instead, to see the sacred elephants. Seven of the monsters,
-each chained by a foot, thrashed about over their supper of hay in a
-roofless stable. They were as ready to accept a tuft of fodder from a
-heathen _sahib_ as from the dust-covered native pilgrim who had tramped
-many a burning mile to offer it, so that the holy beast would forgive
-him his sins. Children played in and out among the animals. The largest
-was amusing himself by setting the little ones, one by one, on his back.
-
-In a far corner stood an elephant that even the clouted keepers avoided.
-He was the most sacred of them all, our guide said, for he was mad, and
-he visited a terrible punishment on any who came within reach of his
-angrily twisting trunk. Yet the sunken-eyed youth explained to us that
-if a man were killed by one of these holy animals he was very fortunate:
-for “if a coolie is killed in that way he will be a farmer when he is
-born again,” he said; “the peasant will become a shop-keeper, the
-merchant a warrior, in his next life.” But those present must have been
-satisfied to remain what they were in life, for we noticed that even the
-despised _sudra_ was careful to keep away from that far corner.
-
-“And how about a white man?” asked Haywood, when our guide had finished
-his explanation.
-
-“A sahib,” said our guide, “when he dies, becomes a crow. Therefore are
-white men afraid to die.”
-
-We rode all night, and arrived at the station of Trichinopoly early the
-next morning. The city was some miles distant from the station. We
-called out to the driver of a bullock-cart, offering four annas for the
-trip to town. (An anna is equal to a cent.) The cart was a heavy
-two-wheeled affair. When two of us tried to climb in behind, we almost
-lifted the tiny, raw-boned bullock in mid-air. A screech from the driver
-called our attention to the danger his beast was in. We jumped down, and
-allowed him to tell us how to board the cart. While Haywood and the
-driver went to the front of the vehicle Marten and I stayed at the back.
-Then, drawing ourselves up on both ends of it, all at the same time, we
-managed to keep it balanced until we were aboard. The wagon was about
-four feet long and three wide, with an arched roof. It was too short to
-lie down in, and too low to sit up in. Haywood crouched beside the
-driver, sitting on the knife-like edge of the board in front. With his
-knees drawn up on a level with his eyes, he held on by clinging
-desperately to the edge of the roof. Marten and I lay on our backs under
-the roof, with our legs extending out at the rear.
-
-At first the bullock would not move; but after much shouting from the
-driver he set out with little mincing steps, like a man in a sack race—a
-lame man at that. The driver screamed shrilly, struck the animal a dozen
-heavy whacks with his long pole, and forced him into a trot that lasted
-just four paces. Then the animal slowly shook his head from side to
-side, and fell again into a walk. This was repeated several times during
-the trip—always with the same result. The cart had no springs, and the
-road was like an empty stone-quarry. We were bounced up and down during
-the whole trip, until we fancied our bones rattled.
-
-We grew very hungry, and Marten ordered the driver to take us to an
-eating-shop. The native grinned to himself and drove toward a _sahib_
-hotel. We called out to him, telling him that that place was too
-high-priced for us. He shook his head mournfully, and said that he knew
-of no native shop where white men were allowed to enter. We bumped by
-more than a dozen restaurants, but all bore the sign, “For Hindus Only.”
-
-At last, in a narrow alley-way, the bullock fell asleep before a
-miserable hut. The driver screeched, and a scared-looking coolie tumbled
-out of the shanty. Then he, Marten, and the driver began to talk
-excitedly in the language of southern India. For a time the coolie
-refused to sell us food, because if he touched anything that we touched
-he would become something lower than a coolie in his next life. But when
-we offered him the princely sum of three annas each he agreed to risk
-losing caste to get us something to eat. So we climbed down off the cart
-and squatted on his creaking veranda.
-
-The bullock crawled on. The coolie ran screaming into the hut, and came
-out again with three banana-leaves, a wife, and many naked children,
-each of whom carried a cocoanut-shell filled with water or curries. They
-put these on the floor of the veranda. The native spread the leaves
-before us, and his wife dumped a small peck of hot rice into the center
-of each of them. When the meal was over we arose to go; but the native
-shrieked with terror, and insisted that we carry the leaves and shells
-away with us, as no member of his family dared touch them.
-
-[Illustration: “Haywood” snaps me as I am getting a shave in
-Trichinopoly.]
-
-Our dinner had been generous enough, but it did not seem to satisfy our
-hunger. Within an hour I caught myself eyeing the food spread out in the
-open shops on all sides. There were coils of rope-like pastry fried in
-oil, lumps, balls, cakes of sweetmeats, brittle bread-sheets, pans of
-dark red chillies, potatoes cut into small cubes and covered with a
-green curry sauce.
-
-I dropped behind my companions, and aroused a shop-keeper who was sound
-asleep among his pots and pans. For months, while traveling through
-countries where I could not speak the language, I had been in the habit
-of picking out my own food; but no sooner had I laid a hand on a
-sweetmeat than the merchant sprang into the air with a wild scream that
-brought my fellow countrymen running back upon me.
-
-“What’s that fellow bawling about, Marten?” demanded Haywood.
-
-“Oh, Franck’s gone and polluted his pan of sweets.”
-
-“But I touched only the one I picked up,” I explained, “and I’m going to
-eat that.”
-
-“These fellows won’t see it that way,” replied Marten. “If you put a
-finger on one piece, the whole dish is polluted. He’s sending for a
-low-caste man now to carry the panful away and dump it. Nobody’ll buy
-anything while it stays here.”
-
-The keeper refused angrily to talk to me when I offered to buy the whole
-dish, and we went on.
-
-Wherever we went, the people were afraid to come near us. The peddler of
-green cocoanuts begged us to carry away the shells when we had drunk the
-milk; passing natives sprang aside in terror when we tossed a
-banana-skin on the ground. When we bought slices of watermelon of a
-fruit-seller, he watched anxiously to make sure that we didn’t drop a
-seed on his stand. If we had done so he would have thrown away his
-entire stock to save himself from losing caste.
-
-As we turned a corner in the crowded market-place, Haywood, who was
-smoking, and who was not at all neat in his habits, carelessly spat upon
-the flowing gown of a turbaned passer-by.
-
-“Oh, sahib!” screamed the native in excellent English. “See what you
-have done! You have made me lose caste. For weeks, now, I may not go
-among my friends or see my family. I must stop my business, and wear
-rags, and sit in the street, and pour ashes on my head, and go often to
-the temple to purify myself.”
-
-“Stuff!” said Haywood.
-
-But the weeping Hindu turned back the way he had come.
-
-This strange belief makes India a land of unusual hardship for a man who
-cannot afford to stop at the great European hotels. He not only has
-difficulty in buying food and lodging, but, worse than that, he cannot
-get water. And in a hot country like India water is an absolute
-necessity. For this reason the English rulers have made a law to help
-travelers who find themselves stranded far in the interior of the
-peninsula. India is divided into states or districts, and each district
-is ruled by a governor, called a commissioner, who lives in the largest
-city of his district. The law provides that if a European finds himself
-penniless and unable to buy food, he may apply to any commissioner, who
-must give him a third-class ticket to the capital of the next district,
-and enough money, called _batter_, to buy food on the way.
-
-We had not been in Trichinopoly long when Marten, who had tossed his
-last anna to a beggar, decided to pay a visit to the district
-commissioner. I agreed to accompany him, for I wanted to see a
-commissioner’s bungalow and to make the acquaintance of so important a
-personage as the governor himself; and wherever we went Haywood was sure
-to follow. Thus it happened that, as noonday fell over Trichinopoly,
-three cotton-clad Americans walked out of the native town and turned
-northward toward the governor’s bungalow.
-
-Heat-waves hovered like a fog before us. Here and there a tree cast its
-slender shadow, like a splash of ink, across the white highway. A few
-coolies, whose skins were safe from sunburn, shuffled through the sand
-on their way to the town. We spoke to one to ask our way; but he sprang
-with a side jump to the farthest edge of the roadway, in terror of our
-touch.
-
-“Commissioner sahib keh bungalow kéhdereh?” (“Where is the
-commissioner’s bungalow?”) asked Marten.
-
-“Hazur hum malum neh, sahib” (“I don’t know, sir”), stammered the
-native, backing away as we stepped toward him.
-
-“Stand still, you fellows,” shouted Marten; “you’re scaring him so he
-can’t understand. Every coolie knows where the governor lives.
-Commissioner sahib keh bungalow kéhdereh?”
-
-“Far down the road, O protector of the unfortunate.”
-
-We came upon the low, rambling building in a grove among rocky hillocks.
-Along the broad veranda crouched a dozen servants (called
-_punkah-wallahs_), pulling drowsily at the cords that moved the great
-velvet fans (called _punkahs_) that hung from the ceiling within. Under
-the _punkahs_, at their desks, sat a small army of native secretaries
-and clerks, looking rather grand in their flowing gowns, great black
-beards, and the bright-colored turbans of the high-class Hindu. Servants
-swarmed about the writers, and fell on their knees with their faces to
-the ground each time an official gave a command. White men there were
-none.
-
-The official wearing the brightest turban rose from his cushions as we
-entered, and addressed us in English:
-
-“Can I be of service to you, sahibs?”
-
-“We want to see the commissioner,” said Marten.
-
-“The commissioner, sahib,” replied the Hindu, “is at his bungalow. He
-will perhaps come here for a half hour at three o’clock.”
-
-“But we want tickets for the one o’clock train,” Haywood blurted out.
-
-“I am the assistant governor,” answered the native. “What the governor
-sahib can do I can do. But it takes a long time to get the ticket, and
-you cannot, perhaps, catch the one o’clock train. Still, I shall hurry
-as much as possible.”
-
-In his breathless haste he returned to his seat, carefully folded his
-legs, rolled a cigarette with great care, blew smoke at the _punkahs_
-for several moments, and, pulling out the drawers of his desk, examined
-one by one the books and papers within them. He seemed unable to find
-that for which he was looking. He rose slowly to his feet, inquired
-among his dark-faced companions, returned to his cushions, and, calling
-a dozen servants around him, sent them on as many errands.
-
-“It’s the book in which we enter the names of those who ask for
-tickets,” he explained; “it will soon be found.” And he lighted another
-cigarette.
-
-A servant came upon the book at last—plainly in sight on the top of the
-assistant’s desk. That officer opened it slowly, read half the writing
-it contained, and, carefully choosing a native pen, prepared to write.
-He was not trying to provoke or tease us: he really thought that he was
-moving with all possible haste.
-
-Slowly his sputtering pen wrote down whatever Marten and Haywood told
-him in answer to his questions. Then he laid the volume away in a
-drawer, locked it, and called for a time-table. He studied it dreamily
-before dragging forth another heavy book. But his pen refused to write
-smoothly; he couldn’t find the keys to the strong box for a time; and
-when he did find them they refused to fit the lock. He gave up at last,
-and, promising that a servant would meet us at the station in the
-evening with the tickets, he bade us good day.
-
-As we rose to depart, Marten asked for water. The native officials
-scowled. They cried out in horrified chorus when Haywood stepped toward
-a _chettie_ in the corner of the room.
-
-“Don’t touch that, sahib!” shrieked the governor’s assistant. “I shall
-arrange to give you a drink.”
-
-Among the servants within the building were none low enough in caste to
-be assigned the task of bringing us water. The assistant sent for a
-_punkah-wallah_. One of the great folds of velvet fell motionless, and
-there sneaked into the room the lowest of human creatures. The assistant
-gave a sharp order. The _sudra_ dropped to a squat, raised his clasped
-hands to his forehead, and shuffled off toward the _chettie_.
-
-Picking up a heavy brass goblet, he placed it, not on the table, but on
-the floor in the middle of the room. The officials nearest the spot left
-their desks, and the entire company formed a circle around us. Haywood
-stepped forward to pick up the cup.
-
-“No, no,” cried the natives; “stand back!”
-
-The coolie slunk forward with the _chettie_, and, holding it fully two
-feet above the goblet, filled the vessel, and drew back several paces.
-
-“Now you may drink,” said the assistant.
-
-“Do you want more?” he asked, when the cup was empty.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then leave the lota on the floor and stand back.”
-
-The _punkah-wallah_ filled it as before.
-
-“Good day,” repeated the assistant, when we had acknowledged ourselves
-satisfied; “but you must carry the lota away with you.”
-
-“But it cost a good piece of money,” suggested Haywood.
-
-“Yes,” sighed the Hindu; “but no one dares touch it any more.”
-
-A native clerk met us at the station with the tickets.
-
-We boarded the express that thundered in a moment later, and in the
-early morning of the next day stopped at a station just outside the city
-of Madras. It was here that Haywood’s bad temper so overcame him that he
-rushed out upon the platform and struck an impudent fruit peddler who
-had sold him some spoiled bananas. Shortly afterward a native policeman
-arrested him, and we were rid of our fiery-tempered companion at last.
-The train sped on, and a few minutes later drew up in the station of
-Madras.
-
-We turned away toward the Young Men’s Christian Association building.
-
-“I’ll pick you up in a day or two,” said Marten, at the foot of the
-steps. “I’ve got an uncle living in town, and I always go to see him
-when I land here.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- THE WAYS OF THE HINDU
-
-
-It was my good fortune to find employment while in Madras. The job was
-the easiest I had yet had, and it brought me three rupees a day. All I
-had to do was to sit in street-cars and watch the Hindu conductors poke
-the fares paid into the cash-registers they wear around their necks, and
-to make sure they did not make a mistake and put some of the coppers
-into their pockets instead. For the Hindu makes many mistakes, and is
-naturally so careless that he has even been known to forget to collect
-fares from his friends on the car.
-
-Thus for merely sitting on different cars all day, and reporting to the
-street railway company any conductor who made such mistakes, I was paid
-three rupees a day. It gave me an excellent chance to see Madras.
-
-As I was riding through the city I noticed that there were almost no
-horses there. Their place was taken by leather-skinned, rice-fed
-coolies. These natives were hitched to heavy two-wheeled carts, which
-squawked horribly as they were drawn through the streets. Perhaps the
-natives did not know that axle-grease would make them run more smoothly.
-Yet two of these thin, starved-looking coolies will draw a wagon loaded
-with great bales from the ships, or a dozen steel rails, for miles over
-hills and hollows, with fewer breathing spells than a truckman would
-allow a team of horses.
-
-One day I came upon a sight that surprised me. At a corner where the car
-in which I sat swung toward the harbor, a gang of coolies was repairing
-a roadway. That in itself was no cause for wonder. But among the
-workmen, dressed like the others in a ragged cloth around the hips,
-swinging his hammer as dully, gazing as stupidly at the ground as his
-companions, was a white man! There could be no doubt of it. Under the
-tan of an Indian sun his skin was fiery red, and his eyes were blue! But
-a white man doing such work, in company with the most miserable, the
-lowest, the most despised of human creatures! To become a _sudra_ and
-ram stones in the public streets, dressed in nothing but a clout!
-Suppose that I were obliged to come to such an end! A terror came upon
-me, a longing to flee while there was yet time from the unfortunate land
-in which a man of my own flesh and blood could fall to this.
-
-Again and again my rounds of the city brought me back to that same
-corner. The fallen one toiled slowly on, bending hopelessly over his
-task, never raising his head to glance at the passers-by. Twice I was
-about to get off the car and speak to him, to learn his dreadful story.
-But the car had rumbled on before I gathered courage. Leaving the office
-as twilight fell, I passed that way again. A _babu_ (educated Hindu)
-standing near the edge of the sidewalk began talking to me in English,
-and I asked him about the white laborer.
-
-“What! That?” he said, following the direction of my finger. “Why,
-that’s a Hindu albino” (colorless Hindu).
-
-One day I decided to have my clothes washed by a Hindu laundryman,
-called a _dhoby_. The _dhoby_ is a hard-working man. High above his head
-he swings each streaming garment, and slaps it down again and again on
-the flat stone at his feet, as if he were determined to split it into
-bits. When his strength gives out, he flings down the tog, and jumps up
-and down on it as if he had lost his reason. His bare feet tread wildly,
-and when he can dance no longer he falls upon the helpless rag, and tugs
-and strains and twists and pulls as if determined that it shall come to
-be washed no more. Flying buttons fill him with glee. When he can beat
-and tramp and tug no longer, he tosses the shreds that are left
-scornfully into the stream. Yet he is strictly honest: at nightfall he
-takes back to its owner the dirt he carried away and the threads that
-hold it together.
-
-The cook of an eating-shop offered, for three _annas_, to wash all that
-I owned except my shoes and helmet. In a colder land I should have had
-to go to bed until the task was done. But not so in India. The roadsters
-gathered in the dining-room of the shop saw nothing strange in my
-costume as I sat down to pass the time in writing letters.
-
-From the back yard, for a time, came the shrieks of my maltreated
-garments. Then all was silent. In fear and trembling, I stole out to
-take a look at the remains. But as a _dhoby_ the cook was a failure.
-There were a few tears in the garments hanging in the blazing sunshine,
-a button was missing here and there; but that was all. An hour’s work
-with a ship’s needle sufficed to heal the wounds, though not the scars,
-of battle.
-
-We left Madras on the train early the next morning. Two days later we
-were on our way to Puri, the city of the god Juggernaut. Puri lies on
-the shores of the Bay of Bengal, about two hundred miles south of
-Calcutta. It is here that the car of the god makes its yearly trip from
-one temple to another about two miles distant. The car, weighing many
-tons, is set up outside the temple, and the god Juggernaut, a
-hideous-faced idol is placed on his throne within. Hundreds of natives
-rush around the place, screaming and struggling for a chance to pull at
-the long ropes attached to the car; and, to the sound of strange prayer
-and song, the procession starts. The great road, fully an eighth of a
-mile wide, stretches away straight and level to the smaller temple.
-There was a time, it is said, when natives threw themselves and their
-children under the great car and let it crush them to death, so that
-they might win favor with the god; but such events were probably
-accidents.
-
-We left the train at Khurda Road, and bought tickets to the sacred city.
-The long train that we boarded was so crowded with natives that there
-was scarcely room for us.
-
-Night was falling when we stepped off at Puri. The station stood in the
-open country, and we started off on a tramp to the city fully two miles
-away. Natives, coming upon us in the darkness along the road of
-sacrifice, sprang aside in terror and shrieked a long-drawn “Sahib hai!”
-to warn others to keep away from us. Nearer the city, a hundred families
-who had come from far had pitched their tents at the edge of the great
-road.
-
-In the city we were hardly able to buy food. Merchants cried out in
-anger when they saw us coming toward their tumble-down shacks, and only
-with much coaxing could we draw one of them out into the street to sell
-us sweetmeats and fruits. Half the shops sold nothing but _dude_, which
-is to say, milk—of bullocks and goats, of course; for the cow is a
-sacred animal in India. The Hindu thinks the soul of a human being lives
-in the body of the cow.
-
-We stopped at one shack to buy some of this _dude_. A wicked-looking
-youth took our coin cautiously and filled two dishes that looked like
-flower-pots. I drank the liquid in mine, and stepped forward to put it
-back on the worm-eaten board that served as counter. The youth sprang at
-me with a scream of rage and fear; but before the pot had touched the
-counter Marten knocked it out of my hand and shattered it to pieces on
-the cobblestones, then smashed his own beside it.
-
-There was not a native hut in Puri that we could enter, and we had
-nowhere to spend the night. We returned to the station, and asked the
-agent if we could sit in the two wicker chairs in the waiting-room. He
-would not let us, but told us of an empty car near the station. We
-stumbled off through the railway yards, and came upon a first-class
-coach on a side-track. It was the best “hotel” of our Indian trip—a
-parlor car containing great couches covered with the softest leather.
-There were bright copper lamps that we could light after the heavy
-curtains had been drawn, large mirrors, and running water. No wonder we
-slept late the next morning.
-
-We were not allowed to go inside the great temple built to house the god
-Juggernaut, but much could be seen from without. The temple rises in
-seven domes one above another like the terraced vineyards of the Alps.
-The steps that wind up and around these domes are half hidden by the
-horrible-looking statues of gods and misshapen animals. Above them
-towers the Juggernaut’s throne-room, looking like a cucumber standing on
-end. Perhaps the builder, when his task was completed, was doomed to
-lose his hands, like so many successful architects of Asia, so that he
-could not build anything more wonderful for others.
-
-While we were walking around the temple we came upon one of the sacred
-bulls starting out on his morning walk past the straw-roofed shops of
-Puri. He was a sleek, plump beast, with short, stumpy horns and a hump.
-He seemed as harmless as a child’s pet poodle. We kept him company.
-
-Starting for the nearest shop, he walked proudly along, shouldering his
-way through the crowd, pushing aside all who stood in his path, not
-rudely, but firmly. Natives threw themselves flat on the ground before
-him; street peddlers stepped aside with muttered prayers; scores of
-women fell on their knees and elbows in crowded streets, bowed their
-heads low in the dust, and ran to kiss his flanks.
-
-Marching boldly up to the first booth, the bull chose a morsel of green
-stuff from the stand, and, chewing it daintily, strolled on to the next
-stall. He selected something from each of the long rows of shops,
-stopping longest where the supplies were freshest. The keepers did not
-like this, but they did not say much against it. For how may a Hindu
-know that the soul of his grandfather does not look out through those
-calm eyes? At any rate, he is just so much more sure of heaven for every
-leaf and stalk that he loses. Now and again Marten told me what the
-storekeeper was saying.
-
-“Hast thou not always had they fill, O holy one!” prayed one native,
-rocking his body back and forth in time to his prayer. “I would
-willingly feed thee. Hast thou not always found welcome at my shop? But
-I am a poor man, O king of sacred beasts. I pray thee, therefore, take
-of the goods of my neighbor, who has great wealth. For I am very poor,
-and if thou dost not cease to-morrow I may not be here to feed thee.”
-
-As if in answer to the prayer, the animal moved on to the booth of the
-neighbor, who showed no sign of the great wealth that had been charged
-against him. His stock was fresh, however, and the bull ate generously
-in spite of the keeper’s prayer. A second and a third time the keeper
-begged him to stop, but he would not. Then the Hindu, picking up a
-bamboo stick, murmured the prayer into it.
-
-“Thou canst not hear the prayer of a poor man, O sacred one, through
-thine ears,” wailed the merchant. “Listen then to this.” And, rising in
-his place, he struck the animal sharply over the nose with the bamboo
-stick. The bull turned to gaze on the sinner, looked reproachfully at
-him for a moment through half-closed eyelids, and strolled slowly away.
-
-We saw many widows among the swarming thousands of Puri. There was a
-time when, on the death of her husband, the Hindu woman had to mount the
-funeral pyre and be burned with his dead body. But since the British
-have taken possession of India they have made a law against such
-cruelties. Now, on the death of her husband, the Hindu woman must merely
-shave her head and dress in a snow-white sheet, and she must never marry
-again.
-
-There were other women in the crowd. Most of them wore jewelry. We met
-some who wore rings on every finger and toe and bracelets on both arms
-from wrists to elbows. It was not unusual to meet a woman with rings in
-the top, side, and fleshy part of each ear, or women wearing three
-nose-rings, one of which pierces the left nostril and swings back and
-forth against the cheek of the wearer.
-
-That afternoon we left by train for Calcutta. The express rumbled into
-Khurda Road soon after we reached the main line. To rest our bones we
-strolled along the platform, stepped into another car—and fell back in
-astonishment. Swinging from a peg near the ceiling was a helmet we had
-seen before. It was none other than Haywood’s. And beneath it, lying at
-full length on a bench, was Haywood himself. He had been released from
-prison, and had lost no time in taking the north-bound express—to
-overtake us, very likely.
-
-His joy at meeting us once more was greater than ours. We were unable to
-look pleased, and Marten grumbled under his breath at the luck that kept
-us in such harmful company.
-
-In the early morning the train stopped at Howrah, a suburb of Calcutta,
-and Haywood alighted with us at the station. We crossed the Hoogly River
-on a floating bridge that connects Howrah with Calcutta, meeting crowds
-of coolies tramping to a day of toil in the city. The Hoogly was alive
-with natives sporting in the muddy waters. Below the bridge scores of
-ships lay at anchor; native barges darted here and there among them;
-from the docks came the rattle of machinery and the shrill chatter of
-men loading freight on the boats. Here, at last, was a real city, with
-all its familiar uproar. My companions started off to visit some
-missionary, and I plunged aimlessly into the stream of people that
-surged through the dusty streets.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
- IN THE HEART OF INDIA
-
-
-Late that afternoon we met at the Sailors’ Home. It was not long before
-Marten and I decided that we must rid ourselves of Haywood once for all.
-Go where we would, he was ever at our heels, bringing disgrace upon us.
-Picking pockets was his glee. When there was no other excitement, he
-took to filching small articles from the stores along the way. As we
-were returning to the Home along a crowded street on our second day in
-Calcutta, his behavior became unbearable. The natives of the big city
-did not spring aside when they came near a white man, as those in the
-country had done. Instead they were more likely to push him aside. To be
-jostled by a coolie was more than Haywood could stand. He started
-striking at those who pushed him, but could not reach them, for the
-street was crowded, and the higher-caste natives who annoyed us carried
-umbrellas.
-
-Suddenly he thought of a way to get even with them. Opening his
-pocket-knife, he marched boldly through the crowd, slashing wickedly at
-every sun-shade whose owner crowded against him. An angry murmur rose
-behind us. Before we had reached the Home, a screaming mob of tradesmen
-surged around us, waving ruined umbrellas in our faces. Certainly it was
-time to be rid of such a companion. It was useless to tell him of his
-faults. There was nothing left but to skip out when he wasn’t looking.
-
-Haywood ate heartily that evening. His plate was still heaped high with
-curry and rice when Marten and I left, to sit on a bench in the garden
-of the Home.
-
-“Look here, mate,” said Marten in a stage-whisper, as soon as we were
-seated, “we must get away from that fellow. The police will be running
-us in along with him some day.”
-
-I nodded. A seaman came to stretch himself out in the grass near at
-hand, and we fell silent. Darkness was striding upon us when a servant
-of the Home came to close the gate leading to the street.
-
-Suddenly Marten raised a hand and called to the gateman.
-
-“Wait!”
-
-“Let’s get out,” he said to me.
-
-“Where?” I asked.
-
-“Up country.”
-
-“All right,” I answered, springing to my feet.
-
-We slipped out through the gate, walked across a park among the statues
-of _sahibs_ who had made history in India, past old Fort William, and
-down to the banks of the Hoogly. The tropical night had fallen, and
-above the city behind blazed a shining mass of stars. For an hour we
-tramped along the docks, jostled now and then by black stevedores and
-native seamen. The cobblestones under our feet gave way to a soft
-country road. A railway crossed our path, and we stumbled along it in
-the darkness. Out of the night rose a large two-story bungalow.
-
-“Trainmen’s shack,” said Marten.
-
-A freight train stood on the near-by track. A European in the uniform of
-a brakeman ran down the steps of the bungalow, a lantern in his hand.
-Behind him came a coolie, carrying his lunch-basket.
-
-“Goin’ out soon, mate?” bawled Marten.
-
-“All ready to start,” answered the Englishman, peering at us a moment
-with the lantern high above his head, and hurrying on.
-
-“Think we’ll go along,” shouted Marten.
-
-The brakeman was already swallowed up in the darkness; but his voice
-came back to us out of the night:
-
-“All right!”
-
-A moment later the British engine shrieked, and the freight screamed by
-us. We grasped the rods of a high open car and swung ourselves up. On
-the floor, folded to the size of a large mattress, lay a waterproof
-canvas. We lay down on it. A cooling breeze, sweeping over the moving
-train, lulled us to sleep. Once we were awakened by the roar of a
-passing express, and peered over the edge of the car to find ourselves
-on a switch. Then our train rattled on, and we stretched out again. A
-second time we were awakened when our train was turned off on to a
-side-track; and the brakeman, passing by, called out that he had reached
-the end of his run. We climbed out, and, finding a grassy slope, lay
-down and slept out the night.
-
-The morning sun showed a large forest close at hand. A red, sandy
-roadway, deep-shaded by thick overhanging branches, led into the woods.
-We followed it. Here and there, in a tiny clearing, a scrawny native
-cooked a small breakfast over a fire of leaves and twigs before his
-grass hut. Above us sounded the song of a tropical bird. The pushing
-crowds and dull, ugly roar of Calcutta seemed hundreds of miles away.
-
-The forest opened and fell away on both sides, and we paused on the high
-grassy bank of a broad river that glistened in the slanting sunlight.
-Below, in two groups, natives, men and women, were bathing. Along a road
-near the river stretched a one-row town of low huts, above which stood a
-government building and a little church.
-
-“Thunder!” snorted Marten. “Is this all we’ve made? That old train must
-have been side-tracked half the time we slept. I know this burg. It’s
-Hoogly, not forty miles from Calcutta. But there’s a commissioner here.
-He’s the right kind—ticketed me to Calcutta four years ago. Don’t
-believe he’ll remember me, either. Come on.”
-
-We strolled on down the road. Before the government building a score of
-prisoners, with belts and heavy anklets of iron connected by chains,
-were piling cobblestones.
-
-We turned in at the gate of the park-like grounds, and followed a
-graveled walk toward a great white bungalow with windows overlooking a
-distant view of the sparkling Hoogly and the rolling plains beyond. From
-the veranda, curtained by trailing vines, richly clothed servants
-watched us, as we came near, with the half-ferocious, half-curious
-manner of faithful house-dogs. I did not intend to ask for a ticket, so
-I dropped on to a seat under a tree. A chatter of Hindustanee greeted my
-companion; a stout native rose from his heels and went inside the
-bungalow.
-
-Then something happened that I had never experienced before in all my
-Indian travels. A tall, fine-looking Englishman, dressed in the whitest
-of ducks, stepped briskly out on to the veranda, and, seeming not to
-notice that we were mere penniless wanderers, called out:
-
-“I say, you chaps, come inside and have some breakfast.”
-
-I should have been less astonished had he suddenly pointed a gun in our
-direction. I looked up, to see Marten leaning weakly against a post.
-
-“I have only come with my mate, sir,” I explained. “It’s he who wants
-the ticket. I’m only waiting, sir.”
-
-[Illustration: The Hindu street-sprinkler does not lay much dust.]
-
-“Then come along and have some breakfast while you wait,” returned the
-Englishman. “Early risers have good appetites, and where would you buy
-anything fit to eat in Hoogly? I’ve finished, but Maghmood has covers
-laid for you.”
-
-We entered the bungalow on tiptoe, and sat down at a flower-decked
-table. Two turbaned servants slipped noiselessly into the room and
-served us with food from other lands. A _punkah-wallah_ on the veranda
-kept the great fans in motion. Upon me fell a strange feeling of having
-been in a scene like this before—somewhere—hundreds of years ago. Even
-here, then, on the banks of the Hoogly, men ate with knives and forks,
-from delicate chinaware, wiping their fingers on snow-white linen rather
-than on a leg of their trousers, and left fruit peelings on their plates
-instead of throwing them under the table. It seemed as if I were in a
-dream.
-
-“I told you,” murmured Marten, finishing his steak and a long silence,
-and mopping his plate dry with a slice of bread plastered with butter
-from far-off Denmark; “I told you he was the right sort.”
-
-Maghmood entered to tell us we were to follow the commissioner to his
-office, two miles distant.
-
-An hour later we were journeying contentedly northwestward in a crowded
-train that stopped at every village and cross-road. Marten had received
-a ticket to Bankipore. In order to reach this city we had to change at
-Burdwan. We alighted at this station three hours before the night
-express. A gazing crowd gathered around us as we halted to buy
-sweetmeats in the bazaars, and, flocking at our heels, quickly drew the
-attention of the native police to us.
-
-At that time Russia was at war with Japan, and the Indian government,
-for some reason, was on the lookout for Russian spies. The police were
-ordered to watch all foreigners in the country. The native policemen,
-who wanted to please the English officers, were very anxious to discover
-such spies. So they asked questions of every sahib stranger they met.
-
-Two lynx-eyed officers hung on our heels, and, following us to the
-station as night fell, joined a group of railway police on the platform.
-They talked together for a long time; then they all lined up before the
-bench on which we were seated, and a sergeant drew out one of the small
-books that the government uses for recording facts about traveling
-Europeans.
-
-“Will the sahibs be pleased to give me their names?” coaxed the sergeant
-in a timid voice.
-
-I took the book and pencil from his hand, and wrote the answers to
-printed questions on the page.
-
-“And you, sahib?” said the officer, turning to Marten.
-
-“Oh, go chase yourself!” growled my companion. “I ain’t no Roossian. You
-got no business botherin’ Europeans.”
-
-“The sahib must answer the questions or he cannot go on the train,”
-murmured the native.
-
-“How will you stop me from goin’?” demanded Marten.
-
-The officer muttered something in his own language to his companions.
-
-“You would, would you?” shouted Marten.
-
-“Ah! The sahib speaks Hindustanee?” gasped the sergeant. “What is your
-name, please, sir?”
-
-“Look here,” growled Marten; “I’ll give you my name if you’ll promise
-not to ask any more fool questions.”
-
-The native smiled with delight, and raised his pencil.
-
-“And the name, sir?”
-
-“Higgeldy Piggeldy,” said Marten.
-
-“Ah! And how is it spelled, please, sahib?”
-
-The sergeant wrote the words slowly and solemnly as my companion spelled
-them for him.
-
-“And which is the sahib’s birthplace?” he coaxed.
-
-“Look here, now,” roared Marten; “didn’t you say you wouldn’t ask
-anything else?”
-
-“Ah! Yes, sahib,” said the _babu_; “but we must have the informations.
-Please, sir, which is your birthplace?”
-
-“If you don’t chase yourself I’ll break your neck!” roared Marten,
-springing to his feet.
-
-The officers fell over each other in their haste to get out of Marten’s
-way. My companion returned to the bench and sat down in ill-tempered
-silence. The sergeant, urged forward by his fellow officers, came toward
-us again, and, standing ready to spring, addressed me in gentle tones:
-
-“Sahib, the police wish, please, sir, to know why the sahibs have come
-to Burdwan.”
-
-“Because the local train dropped us here, and we had to wait for the
-express.”
-
-“But why have you not take the express all the time?”
-
-“We were at Hoogly. It doesn’t stop there.”
-
-“Then why have you not stay in the station? Why have you walk in the
-bazaars and in the temples?”
-
-“To see the sights, of course.”
-
-“But there are not sights in Burdwan. It is a dirty village and very
-poor and very small. Europeans are coming to Benares and to Calcutta,
-but they are not coming in Burdwan. Why have the sahibs come in Burdwan,
-and the sun is very hot?”
-
-“I told you why. The sun doesn’t bother us.”
-
-“Then why have the sahibs bought sweets and chappaties in the bazaars?”
-
-“Because we were hungry.”
-
-“Sahibs are not eating native food; they must have European food. Why
-have you bought these?”
-
-“For goodness’ sake, hit that fellow on the head with something!” burst
-out Marten. “I want to sleep.”
-
-The sergeant moved away several paces and continued his examination:
-
-“And why have the sahibs gone to the tem—?”
-
-The shriek of an incoming train drowned the rest, and we hurried toward
-the European compartment.
-
-“You must not go in the train!” screamed the sergeant, while the group
-of officers danced excitedly around us. “Stop! You must answer—”
-
-We stepped inside and slammed the door.
-
-“The train cannot be allowed to go!” screeched the _babu_, racing up and
-down the platform. “The sahibs are not allowed to go. You must hold the
-train, sahib!” he cried to a European conductor hurrying by.
-
-“Hold nothing,” answered the conductor. “Are you crazy? This is the
-Bombay mail.” And he blew his whistle.
-
-The sergeant grasped the edge of the open window with one hand, and,
-waving his note-book wildly in the other, raced along the platform
-beside us.
-
-“You must answer the questions, sahibs—”
-
-The train was rapidly gaining headway.
-
-“Get down, sahibs! Come out! You are not allowed—”
-
-He could keep the pace no longer. With a final shriek he let go his
-hold, and we sped on into the night.
-
-We halted late at night in Buxar, and took a slower train next morning
-to the holy city of Benares. The train was closely packed with wildly
-excited natives. Every window framed eager, longing faces straining for
-the first glimpse of the holy city.
-
-To many of our fellow travelers this trip was one they had dreamed of
-for years, and this twentieth of April would be the greatest day of
-their lives. For if they merely looked at the holy city, and at the
-river that flowed past, they believed the sight helped to purify them of
-their sins, and assured them of a higher caste in their next life on
-earth.
-
-As we came round a low sand-hill a murmured chorus of outcries sounded
-above the rumble of the train. We went to the open window to see what
-had caused the excitement. There, a half mile distant, the holy river
-Ganges swept round from the eastward in a graceful curve and flowed on
-southward across our path. On the opposite shore, bathing its feet in
-the sparkling stream, sprawled the holy city.
-
-The train rumbled across the railway bridge, and halted on the edge of
-the city. We plunged into the narrow, crooked streets, and almost lost
-sight of each other as we were swallowed up in a great whirlpool of
-people. We pushed our way forward only a short distance before we were
-tossed aside among the goods placed in front of the shops. Here we
-paused for breath, and then tried to go on. When we came to a corner,
-pushing crowds carried us down side streets where we had not chosen to
-go. People of all shades and castes, and from every part of India,
-swarmed through the streets.
-
-Holy bulls shouldered us aside as if they cared nothing for the color of
-our skins. Twice great elephants crossed our path. On the fronts and
-roofs of Hindu temples, monkeys, wearing glittering rings on every
-finger, scampered and chattered daringly. No wonder the natives thought
-that the souls of men lived in the bodies of these bold and lively
-beasts.
-
-We had been tossed back and forth through the winding streets for more
-than an hour, when a wild beating of drums and a wailing of music from
-pipes burst on our ears.
-
-“Religious procession!” screamed Marten, dragging me after him up the
-steps of a temple. “We’ll have to stand here till it gets by. How are
-those for glad rags?”
-
-Below us the street quickly filled with a parade of Hindus wearing
-strange costumes of all kinds and colors. To the wild, screaming music a
-thousand marchers kept uncertain step. One bold fellow was “made up” to
-look like an Englishman. He was dressed in a suit of shrieking checks
-that fitted his thin body as tightly as a glove; on his feet were shoes
-with great, thick soles in which he might without harm have walked on
-red-hot coals. His face was so covered with flour that he was far paler
-than the palest of Englishmen. Over his long hair he wore a
-close-cropped wig of sickly yellow; and the helmet on his head was big
-enough to give shade to four men. He was smoking a pipe, and he swung a
-queer-looking cane gaily back and forth as he walked. Every dozen yards
-he pretended that he had become very angry, and danced about madly,
-rushing toward the other paraders and striking wildly about him with his
-fists. In these fits of anger he never once opened his lips. The natives
-looking on laughed with delight. They thought he was acting just like a
-sahib.
-
-We fought our way onward to the center of the town, and climbed down the
-great stone stairway of another temple, where we could watch the
-pilgrims wash away their sins in the holy waters. Up and down the banks
-of the river Ganges, groups of thinly dressed natives, dripping from
-their baths in the holy waters, smoked bad-smelling cigarettes in the
-shadow of the temple, or bought holy food from the straw-roofed shacks.
-
-Bathing in the holy waters were men wearing almost no clothing, and
-women wearing winding sheets. From time to time bands of pilgrims
-covered with the dust of travel tumbled down the stairways and plunged
-eagerly into the river. For the Hindu believes that, no matter how badly
-a person has behaved, his sins can be washed away in the Ganges at the
-foot of Benares.
-
-The river did not look as if it could make one pure. Its waters are so
-muddy that a ray of sunshine will not pass through a glassful of it. I,
-for one, would be afraid to bathe in that fever infected flow of mud.
-Yet the native pilgrims splashed about in it, ducking their heads
-beneath the surface and dashing it over their faces; they rinsed their
-mouths in it, scraped their tongues with sticks dipped in it, and blew
-it out of their mouths in great jets, as if they were determined to get
-rid of all the sin in their bodies.
-
-[Illustration: I do a bit of laundry work washing my coat in the Ganges
-below the city and at the same time keeping a good lookout for
-crocodiles.]
-
-We went through the city, and reached the station in time for a
-“wash-up.” Twice that day we had been taken for Eurasians (a Eurasian is
-a person who is half European and half Asiatic); so we thought it was
-about time to wash our faces. The station stood at the end of the city.
-Beyond it stretched a flat, sandy plain. Armed with a lump of soap of
-the color of maple-sugar, we slid down the steep bank below the railway
-bridge, with a mass of loose sand and rolling stones. When we reached
-the spot, however, Marten decided that he was “too tired” to turn
-_dhoby_, and stretched out in the shade on the bank. I waded out into
-the river, sinking half way to my knees in the mud. It would not have
-been impolite or out of place to undress at once, but there would
-certainly have been a sadly sunburned sahib ten minutes afterward. So I
-scrubbed my jacket while wearing my shirt, and the shirt while wearing
-the jacket, and wrapped the jacket around me while I soaked my trousers
-in waters filled with Hindu sins.
-
-“Say, mate,” drawled Marten, as I daubed my trousers with the
-maple-sugar soap, “you’ll surely go to heaven fer scrubbin’ your rags in
-that mud. There’s always a bunch of Hindu gods hangin’ around here. I
-don’t want to disturb a honest workin’-man, o’ course, but I’d be so
-lonesome if you was gone that I’m goin’ to tell you that there’s one
-comin’ to take you to heaven now, and if you’re finished with livin’—”
-
-I looked up suddenly. Barely ten feet away, the ugly snout of a
-crocodile was moving toward me.
-
-“Stand still!” shouted Marten, as I struggled to pull my legs from the
-clinging mud. “He’s a god, I tell you. Besides, he’s probably hungry.
-Don’t be so selfish.”
-
-The trousers, well aimed, ended his speech suddenly as I reached dry
-land. After that I worked with wide-open eyes; and before I was through
-with my washing I saw as many as fourteen of the river gods of India.
-
-We reached the station in time for the train, and arrived in Allahabad
-late that night. After walking half a mile from the station we found
-“The Strangers’ Rest,” a home for wanderers, closed. But the Irish
-superintendent was a light sleeper, and we were soon weighing down two
-_charpoys_ under the trees.
-
-After breakfast the next morning I set out to explore the city alone,
-while my companion called on the commissioner. When evening came I was
-again sitting under the spreading trees near the “Rest,” when I looked
-up and saw Marten turning slowly and sorrowfully in at the gate. He had
-been to ask the commissioner for a ticket. According to our plan, he had
-promised to ask for a pass to Kurachee, a city at the mouth of the Indus
-River. But he had made a mistake and had blurted out the familiar name
-of Bombay. He had received, therefore, a ticket to the city on the west
-coast.
-
-Marten did not want to go to Bombay, because I had refused to go there
-with him. But he had the ticket, and the law required that he leave by
-the first train. Even if it had not, there was no one else to whom he
-could apply. He felt very sad about it—so much so, indeed, that he began
-to cry. To dry his tears I agreed to accompany him to the capital of the
-next district, where he could ask for a ticket that would take him my
-way.
-
-Before the night was over we had reached the town of Jubbulpore, where
-we passed a sharp-cornered rest in the station. Marten told a carefully
-worded story to the commissioner of that district, and received a ticket
-to Jhansi. To get there he had to take a train southward until he
-reached the main line, where he could change cars and go northwest. I
-wished to go by another line that would take me through a wilder part of
-India. So we separated, promising to meet again at Bina.
-
-The train on which I traveled was run by a Eurasian driver, who gave me
-a compartment in the car all to myself. The country we passed through
-was covered with hills and ridges, over which the train rose and fell
-like a ship crossing the waves of the ocean. On both sides of the track
-stretched a jungle where the vines and trees grew so thick and close
-together that even the sunshine could not pierce its way into the woods.
-The villages we passed were merely clusters of huts behind the railway
-station. Every time our train stopped at one of these places, the people
-flocked to the station to greet us. Now and then, as we went on, I
-caught sight of some kind of deer bounding away through the shrubbery;
-and once I saw that dreaded beast of India—a tiger. He was a lean,
-lively beast, more dingy in color than those we see in cages. He moved
-toward the track rapidly, yet cautiously, vaulting over the low jungle
-shrubbery in long, easy bounds. On the track he halted a moment, gazed
-scornfully at our slowly moving engine, then sprang into the thicket and
-was gone.
-
-We halted at noon at the station of Damoh. Never thinking that anyone
-would enter my compartment, I left my knapsack on a bench, and went to
-eat lunch in the station buffet. When I returned a strange sight greeted
-my eyes. Before the door of my compartment was grouped the population of
-Damoh. Inside stood a Hindu policeman, in khaki uniform and red turban.
-Under one arm he held my guide-book, a spool of film, and my lunch
-wrapped in a leaf, that he had taken from my knapsack. The sack itself,
-half a dozen letters, and my camera cover lay on the floor at his feet.
-In some way he had found the springs that opened the back of the camera,
-and, having laid that on the bench beside him, was cheerfully turning
-the screw that unwound the ruined film while his fellow countrymen
-looked on with delight. All the pictures I had taken on that trip were
-lost to me because of his meddling.
-
-The natives fled when they saw me coming, and the policeman dropped my
-possessions on the floor and dashed for the shelter of the
-station-master’s office. I followed after to make complaint, and came
-upon him cowering behind a heap of baggage, with his hands tightly
-clasped over the badge that bore his number.
-
-“He says,” explained the Eurasian station-agent, “that it is his duty to
-look in empty compartments for lost articles, but that he has not taken
-the littlest thing, not even a box of matches, and asks that you forgive
-him. If you cannot put the queer machine together again, he will.”
-
-I went on to Bina, where I stayed three days without seeing anything of
-Marten. For some time I supposed he had failed to find me there and had
-gone on without me. But three days later, when I arrived in Agra, I
-found in a letter-rack at the station a post-card across which my name
-was misspelled in bold blue letters. On the back was scrawled this
-simple message:
-
- Godawara, India, April 25th.
-
- _Felow beech comer:_
-
- Missed the train to Bina becaze I knoked the block off a black
- polisman. They draged me down hear and the comish finned me
- fifteen dibs and then payed the fine and put me rite as far as
- Agra. I will pick you up ther on the 27th. yours,
-
- BUSTED HEAD.
-
-The twenty-seventh was past. The ex-pearl-fisher must have gone on, for
-I saw him no more.
-
-The next afternoon I went to see the wonderful Taj Mahal, a great white
-marble building erected by a king as the burial-place of his wife. Then
-I took the night train to Delhi. In that city I found almost an Arab
-world. I began to fancy that I was back in Damascus, the stores and
-people were so much like those of “Shaam.” The calls to prayer, the fez
-headdress, the lean-faced Bedouins with their trains of camels, even the
-stray dogs, reminded me that there was a time when the followers of
-Mohammed ruled a large part of India. But there were also many Arab
-eating-shops where the keepers were not afraid to let me pause to choose
-my food from the steaming kettles that stood near the doorway.
-
-It was these signs of a Western world, perhaps, that soon brought to my
-mind that my side trip “up country” had carried me a thousand miles out
-of my way. I awoke one morning with my mind made up to turn eastward
-once more. I spent that day perspiringly as chief ball-chaser for the
-Delhi Tennis Club, fagging three games for the district commissioner and
-as many more for his friends. They did not reward me at once, however,
-and at twilight I turned back penniless toward Delhi, four miles
-distant.
-
-[Illustration: A lady of Delhi out for a drive in a bullock cart.]
-
-The stillness of the summer night was broken only by the murmuring hum
-of insects, or by the leaves moving softly in the gentle breeze. Now and
-then I heard the patter of native feet along the dusty roadway. Once I
-was startled by a loud chorus of men’s voices that burst out suddenly
-from the darkness in words of my own language; and a moment later a
-squad of English soldiers trooped by me, arm in arm, singing at the top
-of their lungs, “The Place Where the Punkah-wallah Died.” Plainly they
-were returning to their barracks after spending a merry afternoon on
-leave. They disappeared down the road, and I tramped on into the silence
-of the night.
-
-I had to find lodging somewhere; for, although the weather was warm,
-Hindu thieves were numerous. As I crossed the railway tracks I recalled
-the fine “hotel” we had occupied in Puri. The next moment I slid down
-the bank into the broad railroad yards. Head-lights of puffing switch
-engines sent streaks of bright light through the blackness of the night.
-I wandered here and there, looking for an empty car. There were freight
-cars without number, an endless forest of them; but they were all closed
-or loaded with goods. Passenger cars there were none. I struck off
-boldly across the tracks toward the lighted station. Coming into the
-blinding glare of a head-light, I suddenly felt myself falling down,
-down, into space. Long after the world above had disappeared, I landed
-in utter darkness, unhurt except for the barking of my nose. Near at
-hand several live coals gleamed like watching eyes. I had walked into a
-cinder-pit on the track near the engine-house.
-
-Giving a cat-like spring from the top of the largest heap of ashes, I
-grasped the rail above and pulled myself out. Beyond the station lay a
-thickly wooded park known as Queen’s Gardens. I climbed over the railing
-and stretched out in the long grass. But the foliage overhead offered no
-such shelter as had the trees of equatorial Ceylon, and I awoke in the
-morning dripping wet from the falling dew.
-
-That afternoon I received a ticket and two rupees for chasing the
-tennis-balls, and I returned to Calcutta Saturday night.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
- BEYOND THE GANGES
-
-
-Two hours after my arrival in Calcutta, there was seen making his way
-through the streets of that city a youth who had been turned away from
-the Sailors’ Home by a hard-hearted manager because he had once left
-that place without permission for a trip “up country.” In his pocket was
-a single rupee. His cotton garments were threadbare rags through which
-the torrid sun had reddened his once white skin. Under one arm he
-carried a tattered, sunburned bundle of the size of a camera. In short,
-’twas I.
-
-Later, with much trouble, I gained entrance into the Seamen’s Mission.
-It was here that I made the acquaintance of the only guest of the place
-who paid his expenses. He was a clean, strong young man of twenty-five,
-named Gerald James, from Perth, Australia. He had been a kangaroo-hunter
-in his native land, and later a soldier in South Africa. After the war
-there he had turned northward with two companions. In Calcutta his
-partners had become policemen; but James, weary of bearing arms, had
-taken a position as salesman in a department-store.
-
-Four days after my arrival a chance meeting with a German traveler who
-spoke no English raised my wealth to seven rupees. I had also made the
-acquaintance of a conductor who promised to let me ride as far as
-Goalando, a city on the banks of the Ganges. It was on the day following
-that I decided to escape from Calcutta and continue my journey eastward.
-
-As I lay stretched on the roof of the building, that night, the man
-beside me rolled over in his blanket and peered at me through the
-darkness.
-
-“That you, Franck?” he whispered.
-
-The voice was that of James the Australian.
-
-“Yes,” I answered.
-
-“Some of the lads,” came the answer, “told me you were going to hit the
-trail again.”
-
-“I’m off to-morrow night.”
-
-“Where away?”
-
-“Somewhere to the east.”
-
-The Australian fell silent a moment, and his voice sounded as if he were
-apologizing when he spoke again:
-
-“I quit my job to-day. There’s the plague and the summer coming on, and
-they expected me to take orders from a _babu_ manager.
-
-“I’d like to leave Calcutta and go to Hong-Kong. Do you think you’ll
-come anywhere near there?”
-
-“I expect to be there inside of a couple of months.”
-
-“How if I go with you?” murmured James. “I’ve had some experience
-tramping round Australia after kangaroos.”
-
-“Agreed,” I answered; for, of all those at the institute, there was no
-one I should sooner have chosen as a partner for the rough days to come
-than James.
-
-“How’ll we make it?” he inquired. “It’s a long jump.”
-
-“I’ll set you right to Goalando,” I replied. “We can go down on the
-Ganges boat to Chittagong. From there I think we can beat our way
-through the jungle to Mandalay. Then we’ll drop down to Rangoon. They
-say shipping is good there. But let’s have it understood that when we
-reach Hong-Kong each one goes where he likes.”
-
-“All right,” said the Australian, lying down once more.
-
-Thursday passed quickly in looking over our belongings; and, having
-stuffed them all into James’s carpet-bag, we set off at nightfall for
-the station.
-
-“What! Two?” cried the conductor, when I had introduced James. “Well,
-pile on.”
-
-He passed on, and, as the train started, James tumbled into an empty
-compartment after me. When daylight awakened us, our car stood alone on
-a side-track at the end of the line.
-
-Goalando was a village of mud huts, perched on a slimy, sloping bank of
-the Ganges River, like turtles ready to slip into the stream at the
-first sign of danger.
-
-Two days later we reached Chittagong after dark night had fallen.
-
-As the sun was setting the next afternoon, we climbed the highest of the
-green hills in Chittagong to seek information from the district
-commissioner; for the natives in the city knew nothing of the route to
-Mandalay. The governor, aroused from a Sunday afternoon nap on his
-vine-curtained veranda, received us kindly, even delightedly, and,
-having called a servant to look after our thirst, went inside to
-astonish his wife with the news that he had European callers. That lady,
-after being properly introduced, consented to play upon the piano for
-us.
-
-White men do not often come to Chittagong. Chatting like old
-acquaintances, with the district ruler stretched out in a reclining
-chair between us, we came near to forgetting, for a time, that we were
-mere beach-combers.
-
-“And now, of course,” said the governor, when James had told him about
-our journey from Calcutta, “you will wait for the steamer to Rangoon?”
-
-“Why, no, Mr. Commissioner,” I answered; “we’re going to walk overland
-to Mandalay, and we took the liberty of calling on you to—”
-
-“Mandalay!” gasped the Englishman, dropping his slippered feet to the
-floor. “_Walk_ to Man—Why, my dear fellow, come here a moment.”
-
-He rose and stepped to a corner of the veranda, and, raising an arm,
-pointed away to the eastward.
-
-“That,” he said almost sadly, “is the way to Mandalay. Does that look
-like a country to be crossed on foot?”
-
-It certainly did not. Beyond the river lay an unexplored wilderness.
-Range after range of bold hills and rocky mountain chains lay beyond the
-forest, rising higher and higher until they were lost in the blue and
-haze of the eastern sky. At the very edge of the river began a
-vine-choked tropical jungle, covering hill and valley as far as the eye
-could see, and broken nowhere in all its extent by a clearing, or even
-by the beginning of a pathway.
-
-“There,” went on the commissioner, “is one of the wildest regions under
-British rule. Tigers abound; snakes sun themselves on every bush; wild
-animals lie in wait in every thicket. The valleys are full of wild men,
-savage outlaws that even the government fears; and the spring floods
-have made the mountain streams raging torrents. There is absolutely
-nothing to guide you. If you succeeded in traveling a mile after
-crossing the river, you would be hopelessly lost; and, if you were not,
-what would you eat and drink in that wilderness?”
-
-“Why,” said James, “we’d eat the wild animals and drink the mountain
-streams. Of course we’d carry a compass. That’s what we do in the
-Australian bush.”
-
-“We thought you might have a map,” I put in.
-
-The commissioner stepped into the bungalow. The music ceased and the
-player followed her husband out to the veranda.
-
-“This,” said the commissioner, spreading out a chart he carried, “is the
-latest map of the region. You mustn’t suppose, as many people do, that
-all India has been mapped out. You see for yourselves that there is
-nothing between Chittagong and the Irawaddy River but a few wavy lines
-to show mountain ranges. That’s all any map shows, and all any civilized
-man knows of that part. Bah! Your scheme is idiotic. You might as well
-try to walk to Llassa.”
-
-He rolled up the map and dropped again into his chair.
-
-“By the way,” he asked, “why don’t you stop at the Sailors’ Home
-to-night?”
-
-“I never imagined for a moment,” I replied, “that there was a Home in a
-little town like this.”
-
-“There is, and a fine one,” answered the commissioner; “and just waiting
-for someone to occupy it.”
-
-“No place for us,” retorted James. “We’ve spent our last coin.”
-
-“Nothing to do with it,” cried the Englishman. “Money or no money,
-you’ll stop there while you’re here. I’ll send word to the manager at
-once.”
-
-The Sailors’ Home of Chittagong was a wonder in comfort and beauty. The
-city itself was a garden spot. The Home was a white bungalow set in the
-edge of the forest on a river-bank. The parlor was carpeted with mats,
-the dining-room furnished with _punkahs_. In another room stood a
-pool-table and—wonder of wonders—a piano!
-
-Three native servants, housed in a near-by cottage, were ready to come
-when called and wait on us. For, though weeks had passed since a sailor
-had stopped at the Home, everything was as ready for our accommodation
-as if the manager had been expecting us.
-
-An hour after we had moved into the bungalow, we were resting in veranda
-chairs with our feet on the railing, watching the cook chasing one of
-the chickens that later appeared before us in our evening curry, when a
-white man turned into the grounds and walked lazily toward us, swinging
-his cane and striking off a head here and there among the tall flowers
-that bordered the path. When he reached the shade of the bungalow, he
-sprang up the steps with outstretched hand, and, having expressed his
-joy at the meeting, sat down beside us. Whoever he was, he was an expert
-story-teller, and entertained us with tales of life in the army until
-the shades of night fell. Suddenly he stopped at the most interesting
-point of a story to cry out:
-
-“The commissioner sent for me this afternoon.”
-
-“That so?” asked James.
-
-“Yes. He thinks you fellows are going to start to Mandalay on foot.
-Mighty good joke, that”; and he fell to chuckling, while he glanced
-sidewise at us.
-
-“No joke at all,” I put in. “We _are_ going on foot, just as soon as we
-can find the road.”
-
-“Don’t try it!” cried the Englishman, raising his cane on high. “I
-haven’t introduced myself, but I am chief of police for Chittagong. The
-commissioner has given orders that you must not go. The police have been
-ordered to watch you, the boatmen forbidden to row you across the river.
-Don’t try it.” With that, he said no more about it, and began telling
-another yarn.
-
-Late that night, when James had finally agreed to leave off making
-strange noises on the piano, we made a surprising discovery. There was
-not a bed in the Home! While James hurried off to ask a servant about
-it, I went carefully through each room with the parlor lamp, peering
-under tables and opening drawers, in the hope of finding at least a
-ship’s hammock. I was still searching when the Australian returned with
-a frightened native, who assured us that there had never been a bed or a
-_charpoy_ in the Home. Just why, he could not say. Probably because the
-manager babu had forgotten to get them.
-
-So we turned in side by side on the pool-table, and took turns in
-falling off at regular intervals through the night.
-
-With the first gray light of morning we slipped out the back door of the
-bungalow and struck off through the forest toward the uninhabited
-river-bank beyond. For, in spite of the warning of the chief of police,
-we had decided to try the overland journey.
-
-To get past the police was easy; to escape the jungle, quite a different
-matter. A full two hours we tore our way through the undergrowth along
-the river without finding a single spot in the wall-like eastern bank
-that we dared to swim for. James grew peevish and cross; we both became
-painfully hungry. And finally we turned back, promising ourselves to
-continue hunting for an opening in the forest beyond the river on the
-following day.
-
-The servants at the Home, knowing that _sahibs_ often take early morning
-strolls, grinned cheerfully when they saw us returning, and told us
-breakfast was ready. While we were eating, the chief of police bounded
-into the room, told a new story, and said that the commissioner wished
-to see us at once; then bounded away again, complaining that he was
-being worked to death.
-
-When we reached his bungalow on the hilltop, we found the ruler of the
-district pacing back and forth between rows of native secretaries and
-assistants.
-
-“I have given orders that you are not to start for Mandalay,” he began
-shortly.
-
-“But how shall we get out any other way?” demanded James.
-
-“If you were killed in the jungle,” went on the governor, as if he had
-heard nothing, “your governments would blame me. But, of course, I have
-no intention of keeping you in Chittagong. I have arranged, therefore,
-with the agents of the weekly steamer, to give you deck passages, with
-European food, to Rangoon. Apply to them at once, and be ready to start
-to-morrow morning.”
-
-In a blinding tropical shower we were rowed out to the steamer next
-morning. For four days following we lolled about the winch (a crank for
-raising weights) on which the Chinese stewards served our European
-“chow.” The steamer drifted slowly down the eastern coast of the Bay of
-Bengal, and, rounding the delta of the Irawaddy River on the morning of
-May thirteenth, dropped anchor three hours later in the harbor of
-Rangoon.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
- TRAMPING THROUGH BURMA
-
-
-At the time we reached Rangoon, that town was filled with sailors who
-had been looking for a chance to “sign on” for months past, with no
-success. Moreover, they assured me that there was no work ashore, that
-the city was suffering from the plague, and that we had fallen upon the
-most unlucky port in the Orient.
-
-Nevertheless, we were there, and we had to make the best of it. We
-struck off through the city to see the sights. The native town,
-squatting on the flat plain along the river, had streets as wide and
-straight as those of Western cities. There were no sidewalks, of course.
-People on foot walked among the wagons and carts, and disputed the way
-with donkeys and human beasts of burden. A flat city it was, with small
-two-story huts built on stilts. Above it gleamed a few golden pagodas,
-and high above all else soared the pride of Burma, the Shwe Dagón
-pagoda.
-
-There are probably as many pagodas in East India and China as there are
-churches in our own country. A pagoda is a temple containing idols or
-statues of gods which the people worship. We climbed the endless
-stairway up into the great Shwe Dagón in company with hundreds of
-natives carrying their shoes in their hands. We watched them wandering
-among the glittering statues, setting up lighted candles or spreading
-out blossoms before them, bowing until their faces touched the floor,
-but puffing all the time at long cigars. While we gazed, a breathless
-woman with closely cropped hair pushed past us, and laid before an idol
-a braid of oily jet-black hair.
-
-Outside once more, we stood looking up until our necks ached at the
-towering Shwe Dagón, which was covered from peak to swollen base with
-brightest gold. It was all too brilliant in the blazing sunlight. When
-we turned aside and looked into the shadows to rest our eyes, tiny
-pagodas floated before our vision for a long time afterward.
-
-“Mate,” said James, later in the day, as we stood before a world map in
-the Sailors’ Home, “it looks to me as if we’d come here to stay. There’s
-nothing doing in the shipping line here, and not a chance to earn the
-price of a deck passage to Singapore. And, if we could, it’s a long jump
-from there to Hong-Kong.”
-
-“Aye,” put in a grizzled seaman, limping forward; “ye’ll be lucky lads
-if ye make yer get-away from Rangoon. But once ye get on the beach in
-Singapore, ye’ll die of ould age afore iver ye see ’Ong-Kong, if that’s
-’ow yer ’eaded. Why, mates, that place is alive with sailors that’s been
-’ung up there so long they’d not know ’ow to eat with a knife if iver
-they got back to a civilized country. Take my word for it, and keep away
-from Singapore.”
-
-“It would seem foolish, anyway,” I remarked to James, “to go to
-Singapore. It’s a good nine hundred miles from here, a week of loafing
-around in some old tub to get there, and a longer jump back up
-north—even if we don’t get stuck there.”
-
-“But what else is there for us to do?” objected James.
-
-“See how narrow the Malay Peninsula is,” I went on, pointing to the map.
-“Bangkok is almost directly east of here. We’d save miles of travel by
-going overland, and run no risk of being tied up for months in
-Singapore.”
-
-“But how?” demanded the Australian.
-
-“Walk, of course.”
-
-The sailors grouped about us burst out in a roar of laughter.
-
-“Aye; ye’d walk across the Peninsula like ye’d swim to Madras,” chuckled
-one of them. “It’s bats ye have in yer belfry from a touch o’ the sun.”
-
-“But Hong-Kong—” I began.
-
-“If it’s ’Ong-Kong, ye’ll go to Singapore,” continued the seaman, “or
-back the other way. There’s no man goes round the world in the north
-’emisphere without touching Singapore. Put that down in yer log.”
-
-“If we walk across the Peninsula,” I went on, still addressing James,
-“it would—”
-
-“Yes,” put in an old fellow, “it would be a new and onusual way of
-committin’ suicide—original, interestin’, maybe slow, but blamed sure.”
-
-“Now look ’ere, lads,” said the old seaman, almost in tears, “d’ye know
-anything about that country? There’s no wilder savages nowhere than the
-Siamese. I know ’em. When I was sailin’ from Singapore to China, that’s
-fourt—fifteen year gone, we was blowed into the bay, an’ put ashore fer
-water. We rowed by thousands o’ dead babies floatin’ down the river. We
-’adn’t no more’n stepped ashore when down come a yelpin’ bunch o’
-Siamese, with knives as long as yer arm, an’ afore we could shove off
-they’d kilt my mate an’ another and—chopped ’em all to pieces. Them’s
-the Siamese, an’ the wild men in the mountains is worse.”
-
-In short, the “boys” had so much to say against such a trip that we were
-forced to go out into the street to continue our planning. For, in spite
-of their jeers, I still believed the overland trip was possible, and it
-would be more interesting to travel through a wilderness that had never
-before been explored.
-
-James told me he was “game for anything,” and we began studying maps for
-trails and rivers. Natives who had lived in Rangoon all their lives
-could tell us nothing whatever of the wilds seven miles east of the
-city.
-
-Late one afternoon, as we were lounging in the Home talking it over, an
-Englishman in khaki uniform burst in upon us.
-
-“Are you the chaps,” he began, “who are talking of starting for Bangkok
-on foot?”
-
-“We’ve been asking the way,” I answered.
-
-“Well, save yourselves the trouble,” returned the officer. “There _is_
-no way. The trip can’t be made. You’d be killed, and your government
-would come back at us for letting you go. I have orders from the chief
-of police that you are not to leave Rangoon except by sea, and I have
-warned the police on the east side of the city to head you off. Thought
-I’d tell you.”
-
-“Thanks,” muttered James; “but we’ll hold down Rangoon for a while yet,
-anyway.”
-
-But of course we could not give up the plan. One afternoon, as the
-manager of the Home was sleeping, we laid hold on the knapsack we had
-left in his keeping, and struck off through the crowded native town.
-
-“This is no good,” objected James. “All the streets leading east are
-guarded.”
-
-“The railroad to Mandalay isn’t,” I replied. “We’ll run up the line out
-of danger, and strike out from there.”
-
-The Australian halted at a tiny drug-store, and, awakening the
-bare-legged clerk, bought twenty grains of quinine. “For jungle fever,”
-he muttered as he tucked the package away in his helmet. That was our
-“outfit” for a journey that might last one month or six. In the knapsack
-were two cotton suits and a few ragged shirts. As for weapons, we had
-not even a penknife.
-
-A mile from the Home we entered a small station, bought tickets to the
-first important town, and a few minutes later were hurrying northward.
-James settled back in a corner, and fell to singing to himself:
-
- “On the road to Mandalay,
- Where the flying-fishes play—”
-
-About us lay low rolling hills, deep green with tropical vegetation.
-Behind sparkled the golden tower of the Shwe Dagón pagoda, growing
-smaller and ever smaller, until the night, falling quickly, blotted it
-out. We fell asleep, and, awakening as the train pulled into Pegu, spent
-the rest of the night in two willow rockers in the waiting-room.
-
-Dawn found us already astir. A fruit-seller in the bazaars, given to
-early rising, served us breakfast. We did not know the directions,
-however, and had to wait for the rising sun to show us which way was
-east. When we saw it peering boldly over the horizon, we were off.
-
-A sandy highway led forth from the village, but soon swung northward;
-and we struck across an untracked plain. Far away to the eastward were
-rocky hills, deep blue in color, foot-hills of wild mountain chains that
-we would have to cross later. But around us lay a stretch of sandy
-lowlands, dull and flat, with never a hut or a human being in sight.
-
-Ten miles of plodding, without even a mud-hole in which to quench our
-thirst, brought us to a crowded village of bamboo huts hidden away in a
-tangled wood. A pack of dogs came leaping toward us, barking noisily. We
-drove them off and drank our fill, while the natives stood about us,
-staring curiously. As we started on again, a _babu_ pushed his way
-through the group and invited us to his bungalow. He was employed on the
-new railway line that was being built from Pegu to Moulmein, and which
-when it was completed was to bring him the title of station-master in
-his own town. In honor of his future position he was already wearing a
-brilliant uniform, designed by himself, which made his fellow townsmen
-gaze in wonder.
-
-We squatted with him on the floor of his open hut, and made away with a
-dinner of rice, fruit, bread-cakes, and—red ants. No Burmese lunch would
-be complete without the last. When we offered to pay for the meal, the
-_babu_ rose, chattering with anger, and would not pardon us until we had
-patted him on the back and put our thin pocket-books out of sight.
-
-A few miles beyond the village we came upon a gang of men and women at
-work on the new railroad. There were at least three hundred of them, all
-Hindus, for the Burman scorns coolie labor. There was no machinery. A
-few scooped up the earth with shovels in the shallow trenches; the
-others swarmed up the embankment in endless line, carrying flat baskets
-of earth on their heads.
-
-Nightfall found us still plodding on in a lonely jungle. We had heard
-that a division engineer lived just across the Sittang River, and we
-were determined to reach his bungalow before midnight. Not long
-afterward we were brought to a sudden halt at the bank of the river.
-Under the moon’s rays the broad sheet of water showed dark and
-dangerously rough, racing by with the swiftness of a mountain stream. A
-light twinkled high up above the opposite shore nearly half a mile
-away—too far to swim in that rushing flood. I tore myself free from the
-entangling bushes, and, making a trumpet of my hands, bellowed across
-the water.
-
-For a time only the echo answered. Then a faint cry was borne to our
-ears, and we caught the Hindustanee words, “Quam hai?” (“Who is it?”)
-
-I took a deep breath and shouted into the night:
-
-“Do sahib hai! Engineer sampan, key sampan key derah?”
-
-A moment of silence. Then the answer came back, soft, yet distinct, like
-a near-by whisper:
-
-“Acha, sahib” (“All right”). Even at that distance, we could tell that
-it was the humble voice of a timid Hindu coolie.
-
-A speck of light moved down to the level of the river; then, rising and
-falling in regular time as if someone were carrying a torch, it came
-steadily nearer. We waited eagerly; yet half an hour passed before there
-appeared a flat-bottomed sampan rowed by three struggling Hindus whose
-brown skins gleamed in the light of a dickering lantern. Evidently they
-thought we were railway officials. While two wound their arms around the
-bushes to hold the boat steady, the third sprang ashore with a
-respectful greeting, and, picking up our knapsack, dropped into the boat
-behind us.
-
-With a shout the others let go of the bushes, and the three grasped
-their oars and pulled with all their strength. The racing current
-carried us far down the river; but we swung at last into more quiet
-water under the shadow of a bluff, and, creeping slowly up the stream,
-reached the other side. A boatman stepped out with our bundle, and,
-zigzagging up the side of the hill, dropped the bag on the veranda of a
-bungalow at the top, shouted a “sahib hai,” and fled into the night.
-
-The next moment an Englishman flung open the door with a bellow of
-delight. He was a noisy, good-hearted giant, who insisted on our
-stopping at his bungalow for the night. I dropped my bespattered
-knapsack on the top step and followed my companion inside. When our
-thirst had been quenched, we followed the Englishman to the bath-room,
-where we plunged our heads and arms into great bowls of cool water, and,
-greatly refreshed, took our places at the table.
-
-We learned that our host was an engineer of the new line, a soldier of
-fortune who had “mixed” in everything from railway building to battles
-and wars on three continents, and who knew more geography than can be
-found in an atlas. His bungalow was a palace in the wilderness; he said
-that he earned his money to spend, and that he paid four rupees a pound
-for Danish butter without wasting a thought on it.
-
-We slept on the veranda high above the river, and, in spite of the
-thirty-two miles in our legs and the fever that fell upon James during
-the night, we rose with the dawn, eager to be off. As we took our leave
-the engineer held out to us a handful of rupees.
-
-“Just to buy your chow on the way, lads,” he smiled.
-
-“No, no!” protested James, edging away. “We’ve taken enough from you
-already.”
-
-“Nonsense!” cried the adventurer. “Don’t be a dunce. We’ve all been in
-the same boat, and I’m only paying back a little of what’s fallen to
-me.”
-
-When we still refused to take it, he called us cranks and no true
-soldiers of fortune, and took leave of us at the edge of the veranda.
-
-Sittang was a mere bamboo village with a few grass-grown streets that
-faded away in the surrounding wilderness. At one time we lost the path
-and plunged on aimlessly for hours through a tropical forest. Noonday
-had passed before we broke out upon an open plain where the railway
-embankment began again, and satisfied our screaming thirst in the hut of
-a _babu_ employed by the railway company.
-
-Beyond, walking was less difficult. The wildly scrambling jungle had
-been laid open for the railroad that was to be built; and where the
-tangled vegetation pressed upon us, we had only to climb to the top of
-the newly made bank and plod on. The country was not the lonely waste of
-the day before. Where bananas and cocoanuts and jack-fruits grow, there
-are human beings to eat them, and now and then a howling of dogs told us
-that we were near a cluster of native huts tucked away in a fruitful
-grove.
-
-Every few miles we came upon gangs of coolies, who fell to chattering
-excitedly when we came into view, and, dropping shovels and baskets,
-squatted on their heels, staring until we had passed, paying no
-attention to the maddened screaming of their high-caste bosses. Good
-bungalows for engineers were being built on high places along the way.
-The carpenters were Chinamen, who seemed to work faster than the Hindus.
-
-We saw more and more of these wearers of the pig-tail as we continued
-our travels on into Burma. Many of them kept stores. They were shrewd,
-grasping fellows.
-
-We came to the end of the embankment for the new railroad, and tramped
-on into an open country where there were many streams through which we
-had to wade or swim. We were knee-deep in one of these when there
-sounded close at hand a snort like the spouting of a whale. I glanced in
-fright at the weeds growing in the river about us. From the muddy water
-were thrust a dozen ugly black snouts.
-
-“Crocodiles!” screamed James, turning tail and splashing by me.
-
-“But hold on!” I cried, before we had reached the bank. “These things
-seem to have horns.”
-
-The creatures that had so startled us were harmless water-buffaloes,
-which, being freed from their day’s labor, had plunged into the muddy
-stream to escape from flies and the blazing sun.
-
-From there the route turned southward, and the red sunshine beat in our
-faces throughout the third day’s tramp. We passed several villages of
-brown-skinned natives, and the jungle was broken here and there by
-thirsty rice-fields.
-
-As the day was dying, however, we tramped along a railway embankment
-between two dark and unpeopled forests. We were almost ready to lie down
-and sleep out of doors, when we came upon a path leading into the
-forest. Hoping to find some empty shack left by a railway gang, we
-turned aside and tumbled down the bank. The trail wound away through the
-jungle, and brought us, a mile from the line, to a grassy clearing in
-the center of which stood a bungalow.
-
-It was one of the public rest houses kept by the British government for
-_sahibs_ traveling through the wilds. This one seemed to be deserted,
-for there were no servants about. We climbed the steps, and, settling
-ourselves in veranda chairs, stretched our weary legs and listened to
-the humming of countless insects. We might have fallen asleep where we
-were, had we not been hungry and choking with thirst.
-
-Like every house in British India, the bungalow stood wide open. I rose
-and wandered through the building, lighting my way with matches and
-peering into every corner for a bottle of water or a sleeping servant.
-In each of the two bedrooms there were two canvas _charpoys_; in the
-main room a table littered with tattered books and magazine leaves in
-English; in the back room several pots and kettles. There was plenty of
-water also—a tubful of it in a closet opening out of one of the
-bedrooms. But who could say how many travel-stained _sahibs_ had bathed
-in it?
-
-I returned to the veranda, and we took to shouting our wants into the
-jungle. Only the jungle replied, and we climbed down the steps and went
-around the building, less in the hope of finding any one than to escape
-the temptation of the bath-tub. Behind the bungalow stood three ragged
-huts. The first was empty. In the second we found a snoring Hindu
-stretched on his back on the dirt floor, close to a dying fire of
-sticks.
-
-We woke him. He sprang to his feet with a frightened “Acha sahib, pawnee
-hai,” and ran to fetch a _chettie_ of water—not because we had asked for
-it, but because he well knew the first need of travelers in the tropics.
-
-“Now we would eat, O chowkee dar,” said James in Hindustanee. “Julty
-karow” (“Hurry up”).
-
-“Acha, sahib,” repeated the cook.
-
-He tossed a few sticks on the fire, set a kettle over them, emptied into
-it the water from another _chettie_, and, catching up a blazing stick,
-trotted with a loose-kneed wabble to the third hut. There sounded one
-long-drawn squawk, a muffled cackling of hens, and the Hindu returned,
-holding a chicken by the head and swinging it round and round as he ran.
-Catching up a knife, he slashed the fowl from throat to tail, snatched
-off skin and feathers with a few skilful jerks, and in less than three
-minutes after his awakening our supper was cooking.
-
-We returned to the veranda, followed by the _chowkee dar_, who lighted a
-crippled-looking lamp on the table within and trotted away. He came back
-soon after to clear away the plates and chicken-bones. After paying him
-the last of our coppers, we rolled our jackets and shoes into pillows,
-and turned in.
-
-We slept an hour, perhaps, during the night. A flock of roosters crowed
-every time they saw a new-born star, and dozens of lizards made the
-night miserable. There must have been a whole army of these pests in the
-bungalow. They were great, green-eyed reptiles from six inches to a foot
-long. Almost before the light was blown out, one on the ceiling struck
-up his song; another on the wall beside me joined in; two more in a
-corner gave answering cry, and the night concert had begun:
-
-_She-kak! she-kak! she-kak!_
-
-Don’t fancy for a moment that the cry of the Indian lizard is the gentle
-murmur of the cricket or the tree-toad. It sounds more like the
-squawking of an ungreased bullock-cart:
-
-_She-kak! she-kak! she-kak!_
-
-To try to drive them off was worse than useless. The walls and ceiling,
-being made of grasses and reeds, offered more hiding-places for creeping
-things than a hay-stack. When I fired a shoe at the nearest, a shower of
-branches and rubbish rattled to the floor; and, after a moment of
-silence, the song was resumed, louder than before. Either the creatures
-were clever dodgers or they could not be wounded; and there was always
-the danger that anything thrown swiftly might bring down half the roof
-on our heads.
-
-_She-kak! she-kak! she-kak!_
-
-Wherever there are dwellings in British India, there are croaking
-lizards. I have listened to their shriek from Colombo to Delhi; I have
-seen them darting across the carpeted floor in the bungalows of
-commissioners; I have awakened many a time to find one dragging its
-clammy way across my face. But nowhere are they in greater numbers or
-more loud-voiced than in the jungle of the Malay Peninsula. There came a
-day when we were glad they had not been driven out—but I will tell of
-that later.
-
-Early the next morning we came to a broad pathway that led us every half
-hour through a grinning village, between which were many lonely huts. We
-stopped at all of them for water. The natives showed us marked kindness,
-often waiting for us with a _chettie_ of water in hand, or running out
-into the road at our shout of “Yee sheedela?”
-
-This Burmese word for water (_yee_) gave James a great deal of
-amusement. Ever and again he would pause before a hut, to call out in
-the voice of a court crier: “Hear ye! hear ye! hear ye! We’re thirsty as
-Hottentots!” Householders young and old understood. At least, they
-fetched us water in abundance.
-
-The fourth day afoot brought us two misfortunes. The rainy season burst
-upon us in fury not an hour after we had spent our last copper for
-breakfast. Where dinner would come from we had not the least idea; but
-we did not waste our strength in worry.
-
-The first shower came suddenly. One sullen roar of thunder, the heavens
-opened, and the water poured. After that they came often. At times we
-found shelter under some long-legged hovel. Even when we scrambled up
-the bamboo ladders into the huts, the squatting family showed no anger.
-Often they gave us fruit; once they forced upon us two native cigars. It
-was these that made James forever after a firm friend of the Burmese.
-
-Frequently we plodded on in a blinding down-pour that, in the twinkling
-of an eye, drenched us to the skin. The storm lasted only about five
-minutes. With the last dull growl of thunder the sun burst out, hotter
-than before, sopping up the pools in the highway as if with a giant’s
-sponge, and drying our dripping garments before we had time to grumble
-at the wetting. The gorgeous beauties of the surroundings gave us so
-much to look at that the ducking we had received was quickly forgotten,
-and the next down-pour took us as completely by surprise as if it were
-the first of the season.
-
-It was still early in the morning when, down the green-framed roadway,
-came a funeral procession on its way to the place where the body was to
-be burned. There came, first of all, dozens of girls dressed as if for a
-holiday. About their necks were garlands of flowers; in their jet-black
-hair, red and white blossoms. Each carried a flat basket heaped high
-with bananas of the brightest yellow, with golden mangoes and great
-plump pineapples, for the dead. The girls held the baskets high above
-their heads, swinging their bodies from side to side and tripping
-lightly back and forth across the road, the long line performing a
-snake-dance as they came. The strange music that rose and fell in time
-with their movements sounded like a song of victory; now and again a
-singer broke out in merry laughter.
-
-The coffin was a wooden box gayly decked with flowers and trinkets, and
-three of the eight men who carried it on their shoulders were puffing at
-long native cigars. Behind them more men, led by two yellow-robed
-priests, pattered through the dust, chattering like schoolgirls, or now
-and then adding their harsh voices to the singing.
-
-We reached the village of Moulmein late at night, and went home with a
-Eurasian youth who had invited us to sleep on his veranda. There we
-threw ourselves down on the floor, and, drenched and mud-caked as we
-were, sank into corpse-like slumber.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
- IN THE JUNGLES OF BURMA
-
-
-The next morning we went to call on an American missionary. He lived in
-a handsome bungalow set in a wooded park on a hill just outside the
-town. The first persons we saw when we reached the place were a native
-gardener clipping away at the shrubbery on the grounds, and another
-servant following two very little girls who drove about the house a team
-of lizards harnessed together with reins tied to their hind legs.
-
-When we told the missionary that we were looking for work, he quickly
-found something to put us at. Among other things, I repaired the floor
-and several windows, and made two kitchen benches. James put a new cover
-on the missionary’s saddle, cleaned and oiled his fire-arms, put new
-roosts in his hen-house, and set his lumber-room in order.
-
-We found some work in the city also, and, with some four dollars in
-silver and copper, set off once more. A jungle trail led eastward
-through a dark forest. We walked as fast as we could, for the hour was
-late and the next village was fully fifteen miles distant. Not a hut or
-a human being did we pass on the journey; only the path showed that
-someone had been there before us.
-
-Black night had fallen when we reached Kawkeriek. The town was only a
-collection of those same one-story bamboo huts standing in uneven rows
-in the square clearing which its inhabitants had won after a hard fight
-with the wilderness.
-
-We had heard that a commissioner lived at Kawkeriek. We wandered among
-the huts, asking passers-by to direct us to his bungalow. The few whom
-we came upon in the darkness listened with trembling limbs to our
-question, grunted something that we couldn’t understand, and hurried
-noiselessly away.
-
-The hour was late when we came upon one who must have been made of
-bolder stuff than his fellow townsmen, for he agreed to guide us. Beyond
-the last row of huts, he plunged into a pathway that led into the woods,
-and, climbing a low hill, stopped before a bungalow almost hidden in the
-trees. We turned to thank him, but found that he had slipped silently
-away.
-
-The commissioner was reading in his study. To our surprise, he was a
-brown man—a Burman from “over Mandalay way.” He said he had not dined,
-and for that we were thankful; for to have missed the dinner that he
-invited us to share would have been a misfortune indeed.
-
-We watched the commissioner with interest; for it is not often that
-England honors a brown man by making him a ruler over one of her
-districts. In appearance he was like other Burmans of the wealthier
-class. He wore the usual flowing robe, though his legs were dressed and
-his feet were shod. His long, thick black hair was caught up at the back
-of his head in a graceful knot. But in manners and speech he was like an
-educated European. He spoke English so well that if we had entered the
-bungalow blindfolded we should never have suspected that his skin was
-brown. We were much surprised to learn that he was still a bachelor; for
-people of Asia usually marry when they are very young. When we gave
-expression to our astonishment, he answered: “I have been too busy in my
-short life to give attention to such matters.”
-
-[Illustration: The chief of a jungle village agrees to guide us for one
-day’s journey.]
-
-There was a dak bungalow in Kawkeriek. The commissioner’s servant showed
-us the way, prepared our bath, and arranged the sleeping-rooms for us.
-In the morning we took breakfast with the governor. Later that morning
-he called together his council of eight wise men for no other purpose
-than to talk over with them our plans for traveling to Siam on foot.
-Toward noon they called us in to tell us what they thought about it. One
-speaker said that the country east of the city was a trackless jungle
-overrun with savages, poisonous snakes, and man-eating tigers. Even the
-people of Kawkeriek dared not go far into it. However, if we were
-determined to risk our lives and go, there was outside the door a “wild
-man,” chief of a jungle village, who was going our way, and he would
-guide us for one day’s journey.
-
-We answered that we must start immediately. A servant stepped out on to
-the veranda and summoned the _boh_, as they called the “wild man.” He
-came into the council-chamber, a tall, thin, bony, awkward wild man. His
-skin was a leathery brown, his hair short and standing up like bristles
-all over his head. His eyes were small, and moved about so restlessly
-that he made us think of a leopard. His cheek-bones were high and his
-forehead sloped backward to his hair. The chewing of betel-nuts had made
-his teeth jet-black. We began to fancy that we had seen him before,
-playing and chattering in the tree-tops.
-
-His clothes, nevertheless, were brilliant. Around his head was wound a
-strip of pink silk; an embroidered jacket, having no buttons, left his
-chest bare to the waist-line; his hips and legs were clothed as far as
-the knees in many yards of bright red stuff draped to look like
-bloomers. Below the knees he wore nothing. At his waist was fastened a
-bag for betel-nuts. He carried a leather sack of the shape of a
-saddle-bag, and—an umbrella.
-
-He spoke a Burmese so different from that used by the commissioner and
-his council that their words had to be translated for him by another
-native. We knew that they were telling him that he was to be our guide
-through the jungle. He listened carefully, and gave a grunt now and then
-to show that he understood, bowing so low each time he spoke that his
-head all but touched his knees. From time to time, when he wished to
-show unusual politeness, he sat down on his heels. When he left, he
-backed toward the door, bowing almost to the floor with every step, and
-forgetting his leather sack until he was called back by a member of the
-council.
-
-The brilliant clothes that this jungle chieftain wore while calling on
-the governor were not his traveling costume, of course. As soon as we
-were outside the city, he signed to us to wait, and stepped inside a
-hut. When he came out again we hardly knew him. His fine clothes had
-been packed away in his sack. The broad strap of this sack was his only
-covering save a strip of cotton which he wore about his hips.
-
-He turned at once into the jungle, moving with little mincing steps,
-while we stumbled along awkwardly over the uneven ground. The path was
-so narrow that the outstretching branches whipped us in the faces. It
-was overgrown with tough creepers that entangled our feet. None but a
-human being who had lived in the jungle all his life could have followed
-that wandering, often hidden path through the thick maze of vegetation.
-Had we been alone we should certainly have lost it. Flocks of
-brilliantly colored birds flew away before us, screaming shrilly; now
-and then we heard a sudden crashing in the underbrush as some wild
-animal fled from our path.
-
-Our guide was the most silent of creatures. Never once during the day
-did a sound escape him. Where the path widened a bit, he raised his
-umbrella and trotted steadily forward. Even swollen streams did not stop
-him—he hardly seemed to notice them. With never a pause, he splashed
-through the first as if there were nothing in his way, and galloped
-carelessly on along the branch-choked path. We hallooed to him as we sat
-down to pull off our shoes. If we let him get out of our sight we should
-be hopelessly lost in the jungle. He halted a moment, but set off again
-before we had waded ashore. We shouted once more, and he turned to stare
-open-mouthed while we put on our shoes. He could not understand why we
-strange creatures should wear garments on our feet, or why we should
-stop to put them on when there were other streams to wade through. When
-we had overtaken him, he made signs to show us that we should do better
-to toss aside the foolish leather things that made it necessary for us
-to stop so often. He could not understand that a mile over sharp stones
-and jagged roots would have left us crippled.
-
-As we neared the mountains we came across stream after stream, rushing
-past with increased swiftness. By the time we had waded through
-thirty-six of these we grew tired of halting every hundred yards to pull
-off our shoes and shout after the _boh_, who always forgot to wait for
-us.
-
-When we reached the next stream, James tried crossing it on a few
-stepping-stones without removing his shoes. But he slipped, lost his
-balance, and sprawled headlong into the water. I followed more
-carefully, and reached the other bank without falling. After that we
-waded through streams that for the most part were over knee-deep, and
-marched on with the water gushing from our shoe-tops. It mattered little
-in the end, for a sudden storm burst upon us.
-
-He who has never bowed his back to a tropical storm at the height of the
-rainy season cannot know how violent they are. With a roar like the
-explosion of a powder-mill, a furious clap of thunder broke above us;
-then another and another, in quick deafening blasts. Flaming flashes of
-lightning continuously chased each other across the heavens, blinding us
-with their sudden glare. We half expected to see the mass of plant life
-about us burst into flame.
-
-In the falling sheets of water we plunged on; the biggest trees could
-not have sheltered us from it. The _boh_ had raised his umbrella. It
-kept the storm from pounding him, but could not save him a drenching.
-What cared he, dressed only in a cloth the size of a handkerchief? The
-water ran in little rivers down his naked shoulders and along the
-hollows between his outstanding ribs. Between the crashes of thunder the
-thud, thud of the storm drowned all other sounds. Only by speaking into
-my companion’s ear as into a trumpet, and shouting at the top of my
-lungs, could I make him hear me.
-
-The storm died down slowly at first, then suddenly, and all seemed quiet
-except our voices, which continued to be shrill and loud. Quickly the
-sun burst forth again, to blaze fiercely upon us—though not for long.
-All that day the storms broke upon us one after another so rapidly that
-we had no idea of their number. More often than not, they caught us
-climbing a wall-like mountainside by a narrow, clay-bottomed path down
-which an ever-increasing brook poured, washing us off our feet while we
-clutched at overhanging bushes.
-
-The _boh_ led us on by zigzag routes over two mountain ranges before the
-day was done. At sunset we were climbing down into another valley, when
-we came suddenly upon a tiny clearing in the jungle, and a tinier
-village. “Thenganyenam,” the natives called it. There were four bamboo
-huts and a dak bungalow, housing thirty-one “wild men” and one tame one.
-It was easy to see how many there were, for the natives poured forth
-from their hovels to meet us before we had crossed five yards of the
-clearing.
-
-At their head trotted the tamed human being. Among all the shrieking,
-staring band of men, women, and children, there was no other that wore
-clothing. He was a babu, the “manager” of the public rest house. With a
-low bow, he offered us welcome, turned to wave back the gazing crowd,
-and led the way to the dak bungalow.
-
-“Look here, babu,” I began, as we sank down into wicker chairs on the
-veranda. “This is a splendid little surprise to find a dak rest bungalow
-and a man who speaks English here in the jungle. But we’re no
-millionaires, and the government fee is two rupees, eh? Too strong for
-us. Can’t you get us a cheaper lodging in one of the huts?”
-
-“The government,” returned the babu, pronouncing his words very
-carefully, “the government have made the _dak_ bungalow for Europeans.
-Why, you may not ask me. In two years and nine days that I am living in
-Thenganyenam there are come two white men, and one have only rested and
-not sleep. But because the dak bungalow is make, all sahibs coming in
-Thenganyenam must stop in it. When I have see you coming by the foot and
-not by the horses I must know that you have not plenty money. Every day
-we are not everybody rich. How strong you have the legs to come from
-Kawkeriek by the feet. The two rupees you must not pay. If you can give
-some little to the cook, that he make you a supper—”
-
-“That’s the word,” burst out James. “Of course we pay for our chow.
-Where’s the chowkee? Tell him to get busy.”
-
-“But,” apologized the _babu_, “this is a very jungly place and we have
-not proper food for Europeans.”
-
-“Great dingoes!” shrieked the Australian. “European food? We haven’t had
-anything to eat for a day! Bring a pan of rice, or a raw turnip, or a
-fried snake—anything. Ring up the chowkee.”
-
-“The other day,” said the _babu_ dreamily, “there was a chicken in
-Thenganyenam; I shall send the cook to hunt him.”
-
-A few minutes later we saw the population of Thenganyenam chasing the
-lone fowl. He was finally run to earth with a great hubbub, and put to
-death while the crowd looked on. After that all was quiet for so long a
-time that we became uneasy, wondering if some one else was enjoying our
-dinner. Finally, when our overgrown hunger had become very painful
-indeed, the chicken appeared before us as tongue-scorching curry in a
-generous setting of hard-boiled rice.
-
-Meanwhile we had pulled off our water-soaked rags, rubbed down with a
-strip of canvas, and put on our extra garments. The change was most
-agreeable. It was not until then that we knew how useful those squares
-of oil-cloth were. They had kept our baggage dry. Supper over, we
-stretched out on the canvas cots and tried to sleep.
-
-The swamps and streams through which we had plunged that day had swarmed
-with leeches, commonly called bloodsuckers. One of these had fastened
-itself in a vein of my right ankle. I could not pull it out. A tiny
-stream of blood trickled along my toes. When I awoke in the morning I
-seemed to be fastened to the cot. The blood, oozing out during the
-night, had grown hard, gluing my right leg to the canvas.
-
-Before I had dressed, the Hindu cook and care-taker wandered into the
-room, and, catching sight of the long red stain, gave one shriek and
-tumbled out on to the veranda. James, who was sleeping in a room next to
-mine, was awakened by the scream, and, hearing the Hindustanee word for
-“blood,” sprang to his feet in the belief that I had been murdered while
-he slept. I was explaining the matter to him when the cook, looking very
-frightened, returned with the book in which we had written our names the
-night before. Waving his arm now at the book, now at the cot, he danced
-about us, screaming excitedly. We could not understand his chatter, so
-we stepped past him out to the veranda. The “manager” was just coming up
-the steps.
-
-“Here, babu,” demanded James, “what’s wrong with our friend from the
-kitchen?”
-
-The Hindu turned to the manager, talking so rapidly that he almost
-choked over his words. Tears were streaming down his yellow-brown
-cheeks.
-
-“He says,” cried the babu, when the cook became silent at last, “in the
-charpoy is much blood. Have you become wounded?”
-
-“It was only a blood-sucker,” I explained; “but what does he say about
-the book?”
-
-“The cook asks that you will write all the story of the blood in it,
-very careful.”
-
-“What nonsense!” I answered, when James had stopped laughing. “I’ll pay
-for the damage to the charpoy.”
-
-“Oh! It is no dam-magé,” protested the babu, “no dam-magé at all. He is
-not ask for pay. But when the inspector is coming and seeing the much
-blood in the charpoy, he is thinking the cook have kill a man who have
-sleep here, and he is taking him to Kawkeriek and making him shot. Very
-bad. So cook cry. Please, sir, write you the story in the register
-book.”
-
-I sat down at the veranda table and wrote a long story for the visiting
-inspector. Only when I had filled the page below our names, and half the
-next one, was the Hindu cook satisfied. He then carried the book away
-for safe keeping.
-
-We wrapped our dry garments in the oil-cloth once more, and put on the
-rags and tatters we had stretched along the ceiling the evening before.
-They were still clammy wet. As for our shoes, we almost gave up the hope
-of getting into them. When we managed to pull them on at last we could
-hardly walk. Our feet were blistered and swollen to the ankles, the
-shoes wrinkled and shrunken until the leather was as hard and unbendable
-as sheet-iron. However, we hobbled down the veranda steps and away. For
-the first hour we walked as if we were crossing a field of hot coals.
-Once James slipped and stumbled over the stones like a man learning to
-skate. We suffered at every step of our journey from Thenganyenam to
-Siam.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
- IN SIAM
-
-
-The distance to the free state was not great. When we reached the
-boundary we came upon a camp of native soldiers. Here we stopped, as was
-our duty before crossing into Siam. The soldiers were simple,
-good-hearted fellows who showed their astonishment and their sorrow at
-the condition of our feet through the language of signs, and did their
-best to prepare us a good dinner from the rice and jungle vegetables
-they had. It was fortunate for us that they were so generous, for there
-were no stores in the jungle land.
-
-The native lieutenant showed a strong curiosity to know what had brought
-us so far into the wilds. We tried to motion out our reasons for coming,
-but failed to make him understand. Finally he ordered a soldier to guide
-us to the first Siamese village, where he was to explain our presence to
-the head man.
-
-When the sun had begun to set and the latest storm had ceased, we left
-the camp and Burma behind. The river that marked the boundary between
-the two countries was not very wide and only waist-deep. We waded across
-it easily, and climbed the sandy eastern bank—in Siam at last.
-
-We knew that the first village was no great distance off, so we strolled
-easily on through the jungle, pausing to rest in shady thickets so often
-that the native soldier left us and went on alone. Two hours later we
-met him on his homeward journey. He paused to tell us by signs that he
-had delivered his message and that the village was waiting to receive
-us.
-
-[Illustration: A freight carrier crossing the stream that separates
-Burma from Siam.]
-
-The day was not yet done when we came in sight of the first clearing in
-Siam. We were met at the edge of the jungle by a Siamese with ape-like
-countenance, who led us to the hut of the village head man.
-
-Picture to yourself a very fat, important-looking brown man, with a face
-like an Alaskan totem-pole and the general appearance of a wild man in a
-circus, a skin the color of a door-mat that has been in use for many
-years, dressed in a castoff dish-cloth, and you have an exact image of
-the ruler of this Siamese village. He received us in a misshapen bamboo
-shack, sitting with folded legs on a grass mat in the middle of the
-floor. Around the walls squatted several of his chief men, dressed like
-himself. Through the network partition that separated the city hall from
-the family chamber peered a leathery-skinned woman and a troop of dusky
-children.
-
-If we had waited for an invitation to be seated we might have remained
-standing all night. These Siamese did not appear at all friendly toward
-us. We made ourselves comfortable on the floor, with our backs to the
-wall. For more than an hour the head man and his advisers sat
-motionless, staring fixedly at us, and mumbling in a low tone without
-once turning their heads toward those to whom they were speaking.
-
-The sun sank into the jungle, and swift darkness fell. The
-leathery-skinned woman drifted into the room and set on the floor an oil
-torch that gave a dim, flickering light. I had learned a few Siamese
-words from the _babu_ of Thenganyenam. When the talking ceased for a
-moment, I put these words in use by calling for food. The head man
-growled, and the woman floated in once more and placed at our feet a
-small wash-tub of boiled rice.
-
-But I was tired of eating rice. I dragged out my note-book and again ran
-my eyes down the list of Siamese words. I had failed to write down the
-words for chicken or curry. The only word that appeared to be of any
-value at the time was “sugar.” Sugar would make my rice less tasteless.
-I shouted the word at the head man. He stared open-mouthed until I had
-repeated it several times.
-
-“Sugar?” he echoed, showing great astonishment.
-
-“Yes, sugar,” I cried, sprinkling an imaginary handful over the rice.
-
-The law-makers gazed at each other with wondering eyes, and the word
-passed from mouth to mouth: “Sugar!”
-
-“Sure, sugar!” cried James, taking up the refrain.
-
-A man rose slowly to his feet, marched across to us, and squatted before
-the dish.
-
-“Sugar?” he inquired, peering into our faces. “No, no!”
-
-He took a pinch of the food between his fingers, put it into his mouth,
-and munched it slowly as if he were trying to examine the taste. Then he
-shook his head forcefully and spat the mouthful out on the floor.
-
-“No; no sugar, no!” he cried.
-
-[Illustration: My companion, Gerald James of Perth, Australia, crossing
-the boundary line between Burma and Siam.]
-
-“Of course there’s no sugar!” shouted James. “That’s why we’re making a
-holler. Sugar, you thick-headed mummy.” James thought it was not
-necessary to be polite, since they couldn’t understand him.
-
-The official taster went back to his place; a silence fell over the
-company. We continued to shout. Suddenly a light of understanding
-brightened the face of the head man. Could it be because we _wanted_
-sugar that we were raising such a hubub, not because we had fancied some
-had been accidentally spilled on our supper? He called to the woman.
-When she appeared with a joint of bamboo filled with muddy brown sugar,
-the council men rose gravely and grouped themselves about us. I
-sprinkled half the sugar on the rice, stirred it in, and began to eat.
-
-At the first mouthful such a roar of laughter went up from the group
-that I choked in astonishment. Whoever would have guessed that these
-gloomy-faced great ones could laugh? The chief fell to shaking as with a
-fit; his advisers doubled up with laughter. They shrieked until they
-were heard in the neighboring huts. Wild-eyed Siamese tumbled into the
-shack. Within two minutes half the village had flocked into the room to
-see those strange beings who ate sugar with their rice.
-
-The head man stopped laughing, then became stern and drove all but the
-high and mighty among his people forth into the night. Among those who
-stayed was a _babu_. He was a Siamese youth who had been educated in
-Rangoon. To satisfy the head man he questioned us as to our plans, and
-later told the chief and his followers what we had replied. The company
-then talked it over for about two hours. At the end of that time they
-told us what they thought of the trip we had planned. They said the
-jungle to the eastward was so wild, entangled with undergrowth, and
-pathless that even the natives did not try to get through it. Certainly
-white men would not be able to make their way through such a place. We
-must not try it. There was in the village a squad of soldiers who were
-going to Rehang in a week or ten days—we could travel with them. Until
-then we must stay in the village.
-
-James and I said we certainly could not wait for so long a time. The
-head man replied that we should stay, whether we liked it or not. As it
-was late at night, we pretended that we were willing to do as they said,
-and told them we were sleepy. The village chief lighted us into one of
-the small rooms of his palace, and left us to sleep on the bamboo floor.
-
-We fell asleep at once. Early the next morning, long before the sun was
-up, we awoke, grasped our oil-cloth baggage, and tried to get away
-before anyone saw us. Softly we entered the council-chamber. But the
-chief was already astir. We hurried toward the door, thinking that he
-would try to stop us. All he did was to shout at us as we stepped out
-into the dripping dawn.
-
-At the eastern end of the town began a faint path; but it soon faded
-away, and we pushed and tore our way through the jungle, guided only by
-our pocket compass. The war-like vegetation battled against us, tore our
-rags to bits, and cut and gashed us from head to ankles. The
-perspiration ran in stinging streams along our bleeding skins and
-dripped from our faces. Though we fought the undergrowth tooth and nail,
-we did not cover two miles an hour.
-
-The sun was high when we reached a spot showing that someone had passed
-that way before. It was a clearing not more than six feet square, in the
-center of which was a slimy pool, with a few joints of bamboo that
-looked as if they had been cut only a short time. With these we drank
-our fill of the lukewarm water, and then threw ourselves down in the
-shade.
-
-Suddenly we heard human voices. We sprang to our feet, half expecting to
-be attacked by murderous savages. Then our fright left us as there burst
-into the clearing a squad of little brown soldiers.
-
-There were seven in the party, a sergeant and four common soldiers armed
-with muskets, and two coolie carriers, each bowed under the weight of
-two baskets that hung from the pole on their shoulders. When they saw us
-they gasped in astonishment. Then they rushed for the bamboo cups beside
-the water-hole, while the servants knelt to set their baskets on the
-grass. For a time we thought they had been sent to bring us back; but
-when they let us handle their weapons we knew that we had nothing to
-fear. They were on their way to Rehang, but why they had left the
-village so much earlier than the time set we could not find out.
-
-They looked like boys playing war. The sergeant, larger than the others,
-did not come to James’s chin—and the Australian was not tall. The rest
-were weak-looking little runts. An average American school-boy could
-have tied any one of them into a knot and tossed him aside into the
-jungle. There was nothing war-like in their manners or their babyish
-faces. They were dressed in the regular khaki uniform, except that their
-trousers came only to their knees, leaving their scrawny legs bare. From
-their belts hung bayonets; and around the waist of each was tied a
-stocking-like sack of rice.
-
-We talked with them some time by signs. I tried to tell the sergeant
-that my own country owned the Philippine Islands, which were not far
-from his country. He thought I meant that my country owned Siam. He
-sneered at me most cuttingly. The very idea that the white man had any
-claim on the free country of Siam! How foolish! He told his soldiers
-about it. They scoffed at us, and even the carriers grinned scornfully.
-When they had eaten a jungle lunch the soldiers stretched out for their
-noonday nap, and we went on alone.
-
-It was long hours afterward that we came to a break in the jungle.
-Through the undergrowth we made out two miserable huts. We dashed
-eagerly toward them, for we had had nothing to eat since the night
-before and our tramp had made us very hungry.
-
-Two thin brown women, dressed in short skirts and broad-brimmed hats
-made of big leaves, were scratching the mud of a tiny garden before the
-first hut. I called for food and shook a handful of coppers in their
-faces; but, although they must have understood us, they would not
-answer. We danced excitedly about them, shrieking all the Siamese names
-for food that we knew. Still they stared with half-open mouths, showing
-uneven rows of black teeth. We had expected this. Even far back in
-Moulmein, we had been warned that the jungle folk of Siam would not sell
-food to travelers. Far off in this howling wilderness among the
-mountains, the people had never used money and did not know that our
-coins had any value.
-
-We went on, and just at sunset burst into the scattered village of
-Banpáwa. About forty howling storms had poured upon us during the day,
-and we had waded through an even greater number of streams. My jacket
-was torn to ribbons; my back and shoulders were painfully sunburned; in
-a struggle with a stubborn thicket I had lost a leg of my trousers. And
-the Australian looked about as pretty as I.
-
-Near the center of the village was a large roof of grass upheld by
-slender bamboo poles. Under it were huddled about twenty
-freight-carriers, surrounded by bales and bundles. They were the human
-freight trains of the Siamese jungle—cross, silent fellows, who, though
-they stared open-mouthed when we appeared, would not have anything to
-say to us.
-
-They were strong-looking, with great knots of muscles standing out on
-their glistening brown bodies. A small rag was their only clothing.
-Above it the skin was thickly tattooed to the neck with strange figures
-of beasts. Among these the form of a fat pig seemed to be the favorite.
-Below the hip-cloth the figures were blue, even more closely crowded
-together, but stopping short at the knees.
-
-We tried to buy food from our sulky companions. They growled for answer.
-Like the soldiers, each of them wore at his waist a bag of rice. A few
-were preparing supper over bonfires at the edge of the shelter; but not
-a grain of rice would they sell. A raging storm broke while we were
-wandering from one to another offering them our money. When the storm
-began to die down, we hobbled out into the night to try to buy from the
-villagers.
-
-There were about twenty huts in the clearing. We climbed into one after
-another of them, in spite of our aching legs. But it was useless: nobody
-would sell. Too hungry to care what happened to us, we climbed boldly
-into the last hut, and caught up a kettle, intending to cook our own
-supper.
-
-The householder shrieked wildly, and, before we had kindled a fire, a
-mob of his fellow townsmen swarmed into the shack and fell upon us. They
-were not the fiercest of fighters—we shook and kicked them off like
-puppies. But when the last one had tumbled down the ladder we saw that
-they had carried off every pot, pan, and eatable about the place.
-Besides the bare walls there remained only a naked brown baby, that
-rolled about the floor, howling uproariously.
-
-The people of the village were screaming around the shanty in a way that
-made us glad we had a prisoner. James sat down, gazed sadly at the
-wailing infant, and shook his head.
-
-“No good,” he sighed. “Not fat enough. Anyway, there’s no kettle to cook
-it in. Let’s get out of this.”
-
-We turned toward the door. A man was peering over the edge of the
-veranda. By the silken band around his brow we knew that he was a Burman
-and also that he spoke Hindustanee. We understood enough of his excited
-chatter to know that he had come to lead us to a place where food was
-sold. As we reached the ground the crowd parted to let us pass; but the
-furious natives danced about us, screaming and shaking sticks and clubs
-in our faces. A few steps from the hut one bold spirit struck me a
-resounding whack on the back of the head. It was a heavy blow, but the
-weapon was a hollow bamboo stick and caused no damage. When I turned to
-fall upon my assailant the whole crowd took to their heels and fled into
-the night.
-
-“All I’ve got to say,” panted James, as we hurried on after our guide,
-“is, I’m glad that’s not a crowd of Irishmen. Where would the pioneer
-beach-combers of the Malay Peninsula be now if that collection of
-dish-rags knew how to scrap?”
-
-The Burman led us through half a mile of mud and brush, and a stream
-that was almost waist-deep, to a hut a long distance from Banpáwa. He
-went in with us, and sat down to keep us company until our rice and fish
-had been boiled. He was quite clever in understanding the few words and
-the motions we made. Suddenly he began to wish that he had a tropical
-helmet to wear in place of the band around his brow. He pointed at the
-one James wore and held up one finger.
-
-“One rupee! Say yes, sahib?” he coaxed.
-
-“Can’t sell it,” growled the Australian. “Think I want to get
-sunstroke?”
-
-The Burman shrugged his shoulders, then rose and went sadly forth into
-the night.
-
-We turned in soon after on a sort of platform, with nine youngsters who
-amused themselves by walking and tumbling over our outstretched forms. A
-lizard chorus sang loud and gaily. We slept a little by snatches.
-
-When daylight came the Burman appeared again. This time he pointed at
-James’s helmet and held up two fingers. James still refused to sell.
-
-“Then yours, sahib,” begged the fellow in Hindustanee. “One rupee!”
-
-“Only one?” I cried. “Two rupees.”
-
-“One!” he shrieked. “Two for the sahib’s which is new. One for yours.”
-
-The Burman gave in at last, however, and, dropping two coins in my hand,
-marched proudly away with my old helmet set down over his ears.
-
-I handed one of the coins to the head of the family, and we hit the
-trail again. Out of sight of the hut, we halted to put on the extra
-suits in our bundles. From the rags and tatters of my old suit I made a
-band to wind around my head, after the fashion of Burma. Even with the
-top of my head uncovered to the sun and rain, I did not suffer.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
- HUNGRY DAYS
-
-
-The territory beyond Banpáwa was more savage than any we had yet seen.
-Everywhere the climbing and creeping plant life was so thick and
-interwoven that our feet could not reach the ground. Often, when we
-tried to plunge through a thicket, we were caught as if in a net. It was
-impossible to get through, and we crawled out with torn garments and
-bleeding hands and faces to fight our way around the spot. We were now
-in the very heart of the mountains. Range after range appeared, covered
-with unbroken jungle. From the top of every mountain there spread out
-before us an endless forest of teak and bamboo matted together with the
-wildest undergrowth. Mountains that were just blue wreaths in the
-morning climbed higher and higher into the sky—and beyond them were more
-mountains, all covered with a mass of waving tree-tops. Every valley was
-choked with vegetation.
-
-Often, while climbing, we lost our footing and went plunging headlong
-through thorn-bristling thickets. There were no level spaces. No sooner
-had we reached the bottom of a narrow valley than we found ourselves at
-the base of another higher mountain, which we climbed hand over hand as
-a sailor climbs a rope. In our ears sounded the continual hum of
-insects; now and then a snake squirmed off through the bushes; more than
-once we heard the roar of some beast. Monkeys swarmed in the thick
-network of branches overhead, and fled screaming away, as we came near,
-into the dark depths of the forest.
-
-At every mud-hole we halted to drink; for within us burned a thirst such
-as no man knows who has not suffered it in the jungle. Chocolate-colored
-water we drank, water alive with squirming animal life, in pools out of
-which wriggled brilliant green snakes. Often I rose to my feet to find a
-blood-sucker clinging to my lower lip.
-
-As the day grew, a raging hunger fell upon us. In a sharp valley we came
-upon a tree on the trunk of which hung a dozen or more jack-fruits
-within easy reach. We grasped one and tried to pull it down. The short,
-tough stem was as stout as a manila rope, and knife we had none. We
-wrapped our arms around the fruit and tugged with the strength of
-despair; we might as well have tried to pull up a ship’s anchor by hand.
-We chopped at the stem with sharp stones; we hunted up great rocks and
-attempted to split the fruit open on the tree, screaming with rage and
-bruising our fingers. Streams of perspiration raced down our
-sun-scorched skins; our hunger and thirst grew maddening; and still
-nothing came of it. When we finally gave up and plunged on, our violent
-attack on the fruit had hardly scratched its stony rind.
-
-Weary and half starved, matted with mud from crown to toe, and bleeding
-from countless cuts and scratches, we were still struggling with the
-entangling vegetation well on in the afternoon, when James, who was
-ahead of me, uttered a shriek of victory.
-
-“A path! A path!” he cried. “And a telegraph wire!”
-
-Certain that hunger and the sun had turned his brain, I tore my way
-through the thicket that separated us. He was not mad. A path there was,
-narrow and steep: and overhead a sagging telegraph wire, running from
-tree to tree.
-
-After following it for about a half-hour we came to a little plain
-crossed by a swift stream, in which swam a covey of snow-white ducks. On
-the western bank stood a weather-beaten bungalow. Above it the telegraph
-wire disappeared. We drank from the river until we were thirsty no more,
-and then mounted the narrow steps and shouted to attract attention.
-There was no answer. We pushed open the door and entered. The room was
-about eight feet square and entirely unfurnished. In one corner hung an
-unpainted telephone instrument. It was home-made and very crude. A
-spider had spun his web across the mouth of the receiver, and there were
-no signs that anyone had ever lived in the hut.
-
-“There is nothing worth while here,” said James. “Let’s swim the creek.”
-
-On the opposite bank was a bamboo rest house, the floor of which was
-raised some feet above the damp ground. Back of it, among the trees,
-stood a cluster of seven huts. We went to all of them, trying to buy
-food, but returned to the rest house with nothing but the information
-that the village was called Kathái Ywá. Nine freight-carriers had
-arrived. Among them were several we had seen the evening before. They
-had, perhaps, some secret hatred against white men; for they not only
-refused to sell us rice, but scowled and snarled when we drew near them.
-The day was not yet done. We should have pushed on had not James fallen
-victim to a burning jungle fever.
-
-While there was plenty of water at hand, our hunger became unbearable.
-For a time we kept ourselves cheerful by thinking that perhaps the next
-carrier who wandered into the place would be more friendly. But each new
-arrival was more stupid and surly than the others. The sun touched the
-western tree-tops. James lay on his back, red-eyed with fever. Eat we
-must, if we were to have strength to go on in the morning. I made the
-round of the huts a second time, hoping to bully the inhabitants into
-selling me food. The people rose in a mass and swarmed upon me. The men
-carried long, overgrown knives; the women, clubs. I returned hastily to
-the rest house.
-
-The sight of the telephone wire awakened within me the senseless notion
-that I might call for help from some neighboring village. I left my
-shoes and trousers in charge of the Australian, and dashed through the
-stream and into the government bungalow. At the first call I “got”
-someone. Who or where he was I could not guess. I bawled into the
-receiver English, French, German, and all the Hindustanee I could think
-of. When I paused for breath the unknown subscriber had “rung off.” I
-jangled the bell and shook and pounded the instrument for five minutes.
-A glassy-eyed lizard ran out along the wire and stared down upon me. His
-mate in the grassy roof above screeched mockingly. Then another voice
-sounded faintly in my ear.
-
-“Hello!” I shouted. “Who’s this? We want to eat. D’you speak English? Do
-sahib hai, Kathái Ywá. Send us some—”
-
-A flood of meaningless jabber interrupted me. I had rung up a Burman;
-but he was no babu.
-
-“English!” I shrieked. “Anyone there that speaks English? We’re sahibs!
-Hello! Hello, I say! Hello—”
-
-No answer. Central had cut me off again. I rang the bell until my arm
-was lame, and listened breathlessly. All was still. I dropped the
-receiver and tumbled out of the hut, determined to throttle one of the
-freight-carriers. In the middle of the stream I slipped on a stone and
-fell on my knees, the water up to my arm-pits. The startled ducks ran
-away before me. I snatched up a club, and ran after them through the
-village and back to the creek again. The inhabitants ran screaming
-behind me. I threw the weapon at the nearest fowl. It was only a joint
-of bamboo, and fell short. The ducks took to the water. I plunged in
-after them, and once more fell sprawling.
-
-Before I could scramble to my feet, a shout sounded near at hand. I
-looked up to see the squad of soldiers breaking out of the jungle. They
-halted before the government bungalow, and watched me with deep-set
-grins as I came toward them. The sergeant, understanding the motions I
-made, offered us places around the common rice heap. I returned to the
-rest house for my garments. The villagers were driving their panting
-ducks homeward. The Australian struggled to his feet and waded the
-stream once more, joining the soldiers on the veranda of the government
-bungalow. Their porters brought huge wet leaves to protect the floor,
-and built a fire within. Half an hour later the troopers rose to their
-feet, shouting, “Kin-kow! Kin-kow!” (“Eat!”) We followed them into the
-smoke-choked building. In a civilized land I would not have tasted such
-fare as was spread out on that banana leaf in the center of the floor,
-to win a wager. At that moment it seemed food fit for a king.
-
-We slept with the soldiers in the telephone bungalow. James’s fever
-burned itself out, and he awoke with the dawn, ready to push on. For the
-first few miles we followed a path below the telephone wire. In
-stumbling over the uneven ground my shoe-laces broke again and again.
-Well on in the morning I halted to replace them with stout vines. The
-Australian went on ahead. Before I had overtaken him the path divided
-into two paths, and the wire disappeared in the forest between the two
-trails. I hallooed to my companion; but the rain was coming down in
-torrents, and the voice does not carry far in the jungle. I struck into
-one of the paths; but in less than an hour it faded and was lost. I
-found myself alone in a trackless wilderness.
-
-[Illustration: The sort of jungle through which we cut our way for three
-weeks. Gerald James, my Australian companion, in the foreground.]
-
-Here was a misfortune indeed. The Australian had carried off the
-compass; our money was in my bundle. What chance was there of finding
-each other again in hundreds of miles of untraveled wilds?
-
-I set a course by the sun, and for three hours fought my way up the
-wall-like face of a mountain. To crash and roll down the opposite slope
-took me less than a third of that time. In the valley, tucked away under
-soaring teak trees, was a lonely little hut. A black-toothed woman in a
-short skirt squatted in the shade under the cabin, pounding rice in a
-hollowed log. The jungle was humming its sleepy tune. I climbed to the
-veranda and lay down, certain that I had seen the last of James, the
-Australian. Under the hut sounded the _thump_, _thump_, _thump_ of the
-pestle.
-
-But it was not by loafing in the shade that I should beat my way through
-to civilization. I soon rose to my feet and arranged the things in my
-bundle again. If I could only hire a guide. Hark! The sound of a human
-voice came faintly to my ear. No doubt the owner of the hut was
-returning from a morning hunting trip. I listened attentively. Then off
-to the right in the jungle rang out a familiar song:
-
- “Oh, I long to see my dear old home again,
- And the cottage in the little winding lane.
- You can hear the birds a-singing,
- And pluck the roses blooming;
- Oh, I long to see my dear old home again!”
-
-It was the Australian’s favorite ballad. I shouted at the top of my
-lungs, and, springing to the ground, with one leap crashed into the
-jungle. A thicket caught me in its tough grasp. I tore savagely at the
-entangling branches. The voice of the Australian rang out once more:
-
- “Oh, why did I leave my little back room, out in Bloomsburee?
- Where I could live on a quid a week in such luxuree—”
-
-He was farther away now. I snatched myself loose and plunged on after
-him, leaving a sleeve of my jacket in the thicket.
-
-“Hello, James! Hello!” I bellowed.
-
-He was singing so loudly that the sound of his own voice filled his
-ears. I opened my mouth to shout again, and fell through a bush into a
-clearly marked path. Above it sagged the telephone wire, and just in
-sight through the overhanging branches plodded the Australian.
-
-“Goodness, but you’re slow,” he laughed, when I had overtaken him.
-
-“When’d you find the path?” I demanded.
-
-“Haven’t lost it,” he answered. “Why? Did you?”
-
-“Haven’t seen it for five hours,” I replied.
-
-“Great dingoes!” he gasped. “Thought you were close behind, or I’d have
-felt mighty little like singing.”
-
-We had no difficulty in keeping to the path for the rest of the day, and
-passed several freight-carriers traveling westward. With never a hut on
-the way, we went hungry. Yet, had we but known it, there was food all
-about us. What a helpless being is civilized man without the tools of
-civilization.
-
-Faint from hunger, we had halted at the edge of a mountain stream well
-on in the afternoon, when we were overtaken by the little brown
-soldiers. They had packed away their uniforms and wore only loin-cloths
-and caps.
-
-“Kin-kow? Kin-kow?” (“Are you hungry?”) asked the sergeant, placing his
-hand on his stomach.
-
-We nodded sadly. He chuckled to himself, and waved his arms about him as
-if to say there was food all about us. We shrugged our shoulders
-unbelievingly. He laughed gleefully, and turned to say something to his
-men. Two of the soldiers picked up clubs, and, returning along the path
-to a half-rotten log, began to move back and forth on both sides of it,
-striking it sharp blows here and there. They came back with a half-dozen
-lizards—those great, green reptiles that sing their _she-kak!_ all night
-long in the grassy roofs of the Indian bungalows.
-
-Meanwhile two others of the company were kneeling at the edge of a
-mud-hole. From time to time they plunged their bare arms into it,
-drawing out frogs and dropping them, still alive, into a hollow bamboo
-stick. The sergeant took his long, heavy knife, or _dah_, and cut down a
-small tree at the edge of the jungle. One servant dug some reddish-brown
-roots on the bank of the stream, while the other started a fire by
-rubbing two sticks together.
-
-In a few minutes all were gathered beside us. The lizards were skinned,
-cut up with lumps of red curry in an iron pot, and set to boiling. A
-servant drew out the frogs, one by one, struck them on the head with a
-stick, and tossed them to his companion. The latter rolled them up
-inside mud balls and threw them into the fire. The sergeant split open
-his tree, pulled out a soft spongy stuff from the center of it, cut it
-into slices, toasted them on the point of his _dah_, and tossed them on
-to a large leaf spread out at our feet. The reddish roots were beaten to
-a pulp on a rock and sprinkled over the toasted slices. Rice was boiled.
-
-The soldiers, grinning at one another, began saying, “Kin-kow? Kin-kow?”
-and the meal began. Before it was finished we thought better of both the
-jungle and its people. Taken from their shell of mud, the frogs were
-found to be baked in round balls and tasted like fried fish. The toasted
-pith from the tree tasted like pickled beets. Best of all was the lizard
-curry. James and I ate more than our share, and we told each other that
-we wished the pair sent to pound the old tree-trunk had remained longer
-at their task.
-
-We went on with the soldiers, halting after dark at the bank of the
-largest stream we had yet faced. There was no village here, but the
-government had built a rest house for soldiers on the bank. In this we
-spent the night with the troopers, after eating a frog-and-lizard
-supper.
-
-Beyond there were not so many mountains and the path was well marked;
-but the river beside which we had left the soldiers was deep and swift,
-and wound back and forth, crossing our route again and again. In the
-first few morning hours we swam it no less than fourteen times. It was
-the ninth crossing that gave us the most trouble. Reaching the narrow,
-sandy bank a bit before my companion, I pulled off my clothes, tied the
-bundle to my head, and plunged in. James began to disrobe as I reached
-the other shore. Without removing his ragged shirt or his helmet, he
-fastened on his bundle as I had done, and struck out.
-
-Being an excellent swimmer, he glided along easily, with long, swift
-strokes. Unfortunately, he did not take care to keep his head pointed
-up-stream. The powerful current caught him suddenly and dragged him
-under. He righted himself quickly, but in that short struggle lost both
-his bundle and his helmet. He tried to save them, but caught only his
-helmet. His bundle raced down-stream. I sprang to my feet and dashed
-along the sandy shore after it. But the stream was far swifter than I.
-The tangled undergrowth brought me to a sudden halt, and the
-Australian’s possessions were swallowed up in the jungle.
-
-I returned to find him sitting unhappily on the bank.
-
-[Illustration: Myself after four days in the jungle, and the Siamese
-soldiers who invited us to eat a frog and lizard supper.]
-
-With the bundle had gone his shoes, trousers, jacket, the odds and ends
-he had picked up on his travels, his military and citizenship papers,
-and the pocket compass; in short, everything he owned except a helmet
-and a tattered shirt.
-
-But James was not a man to be long discouraged by little things. He tied
-the shirt about his loins and we went on. As he had nothing to carry, he
-marched more easily and crossed the streams with far less difficulty
-than I. But in less than an hour his shoulders, back, and legs were
-painted a fiery red by the unmerciful sun; and the stones and jagged
-brambles tore and bruised his feet until he left a blood-stain at every
-step.
-
-We were again overtaken by the soldiers about noonday, and halted for
-another jungle meal. Off once more, we pushed ahead, but found it wise
-to wait for the troopers to lead the way; for the route was beset by
-unexpected pitfalls—as once when, in fighting our way along the bank of
-the river, we crashed headlong through the bushes into a dry, stony bed
-of a branch river fifteen feet below. This accident left little of my
-clothing, and made the Australian look worse than before.
-
-So we waited for the soldiers, and followed them along a wider path. The
-higher mountain ranges fell away; but the foot-hills were very steep,
-and the slopes were often bare and covered with deep mud. At the top of
-such a hill we overtook a troop of horsemen returning from some village
-off to the southwest. Burdened with huge packsaddles, the horses began
-the dangerous downward climb unwillingly. Suddenly three of them lost
-their footing, sat down on their haunches, and rolled over and over,
-their packs flying in every direction. James laughed loudly and slapped
-me on the back. The blow made me lose my balance. My feet shot from
-under me, and slipping, sliding, rolling, clutching in vain for
-something to hold to, I pitched down the five-hundred-yard slope and
-splashed head-first into a muddy stream at the bottom several seconds
-before the horses got there.
-
-Another mile left me bare-footed and nearly as naked as my companion.
-Now and again we overtook a band of freight-carriers; one a young
-Buddhist priest in tattered yellow, attended by two servants. We had
-seen him somewhere a day or two before, and remembered him not only by
-his dress, but on account of the bold and impudent expression of his
-face. He joined our party without being invited, and tramped along with
-us, puffing at a long _saybully_, and chattering loudly and
-continuously. The soldiers roared with laughter at everything he said,
-and winked at us as if they thought we could understand his remarks. We
-were more sorry than ever that we did not understand the Siamese tongue.
-
-James was complaining that he could not go on another yard, when we came
-most unexpectedly to the edge of the jungle. Before us stretched a vast
-rice-field, deeply flooded. The soldiers led the way along the tops of
-the ridges toward a thick wood two miles away. At least a hundred curs
-began howling as we drew near, and as many chattering brown people
-swarmed about us when we stopped to rest in a large, deeply shaded
-village at the edge of a river fully a mile wide. It could be no other
-than the Menam—the “great river” of Siam. Along the low eastern bank
-stretched a real city with white two-story buildings, before which were
-anchored large native boats. It was Rehang. The soldiers told us so with
-shouts of joy, and ran away to put on their uniforms.
-
-We threw off what was left of our garments, and plunged into the stream
-to wash off the blood and grime of the jungle. When we had finished, the
-soldiers were gone. We asked the villagers to set us across the river.
-They refused. We pushed out one of a dozen dugout logs drawn up along
-the shore, and the village swarmed down upon us in a great landslide of
-men, women, children, and yellow curs. Catching up two paddles, we beat
-them off. In two minutes we were alone.
-
-We pushed the dugout into the stream, and were climbing in when two
-ugly, wrinkled brown women ran down the bank and offered to ferry us
-across. They pointed the craft up-stream and fell to paddling. They were
-expert water dogs, and crossed the swift stream without accident,
-landing us at a crazy wooden wharf in the center of the town.
-
-On nearer sight Rehang was disappointing. The white two-story buildings
-were poor, rickety things. The roads between were not much better paved
-than the jungle paths, and deeper in mud. There was no health
-department, it seemed, for here and there a dead dog or cat had been
-tossed out to be trampled underfoot. There were great crowds of people,
-but the passing throng was merely a larger gathering of those same
-strange “wild men” of the jungle villages. The fear of being arrested
-for having no clothes soon left us. James in national costume attracted
-much less attention than I in the remnants of jacket and trousers.
-
-We were glad, however, to be in even this tumble-down city on the bank
-of the Menam; at least, it was a market town. James dashed into the
-first store with a whoop of delight, and startled the keeper out of his
-wits by demanding a whole three cents’ worth of cigarettes. He splashed
-on through the muddy streets, blowing great clouds of smoke through his
-nostrils, and forgetting for a time even the smarting of his torn and
-sun-scorched skin.
-
-Half the merchants of the town were Chinamen. We stopped at a shop kept
-by three wearers of the pig-tail, and, seating ourselves before a bench,
-called for food. One of the keepers, moving as if he disliked having us
-there, set canned meat before us, and after a long time brought us as a
-can-opener, a hatchet with a blade considerably wider than the largest
-can.
-
-When we rose to go, the Chinese demanded ten tecals. The market price of
-the stuff we had eaten was certainly not worth one. I gave them two.
-Three screams split the air, and half a dozen Chinamen bounded into the
-shop and danced wildly about us. One caught up the hatchet and swung it
-high above his head. James snatched it from him, kicked him across the
-room, and threw the weapon among the heaped-up wares. We fought our way
-to the street. The keeper nearest us gave one loud bellow that was
-answered from every side. Chinamen stumbled out through every open
-doorway, out of every hole in the surrounding shop walls; they sprang up
-from under the buildings, dropped from the low roofs, swarmed out of the
-alleyways, for all the world like rats, screaming, yelping, snarling,
-clawing the air as they ran, their pig-tails streaming behind them. In
-the twinkling of an eye the mob at our heels had increased to a hundred
-or more. We refused to disgrace ourselves by running. The crazed yellow
-men scratched us savagely with their overgrown finger-nails, caught at
-our legs, spattered us with mud. Not one of them used his fists. When we
-turned upon them they bounded away as if from a squad of cavalry, and we
-could get even only by catching a flying pig-tail in either hand, to
-send a pair of yellow-skinned rascals sprawling in the mud. They came
-back at us after every stand before we had taken a dozen steps. Our
-backs were a network of finger-nail scratches. We cast our eyes about us
-for some weapon, and found two muddy sticks. Before we could use them
-the Chinamen turned and fled, still screaming at the top of their lungs.
-
-Not far beyond, we turned in at the largest building in the town—the
-Rehang barracks for soldiers. Among the half hundred little brown
-soldiers lounging about the porch were our comrades of the few days
-past. It was plain that they had told our story. The recruits gathered
-about us, laughing and asking questions in the deaf-and-dumb language.
-How had we liked lizard curry? What had turned our dainty skins so
-blood-red? What ignorant and helpless creatures were white men, were
-they not?
-
-Suddenly, while they were chattering, I thought I heard someone say that
-there was a white man on the floor above. We sprang toward the stairway
-at the end of the porch. The soldiers shrieked in alarm and snatched at
-my rags. We must not go up; it was strictly against barrack rules. A
-guardsman on duty at the foot of the stairs held his musket out before
-him and feebly shouted a command. James caught him by the shoulder and
-sent him spinning along the veranda. We dashed up the steps. Two doors
-stood partly open. James sprang to one, while I pushed open the other.
-
-“Hello!” I shouted. “Where’s the white—”
-
-A roar of delight from my companion sent me hurrying after him. He was
-dancing gleefully just inside the second door, and shaking a white man
-fiercely by the hand—an astonished white man in khaki uniform with
-officer’s stripes. I reminded the Australian of his costume, and he
-became quiet. The European invited us inside, and sent a servant for
-tea, biscuits, and cigars. Our host was commander of the soldiers—a Dane
-who spoke English well. That we had been wandering through the jungle he
-could see all too plainly without our telling him; but that we had come
-overland from Burma was a tale he could not believe until the sergeant
-had been called in to prove that what we said was true. Forgetting his
-military duties, the commander asked us wondering questions until dusk
-fell, and then ordered three of his soldiers to find us a place to spend
-the night.
-
-On the veranda the soldiers spread a pair of army blankets. We were for
-turning in at once. They would not hear of it. For a half-hour they
-trotted back and forth between our bungalow and that of the commander,
-carrying steaming dishes. The table they had set up was groaning under
-its load before the sergeant signed to us to begin. There were broiled
-fish, a mutton roast, a great steak, a spitted fowl, and fruits and
-vegetables of many kinds.
-
-We spent the night on the veranda. We did not sleep there. Our
-sun-scorched skins would not permit it. Even had they burned less
-fiercely, we could not have slept. One would have fancied the place a
-gigantic hen-yard during the hours of darkness. After every shower the
-unveiled moon was greeted with a din of crowing that was awful. In the
-moments of quiet between, we tossed about wide awake on our hard couch,
-listening to the musical tinkling of pagoda bells.
-
-When dawn came the Dane sent for us. We hurried to his bungalow and
-joined him at breakfast. He had gathered together two pairs of shoes and
-four khaki uniforms. They were from his own tailor in Bangkok, still
-very useful, though fitting us a bit too tightly and chafing our
-blistered skins. Rolling up our extra garments and swinging them over
-our shoulders, we bade our host farewell.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
- FOLLOWING THE MENAM RIVER TO BANGKOK
-
-
-The path to Bangkok, such as it was, lay on the eastern bank of the
-Menam River. This time we crossed the stream in a dugout canoe fully
-thirty feet long, which held, besides ourselves and four paddlers,
-twenty-two natives, chiefly women. All day we tramped through jungle as
-wild as that to the westward, following the course of the river. We
-passed many bamboo villages, and for every hut at least a half dozen
-yellow curs added their yelpings to the uproar that greeted us as we
-came near.
-
-The inhabitants were careless “wild men” like those of the mountains,
-content to live and die in their nests of jungle rubbish, with never a
-peep at the outside world. Both the men and the women wore their dull
-black hair some two inches long and dressed in a bristling pompadour
-that made them look like startled porcupines. Both had jet-black teeth.
-The children were strong and healthy little animals.
-
-On the way we had to swim across many branches of the Menam River.
-Sometimes they were swift and deep. What we dreaded more were the almost
-motionless streams through which we must wade waist-deep in acres of
-green slime where poisonous snakes lay in hiding.
-
-The sun was still high when we reached a handsome large bungalow set in
-the center of a clearing on the bank of the Menam, with a half circle of
-huts roundabout and at some distance from it. The bungalow was the home
-of the “jungle king,” as he was called; his servants lived in the huts
-about it.
-
-We had heard of the king at breakfast that morning. The Dane had told us
-of a white man from Sweden who was manager for a lumber company dealing
-in teak forests, and that he was called the king on account of the style
-in which he lived.
-
-We found the royal person sitting on the veranda of his palace, gazing
-peacefully out across the clearing. He was a white man who must have
-weighed nearly a quarter ton. The servants who moved about near him
-looked like manikins in his presence. We stopped at the foot of the
-veranda and asked for a drink of water. He looked at us without a sign
-of surprise, and with a calm wave of his hand ordered a servant to bring
-it. One would have thought white men passed his palace every hour. He
-watched us silently as we drank, asked from us where we came and where
-we were going, and that was all. He was not enough interested in our
-doings to ask more.
-
-“I can let you stay in one of my bungalows,” he said, “if you have
-planned on stopping here.”
-
-We were of half a mind to push on. It was an hour before sunset, and, to
-tell the truth, we were a bit disappointed at his coolness of manner. In
-the end we swallowed our pride and thanked him for the offer. It was
-fortunate for us that we did so.
-
-The “king” waved a hand once more, and a servant in a scarlet uniform
-stepped forth and led us to one of the half circle of bungalows. Five
-servants were sent to look after our wants. They put water for us in two
-bath-tubs, and stood ready with crash towels to rub us down. Our skins
-were so painfully sunburned and scratched, however, that we had to do
-without that service. When we had changed our garments, a laundryman
-took charge of those we had worn. By this time a servant had brought a
-phonograph from the palace and set it in action. How we did enjoy it!
-For weeks we had heard no music save the shrill croaking of lizards.
-
-Then came our evening feast. For days afterward James could not speak of
-that without a trembling of his voice. It made the supper of the night
-before seem like a penny lunch in comparison.
-
-We had just settled down in our bungalow to talk matters over, when a
-sudden hubbub burst forth. I dashed out upon the veranda. Around the
-palace fluttered half the people of the place, squawking like excited
-hens; and the others were tumbling out of their bungalows in their hurry
-to join the crowd.
-
-The palace was afire. From the back of the building a mass of black
-smoke wavered upward in the evening breeze. When we had pushed our way
-through the frightened crowd, a slim blaze was licking at a corner of
-the back veranda. It was not hard to guess how it had started. At the
-foot of a bamboo post lay a sputtering kettle over a heap of burning
-sticks. Around it the natives were screaming, pushing, tumbling over one
-another, doing everything except putting out the fire. A dozen of them
-carried buckets. Twenty yards away was a stream. But they stood or
-rushed about helplessly waiting for someone to tell them what to do.
-
-James snatched a bucket and ran for the creek. I caught up the kettle
-and dumped the half-boiled rice on the flame. The Australian’s first
-bucketful lowered the blaze somewhat, and after that it took us only a
-moment to put it out entirely. When the last spark had disappeared a
-native arrived with water from the stream. Behind him stretched a long
-line of servants with overflowing buckets. They fought with each other
-in their eagerness to flood the blackened corner of the veranda. Those
-who could not reach it dashed their water on the surrounding crowd and
-the real firemen; then ran for more. We were obliged to pull the buckets
-out of their hands to save ourselves from drowning.
-
-[Illustration: An elephant, with a native dozing on his head, was
-advancing toward us.]
-
-As the last native was running across the clearing, I looked up to see
-the “king” gazing down upon us. He showed not a sign of excitement.
-
-“These wild men are a useless lot of animals,” he said. “I’m glad you
-turned out.” Then he waddled back into his palace.
-
-We returned to our bungalow and started the phonograph again. Fully an
-hour afterward the “king” walked in upon us. He carried what looked like
-a great sausage, wrapped in thick brown paper.
-
-“I’m always glad to help a white man,” he said breathlessly, “especially
-when he has done me a service.”
-
-I took the parcel in one hand, and nearly lost my balance as he let it
-go. It weighed several pounds. By the time I had recovered from my
-surprise he was gone. I sat down and unrolled the package. It contained
-fifty silver tecals.
-
-Four days later we were miles beyond the place, on our way toward the
-mouth of the Menam. As we lay resting in a tangled thicket, a crashing
-of underbrush brought us anxiously to our feet. We peered out through
-the maze of branches. An elephant was coming toward us. We jumped back
-in terror. A second glance showed us, however, that a native sat dozing
-on his head. Behind him came another and another of the great, heavy
-animals, fifteen in all, some with armed men on their backs. We stepped
-out of our hiding-place in time to meet the chief of the company, who
-rode between the seventh and eighth elephants on a stout-limbed pony. He
-was an Englishman, a manager for the Bombay-Burma Lumber Company, who
-had spent fifteen years in wandering through the teak forests of Siam.
-Never before, he declared, had he known white men to travel through
-these forests alone and without guns. He urged us to turn back and spend
-the night with him. When we declined, he warned us to keep a sharp
-lookout in the forest beyond, declaring that he had killed two tigers
-and a murderous savage within the past week.
-
-For miles we struggled on through the tangle of vines, bushes, and
-branches. Nowhere was there a sign that anyone had been there before us.
-The shadows lengthened eastward; twilight fell and thickened to
-darkness. To travel by night was utterly impossible. We tried to do so,
-but lost our way and sank to our knees in a slimy swamp. When we had
-dragged ourselves out, we found that we could not remember in which
-direction we had been traveling. With raging thirst and gnawing hunger,
-we threw ourselves down in the depths of the wilderness. The ground was
-soft and wet. In ten minutes we had sunk until we were half buried. I
-pulled my bundle loose and rolled over to another spot. It was softer
-and wetter than the one I had left.
-
-“Hark!” whispered James suddenly. “Is that a dog barking? Perhaps
-there’s a village near.”
-
-We held our breath and listened. A far-off howl sounded above the dull
-humming of the jungle. Perhaps some dog was baying at the faint face of
-the moon. Or possibly it was the roar of some beast roaming about in
-search of prey. “Tigers abound,” the Englishman had said. So must snakes
-in the undergrowth of this damp spot. A crackling of twigs close beside
-me sent an electric shock along my spine. I opened my mouth to call to
-James, but found I couldn’t speak. The noise had been made by the
-Australian himself moving past me. He spoke before I could.
-
-“Hello!” he whispered. “Say, I’ll get a fever if I sleep in this mud.
-Let’s try that big tree.”
-
-It was a giant of a tree. The lowest of its wide-spreading branches the
-Australian could reach from my shoulders. He pulled me up after him, and
-we climbed higher. I sat astride a great limb, tied my bundle above me,
-and, leaning against the trunk, sank into a doze.
-
-I was awakened suddenly by a blow in the ribs.
-
-“Quit it!” cried James angrily, thumping me again. “What are you tearing
-my clothes off for?”
-
-I opened my mouth to tell him I was not doing anything of the kind, when
-I was interrupted by a noisy chattering in the branches above as a band
-of monkeys scampered away at the sound of our voices. They soon
-returned. For half the night those jabbering, clawing little brutes kept
-us awake, and ended by driving us from the tree. We spent the hours of
-darkness left on the ground at its foot, caring nothing for either
-snakes or tigers.
-
-When daylight came we found the river again within a few hundred yards
-of our resting-place. A good hour afterward we stumbled, more asleep
-than awake, into a village on the northern bank. The place had a shop
-where food was sold. In it we made up for the supper we had gone without
-the night before.
-
-Almost before we had finished eating we were in the center of a village
-fight. It was all the fault of the natives. We offered them money to row
-us across the river, but they turned scornfully away. When we stepped
-into one of the boats, made of dugout logs, that were drawn up on the
-bank, they charged down upon us. For a moment I thought we would end our
-wanderings in that very village.
-
-In the thick of the fight a howling fellow, swinging a great knife,
-bounded suddenly into the boat. James caught him by an arm and a leg,
-and a glistening body flashed high in the air, gave one long-drawn
-shriek, and sank in the black water some distance behind us. When he
-came to the surface again he had lost his knife and we had pushed off
-from the shore.
-
-“Beastly savages!” growled the Australian, catching up a paddle. “Serve
-’em right if we kept their old hollow log and went down to Bangkok in
-her. What say we do?” he cried. “My feet are nothing but two blisters.”
-
-For answer I swung the boat half round, and we glided out and down the
-Menam. A boat-load of natives put out behind us; but, instead of
-following directly after us, they paddled across the river and down the
-opposite bank. We stretched out in the bottom of the dugout, and,
-drifting with the current, let them get ahead of us. Far down the stream
-they landed and ran off into a grove of trees above which rose a white
-building. I dozed a moment, and then sat up suddenly with a shout. They
-had come back and were pushing off in the boat again, while behind them
-came a second canoe bearing six khaki-clothed soldiers armed with
-muskets. The white building was a military post, and a part of the
-terrible Siamese army was after us.
-
-“Swing her ashore,” shouted James, grasping his paddle. “No naval
-battles for me.”
-
-Our dugout ran aground near the bank. Between the jungle and the water’s
-edge was a narrow open space. Throwing our bundles over our shoulders,
-we set off down the bank at an easy walk. The “wild men” pulled their
-boats up on the beach near the dugout, and dashed after us, shouting
-angrily. When they came near enough, the soldiers drew up in a line and
-leveled five guns at us. Their sergeant shouted the Siamese words for
-“Ready! Fire!” An icy chill ran up and down my spine, but we marched
-steadily on without a pause. They did not fire. When we had gone on a
-few yards, the troop ran after us and drew up once more in firing line.
-The sergeant bellowed in very loud tones; but the guns did not go off.
-
-Seven times this move was repeated. We were already a half mile from the
-landing-place. Suddenly a villager snatched a gun from a soldier, ran
-close up on our heels, and took a careful aim at us. He looked like a
-bold, bad man. My flesh crawled, in expectation of the sting of the
-bullet. I caught myself wondering what part of my body it would
-puncture. But the fellow merely aimed, and shrieked in anger; he dared
-not pull the trigger.
-
-Finding that we paid no attention when they attempted to frighten us,
-the sergeant tried a new plan. One by one, the bare-footed soldiers
-slipped up behind us and snatched at our packs and jackets. When we
-turned on them they fell back wild-eyed. They continued to pester us in
-this way until we lost all patience.
-
-“Tell me when you see the next one trying it,” said James.
-
-Out of a corner of an eve I watched a soldier steal up to my companion
-and reach for his small bundle.
-
-“Now!” I shouted.
-
-The Australian whirled and caught the trooper’s gun in both hands. The
-fellow let go of it with a scream, and the whole crowd—sergeant,
-soldiers, villagers, and bold, bad man—turned tail and fled.
-
-Miles beyond, we met two lone soldiers wandering northward, and, knowing
-that they would stop at the white building, we made them take the gun
-with them.
-
-We plodded on. Once more we spent the night in the jungle, and again the
-ground was wet and spongy and the trees alive with monkeys. On the
-following day, for all our sleepiness and blistered feet, we tramped a
-full thirty miles, and spent that night in a strongly scented bamboo
-hut.
-
-Forty-eight hours later we came upon an unfinished railroad that a
-German company was building in Siam. It was the only railroad in the
-country. We struck out along the top of it in the early afternoon, and
-with no thorny bushes or tangled vines to hinder, we got on faster than
-we had for weeks past. Long after dark we reached the house of the
-German superintendent of the line. He gave us permission to sleep in a
-neighboring hut in which were stored several tons of dynamite.
-
-An hour’s tramp next morning brought us to the work train. Hundreds of
-Chinese laborers, in mud-spattered trousers and leaf hats three feet
-wide, swarmed upon the flat cars as they were unloaded. We climbed on to
-one of these cars, and were jolted away with the Chinese coolies through
-the sun-scorched jungle.
-
-Ten miles south the train turned on to a side-track and stopped near a
-helter-skelter Chinese village. A heavy storm drove us into a shop where
-Chinese food was sold. We spent the whole morning talking about the
-nature of the yellow race while the store-keepers quarreled over their
-cards, and, when they tired of this, tossed back and forth about the
-room a dozen boxes of dynamite. At noon they set out on those same boxes
-a generous dinner of pork, duck, and rich wine, and invited us to join
-them. We did so, for we were very hungry; but we feared that we would
-have to part with most of our money when the time came to pay the bill.
-Throughout the meal the Chinamen were most polite, helping us to
-everything good to eat. When it was over they rolled cigarettes in
-wooden wrappers for us. They themselves smoked these all the time, even
-while eating.
-
-“Suppose they’ll want all our cash, now,” groaned James, as I drew out
-my purse to pay them. But, to our great surprise, they refused to take a
-copper.
-
-“Now, what do you suppose their game is?” gasped the Australian.
-“Something tricky or I’m a dingo. Never saw a pig-tail look a coin in
-the face yet without grabbing for it.”
-
-The head shop-keeper, an old fellow with a straggly gray queue and
-shifting eyes, swung suddenly round upon us.
-
-“Belly fine duck,” he grinned.
-
-Our faces froze with astonishment.
-
-“Dinner all light?” he went on. “Belly good man, me. No takee dollies
-for chow. Many Chinyman takee plenty. You find allee same me. No blamed
-fear. One time me live ’Flisco by white man, allee same you, six year.
-Givee plenty dollies for joss-stick. Me no takee dollies for chow.”
-
-The rest of the company had grouped themselves about us, laughing
-gleefully at the surprise which the old man had sprung on us. Of the
-eight Chinamen in the hut, six spoke English and had understood every
-word we had said.
-
-We spent the afternoon there while those jungle merchants taught us the
-Chinese names of things we would be likely to need. At dusk they
-prepared a second feast, after which two of them shouldered our packs
-and led the way through the wilderness to a place on the railroad where
-the engine of the work-train would stop on its way south.
-
-Freed of its burden of flat cars, the engine raced like a thing of life
-through the cool, silent night, turning around the curves so swiftly
-that it almost tipped sidewise. We sat high up, chatting with the
-Eurasian driver, who allowed the engine to rush madly on until the
-station lights of a large village flashed up out of the darkness.
-
-At noon the next day we boarded a passenger train and rumbled across
-flooded rice-fields, stopping often at excited bamboo villages. Then
-towering pagodas rose slowly above the southern sky-line, the jungle
-died away, and at five o’clock the daily train of Siam pulled in at the
-Bangkok station. By that time we did not look like white men. Until we
-had shaved and washed in a barber’s shop we did not dare introduce
-ourselves as such to any innkeeper of the Siamese capital.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
- ON THE WAY TO HONG-KONG
-
-
-Spread out in the low, flat valley of the Menam, Bangkok was a dull city
-of rambling rows of cottages. Her poorly paved streets were crossed by
-many canals, on which low-roofed boats and floating houses set on bamboo
-rafts were rising and falling with the tide.
-
-The people of the city were dull and careless. They had the black teeth,
-the bristling pompadour, and they wore no more clothing than their
-brothers of the trackless bush. There were many Chinamen and some
-Europeans.
-
-We found that deck passage to Hong-Kong cost next to nothing, and four
-days after our arrival we went to buy tickets at the steamship offices.
-The next afternoon a “wild woman” paddled us lazily across the Menam in
-a raging downpour, and set us aboard a small steamer that was officered
-by five Germans and manned by a hundred Chinese seamen, stokers, and
-stewards. When the Germans and Chinese talked together they spoke
-English.
-
-Three hours after we boarded the vessel she cast off her shore lines and
-slipped down over the sand-bar at the mouth of the river. Never before
-had she carried white men as deck passengers. The Chinese thought the
-deck belonged to men of their race, and that we had no business there.
-They glared at us with scowls and snarls when we came on board, and
-tried their best to get in our way and to bump against us while about
-their work. We laughed at their unfriendly acts, and, choosing a place
-back of the wheel-house, took our coats off and settled down for a long
-and tiresome voyage.
-
-[Illustration: Bangkok is a city of many canals.]
-
-On the afternoon of our second day aboard, about thirty Chinese stewards
-marched to our end of the vessel with their bowls of rice, and squatted
-in a half circle about us. We paid no attention to them. One of them sat
-down on the bundle containing my camera. When I motioned for him to get
-off, the fellow leered at me and refused to move. I pushed him off, and
-picked up my bundle. In his fall he dropped and broke his rice-bowl. The
-entire crowd sprang to their feet.
-
-“Kang kweitze!” (“Kill the foreigners!”) screamed the chief of the
-stewards suddenly. With a roar the Chinamen surged forward. A heavy
-piece of timber struck me a stunning blow on the back of the head, and I
-landed face down among some chains near the railing.
-
-When I came to enough to realize what had happened to me, a dozen
-Chinamen were beating me with bamboo clubs. I struggled to my feet.
-James was laying about him right merrily. Inch by inch we fought our way
-around the deck, and had almost freed ourselves, when James stumbled and
-fell headlong. A score of Chinamen rushed at him; every man of them
-struck him blow after blow with some weapon. A Chinaman struck at me
-with a long thin knife. I threw up my right hand, grasping the blade. It
-cut my palm and slashed my wrist; but the fellow let go of the weapon. I
-snatched hold of it with my other hand and with its help fought our way
-forward, where four of the German officers stood huddled together like
-frightened sheep.
-
-We washed our wounds in salt water and bound them up as best we could.
-The captain armed himself with two revolvers and marched down the deck
-to restore order among his seamen. He pretended that it had not been
-much of a fight, and tried to laugh it off; but he turned over to us an
-unfurnished cabin and left us to spend a feverish and painful night on
-the wooden slats of the narrow bunks. In the morning there was not a
-spot the size of a man’s hand on either of our bodies that was not black
-and blue.
-
-Eight weary days the creaking old tramp of a ship wheezed past the many
-bays that cut into the southern coast of French Indo-China. Early one
-gray morning, one year after my departure from Detroit, two small
-islands rose from the sea on our left. Several queer-looking Chinese
-boats, manned by evil-faced, unshaven yellow men, bobbed up out of the
-dawn, and, hooking the rail of our vessel with grappling-irons, floated
-along beside us, while their crews shouted to the passengers, offering
-to help them with their baggage. Greener islands appeared, and when we
-slipped into the horseshoe-shaped harbor of Hong-Kong it was still half
-shaded by the forest that incloses it.
-
-A Chinese house-boat containing a large family set us ashore. We made
-our way to the Sailors’ Home. My hand had healed, but James was still so
-badly injured that we tried to secure entrance for him at the city
-hospital. For several days he was turned away; but at last, when he had
-become much worse, he was admitted, and I turned my attention to
-outgoing ships, eager to be off, though sorry to leave behind the best
-companion with whom I had ever shared the joys and miseries of the open
-road.
-
-The next morning I boarded an English freight steamer about to sail for
-Shanghai, and asked for work to pay for my passage.
-
-“Sure, lad,” cried the good-natured British mate. “Come on board
-to-night and go to work. The old man will be glad to give you a few bob
-for the run.”
-
-At midnight we sailed. Four days later we were steaming slowly up the
-dark river between flat banks and warehouses. Our ship stopped close by
-the Sailors’ Home.
-
-I saw many Americans and Europeans in Shanghai. In fact, the city is
-filled with blocks of great buildings where business is carried on
-solely by European merchants. Outside the European section lies many a
-square mile of two-story shanties that crowd one another in an effort to
-stand upright. The maze of narrow foot-paths winding among these
-buildings are aglow with the brilliant signboards of gay Chinese shops,
-and swarm with sour-faced yellow men who scowl fiercely at the white
-foot traveler, or mock his movements and make faces at him. Cackling
-peddlers zigzag through the crowd; wealthy Chinamen in gay robes and
-carefully oiled queues pick their way along the narrow meandering lanes.
-Great, muscular runners, carrying on one shoulder a Chinese lady who
-cannot walk, jog in and out among the shoppers.
-
-After spending three days in Shanghai I awoke one morning to find it
-raining dismally. To spend a day indoors was too much for me, and I
-began to think of continuing my journey. So I packed my belongings
-hurriedly, and an hour later was slipping down the plank on board a
-Japanese steamer. Among several hundred third-class passengers I was the
-only European; but I was treated kindly by my fellow-travelers. Our
-sleeping quarters consisted of two shelves sloping toward the wall and
-running along half the length of the ship. In my ignorance, I neglected
-to apply for a place on this shelf until every foot of it had been
-claimed. But I lost nothing thereby; for no sooner was it noised about
-among the Japanese that an American was aboard without a place to sleep
-than a dozen crowded round to offer me their places. I joined a party of
-four students returning from Pekin, and, by packing ourselves together
-like spoons, we found room without robbing any other of his rest.
-
-On the second morning out, the rolling green hills of Japan rose slowly
-above the sun-flecked sea. My companions cried out joyfully when they
-caught sight of their native land, and tried to make me believe that it
-was the most beautiful spot on the globe. We soon steamed into the
-harbor of Nagasaki. From the water’s edge rose a brown-roofed town that
-covered low green mountains like a wrinkled brown carpet, and faded away
-into the blue wreaths of hillside forests.
-
-The port was busy and noisy. House-boats, in which stood Japanese
-policemen in snow-white uniforms, scurried toward us. Close to our
-vessel two dull gray battle-ships scowled out across the harbor.
-Doctors, custom officers, and armed policemen crowded on board. By
-blazing noonday I had stepped ashore.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
- WANDERING IN JAPAN
-
-
-“Set me down at the Sailors’ Home,” I ordered, stepping into the first
-’rickshaw to reach me.
-
-“No good,” answered the runner, dropping the shafts. “Sailor Home be
-close.”
-
-[Illustration: My ’rickshaw man whose picture I took from my seat in the
-’rickshaw while seeing the sights of Tokio.]
-
-However, I found a hotel beside a canal down near the harbor. The
-proprietor, awakened from a doze, gurgled a welcome. He was an American
-who had lived for some years in Nagasaki. The real manager of the hotel
-was his Japanese wife, a lively woman who seemed to have a better head
-for business than her husband. They had two interesting children, a boy
-and a girl of twelve and ten. No American children could have been more
-quick to see and act, or more whole-heartedly busy at their work and
-play; no Japanese more polite of behavior. Already the father asked his
-son’s advice in business matters of importance; and the mother depended
-upon her daughter to look after the flower garden and the wardrobe.
-
-[Illustration: Numadzu: A view of the fishermen along the river. Rows of
-huge fish can be seen on the bank.]
-
-I was given an airy chamber where I could have slept late next morning
-had I not been awakened at daybreak by what seemed to be several shots
-from a revolver. I sprang to the window, wondering what had happened. In
-the yard below squatted the American-Japanese children, with a stick of
-“punk” and a great bundle of fire-crackers. I had forgotten the date. It
-was the Fourth of July, and Nagasaki was celebrating. All through the
-day shots and explosions were heard about the city; nor was the racket
-made entirely by Americans.
-
-On other days the boy and girl of the hotel dressed exactly like their
-playmates, and no sooner turned their backs on their father than they
-began at once to speak the Japanese language. But on this American day
-the boy wore a knickerbocker suit and leather shoes; his sister had laid
-aside her kimono and wooden sandals to wear a short skirt and long
-stockings. Instead of the fancy coil on top of her head, her jet-black
-hair hung in two braids over her shoulders; and all that day they spoke
-nothing but the English language.
-
-Two days later I hunted up the railway station and took third-class
-passage for Hiroshima. The train wound through a rolling country, here
-circling the base of a thickly wooded hill, there clinging close to the
-shore of a sparkling bay. Farm crops grew in every valley and on every
-hillside. Peasants toiled in the fields; their neat cottages dotted the
-landscape as far as the eye could see. We passed through village after
-village. The stations were well built and bore the name of the town in
-both Japanese and English.
-
-The trains were like those of America, but every car was a smoker; for
-tobacco is used by almost every man and woman in Japan. There were
-ladies seated in the car, smoking pipes that looked like long
-lead-pencils with bowls that held much less than the smallest thimble.
-There were no dining-cars. At nearly every station boxes containing
-rice, several boiled and pickled vegetables, one baked fish, and a pair
-of chop-sticks only half split in two, were sold. The contents were
-always the same; the price surprisingly low.
-
-I reached Hiroshima at twilight, and left the train in company with two
-English-speaking Japanese youths who had taken upon themselves the task
-of finding me a lodging. The keeper of a hotel not far from the station
-said that he had never housed a white man, but that he would for a
-change. I bade my new acquaintances farewell.
-
-[Illustration: Some street urchins near Tokio.]
-
-The hotel office was paved with small stones from which a broad stairway
-led upward. The keeper shouted a word of command. A smiling woman, short
-and fat, with a wide sash wound round and round her waist, appeared on
-the landing above and beckoned me to climb up. I caught up my bundle;
-but before I had mounted two steps the proprietor sprang forward with a
-scream, and, clutching at my coat-tails, dragged me back. Half a dozen
-servant-girls tumbled wild-eyed into the office and joined the landlord
-in scolding me. I had dared to start up the stairway without removing my
-shoes!
-
-I pulled them off. The keeper, grinning at their weight, added them to a
-line of wooden sandals placed along the wall; and the stout woman led me
-to a small room with a balcony opening on the street. Everything about
-the place made me feel as if I were a giant among pigmies: the low
-ceiling, covered with gayly painted dragons; the walls, mere sliding
-screens of paper stamped with flowers and strange figures; the highly
-polished floor of such light boards that they bent under my feet with
-every step. With a flying start I could have run straight through the
-house and left it a wreck behind me.
-
-[Illustration: Osaka: One of her many canals.]
-
-The room was entirely unfurnished. My hostess placed a cushion for me in
-the center of the floor, and clapped her hands. A servant-girl slipped
-in, carrying a tray on which was a tiny box of live coals, several
-cigarettes, a joint of bamboo standing upright, and a pot of tea with a
-cup and saucer. Having placed her burden at my feet and touched her
-forehead to the floor, the maid handed me a cigarette, poured out tea,
-and remained kneeling a full half hour, filling the tiny cup as often as
-I emptied it.
-
-When she was gone I picked up the joint of bamboo, fancying it contained
-sweetmeats. It was empty, however, and I was left to wonder until the
-hostess returned. When she understood my motions, she began to explain
-by talking rapidly; but I shook my head. Then, with a wry face, she
-caught up the hollow joint and spat into it. The thing was merely a
-Japanese spittoon.
-
-A maid soon served supper. She brought first of all a table some eight
-inches high; then a great wooden bucket brimming full of hard-packed
-rice; and, lastly, several little paper bowls. One held an oily liquid
-in which floated the yolk of an egg; another a small boiled turnip; a
-third a sample of some native salad; at the bottom of a fourth lay, in
-dreary loneliness, a pitiful little minnow. Of rice there was enough for
-a squad of soldiers, but without it the meal could not have satisfied a
-hungry canary.
-
-As I ate, the girl poured out tea in a cup that held a single swallow.
-Fortunately, I had already learned how to use chop-sticks, or I should
-have been forced to eat with my fingers. As it was, it took a great deal
-of skill to possess myself of the swimming yolk; and he who fancies it
-is easy to balance a satisfying mouthful of rice on the ends of two
-slivers has only to try it to discover his mistake.
-
-I fancied I might have to sleep on the polished floor; but the
-hotel-keeper’s wife glided in once more, and asked, by resting her head
-in the palm of her hand, if I was ready to go to bed. I nodded, and at
-her signal a servant appeared with a quilt of great thickness, which she
-spread in the center of the floor. This seemed of itself a soft enough
-resting-place; but not until six pudding-like covers had been piled one
-on top of the other was the landlady content. Over this couch, that had
-taken on the form of a huge layer-cake, the two of them spread a
-coverlet,—there were no sheets,—and backed out of the room. They
-returned shortly after dragging behind them a great net. While the
-matron fastened the four corners of the top to hooks in the ceiling, the
-maid tucked the edges under the stack of quilts, so that the net formed
-a sort of tent over my bed. I crawled under it, and was soon asleep.
-
-[Illustration: Horses are rare in Japan. Men and baggage are drawn by
-coolies.]
-
-How surprised I was when I awoke in the morning! It was broad daylight.
-The sun was streaming in across the balcony, and the constant scraping
-of wooden clogs sounded from the street below. But the room in which I
-had gone to bed had entirely disappeared! I sat up with bulging eyes.
-Under me was the stack of quilts, but all else was changed. The net was
-gone, and I sat alone and deserted in the center of a large hall, the
-front of which for its entire length opened on to the public street. The
-change was no magician’s trick, though it was several moments before I
-was sufficiently wide awake to understand what had happened. The
-servant-girls had merely pushed together the screens that made the
-walls.
-
-[Illustration: Japanese children playing in the streets of Kioto.]
-
-Later I managed to find the highway that led out of Hiroshima. It led
-the way between bright green hedgerows, through village after village,
-past many farm-houses and rice-fields. The air was fresh and cheering,
-and I was often within sight of the bright blue arm of old ocean that
-wound in and out along the coast. Now and then an ocean liner, awakening
-memories of far-off lands, glided by. In shallow bays unclad fishermen,
-too brown to sunburn, disentangled their nets and heaped high their
-catches in wicker baskets.
-
-It needed a very few hours on the road to teach me that the country
-people of Japan are very curious—even more so than the Arab. I had only
-to pass through a village to cause all business to stop. Workmen dropped
-their tools, children forgot their games, girls left their pitchers at
-the fountain, even gossips ceased their chatter—all to stare wide-eyed
-if I passed on, to crowd around me if I paused.
-
-[Illustration: Women do most of the work in the rice-fields of Japan.]
-
-Wherever I stopped for a drink of water, the town rose in a mass to
-watch my strange action. When I set the cup down they passed it
-wonderingly from hand to hand. To stop for a lunch was almost dangerous,
-for the crowd that collected at the door of the shop threatened to do me
-to death under their trampling clogs. In the smaller villages the whole
-population, men, women, and children, followed me out along the highway,
-leaving the place as utterly deserted as if the dogs of war had been
-loosed upon it. Once I passed a school at the recess hour. Its two
-hundred children trailed behind me for a long mile, paying no attention
-to the jangling bell and the shouts of their excited masters.
-
-Partly by foot and partly by rail, I finally reached Kyoto, where I
-spent a day. At the station next morning four yen were more than enough
-for a ticket to Tokyo, with stopovers anywhere I chose. At Maibara a
-squad of Russian prisoners, clothed in arctic cloaks and fur caps,
-huddled in a sweltering group on the station platform. As long as the
-train stood there not a sound of mockery rose from the crowd, and the
-towns-people came in a continual procession to offer the silent fellows
-baskets of fruit, packets of tobacco, and all manner of delicacies.
-
-From Nagoya the railway turned southward, following the coast, so that
-again I caught frequent glimpses of the ocean as we sped along, passing
-through a country filled with rice-fields, where peasant women wallowed
-in the water, clawing with bare hands the mud about the roots of the
-rice plants. On slopes too steep to be flooded, long rows of tea bushes
-stretched from the railway to the wooded tops of the hills.
-
-I reached Yokohama at night, and stopped at the Sailors’ Home, certain
-that in this city I could soon get work on some vessel going to my
-native land. I squandered the seven yen I had left, and on a morning
-late in July wandered down to the port to ask for work on some ship.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII
- HOMEWARD BOUND
-
-
-It was Saturday, nearly two weeks after my arrival in Yokohama, that I
-saw a chance to escape from Japan. The American consul had promised to
-speak for me to the captain of a fast mail steamer to sail a few days
-later.
-
-Early the following Monday, the last day of July, I turned in at the
-American consul’s office just as two men stepped out. One was the
-vice-consul; the other, a large man of some fifty years, wearing
-thick-rimmed spectacles and a broad-brimmed felt hat. His black hair was
-unusually long. I supposed he was a missionary, and stepped aside to let
-him pass. The vice-consul, however, catching sight of me as he shook the
-stranger’s hand, beckoned to me.
-
-“By the way,” he said, speaking to the stranger; “here is an American
-sailor who wants to work his passage to the States. Can’t you take him
-on, captain?”
-
-Captain, indeed! Of what? The fast mail steamer, perhaps. I stepped
-forward eagerly.
-
-“Umph!” said the stranger, looking me over. “On the beach, eh? Why, yes;
-he can come on board and I’ll set him at work.”
-
-“Good!” cried the vice-consul. “There you are! Now don’t loaf and make
-us ashamed to ask a favor of the captain next time.”
-
-“Go get something to eat,” said the captain, “and wait for me on the
-pier.”
-
-I raced away to the Home to invite one of the “boys” I had met there to
-a farewell luncheon, then returned to the place of meeting. The day was
-stormy, and a dozen downpours drenched me as many times during the seven
-hours that I waited. Toward nightfall the captain drove up in a
-’rickshaw, and we stepped into his launch.
-
-Ten minutes later I should have given much to have been able to spring
-back on the wharf. The launch raced at full speed out across the harbor,
-past the last steamer riding at anchor, and turned toward the open sea.
-Where in the name of Father Neptune was she bound? I wiped the water
-from my eyes and gazed in astonishment at the fast disappearing shore.
-The last ship was already behind. The higher waves of the outer bay
-caught our tiny boat as she slipped through the mouth of the
-break-water, and sent me waltzing about the slippery deck. Was the
-long-haired captain a lunatic who had chosen a launch for a sea voyage?
-Then all at once I understood, and gasped with dismay. Far off through
-the driving rain appeared the towering masts of the sailing-vessels, and
-that one toward which we were headed had her sails bent, ready for
-starting. That vice-consul had sentenced me to work my way home on a
-sailing-vessel!
-
-Dusk was settling over the harbor when the launch bumped against the
-ship’s side. Several seamen, sprawling about the deck, sprang to their
-feet as I poked my head over the bulwarks.
-
-“Hooray!” bawled a loud voice. “A new shipmate, lads. Turn out an’ see.”
-
-Sailors dressed and half dressed stumbled out on the deck; and in the
-twinkling of an eye I was surrounded by all hands and the cook.
-
-The cook gave me leave to dry my uniform in the galley, and I went to
-the forecastle to tell my story to the excited crew.
-
-[Illustration: When I arrived in Yokohama I found the city decorated in
-honor of Secretary Taft’s party, which, with Miss Roosevelt, arrived
-July 25, 1905. The arch through which they drove to the station is made
-of evergreens.]
-
-“It’s a ragged deal t’ ’ave t’ work your passage ’ome on a wind-jammer,”
-cried one of the seamen, when I had finished. “Howsomever, ’ere you are,
-an’ it’s no use kickin’ after you’re ’ung.
-
-“This tub?” he went on, in answer to my question about the ship. “She’s
-the _Glenalvon_, English built, as you can see wi’ your eyes shut, solid
-enough, being all iron but ’er decks; but that’s all can be said for
-’er. This crowd shipped on ’er from England two years ago with loaded
-saltpeter for Yokohama, and she’s bound now for the States all right—to
-load wheat for ’ome, like ’nough. Maybe it’ll take a month to get
-there.”
-
-By the time my clothes were dry the second mate came forward to tell me
-what my work was to be, and I turned in with my new mess-mates. It
-barely seemed possible that I had fallen asleep, when there came a
-banging on the iron door of the sailors’ room and a noisy shout of:
-
-“All hands! Up anchor, ho!”
-
-With only five minutes to jump into our clothes, we tumbled out
-hurriedly. Twenty-two men and boys, their heads still heavy with sleep,
-grasped the bars of the capstan—the wheel that pulled up the anchor. For
-four hours we marched round and round the creaking thing. One man at a
-proper machine could have raised the anchor in ten minutes; but the
-_Glenalvon_ had not so much as a donkey-engine.
-
-Dawn found us still treading around in a circle in time to a mournful
-song sung by long-winded members of the crew. The sun rose, and the
-sweat ran in streams along the bars. Hunger gnawed us inwardly. The
-captain went ashore for his morning outing, a steamer slipped by us, and
-I caught myself gazing sorrowfully away across the bay at the city we
-were about to leave behind.
-
-Then all at once the second mate, peering over the side, raised a hand.
-
-“Shake ’em out!” he bellowed. “All hands! Man the wheel!”
-
-The crew sprang into the rigging and climbed the masts. We loosened a
-dozen sails, and, leaving a man on each mast to fasten the ropes, slid
-down on deck again. Then came a harder task, to raise the upper
-topsail-yards—timbers that kept the sails stretched out to their full
-width. Every man on board pulled on the rope; even then we were not
-enough. The heavy iron yard rose, but only inch by inch; and every pull
-seemed to yank our arms half out of their sockets.
-
-It was finally fastened in place, however. Then, breaking up into
-smaller groups, the crew raised more timbers, and, when we turned in for
-breakfast an hour late, weak and ugly from hunger, the _Glenalvon_ was
-ready to sail.
-
-“At least,” I told myself, rubbing my aching arms between mouthfuls of
-watery soup, “we’re off, and the worst is over.”
-
-Which only proved how little I knew of the queer ways of “wind-jammers.”
-
-Refusing to hire a tug, our captain was determined to beat his way out
-of Tokyo harbor by tacking back and forth against the wind that blew
-steadily in at the mouth of the bay. A bellow called us on deck before
-breakfast was half over, to go about ship again. A few more mouthfuls,
-and we were at it again. But it was of no use. The wind blew stronger
-and held us back; the bay was narrow. On the third time across the
-captain moved too near the shore, lost his head, and roared out an
-order:
-
-“Let go the anchor!”
-
-The anchor dropped with a mighty roar and rattle of chain; sails came
-down with a run; ropes screamed through the blocks; the topsails fell
-with a crash; sails swelled out and snapped in the breeze with the boom
-of cannon; blocks fell about our heads; ropes and chains of every size
-threshed about the decks, snatching us off our feet and slashing us in
-the face; men and goats sprawled about the deck. It seemed as if an
-earthquake had struck us, and in three minutes the work of five toilsome
-hours had been utterly undone.
-
-When the uproar ceased we began the work of restoring things to order
-again—furled the sails, raised yards, coiled up the thousand and one
-ropes that carpeted the deck, attended to many other tasks. To most
-people this would have seemed work enough for one day. But after less
-than a half hour for dinner we were called out once more and sent over
-the side with our paint-pots.
-
-Exactly the same thing happened to us the next day, and the next. Day
-after day the wind blew steadily in at the mouth of the harbor, holding
-us there.
-
-A week went by. A ship that had long ridden at anchor near the
-_Glenalvon_ was towed out to sea and sailed away. The fast mail steamer
-glided by so close that one of the “boys” whom I had known at the
-Sailors’ Home waved to me from her deck. A dozen ships went in and out,
-and still the white cone of Fujiyama gazed down upon us. The harbor of
-Yokohama came to be a sight hateful to all on board. The crew was worn
-out in body and spirit, and I began to give up hope of ever again
-setting foot on land.
-
-But our skipper was forced to hire a tug at last. On the morning of
-August eleventh we turned out to raise the anchor for the tenth time.
-The skipper had been rowed ashore the afternoon before, and a tug was
-waiting to take us out of the harbor. Late in the day she dropped us
-outside the narrows, and when night fell the _Glenalvon_ was tossing on
-the open sea.
-
-We had no time to feel dull on the trip across. First of all, the breeze
-that had held us bottled up in the harbor for twelve days increased to a
-heavy gale. For more than a week it blew steadily from the same
-direction. Rain poured constantly. Lashed by the storm, the sea rose
-mountain high, and the ship reared like a cow-boy’s broncho, or lay on
-her side like a mortally wounded creature.
-
-[Illustration: A Yokohama street decorated for the Taft party.]
-
-There was no standing on the deck. The best pair of sea legs failed to
-do it. We moved like mountain goats on a mountain-peak, springing from
-post to railing and from railing to stairway, or dragging ourselves hand
-over hand along the ropes. After a time the wind changed in direction so
-often that every square of canvas had to be furled, rolled up, and
-shaken out again a dozen times a day. The bellow ordering us about was
-forever ringing in our ears. We lived in the rigging, like apes in
-tree-tops.
-
-The wind, the pouring rain, and the sudden gales continued for weeks.
-The weather turned bitter cold. Unable to hold her course, the
-_Glenalvon_ ran “by the wind” far to the north. One night in the second
-week out, a goat froze to death. With only my khaki uniform, I should
-have suffered the same fate had it not been for the kindness of a
-shipmate who allowed me to use a “dead man’s gear” which he was afraid
-to wear.
-
-To tell of all the hardships and misfortunes that befell us during that
-voyage would make this story too long. We slept in wooden bins on sacks
-filled with bits of straw and lashed ourselves fast to keep from being
-thrown out on the deck. The kind of beds we had mattered little, though,
-for we were not in them much of the time. The food fell so low that we
-had to get along on half rations; which was well, perhaps, for what was
-left had been on board more than two years. The biscuits in one cask
-opened toward the end of the voyage, were stamped with the date of 1878.
-
-Looking forward to an easy passage, the captain had rigged out the ship
-in her oldest suit of sails. One by one, the fury of the wind tore them
-to ribbons. The bursting of canvas sounded above the roar of every
-storm. As each sail went, new ones of double-weight canvas were dragged
-from the locker and raised on high to the top of the mast. It was
-dangerous work to hang on away up there while bending a sail on the icy
-poles, with the wind howling about you, the foot-rope slippery, and
-every line frozen stiff, while the ship swung back and forth far below
-like a cork on the end of a stick. Every old sail was carried away
-before that unchanging wind, and even the new canvas was sometimes
-split.
-
-On the eighth of September we found that, after all our work, we had
-covered just sixty miles! But on that day the wind changed, and our
-vessel caught the breeze on her beam and raced homeward like a steamer.
-
-On the nineteenth day of September some one said that we were nearing
-port. Several of the seamen declared that the voyage was not half over;
-but, for all that, everybody began to get excited. In the middle of the
-afternoon the mate gave an order to get the anchor over the side. He did
-not have to repeat the command. The men rushed to the work, laughing
-childishly. In a short time the anchor swung in place, and we waited
-impatiently for signs of land.
-
-But the best pair of eyes could not have made out a mountain a ship’s
-length away in the fog that enveloped us. For two days we beat up and
-down the coast, not knowing just where we were, while the crew nibbled
-stale biscuits in helpless rage.
-
-On the twenty-first the gale died down to a quieter breeze, and in the
-early afternoon the fog thinned and lifted, and a mighty cheer from the
-watch brought every man tumbling from his bunk. A few miles off before
-us a rocky highland rose slowly, throwing off the gray mist like a giant
-freeing himself of a flowing garment. A tug hovering near the shore
-spied the flapping canvas of the _Glenalvon_, and darted out to meet us.
-We were near the entrance to Puget Sound.
-
-All night long the tug strained at the ropes of our vessel. In the
-afternoon we dropped anchor in a quiet bay close off a wooded shore
-decorated by several wigwams.
-
-The next morning I began work with the crew as usual, and toiled from
-daylight to dark. No hint that I was to be freed from duty having
-reached me by the next afternoon, I marched forward and asked for my
-discharge.
-
-“What’s your hurry?” demanded the captain. “I’ll sign you on at full
-wages and you can make the trip home in her.”
-
-“Thank you kindly, sir,” I answered, “but I’m home now, once I get
-ashore.”
-
-“Aye!” snorted the captain. “And in three days you’ll be on the beach
-and howling to sign on again. Turn to with the crew until she’s tied up
-in Tacoma, and I’ll give you your discharge.”
-
-I told him plainly that I could not wait. I wanted to go ashore at once.
-
-“Huh! That’s it!” growled the master. “Every man jack of you with the
-price of a drink coming to him is ready to desert if a shift of work
-turns up. Well, to-morrow is Sunday. I’ll get some money when I go
-ashore, and pay you off on Monday morning. But I’ll have to set you down
-on the records as a deserter.”
-
-“Very good, sir,” I answered.
-
-Fifty-seven days after boarding the _Glenalvon_ I bade farewell to her
-crew. Dressed in a khaki uniform and an ancient pair of sea-boots that
-had cost me four messes of plum-duff, I landed with the captain at a
-rocky point on the farther side of the bay. He marched before me until
-we reached the door of a lonely tavern, then turned and dropped into my
-hand seven and a half dollars.
-
-“You must be back on board by to-morrow night,” he said.
-
-“Eh!” I gasped.
-
-“Oh, I have to tell you that,” snapped the skipper, “or I can’t set you
-down as a deserter,” and, pushing aside the swinging doors before him,
-he disappeared.
-
-I plodded on toward the city of Victoria. The joy of being on land once
-more—above all, of being my own master—was so keen that it was with
-difficulty that I kept myself from cutting a caper in the public street.
-
-I was really in a foreign land still; yet how everything about made me
-think of the fatherland from which I had been so long absent. The wooden
-sidewalk drumming under my boots; the cozy houses, roofed with shingles
-instead of tiles, and each standing far back from the street on its own
-green lawn; the tinkle of cow-bells in neighboring pastures—a hundred
-little unimportances, that I had hardly noticed when I lived among them,
-stood forth to call up memories of the years gone by. In Victoria each
-passer-by seemed like a long-lost friend, so familiar did each look in
-face, clothing, and actions. All that day, as often as I heard a voice
-behind me, I whirled about and stared at the speaker, utterly astonished
-that he should be speaking English.
-
-I caught the night boat for Seattle, and landed at midnight in my native
-land, after an absence of four hundred and sixty-six days.
-
-For two days following I did little but sleep. Then I boarded a train
-one evening to continue eastward, landing in Spokane the second night
-thereafter. My wages as a seaman being nearly spent, I stopped a week in
-Spokane, where I helped build cement sidewalks. At the end of that time
-I shipped as a railway laborer to Paola, Montana.
-
-The train halted at midnight at the station named ——, a lonely shanty in
-a wild mountain gorge.
-
-The next morning I went on to Havre. While stepping from one of its
-restaurants, a ranchman accosted me. He put me in charge of seven
-carloads of cattle, and when night fell I was speeding eastward again.
-
-Six days later I turned the animals over to the tender mercies of a
-packing-house in Chicago, and on the morning of October fourteenth
-walked into the home of my parents.
-
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-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
-
-
- 1. Changed “Sidra” to “Sidon” on p. 92.
- 2. Silently corrected typographical errors.
- 3. Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
- 4. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Working my Way Around the World, by
-Lena M. Franck and Harry Alverson Franck
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