The Green Child
The Green Child
The Green Child
or LU
< OU_158157>m
CD
Gift of
YALE UNIVERSITY
ROCKEFELLER FOUNDATION
1949
Jveroert IKeaa
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New
NEW YORK
OFFICE
INTRODUCTION
r
rHERE
has been a great proliferation of fiction in our day. There has been an even greater decline in quality. Since
Ulysses, if you accept Ulysses as a great novel, there have been very few really great novels in English. Lady Chatterly, The Rainbow and Women in Love; Ford Madox Ford's Tietjens series, really one novel; some of Sherwood Anderson; the unfinished promise of William Carlos Williams' First Act; a few others. The Green Child is fully the equal of any of these, although it is of a rather more special kind. Graham Greene speaks of it as surcharged with a sense of glory gloire that lustre and effulgence which Aquinas marks out as the special sign manifest of great works of art. Certainly The Green Child has it an unearthly, hypnotic radiance. Partly this is clue to style as well as to the temper and depth of the mind and sensi-
(Or is this a definition of style?) Anyway, it is hard to beyour eyes as you read. The sheer perfection of the writing is very rare in English since the loosening of standards in Nineteenth Century fiction. Landor wrote this way, and Bagehot, and Mill, and Clerk Maxwell, and various explorers and scientists, but the novelists mostly have forgotten how. Read has, in addition, something that Pilgrim's Progress has, or Walton's Compleat Angler, or Gilbert White's Natural History of Selbourne, or, on a different plane, Robinson Crusoe. These books are in
bility.
lieve
some sense allegories, archetypes. They have, scaled down, what you find in Homer, Le Morte D' Arthur, Rabelais mythopoeia. And they have something else, something that maybe is essential to myth, and which you have to have if you are going to capture the mythic quality of the past, and which, for all their chatter about Le Mythe et Le Verbe, the muggy surrealists never had clarite. I have never gone with Walton along flowery banks by calm rivers after the gallant trout without feeling as though
I
inet, into a visionary world where the grass and flowers were like gems and the water like lambent aether, where the air
In The Green Child reality is again entranced and translucent with the light of a natural glory behind it. What is more remarkable, one gradually comes to realize that it is about this state of being as such that Read is writing. It is impossible
5
nitrogen.
INTRODUCTION
to believe that he sat down and did it deliberately. One cannot be deliberately glorious. But certainly the book is one of the most sustained products of conscious rapture in our literature. It is really "gripping." You slip deeper and deeper into the soft clench of Read's rapture. This vise-like grip of vision, so soft and unobtrusive, but so inescapable, is so powerful be-
cause it is, finally, the vision of reality. There are no raptures in hallucination, only the tawdry residues of somebody else's
frustrations and crippled libido. All of the books I have mentioned have a conspicuous feature in common. They are all written with full respect for Blake's minute particulars, for Sam Johnson's ineluctable modality of the visible. They are all "action fiction" first of all. They are sheer narrative. In recent years psychologicalallegorical fiction has become very popular, but most of it has suffered from the worst possible faults that such writing can
have
imprecision, subjectivity, and psychologizing. It is not to describe the situation realistically, like Gregor's sensations on that dreadful morning he found himself a bug. Realism is not enough. Apelles' flowers drew bees and butterflies to them, but the flowers of allegory must give off perfume and be sweet with honey. This is why Hawthorne's retellings of Greek myths for children are so much his best work. Baucis and Philemon live outside of Salem in a brighter and cleaner West Peabody, Hester only in his own troubled mind. I am not going to tell you the meaning of Read's allegory the secret of his myth. At Eleusis the priestess rose from the subterranean marriage bed of the heirosgamos and exhibited an ear of barley, and today, scholars in their ivied halls by the Cam and Thames and Charles dispute about what she meant. Sink into his developing vision, led on by the careful loving delineation of reality the village where he was born, the pampas and plateaux of dream, the caves he explored as a boy, finally the vision will crystallize around you and shut you in and the story end in an equivocation that seems to undo all that has gone before. What does it mean? What does the Tao Te Ching mean? What does the Book of Changes, that immemoriably subtile document, mean? All myth, all deep insight, means the same as and no more than the falling of the
enough
solar system
on
its
Kenneth Rexroth
CONTENTS
PART
11
I
PART
59
II
PART
158
III
assassination of President Olivero, which took of 1861, was for the world at
large one of those innumerable incidents of a violent nature which characterise the politics of the South
continent. For twenty-four hours it loomed in the headlines of the newspapers; but beyond an large intimation, the next day, that General Iturbide had
formed a provisional government with the full approval of the military party, the event had no further reverberations in the outer world. President Olivero, who had
arranged his own assassination, made his way in a leisurely fashion to Europe. On the way he allowed his beard to grow. When he disembarked in Spain, he seemed unremarkable enough, for the return of the emigrant, swarthy and bearded from a life on the pampas, was a common event in that country. But Spain was not where he designed
to stay; for though the Spanish language had become natural to him, so that he habitually used it in thought and speech, his real nationality was English, and the ruling desire in all his present conduct was to return to his native land and particularly to the scenes of his childhood. Thirty years had elapsed since his precipitate departure thirty long years during which those scenes had withdrawn to a fantastic distance, bright and exquisite and miniature, like a landscape seen through the wrong end of a telescope. But though the sentimental nostalgia which consumed his being was so strong, his rational fear of disillusionment was also considerable,
and
it
many
haltings
1 1
Reality? That may not be the right word to describe the contrast between two states of mind, one of
which is drinking in the bright charm of tangible things, of picturesque towns and people, of hill and sky, of food and wine, of books and papers casually bought, of music
overheard; the other occupied by a landscape distant and withdrawn in the long dark tunnel of time, but bright in
its
crystal setting.
He who had
He found
now sought
remembering.
that the
essential
was
to resign all conscious attempts at recalling the past. Events and places in their individuality demand a place
in time, and after thirty years, how can one reconstitute a sense of time? To escape from the sense of time, to live in the eternity of what he was accustomed to call "the divine essence of things" that was his only desire. But it was this very essence that now impelled him to return to the place where his personality had first been liberated, in circumstances extraordinary them the enduring reality of his life.
enough
to
make
Once
in
now
new
line carried
junction on the main line, the train took a meandering course among the hills, stopping at every station and
sometimes waiting for a considerable time to allow cattle or goods to be loaded. Olivero in England his name had been Oliver still retained the black cloak and widebrimmed hat in which he had left South America, and
figure
among
the country
were recognised with an unexpected access of emotion; but the towns, with their stations and accompanying sheds, were seen from a strange aspect. He was relieved to find that his own station was some distance from the to plunge too suddenly into village he was not prepared He left his bag at the station, and the heart of his past. waited until the last of the passengers who had descended
v
:
with him had disappeared down the lane which led to the village. Then he followed them slowly, his head bent, as if afraid that to look up and around would disturb him too much. When he reached the first houses it was
nearly dusk.
The
village consisted of
two
streets,
crossing at the
with houses beyond it, approached sometimes by only a broad plank, sometimes by a wooden bridge with handrails, and in a few cases by a stone culvert. When it reached the market-place the river bent round to the the road which went in that right, still accompanying direction. Here it was separated from the road by a line of sycamore trees, and the prospect, as one looked along the street, with the old almshouses on one side, the sycamores and the river with the high wall of the Hall beyond it on the other side, was one of the prettiest in England. Beyond noticing that the trees were bigger and the shade denser than he had remembered, Olivero looked neither to the right nor the left, but made
'3
about.
He
sounds
voices in the
he had once spoken, the click of a raised latch, the rattle of a milk-pail, the chiming of clocks in the houses; and underneath all these occasional sounds,
soft dialect
the persistent lapping of the stream in its pebbly bed. white railing opposite him ran along the edge of the stream, and presently he got up and went across to this and leant against it as he gazed down into the railing,
rippling water. It was then that he noticed, or thought he noticed, an
extraordinary fact. The stream as he remembered it and he could remember the pressure of its current against his bare legs as he waded among its smooth flat pebbles
just
ran in the direction of the station from which he had come. But now, indubitably, it was flowing in the
The reflection of opposite direction, towards the church. the moon, which had now risen placidly above the sycamores, made this clear in the fluctuating ripple of the
stream; whilst here and there a stone projecting above the surface curled the water back against the force of the current. For something like an hour Olivero remained as if transfixed to the white railing; for the whole structure
of his
memory was
challenged.
He
detail of his early experience in relation to the stream : the trout suspended with their heads upstream which he
had
by the church
touched the surface of the water; the pool below the mill where they used to bathe and here he distinctly re-
membered the sagging branches of the willows with long beards of faded weed, and how yes, positively these wisps when caught by the bank of the stream inclined towards the village; besides, the mill itself was a mile's distance upstream, beyond the church, and beyond the mill the stream made its way which is a manner of in the opposite speaking, because it had made its way the meadows and the direction made its way through
came to the open fells, and there, among the slopes, it had its source. He had oftQn followed the bed of the stream on a long day's excursion right up to this source, a bog scented with low bushes of myrtle and
woods
until
it
There bright with yellow-green patches of butterwort. be no doubt that the stream rose out yonder could beyond the church and flowed through the village in the direction of the railway-station. But yet unless his
him was positive evieyes deceived him there before dence that the stream now flowed in the opposite direction,
His
had observed. The planation of the phenomenon he of a stream, for example, can be very meanderings of obstacles divert the natural flow deceptive. All kinds of water towards the lower level of the sea inequalities
in the height and hardness of the ground, not to mention the deliberate interference of man so that a stream which is flowing from the north to the south at one from the south to the north point can easily be flowing at another point not so far away. Ask any man in what
would be
travelling
when he
passes through
the
if he deigned to answer at all he would say, most often, from east to west; or if he suspected a catch, he might say, from north to south; he would never suspect the truth, which is that owing to the contortions of that strange isthmus, his actual direction would be from
Ocean, and
west to east. It is not to be expected, therefore, that a stream should always keep to the same direction in its progress towards the sea in reality it may move through
:
the points of the compass. But from where Olivero stood in the market-place, to the bridge near the church
all
trout, the
came
no
the stream,
if changed it had been, must have been changed by human agency he dismissed, incidentally, the thought that did for a moment flash through his brain, that possibly an earthquake had shifted the levels of the land in some way and so caused a contrary flow;
for earthquakes, of course, never occur in England. He decided, late as it was, to proceed upstream to solve the problem. The moonlight was sufficiently strong
show the way, and who knows but that in the dark his early instincts might the easier revive and reveal to him the paths which he had known as a boy fisherto
difficult
paths
for any stranger. But before actually setting out, he bent over the stream by a stone step where the villagers brought their pails to fill, and drawing back his cloak and sleeve, he dipped his hand in the stream, right up to his sensitive wrist, and felt the flow of the cold water, thus confirming by an independent sense the impression which he had received from his eyes. While like most
16
men he was
was
now about
eight o'clock.
He had had
tea at the
for the branch line, and junction where he had changed in this part of the country tea is the last meal of the day. There was no reason, therefore, why he should return to the inn, and the innkeeper might naturally suppose that he had gone out to visit friends. The main street was now quite deserted in an hour most of the lights would be out, for already people were going to bed. He walked here the slowly along until he came to the stone bridge; the stream, still accomstreet went straight on, whilst There was panied by a smaller road, turned to the ..left. on the bridge: it arched not much point in lingering itself high above the bed of the stream, and at night there were no fish to be seen. But as if only to repeat an earlier habit, Olivero went and looked over the stone water looked black and cresting, down to where the in the shadow of the arch. Nothing, however, was sullen to be gained by staying there, and he soon left the bridge and took the road to the mill. There was still no perceptible incline in the ground, so Olivero did not stop to consider whether there was yet a contradiction in that elementary law of physics which decrees that water can never flow uphill. That law, as he now recalled, Olivero had had some difficulty in believenunciated to him at school. He ing when it was first knew long stretches of the stream, which when seen from
a neighbouring hill, had all the appearance of sloping upwards in the direction of the flow. Besides, water was
not a powerless element; it had cohesion, as you might observe in a drop of rain, clinging like a crystal bead to
17
the edge of a cabbage-leaf, mirroring the whole world on hard surface. Again, it had always seemed possible to his boyish reasoning that the force which impelled water downwards should be capable of impelling the same water upwards and when it was explained to him that this force was the force of gravity, it still seemed a reasonable calculation to allow that a stream of water which had fallen for x number of feet over a distance of
be capable of rising x n number of feet y miles, should l over a distance of y n miles. The factor n might, of course, be considerable, owing to the regrettable tendency of water to slip backwards; but still, on any reasonable one basis of expect a stream to flow
might probability, a gentle incline of say five hundred yards. up He remembered these childish calculations as
he pro-
ceeded along the road to the mill. He was now on so familiar that years ago exceedingly familiar ground he had known the colour and shape of every stone embedded in the footpath, every variation in the shape and the hedge which presently bordered the composition of of the road, now that the last cottages were right side For the greater part of his childhood the mill passed. had been his home, and this path he had taken daily
between the house and the school. The other side of the stream was here bordered by a high hedge of ragged ash and blackthorn; under tree s elderberry, willow, their overhanging branches the water-hens used to dart in and out. Soon he could see the long white front of
the mill shining in the moonlight, and to the right, half buried in a huge copper-beech tree, the mill-house. But as he approached he became aware, with a trepidation of changes changes in the atmohe could not
justify,
the sound of the water, the vague outline of trees and hedges. His pace grew slower and he finally stopped,
sphere,
18
and
assess, in the
him and a footbridge to the right; for at this the river divided into a loop, one arm, the one on point his left as he stood, being the water which had passed dam beyond, the other, on through the mill from the the right, being the natural course of the stream. But the ford and the white footbridge had now disappeared, and the road to the mill ran fair and level over a brick
front of
Advancing slowly to this new bridge, he discovered an unexpected flow of water beneath him; but this phenomenon was explained almost at once by his further discovery that the water which had formerly flowed in rather noisy force from the diverted mill-race, had now entirely ceased, the bed of this side of the loop with grasses and willow-herb. being quite overgrown This surely implied that the mill had ceased to function, or perhaps was now run by some power other than water. But the blank deserted look of everything, even
culvert.
all
Olivero approaching nearer, this explanation, confirmed by the broken unglazed winwas explanation dows, in which one or two old sacks flapped desolately. in the house itself, but the garden There was no
light
and when
was tidy and a cat sprang from the acacia tree by the and came to rub its sleek body against his leg. garden-gate returned to the stream. He was now quite Olivero certain that his memory had not deceived him, and that
the direction of the current had actually changed. The reason was still to seek. He recrossed the culvert and took the path which led round to the back of the mill, to the dam and the weir. Here little had changed, but the supporting bank between the weir and the dam had
'9
now
familiar ground. clearly-defined path led along the side of the stream; on his right was a wood, but over the stream were the meadows which be-
more he was on
longed to the
mill,
parallel to the
stream, would be the road which led to the moors. For a few moments he deliberated it was getting late and he was uncertain how long the moonlight would last. He cross the stream and make across the
might perhaps
meadows
explain events of the last hour, especially the discovery of the deserted mill, had so thoroughly imbued him with a sense of uncertainty, that he determined to take no chances, and with an occasional glance at the stream,
which rejoined the stream two miles farther up the valley the going would be easier in the dark, and surely there could be no intervening cause the stream's change of direction. But the to
for the road,
:
made
his
way
as quickly as
difficult
progress Nothing occurred to interrupt flowed on before him; he could both see and hear the direction o the water. It went laughing over the stones
the stream
bed, mocking him, luring him onwards. Then in front of him, and he suddenly he perceived lights reckoned that they must come from a house known as the Cauldron, which stood at the point where the moorreland road from the village crossed the stream. He
in
its
20
rough millstones suitable for grinding rough grain, such as rye, into meal for cattle a mill used by the few outmoorland farmers to save them the extra cartage lying
involved in bringing their grain to the village.
this
What
if
had expanded, grown grander and more efficient, until it had finally superseded the village mill? There was no knowing what an ambitious man might do, once the possibility had come into his mind for
mill
power, the only necessary means, was at hand. He remembered, about the time he left the village, some talk of modern machinery that could grind flour finer and whiter than any ever produced before. It was likely enough that the miller at the Cauldron had stolen a
march on his conservative rival, installed the new plant and gained all the trade. As he drew nearer, his supposition was confirmed by
the discovery that the several lights in front of him belonged to one building, or group of buildings, and when nearer
still
he heard the steady hum of machinery. The and enlarged, was working through the night. He saw now the flicker of wheels and the flurry of straps through an open window. The path brought him up and he realised that he would against a garden fence, have to make his way through the mill-yard, past the house. He was a little loth to do this, for fear of being stopped and questioned not that he had a guilty conscience about the investigation he was making, but still, it would be difficult to explain his business to people who might not see the importance it had for him, who might even consider him a little mad, wandering about at midnight on such an apparently unimportant errand. Inmill, rebuilt
21
house a single window threw its an open window on the floor, quite near to the level of the ground. ground Olivero's instinct was to avoid the fan of light by making a wide detour in the field, but he was deflected from this
At
by the unexpected appearance of a figure, man, who loomed out of the darkness beyond the a burden in his arms. As this figure drew light, carrying nearer the light, the burden was clearly to be recognised as a lamb, quite still and perhaps dead, which the man the open window, and then proceeded to pass through to follow himself, first thrusting in his legs, and turning to draw his body after them, for the window was low
intention
of a
that
and inconvenient. The whole procedure took place with the quickness and certainty of an act deliberately done, and naturally aroused the curiosity of the unsuspected onlooker. Olivero realised that at the time of year it was not unusual for a lamb to die of exposure, but perhaps the weather was exceptionally fine; and why, in any case, should the lamb be rescued at midnight, and taken into the house with such obvious secrecy? It occurred to him,
that as most people have a repugnance for the flesh of animals that have died naturally (that is to say, from the act of God, and not in a slaughter-house), and as most cattle-owners resent the loss incurred in this way, the man might be smuggling in the dead animal to pass
later, as a slaughtered one. But the lamb appeared be too small for the table, and in such a lonely place it would not be difficult to do the smuggling by light of seemed necessary, and for day. Some other explanation
it off,
to
22
moment
his
occupy
mind.
for a
He stood
to sidle slowly towards the light. He was ten feet away when he drew up petrified by a perhaps shrill scream that issued from the open window. But his
he darted
to the
window,
the ground and instinctively, fell flat on slowly raised his head to the level of the sill. There once he was held transfixed.
again
On
its
throat
had been cut and was bleeding into a large bowl, over the edge of which its head hung pathetically. In the middle of the room the man stood, drawing back the head of a woman by the hair and compelling her to drink from a cup which he held in his hand. So much
was clear at a glance; then Olivero noticed that the woman, who was extraordinarily frail and pallid, was bound by a rope to the chair in which she was seated, and that her expression was one of concentrated terror
The blood down each side of her mouth and fell in bright stains down the front of her white dress. The light came from a paraffin
as she struggled to refuse the proffered cup. which she was being forced to drink dribbled
man
situation to
not be a passive onlooker, but in which he must participate. Strange fluids pass into his blood-stream, his eyes
dilate, his hair bristles
on
For
thirty years, much against his natural inclinations, Olivero had been a man of action. On many occasions he
to act violently
was invariably
difficult for
him
and
he
gaining without conscious effort a reputation for courage and even for reckless bravado little in consonance with the ordinary mood of his existence. And so now, without hesitation, he hurled himself into the room, legs foremost as he had observed the man do; but, unfortunately, as he clung to the sash
well
body round, an incongruous posithe sash descended and tion, the upper half of his body outside the window, his inside the room. This mishap, which legs waving wildly
left
of the
window
to raise himself
and
twist his
him
in
in
comic, gave a still further fantastic turn to the scene of horror inside the room, but it also served to dispel the instinctive defences which a man might be expected to
put up when suddenly confronted by the complete figure of an opponent. As it was, the man in the room, when he turned and saw the waving legs, merely put the cup he was holding on the table, releasing at the same time
the head of the
whilst
Olivero quickly regained his balance, struggled to lift the sash imprisoning him, and finally emerged, hatless
and rufHed, but impressive and massive against the low frame of the window. For a moment the two men remained confronting each other in silence. Olivero was completely shaken out of the instinctive mode of action. His thoughts raced quickly through his 'Release brain. He knew that properly he ought to cry that woman,' or words to that effect. The woman, meanwhile, had dropped her head on her breast, softly moaning to herself, not even curious to follow the drama
:
24
its
politeness,
he merely said:
did not reply, but retreated behind the chair in which the woman was tied. From this point of vantage he continued to eye the intruder with wild but helpless on the man, Olivero animosity. Keeping his gaze fixed a step or two, and in this very advanced into the room
The man
he perceived that his opponent was cowed, and would retreat rather than offer any opposition. Olivero therefore, but still slowly, advanced farther into the room, until close by the woman, and then quietly began to unloosen the cords which bound her. She remained limp and passive. Her released arms fell on each side of the chair; her head relike
act
breast. Feeling infinitely tender towards such a helpless victim of man's malice, Olivero lifted one arm and began to chafe the bruised wrist. It was then that he noticed a peculiarity in her flesh which The skin was not white, explained her strange pallor. but a faint green shade, the colour of a duck's egg. It was, moreover, an unusually transparent tegument, and through its pallor the branches of her veins and arteries and scarlet, but vivid green and golden. spread, not blue The nails were pale blue, very like a blackbird's eggshell. The faint emanation of odour from her flesh was sweet and a little heavy, like the scent of violets. Olivero looked up at the man, who stood glowering Child!' he cried. The against the wall. 'It is the Green man merely stared fixedly, but Olivero knew that his
no longer be capable of investigating the phenomenon on the spot he who, in the whole village, would have been the natural person to take charge of such an affair.
Anyone who
cares to look
up the records
will discover
the curious
what has already been said that it was about the year 1830, but for reasons which will be obvious when this
narrative has been read, it was necessary to disguise the time and place of these events well, in a certain year
in the county of two children, apparently about four years old, who could not speak any known language, or explain their
origin, or relate themselves in any way to the district indeed, even the world in which they were found. Moreover, these children, who were lightly clothed in a green web-like material of obscure manufacture, were
further distinguished
their flesh,
by the extraordinary
quality of
which was of a green, semi-translucent texture, perhaps more like the flesh of a cactus plant than anything else, but of course much more delicate and sensitive. These children were adopted by a widow (Woman in the village, in order that they might be educated and civilised though for that matter they were gentle enough in their manners, indeed timid as fallow deer; but they had no notions of God or of even such morality as an English child of that age has usually acquired. Now, Olivero had never forgotten this
strange
26
mind
it
had the
significance of
an un-
resolved symbol, obscurely connected with his departure, and connected, too, with the inevitability of his return. It is not therefore surprising that he should have
jumped
so quickly to the explanation of the strange appearance of the woman before him. No sooner had he realised her identity than a new state of calmness descended on him. His mind was still extremely active, images of a diverse nature emerging and sinking in rapid succession; but this mental activity resembled the con-
tained
of a gyroscope, resting, at
one point, in nis brain, but otherwise distant, and unrelated to the cool element of his flesh. With his handkerchief he wiped away the traces of blood on the woman's face and then folded her arms across her lap. She was breathing gently, without agitation; her eyes had opened, but her fixed gaze was directed to the floor. Olivero looked towards her companion, whose attitude had become less tense and defensive. His head was now turned slightly aside, and something in the sly side-long glance with which he observed Olivero, struck the latter with a sudden sense of recognition. 'You are Kneeshaw/ he said, and then went towards him. The only effect of this recognition was to deepen the man's fear. To the physical reaction was now added a
sense of the mysterious divination possessed by the fear so possessed him that his stranger. But now his body became limp and powerless, and with a moan he fell
down
It
at Olivero's feet.
was far from Olivero's intention to do the man any harm. He was afraid of the feeling of contempt which threatened to possess him; moreover he was now so anxious to solve the mystery of the scene he had witay
He
table.
'Kneeshaw/ he began, 'carry your mind back thirty were a schoolboy. Your last days at school years. You do you remember them? Do you remember one day, one afternoon, your master had spread on the schoolroom table a model railway with a clockwork engine. It was a those days not the kind of toy which great novelty in now can be bought in any toyshop, but a miniature train That engineer was carefully constructed by an engineer. uncle, one of the first great railway engineers. He my I a I gave me this model railway when was boy. Because had certain ideas about the inadequacy of knowledge I I was in the habit of still remain faithful to them
allowing you boys to play to become absorbed in your Whilst you played I watched phantasy and imagination. and learnt much about the nature of your minds. you, Sometimes I watched you unobserved, and on one occasion I saw a boy, whose character was in general sullen and unimpressive, seize the engine and begin winding it
up with an
evil intensity.
You had
all
to overwind the engine. This boy suddenly decided to disobey this instruction to destroy this ingenious toy which he knew was valued by the master and a source
28
the boy's hand and lay on the table like a disembowelled animal. You, Kneeshaw, were that boy, and I was the master. When that spring snapped, something snapped in my mind. I left the village the next day, and until this day now, thirty years later, I have never returned/ Kneeshaw sat very still whilst Olivero spoke. His gaze lifted sharply when Olivero revealed his identity, but the been roused in him was one of curiosity feeling that had rather than of amazement. Those past events which had
for Olivero, controlling his personsignificance their steady persistence in his mind, ality for years by records of Kneeshaw's were evoked from the
so
much
forgotten the accident of this meeting. The young past only by schoolmaster who had struggled for two years with an intractable group of seven or eight boys had passed enof Kneeshaw's life before he had reached the tirely out
Kneeshaw remembered him as tall and age of twelve. hair. He rememdark, his face very pale beneath his lank the round table at which they all bered the classroom with an arm-chair sat, the black marble mantelpiece which Olivero did most of his teachbefore the fire from and a little arithmetic. ingrecitation, dictation, spelling the schoolroom was now still standing The house was the office of Mr. Coverdale, the solicitor, and the first
was used by the Conservative Club an ugly town It house, out of character with the rest of the village. farther back from the street than the rest of stood much the houses, and what had once been a garden was now a
floor
It
was
29
as
though the
dead; I disliked my father. I had never planned to spend my life as a village schoolmaster, a calling for which I had neither the physical nor the mental aptitude. I thought I might become a poet, but my poetry was
gloomy and obscure, and nobody would publish it. I felt impotent and defeated, and longed for external circum-
upon me. I struggled feebly with and stupidity of you and your comthe ignorance panions, but as I had no faith in knowledge, my only desire was to leave you in possession of innocence and
stances to force action
happiness. This was interpreted as weakness or laziness, and gradually parents took away their children, till only a handful was left, a handful of neglected children, the
children of parents who did not place any value on education, but merely wished to be rid of an inconvenient burden for a few hours every day. Some of these boys I loved they were like young animals, like calves or foals, with clumsy limbs and bright eyes and
sudden
out
senseless
movements.
the day I watched you playing with the until the day a spring snapped and the tension engine, was ended. I left you all/
evil until
The
make
Green
Child.'
a low voice.
at Olivero.
He
Kneeshaw repeated the words in spoke the words and remained gazing
in the circumstances to
contact easy between the two men. For fifteen since the day he brought the Green Child to this years, mill as his wife, Kneeshaw had lived a life of isolation. He was unread and almost inarticulate, facing the prob-
from day to day was now faced by a man who obviously belonged to another world a world of easy speech, of ideas and sentiments, of complicated exThere was no natural impulse to communicate perience. with such a man. But tragedy drives us beyond natural behaviour, on to a level where imagination and phanlems of
life
with direct
instincts, acting
He
tasy rule.
said,
'came to
me
fifteen years
'There were two/ said Olivero. 'One died/ replied Kneeshaw. 'He did not live more than a few months in this world. He would not eat he wasted away. And now this one is tired of this world, and wants to go back to the world they came from/ 'And that is why you were forcing her to drink blood?* 'Yes. For many weeks now she has eaten nothing solid she drinks water and milk, but even milk she does not willingly take. She is wasting away and will die, because she never eats meat, and has no desire to live/ Tell me all. I have heard nothing since the day I left
the village/
3'
told
sea. In those days, before newsexisted in their present nature, before there were papers an event like the apreporters and press-photographers, children soon ceased to be a of the
green pearance matter of more than local interest. It is true that there were many enquiries, and for a long time the green children were pointed out as an object of curiosity to doctor from a neighbouring town made an visitors.
attempt to
he wished
examine the children in a scientific manner sound their lungs, listen to the beat of their hearts, even to do much more scientific things, such as analyse their water and take a specimen of their blood. But Mrs. Hardie was a jealous stepmother, and kept the green children inviolate from such the action of this disinvestigations. It was through
:
was enquired appointed doctor that the legal position but it was found that there was no treasure trove in green children, that the law did not in any way prointo;
vide for such an eventuality as the appearance of two such extraordinary beings; so possession being nine
3*
he was being taken to the church, and this so scared the that Mrs. parson and all who had any desire to interfere, Hardie was left in future severely alone. It is true the dead child could not be given Christian burial, but no one raised any objection when Mrs. Hardie decided to bury it on the triangular patch of ground which was to be found where the road from the moors split in two, one half to go direct to the village, the other half to the mill. It was rumoured that a highwayman had once, in the eighteenth century, been buried on this waste
land.
Mrs. Hardie began to Sally, grew up in a normal way by that is to say, she took proper nourishment and increased in size. It was always a matter of speculation to say how old the children were at the moment of their
other green child,
call
The
whom
the prosaic
name
appearance.
By
their physical
five years;
that they could not speak and apparently had no natural thoughts, there was an ageless look in their fully formed
all
such speculations.
And
though Sally increased in size of stature, the expression and character of her face did not alter at all; so that now, thirty years later, she had the same ageless
innocent features which she had when she first appeared. One could only say that everything was on a
slightly larger scale.
at the
time of the
c
fields totally
un-
the village
led past Mrs. Hardie's cottage, and every time he passed that way, Kneeshaw thought of the strange child who
Sometimes he would see her, suddenly stirring out of the immobile green background, like a startled moth. But she was so timid that she never spoke to him and it was only sometimes when he met her walking along the road with Mrs. Hardie coming back from the woods with a bundle of kindling-sticks on her back that he could ever get a nearer view of her. Then he would sometimes stop Mrs. Hardie to ask if she had heard from her son Tom lately and in what foreign parts he might be then. And because before he went to sea Tom had been a sort of elder brother to Kneeshaw, Mrs. Hardie would stop for a minute or two and talk to the queer sullen lad. For several years nothing more happened; but then one year, perhaps ten years after the first appearance of the green children, Mrs. Hardie fell in a faint, and she began to feel that her end was not far off. She knew that she must provide for the future of the Green Child, and the only person to whom her
lived there.
34
Kneeshaw was now a thoughts turned was Kneeshaw. man of twenty-two; he was sober and energetic,
little
mill kept
by
his father
as
well as
for the up-dale day, grinding corn a woman was greatly to be desired in Kneeshaw's mother had died when
he was born), Kneeshaw had apparently no interest in women, and in spite of the importunity of his father, showed no inclination to take a wife. The casual meetings on the road became more freabout Tom much longer. quent, and the conversations near the cottage it was raining, One day as they passed so Mrs. Hardie asked Kneeshaw to shelter for a while. He went in with them, and the Green Child made them As he watched her silent movements about the tea. room, her shy and delicate flutterings against the fireKneeshaw knew for the first time the anguish and
light,
of a woman in his own home, longing for the presence a longing for this creature who belonged to above all, another world a world so delicate and subdued. He carried her image back to the bleak mill, to the great bare kitchen with its open fireplace and high smoke-
blackened rafters. Mrs. Hardie soon knew from the bashful look in his
eyes
Kneeshaw was
sponse.
love,
and the agitated movements of his body, that in love, and she smiled on him and enhim. But the Green Child herself made no recouraged
Actually she
felt
knew nothing
of the nature of
fleshly promptings which acemotions of love in ordinary mortals. company Though she had by now learned how to speak in the of it was conditioned English language, her knowledge the circumstances under which she lived by the by life of an old widow woman, with no interests
and
none of the
the
daily
35
but the
girl, to
be sure,
of her. was a queer fish, had told his mates in the foc's'le the strange Once he had laughed at him story of the green children, but they for a credulous fool, so he never mentioned it again; and when he came home, he acted as though he knew
nothing of Sally's history. He completely ignored her, and she on her part did not find such behaviour unnatural.
Matters had been brought to a precipitate conclusion by the final illness of Mrs. Hardie. One morning she fainted as she rose from her pillow, and remained for a
long time unconscious. She was still unconscious when so long appearing, went Sally, wondering why she was to her bedroom and found her still and white on the up bed. Sally did not know anything about death, or its
symptoms, so she sat down to wait for the old woman to awake. Presently her eyelids did flicker a little, and a
36
not very scared at what had happened and sent Sally, for the doctor, whom she despised, but for Kneeshaw.
in bed, and when Kneeshaw came, rehim to come up and sit down by her side. She quested asked him to take a box from a ledge in the chimney,
She remained
it. Inside were ninety golden sovereigns, a brooch and a locket with a wisp of Tom's gold filigree hair enclosed in it. The brooch was to be Sally's and the locket was to be sent to Tom, but the money, she said, was to be Kneeshaw's if he would go down on his knees and solemnly swear that he would take Sally and marry her, and be good and kind to her all her life. The clock downstairs was striking the hour of twelve whilst Kneeshaw was on his knees, and when he came downstairs the Green Child was standing against the light of the kitchen window, peeling potatoes, and the light shone through her bare arms and fingers and her delicate neck, and her flesh was like flesh seen in a hand that shelters a candle against the air, or the radiance seen when we look at the sun through the fine web of shut Kneeshaw carried the box back to the mill and eyelids.
and
to
open
to his
father,
and
his
father readily agreed to the marriage. With so much money they could buy one of the new roller-machines, and so make flour finer than any the village mill could make.
Mrs. Hardie never rose from her bed again, but died one night in her sleep. The Green Child, when she could not wake her, came to fetch Kneeshaw, and he, knowing what had happened, made4rher stay behind with his father. Then he went to the village and brought the doctor to Mrs. Hardie's cottage, and it was quite true that she was dead of heart failure, as the doctor certified in due course. She was buried in a pauper's grave,
37
questions there anyone to question Kneeshaw's action in taking the Green Child for a wife; for though the parson could them because the Green Child had never been not
no money was found in the house; but later her few were sold by the auctioneer, and with the money that they brought, the rent was paid and about her estate. Nor was there were no more
for
was no one who would bother to interbaptised, there fere with them; they might live together, isolated in an indifferent world. five years after the Kneeshaw's father lived
perhaps
marry
chair in a dark corner of the immense kitchen. The only other occupant of the house was a kitchen-maid. When
the Green Child came, the maid was sent away, but then Kneeshaw found that the Green Child was so 'gawmin domestic affairs, that the less,' as he called it, so inapt be engaged again, to do the cooking and maid had to the cleaning. Among the first peculiarities Kneeshaw were an inability to go close to a fire, discovered in
coming enter any more into the man, and spent most of
of the
Green Child
but he does not was a very fat old story. his time sleeping in the armto his house,
He
any form of animal flesh. She normal person to susceptible than a of heat and cold, and would shrink as if extremes scalded from a fire two feet away; she could not bear her hands in hot water, and she even shrank from the heat of a human body. Her distaste for meat was constitutional; she turned in disgust from the sight of raw flesh. Trout from the stream she would eat, but always as a cold dish. She would drink a little milk, but was avid sweet-briar and water-cress, and of only of hazel-nuts, of mushrooms and toadstools. all kinds
and a
When
it
came
38
Kneeshaw was
hibited in
all his
outward behaviour.
He
perience and therefore without the art necessary to educate his companion in the pleasures and duties of marriage. The Green Child was not merely ignorant of nor-
mal sexual cravings she was entirely devoid of them. She fled from Kneeshaw's embraces as from a hotbreathed faun. She fled out into the night, into the woods, into the branches of the acacia tree which strangely existed in this lonely spot, and there the feathery leaves held her in a safe retreat. She liked the cold water of the mill-race, and without shame or hesitation would throw off her frock and float like a mermaid, almost invisible, in the watery element. She did not seem to have any affection for human beings or animals; she never mentioned Mrs. Hardie from the day of her death; she never paid the slightest attention to the retriever dog, the poultry, or the cattle. Only sometimes she would be seen observing intently little birds, especially those which lived near the ground, such as wrens and linnets; she listened to the earth like a blackbird. She did not sing or whistle, or amuse herself
with any sounds. Only the sound of rippling water inand she would play for whole days in the bed of the stream. She was not capable of much pebbly and when she had walked two or three physical exercise, was quite exhausted. If she went out, she always miles, walked in the direction of the moors, away from the vilfirst Kneeshaw was alarmed when she did not lage. At return by nightfall, and would set out with a lantern to find her finding her always by the side of the stream. She would follow him obediently back to the mill, but
terested her,
39
night, sitting
went by, Kneeshaw would sometimes fall asleep had become aware of Sally's absence, and not whole once, but many times thereafter, she was out the was less the side of the stream. This
as time
by
since she very rarely slept strange than might appear, like a normal human being. It is true that for long hours she would sit in a kind of trance, unaware of what was
but with eyes open. At night-time, passing before her, when she lay on her bed in the dark, she might have Kneeshaw had never observed her in a sound slept; but slumber, and if she slept at all, slept so lightly that his
to wake her. very approach was sufficient
events drew Kneeshaw's attention away from the Green Child. One was the death of his father, together trade of the mill the mill absorbed with the
Two
expanding
of his time
was kitchenmaid asleep in the barn where the hay was kept. She was lying on her back, her limbs open and abandoned. The sudden lust that swept over Kneeshaw met with no resistance, and from that time onwards Kneeshaw's natural desires were completely satisfied by this
less creditable.
and energy. The other event One summer day he discovered the
subordinate member of the household. This did not, however, leave Kneeshaw completely indifferent to the Green Child. She continued to attract him in a way and for reasons he would have found difficult to analyse. It was perhaps the mystery of her flesh, of discovering in her a different mode of the
possibility love; it was partly the simple charm of her behaviour. Olivero, in all his questionings, could not discover how
had lasted; Kneeshaw, naturlong a state of veneration did not wish to expose himself too much, and ally,
though Olivero had
behaviour in
all
40
change from simplicity to complexity, from roughness to polish, from natural to artificial manners. The degree of humbug, as some might call it, seems to have remained fairly constant; it is only the component details that have changed. A progress from complexity to simplicity would no doubt require a non-human world, as Olivero was to discover. This attitude of respect may have been maintained by Kneeshaw for as long as ten years. But by that time daily intercourse would have reduced the man's instinctive fear (for that is what his veneration would really amount to) to a minimum; and meanwhile his relations with the kitchenmaid may have become stale and ungrateful. Certainly, at some period several
years before Olivero's return, Kneeshaw had begun to torment the Green Child. He began by shutting her up in her room, in the hope of reducing her movements to some
regularity. If only, he had felt, he could make her sleep and eat at the normal hours, perhaps she would grow more human and tractable. At first she escaped again and again either through the window, or, when that had been barred, by the chimney, which was wide enough to admit her slight and sinuous body. On these occasions she would disappear for many days at a time, but some fear kept her from venturing too far from the district, and her body, wild and exhausted, was always recovered by Kneeshaw from the moors, where in the side of a hill she would have made a bed of heather and bracken.
in
the
semi-darkness
battering
her
delicate
fists
which Kneeshaw had nailed across had fainted in the attempt, and alarmed, Kneeshaw had carried her frail body downstairs, and laid her on the sofa in the room they called the parlour. He was alarmed to see the change that had taken place in her; her flesh had turned from its green translucent colour to a waxen yellow, the colour of ripe golden plums. Her eyes had darkened: her breathing was scarcely perceptible. For a long time she lay there, and in the strong light which flooded in upon her, seemed to revive a little. Kneeshaw left her there to sleep on the sofa that night, and when he came down the next morning, very early, he found her standing in the embrasure of the window, in the first rays of the sun. Her natural tint had returned, and that day she ate again and so gradually regained her strength. She
against the boards the window. She
never returned to the dark room upstairs. When she was strong enough, Kneeshaw took her out into the fields and along the banks of the stream. They spent many long hours in this way, not happy together, because the Green Child had almost ceased to speak and wandered about self-contained, whilst Kneeshaw was suspicious and vigilant. But such excursions were diffi-
him, and became increasingly so with the continued expansion of his business. About this time the old mill in the village closed down; Olivero's father's
cult for
successors
finally
suc-
cumbed
When
the routine of
life
years pass in a state of psychological futility, simply mind was so occupied with practical activities, that it automatically excluded personal adjustments. The psychology of the Green Child was a different matter; in a sense, it did not exist. There was no evilet
because his
dence that she possessed any ordinary at the death of Mrs. Hardie, as
human
affection;
had betrayed no grief she had not even mourned for the brother she lost. Her reactions in more habitual emotional situations were obvious, but odd.
physically
43
sound
at the base of her throat. Sorrow, like affection, she did not seem to know, but fear and repugnance pro-
flesh
which was
the effect of depriving her of the sunlight, but produced it suddenly, like an inverse blush. This leaves the emotion of love
still unaccounted for, and that, of course, was the emotion which Kneeshaw had sought vainly to
arouse in her. He could not conceive that anything so feminine (and therefore so strongly attractive to his masculinity) could be without what we in the learned world call sexual characteristics, and the blind motive of all the attention he devoted to the Green Child had no other origin. It was a research into the mystery of the
Green Child's heart. But pursued in a dumb instinctive fashion. Kneeshaw did not convey all these details to Olivero that night, as they sat with the Green Child unconscious in the chair beside them. But as the situation that must have existed for the last five or even ten years became
spoke to
grew sick with anxiety. The man who him, who answered his questions in a sullen unwilling manner, was the boy who thirty years ago had
clearer, Olivero
symbolised for Olivero the evil destructive instinct which lurks beneath the civilised conventions of society. In
his
of youthful despair, the sight of this deliberately breaking the spring of an intricate toy
mood
final crisis of his disillusionment, precipitated the with that image burnt into his mind, he had left the
Though
44
ence
despair, even to
accept evil as a necessary agent of good, an irritant to stir the slothful soul to action, yet nothing had diminished
his sense of the actuality and power of evil. As Kneeshaw spoke, he began to realise, with almost unbearable
had an
anguish, that once again the instinctively evil boy had intricate machine in his hands, and as he turned to the frail figure in the chair, he feared that once again the spring had been deliberately overwound.
or longer bear the pitiful sight of the frail figure lying exhausted in the lamplight he proposed that they should carry her to her room. Kneeshaw suggested that they should put her on the couch in the
rather,
When
when he could no
parlour, since she liked that room the best, where she would wake in the morning with the sunlight streaming in upon her. So telling Kneeshaw to precede him with
the lamp, Olivero went over to the chair and picked up the Green Child in his arms. He was amazed at the
much lighter than the body of a child, lighter than a sheaf of corn. The parlour was on the other side of the vestibule, to the right of the window
lightness of her body,
It
was
a musty fragrance that came from the unused furniture, the jars of dried rose-petals on the mantelpiece, the bleached sprays of honesty. Inside the shining brass fender were two large and convoluted shells, from
whose pink
lips
murmured
con-
tinually. Kneeshaw placed the lamp on the circular table in the middle of the room, and Olivero came in with his burden and placed her on the couch, which was already drawn across the window embrasure. He took cushions from the chairs and very gently disposed her head and arms. Olivero looked out into the bright night and won-
45
whose peaked misery went straight to Olivero's heart. He stood watching her, something of the fierceness and unrest of his life suddenly quenched in this
face
it
the space beyond the lamp. He had remained standing there ever since he placed the lamp on the table; his hand still rested loosely on the table-
him from
watched Olivero intently and jealously. The that had mounted in his sullen suspicion and resentment the questioning to which Olivero had nature all during submitted him were now resolved into hatred of the intruder. Olivero's assurance, the mastery with which
edge.
He
his
and complexities of character the simpler man, motive only dimly apprehended by Kneeshaw. He foresaw that Olivero would
angered
an ascendancy over the Green Child, quickly acquire would know how to deal with her, how to speak that he to her, how to make her human. What he had striven to do through the
fruitless years, this
man would
accom-
in a night. plish 'Let us go back,' suggested Olivero. 'Bring the lamp/ He walked out of the room, and Kneeshaw followed returned to the living-room, obediently enough. They then stood facing each other, Olivero with lowered and head, his hands clasped behind his back, quietened by
There
is
can
rest in
had uneasily. Olivero's persistence rid of this man inflamed his temper. He wished to be who threatened to disturb the sheltered plan of his life
Kneeshaw moved
threatened, even, to take the Green Child
fists
from him.
'You must go/ he cried, his clenched working up and down like hammers. Olivero realised that he must keep calm, must appear to yield to the other's persistence. At the same time, he would not leave the Green Child. He had come too far and endured too much to be thwarted of his destiny at
this
hour of
fulfilment.
'Very well/ he said. 1 will go/ But he did not intend to go. He did not know exactly what he should do. He glanced at the window, but shuddered inwardly. He decided to seek the stream the mill. It could not be, of course, that again, beyond could have diverted any machinations of Kneeshaw's but he would like to have the mental satisthe current, faction of knowing that the stream continued its perthe mill. He passed out through the verse course
beyond
back of the room, Kneeshaw standing sulHe went through the kitchen and found in a paved yard, with dim shadows of trees in himself the distance before him. But to the left stood the mill, a door
at the
lenly aside.
narrow building three storeys high, its windows dimly lit. The hum of the machinery came softly across the darkness, with the more distant sound of swirling water
behind
it.
47
was dammed, and the water sank swiftly and almost road at his feet. It emerged on the silently under the other side of the road, in a sluice down which it ran like a swift bolt of steel, and was shot with force into the
mill-wheel. Olivero passed through pockets of the great a small wicket-gate that led on to a platform above the mill-wheel; on his right was a door into the mill. The mill-wheel seemed to move slowly under the great weight
of descending water, which broke into angry spray of the cumbrous wheel. against the dull resistance water from the dam escaped Down below the surplus
the waters along a steep chute. Beyond the wheel all a tormented whirlpool, from which a united again in roar came up that deadened all other sounds. Olivero went to the far end of the small platform and looked down into the confused waters. The moon was still sufficient to cast an oily sheen on the water, but Olivero could see no direction in the whirlpool: the water had in many years gouged out a deep pool,
falling
into this pool for a whole day withhundreds of cross-currents repeat a single was a continual interweaving of irregular
ribbons of water, gushing and spouting in every direction. The final drift of the stream was now lost in the
darkness. Into the darkness Olivero peered, but it was all so If for a moment he might stop the mill-wheel, hopeless.
it
in the pool. Olivero knew, from his own childhood spent at a mill, that it was the easiest thing in the world to a mill-wheel. You had either to move the wooden
might be
see possible to
what happened
to the water
stop
48
screwed down the lock until it would screw no farther, and then rushed back to the platform. The wheel was slowly coming to a standstill, the water dripping from its sodden moss-hung rungs and staves. To get a better view of the pool, Olivero lay flat on his belly, shading his eyes from the rays of the moon. He gazed
He
down into the waters, concentratedly. The waters below still made so much noise, that he was not aware of the
cessation of the mill's machinery,
him
and did not even hear But whilst Olivero was open.
making his researches, Kneeshaw had returned to the mill, and was presently amazed to find his machinery coming to a standstill. The foreman had now left, and therefore no one could have disengaged the mill-wheel. The flow of water must have been diverted, and he therefore
made
his
way
When
he could see nothing, but he noticed that the water from the sluice was not running. He therefore stepped out on to the platform, and in He pitched forward doing so stepped on Olivero's foot. and fell, and since the platform was narrow, and had no hand-railing, he only saved himself from falling he opened the door,
headlong over the side of the wheel by clutching at the wooden chute. When he recovered himself and turned,
49
i>
He
Kneeshaw and the open door, but Kneeshaw sprang too, and they closed in a grip on the platform. Kneeshaw had clasped his arms round Olivero's body and was attempting to lift him off his feet and carry him to the edge of
the platform. Olivero struggled and succeeded in getting
his right
arm
with
all his
make him
free and this he pressed palm upwards, force against Kneeshaw's chin, hoping to release his grip. But he felt himself being
ground in spite of all his efforts. Kneeshaw tried to turn with his burden, and Olivero seized the
lifted off the
opportunity, when his opponent's balance was all on one leg, of suddenly hurling his weight forward, kicking backwards against the wall of the mill. Kneeshaw stag-
gered and fell across the platform. His head hung over the pit, but he still gripped Olivero like a snake. Olivero spread out his legs to guard against being turned over, and found a buttress for each foot, one against the wall of the mill, the other against the chute. It would be man to overturn practically impossible for the strongest
him. With his disengaged hand he was still pressing back the hard foul chin of Kneeshaw, and now he
pressed with
all his force.
He knew
that in this
way he
cried,
He
moment
lifted his
complete his original intention to set the mill going again. Olivero heard the water swish down the chute and break over the wheel; but since the gear had not been disengaged, the wheel would not move. It had to be released first, and gather momentum before the
machinery would engage. Kneeshaw reappeared at the door with this purpose in mind. The lever and gear were directly behind the bin on which Olivero was seated, and at first Kneeshaw hesitated to pass him. But Olivero,
understanding his intention, signalled to him to go past.
Kneeshaw pulled the lever and his hand remained was a bar of iron about three feet long, resting on it. It
with a square socket at the end which fitted on to the wheel-gear. It lifted off. Outside the mill-wheel gathered momentum. Kneeshaw turned rapidly, the lever lifted above his head. But Olivero had heard the intent interval during which Kneeshaw stood transfixed by the sudden temptation the iron in his hand presented to him, and just as Kneeshaw lifted the lever he turned. Kneeshaw had no time to divert the blow, which fell
air.
The
5'
peered down into the swirling waters. He could see nothing for the spray of the chute, and therefore ran to cut off the flow at the sluice. This done he ran back. The wheel was coming to a standstill again, but as it rose the face of Kneeshaw suddenly emerged out of the obscurity of the well into the moonlight. He was clinging to one of the rungs of the wheel, and rose as the wheel turned. But when he was within three feet of the top of the platform, the wheel finally stopped. He lifted his face to Olivero and cursed him. For now the wheel, being disengaged from the gears and revolving freely on its axis, began slowly to be borne down in the reverse direction by the weight of Kneeshaw's body. Kneeshaw
realised that this
Olivero
ately.
knew
too,
would happen, and imagined that and had stopped the water deliberwheel by wedging his foot
He
against the wall of the platform, but this was all slimy with water weeds and offered no resistance. The wheel suddenly lurched downwards and Kneeshaw fell backwards into the whirlpool. Olivero, who had fallen flat on his stomach in an effort to catch hold of Kneeshaw,
saw him
his view.
fall,
of the well
and heard his cry, but then the darkness and the tossing water hid everything from
back over the bridge, through the stack-
He ran
him
all
invisible in
the direction of the mill-wheel. He waded upwards between the black walls, till the water beat against his breast and he felt himself sinking quickly beyond his
depth. The roar of water was deafening and nothing could be seen except the dim phosphorescence of the foam. He desisted and made his way back to the low
bank.
He
him. But nothing came. He began to shudder violently from the icy cold wet clothes that clung to his skin. When he could no longer endure the icy agony of the cold, he returned to the house. In the kitchen he found the embers of a fire, before which he stripped and
dried and
clothes
warmed
himself.
He wrung
an
found round
himself, he sank into a chair by the fireside. He felt sure that Kneeshaw was drowned. It was very unlikely that he could swim, and the pool below the
wheel was deep, the currents strong. The mill had stopped; the lights in the lamps would burn low. It must now be two or three o'clock in the morning. At six or earlier the servant girl would come down and find him there. It would be difficult to explain his presence to her; more difficult still to explain Kneeshaw's absence. But actually he never saw the servant girl. About six o'clock he awoke with a start. It was already daylight, but not a sound was to be heard in the house. He quietly put on his dry clothes and went through to the front
53
'Kneeshaw has gone/ said Olivero, after some time passed, and as they approached the river-bank. She turned an unmoved and perhaps uncomprehending face towards him. 'Kneeshaw has gone/ he repeated. 'He fell into the mill dam, into the water below the wheel. I think he is drowned/ She said nothing. They were by the side of the stream now, at a point about two hundred yards below the
had
mill.
still
grassy path led alongside the stream, which here ran rather deeply between earthy banks. At intervals
54
stream, and started. Olivero followed her startled glance. In the angle made by the bank and the pole across the stream, in a backwater thick with dried stalks and withered sedge, floated the body of Kneeshaw.
It
as they stood transfixed by the stile. His black hair, wet and matted, fell over his pale forehead, but did not hide
and
terror, was deeply horrified. He had already concluded that Kneeshaw was drowned, but the sudden sight of his dead body actualised, in one acute instant, all the mental
But the Green Child was already moving had, before he had realised it, descended from and taken a few steps in apparent unconcern. not look back, but went slowly on. With one last look at the corpse swinging in
on.
She
stile
the
She did
the cur-
rent of the stream, Olivero leapt over the stile and followed the Green Child. They walked several miles, past
the outlying farms, and at last left the fields and followed the stream, now diminished, across the moorland. But how can the stream grow narrow and yet flow
onwards?
Olivero
asked himself.
He
explained his
55
but the Green Child had revived as the sun rose. They drank water from the stream, and at a place on the moor where the stream forked, and three pine trees cast some shade, they rested for two hours, and during that time Olivero told the Green Child the story of his
ger,
life.
Then in the afternoon they followed the stream into the heart of the moor. About four o'clock they came into a small valley, near the highest point of the moorland. It had an entrance, but no exit. At the farther end it curved round, and there in the basin at the foot of
this slope, the
stream had
its
beginning, or
its
end.
he approached the end of his long research. It seemed so long, a whole lifetime, since he had left the village the evening before on this errand of investigation. Here he was at the solution of his perplexity. The stream came to an end here, not in the all-gathering sea, but far inland, in the embrace
of the hills.
off his shoes and socks, and rolling up waded out into mid-stream. The bed of the stream was warm and sandy; his feet sank into the warm sand. The Green Child followed him, and side by
Olivero took
his trousers,
side they walked towards the basin. The stream exSoon panded into a bog, thick with rushes and
myrtle.
they saw before them a round pool. The stream flowed into this pool, and seemingly round it, in a complete circle. But the middle of the pool was very still, no vortex. There were even lilies and kingcups on
floating
must be shallow, thought Olivero, but where, then, does the water go? They advanced slowly.
the surface.
It
softly
It
was
56
The
The
sand, though
it
seemed
solid,
grain dancing water, thought Olivero, must sink here. And as he thought this, he saw the green naiad figure of Sally step forward. She walked swiftly through the
on a stretched drum.
water on to the silvery sand. She was sinking, and as she sank she turned towards Olivero. Her face was transarm figured, radiant as an angel's. She stretched out an towards Olivero. With a cry of happiness, as if a secret joy had suddenly been revealed to him, he raced forward and hand in hand they sank below the surface of
the pool.
57
that Olivero related to the Green Child trees died on the moorland air. The narrative that follows is based on the papers which were discovered afterwards in the baggage he had left at the inn, reinforced by the archives of the Hispanic Association of South America. Naturally it lacks the simplicity of style which Olivero must have used on that unique occasion; for he would realise, as he spoke to the Green Child, that she came from a world of which he had no knowledge. She had never been able to describe that world to anyone, because there were no earthly words to exchange for her memories. If he had asked her if trees like those above them grew in that world, or if any trees at all grew
there, she
would only have shaken her head and said: 'Everything was different.' For thirty years Olivero, too, had lived in a world where everything differed strangely from the peaceful
before them. Trees grew in that country, of course, as in England, but their green leaves were often covered with white dust, and hung in the glaring sun like leaves of clay. Olivero had words like these to de-
scene
too many words, words the Green Child had never heard and could not understand. But he had to use those words, because words and things grow together in the mind, grow like a skin over the tender images of things until words and things cannot be separated. The words the Green Child did not understand fell like music on her ears, and the music had a meaning for her, so that none of Olivero's words was
scribe his world,
altogether lost
on the moorland
air.
When
I left
to
pointed place. was ambitious that is to say, I was anxious to win command over men by the exercise of those talents talents for writing, for expressing ideas, for using words. Words
centre of the world, and I thought that among all its wonders, in the variety o its ways, I should find my apI had faith in certain of my talents. I
can attract men's eyes and fascinate their minds even when they mean little or realise how difficult it would be nothing. But I did not to make one's voice heard, to lift one's self above the crowd, to gain any little eminence from which the words from one newspaper might attract attention. I wandered but nowhere was it possible to gain office to another, can be bright and
glittering,
published work.
entrance, to make a beginning, I had nothing to offer them a young country schoolmaster, who had never a line, who had no experience of newspaper
The twenty pounds I had brought with me were soon exhausted. At first I allowed myself a pound a week to live on, but when ten weeks had passed, with no work
in sight, I then allowed myself only ten shillings a week. And when another ten weeks had passed, and still no five shillings a week, work found, then I allowed
myself
that cost sixpence a night and spending sleeping in beds the rest on bread. I was in this unhappy condition when one day I saw a notice in a tailor's shop window, which
YOUTH WANTED. APPLY WITHIN/ It was a raw November day. I was cold and hungry I entered the was a counter, and behind it a room shop. Facing me stacked with rolls of cloth down one side; on the other
read: 'SMART
:
side
wood
staircase leading to an upper floor, and understaircase an office separated from the room by and glass partition. The door of this office opened
6b
THE GREEN CHILD with a click, and a man advanced towards me Mr. with Klein, the owner of the shop. He was a small man
a big head sunk low in his shoulders; his skin was grey and loose on his rounded jaws; the lids of his eyes were lashless. There was something like a snake in his general
a tortoise. I drew myself up appearance a squat reptile, as he approached me. I was tall in comparison, and was then very thin and emaciated; my hair had grown long and fell in a shock over my forehead and ears. I explained that I was an applicant for the post advertised in his window. He looked at me sharply and asked my age. I said nineteen, because a man already twenty too oldP a is perhaps no longer to be called youth. 'Oh, wrinkled hands imhis fat Mr. Klein exclaimed,
waving
patiently.
'But no!'
cried,
in my desperate voice to make thing compelling enough Mr. Klein check the backward turn which he had and raise his eyebrows in already given to his body,
surprise.
1 am young,
to explain.
am
starving, I can
work hard/
began
'Are you clever with figures?' he asked, in a voice which I then recognised as foreign. 'Yes. I was at a good school. I have studied mathematics,' I explained, not wishing to put my claims too high. 'Mathematics, eh? Mathematics!' cried Mr. Klein, and that was, I think, the first time I had exercised the of words, of one word 'So you have studied
magic power
business.'
And
then he asked several other questions, finally agreed to give me a trial. I was to return at eight o'clock the next morning. That night I gave myself a good meal, and next morn61
and
myself to
Mr. Klein.
justified.
his own account. When I walked into he had been in business for only six months, and during that time had attempted to keep his own books. But the English money system gave him great trouble, and many hours were spent in fruitless endeavour to make his accounts balance. So finally he
fled to England several years before this time. At first he had worked as a tailor's cutter, but being of a capable and independent nature, had quickly saved enough
money to begin on
his shop,
decided to employ a clerk, and had put a notice in his window only an hour or two before I had seen it. I was
after my first applicant for the post, and was, one pound a week. day's trial, engaged at a salary of The first day I spent checking Mr. Klein's books, and
the
first
he was so impressed with the rapidity and sureness with which my eye added up the columns of pounds, shillings and pence, that he made no further enquiry into my For myself I found that my school knowcapabilities.
the ledge sufficed for the simple business of balancing credit and debit sides of Mr. Klein's cash-book and
ledger,
he was perfectly satisfied. When he further asked for an analysis of his costs, I was able to give him this without difficulty. In a week or two I
and with
this
had established a relationship of complete confidence and was even given control of the cash-box.
not trouble you with any further details of this like Mr. Klein, to understand part of my life. I grew to his simple commercial mind, to sympathise with the
I shall
62
presence in London and was the motive for his desire to justify himself in the world. I discovered, for example,
behind in Poland was his ambition to make a home for them in England; but it must be a good home, a place of comfort which would give them a standing in the world, where the family could be reestablished with himself as the patriarchal head. But I did not stay with him long enough to see his ambition
his intense family loyalty.
left
He had
sisters. It
Actually I had loathed the dingy shop, the smell of cloth, the pervading greasy odour of the district, the dull unimaginative work I was compelled to do, the degeneral poverty of my circumstances. Poverty is
realised.
human being; but for one born with those instincts and senses which cry out for beauty and
sensitive pleasures, for music and poetry and romance, a slow torture, a torture of the mind rather than of and so all the more acute. There were mothe
it is
gall
body, ments, passing before a bookshop or a theatre, when the seemed to rise in floods of bitterness within me. I
could afford to indulge their people who could take these things for granted, as part of their routine and heritage, and without the real need that consumed me. I did not cry so much against the society in which this unjust distribution of goods was normal, but rather saw the problem as an individual one, and longed myself to possess the
who
power to command such things. Perhaps in this I was no better than my employer, Mr. Klein; but I was less Klein knew that possession is only given practical. Mr. in exchange for the tokens of wealth, which are earned by industry; and therefore set himself single-mindedly
to accumulate these tokens. I wished to possess myself of
63
wished to escape.
had entered into a bond to serve Mr. Klein for three of this bond he had increased my years, and in virtue first to thirty shillings a week, and finally to two salary,
I
last
him
managed
this
to save
and with
sum
service with two years of altogether I saved forty pounds, determined, at the end of
my
my
bondage, to venture out into the world. At first thoughts turned to America,
my
where so
many young men in my situation had ventured with success. But my longings, though romantic, had definite
limitations; they were not of the kind that finds a satisfaction in struggling with natural forces. I was not a instinct, but sought rather to dwell in those
pioneer by
countries
where the longest human experience had left the richest deposit of beauty and wisdom. Greece, Italy, Spain were the scenes of my most frequent fancies, and if my thoughts ranged farther, it was to the remote and mystical East, to India and China. Actually it was Mr. Klein himself who set me off on my wanderthink he realised the deep-seatedness of my unings. I
and
cities
rest,
and when
confided to
him
my fortune abroad, he was not merely sympathetic, but entrusted me with a mission which took me to the heart of Europe. Though the letters he received from his sisters gave him no cause for alarm, he wished to be assured of the well-being of his mother, who could not
herself write.
He
sum
of
but would not money, about a hundred English pounds, with such a sum. His mother lived in a trust the post small town to the south of Warsaw, and thither Mr. to send me, paying the expenses of my Klein
proposed
64
THE GREEN CHILD outward journey and giving me ten pounds in addition, to carry me farther if I wished. I accepted his offer without hesitation; during
three years in London I had there was particularly cared for, and It was nothing, nothing at all, to keep me in England. Octoher when we began to discuss this plan, and
my
made no
already
at
first
friends
Mr. Klein suggested that I should wait for the next spring, when travelling would be pleasanter. But so an adventure, that I eager was I to be away on such a delay, and one day in Novemwould not hear of such ber, almost exactly three years after I had first entered Mr. Klein's shop, I left London for Warsaw. I did not delay on the outward journey. The money,
round my middle in a belt Mr. Klein himself had made. The trains in those which and I was days were few, slow and uncomfortable, in the cheapest possible manner. Nevertheless, travelling no words could convey the interest and excitement with which I followed every stage of the journey the coast
in gold coins, was strapped
of England receding as we set out to sea, the sense of being at sea, the first impact of foreign voices and foreign faces at Hamburg, where I left the ship, the strange
habits of
my
took to
Lubeck, the bustle and renewal of interest at every stage. I sat still and silent in a corner of the coach. I was conscious of the belt
under
my
shirt.
slept fitfully.
At
Lubeck*! took a small coasting vessel to Danzig, from whence I proceeded by boat up the River Vistula, until
the ice
made
navigation impossible.
The
last
part of
my
in a sleigh, drawn by small journey was accomplished When we reached Warsaw it was inshaggy ponies. fallen and under its white covertensely cold; snow had the houses and streets looked like pictures in a book ing of fairy-tales. But the reality was grimmer. In the large
65
square where
their right hands, with rifles slung across their backs. They were followed by a cart drawn by four horses, escorted on each side by another mounted soldier; two
other soldiers followed on foot, with rifles only. The cart was boarded across to make a platform, and on this platform, seated on a bench, was a poor dejected wretch of
a
man.
He
his neck
was clad in a cap and greatcoat, and round was hung a board, inscribed with two lines of
black lettering. I could not read this notice, and could not make enquiries from those about me; but there was no need. It was only too evident that the man was a
condemned criminal on
the crowd near
his way to the gallows. Some of shouted out angry jeering words, but the prisoner paid no attention. A few flakes fell out of a cold grey sky; the procession passed, oddly silent on the fallen snow. I could not speak the Polish language, but Mr. Klein had given me a letter which I could show to anyone who looked kindly and sympathetic, explaining that I was an Englishman who wished to proceed to the town of and requesting the kind stranger to assist me.
me
and a few words which I had learnt, I found the coach without difficulty and eventually reached The house of the Kleins was in an obscure side street, but this, too, I found without great difficulty, and for the situation I now had to face the letters I carried with me were sufficiently explanatory. I was welcomed at the door by one of Klein's sisters, and led through
With
this letter,
66
She was
presently
deaf,
and muttered unintelligibly; but I was shown to a bedroom, which I gathered would
be put at
When
my
had washed myself, I returned to the kitchen laid the belt of money on the table, not a little reand lieved to have reached my destination and fulfilled my
I
mission.
The
old
a
woman
The
and without
one, and
turned her chair to the table, to unpick the coins were revealed one by gold
piled up Only when the last coin had been recovered did the old woman again become aware of my presence, and then, to my alarm, she rose from her chair and stumbled across to where I was seated, pressed her hands on my head and kissed my brow in gratitude. She then took a silk cloth, gathered the money into it, and disappeared upstairs. Meanwhile the sister (only one ever appeared, and I concluded that the other was married and had left the house) had prepared a meal. Whilst we ate, the two women talked to
each other in happy excited voices, almost ignoring my when they turned with smiles to press presence except more food on me. I stayed three days with them, resting all the time, deliberating much, not yet determined what my next step should be.
The only foreign language I knew at that time was French, but I had no particular desire to go to France. I decided to make my way back to Hamburg and there consider what next to do. I said good-bye to the Klein family, returned to Warsaw, and from there retraced my path without any untoward incident. On the way I thought of every means of earning a living, but I could think of no other way than the one my abilities, coupled
my
me
namely,
the teaching of
my own language
to foreigners.
At Ham-
burg, however, an unexpected chance presented itself. I decided to seek the advice of the English consul, on how best to work my way to some cosmopolitan city like Paris. I found a sympathetic man, who after some conversation took interest in
my
plans,
and invited
me
to
sup with him. Eventually, through his kind intervention, I was taken on a vessel trading with Bordeaux and Morocco. It was agreed that I should deposit two hundred
and
fifty marks, half of all that remained to me, with the captain of the vessel, to be forfeited should I not make the return passage. I was to assist the captain, who
my
command of the two or three principal of Europe. I still thought so when we reached languages Bordeaux, in spite of the rough seas we encountered in
I
improved
my
the Bay of Biscay. But when, three or four days later, we reached the port of Cadiz, my resolution suddenly changed. The foul weather we had experienced in the Atlantic Ocean was left behind when we turned Cape St. Vincent; when we entered Cadiz harbour, the air
sweet, the city glittering beyond the blue snow-white turrets rising majestically into the clear sky. I was enchanted by the sight, and when I went
was
warm and
its
water,
on
shore,
streets,
still further delighted by all I saw the marble the massive ramparts, the wide promenades. At 68
I had conceived a romanour ancient enemies and was therefore overcome with joy to find no resentment among them, but everywhere a carefree gaiety and a manner of life
which struck
capital,
me
as ideal.
I
travel further.
Here
and seek
my
fortune.
The
my
desertion,
and natur-
ally I forfeited
I left the ship with my few belongings, he bade me farewell with a good grace, and even gave me a letter of introduction
my
to
some merchants
in Seville, with
whom
might find
employment.
I was not destined to leave Cadiz Ignorant as I was, both of the language of the country and the state of its affairs, I strayed into a trap which perhaps in any case I should not have avoided. On leaving the ship, I had gone to a lodging-house frequented by sailors. I had spent the evening wandering about the town, accustoming myself
Actually, however,
for
many months.
to
its
atmosphere,
and
One of them, who appeared to be of some subordinate rank, poured out a torrent of harsh words, not one of which had any meaning for me. But by his that I was under arrest, and must gestures I gathered
accompany them.
It was useless to resist. The keeper of the lodginghouse, a fat and disagreeable old sailor, looked at me
with displeasure. My kitbag, which I had left in an upper room, was in the possession of one of the soldiers.
69
Bewildered,
again.
There
my
me
cell,
spoke to me in Spanish. Perhaps he asked me whether I could speak Spanish; at any rate, I replied in French that I could not understand that language, and begged him to explain in French the reason of my arrest. He turned to another officer seated by his side and
in Spanish.
Then 'Vous
English. 'Et
hardly recog-
Jacobin,'
he added.
cognised as
I
my
He
writer, Voltaire, a
book of great wit and wisdom, which all other books, and constantly
read.
In a flash the situation was clearly revealed to me. For many years, Cadiz had been the revolutionary centre of Spain. Here, in 1812, the Cortes met and proclaimed the
first
Liberal constitution; here, in 1820, to renew that constitution, the citizens revolted, and the revolution
had spread throughout Spain. That revolution had later been suppressed by a French army under the due d'Angouleme, and ever since a state of anarchy and mili70
but in my tary oppression innocence I had not realised the state of vigilance and nor the incriminating espionage which still persisted, character of the few books I carried with me. Though never actively concerned with political affairs, my sympathies were decidedly Liberal. Voltaire, Rousseau and Diderot were authors who appealed to me both by the enlightened nature of their philosophy and the I had read other writings of literary graces of their style. a revolutionary flavour, such as Volney and Montesthis question 'Etes-vous Jacoquieu. When, therefore, bin?' was suddenly hurled at me, I could not instinctI began to explain that I had ively repudiate the name. no connection with the Jacobins, that I had no political
any kind. But the more voluble I grew, the convinced the officer became, and he soon cut me short with the further question: 'Ce livre est a vous? I could not deny it. Nor could I protest against the flimsy nature of the evidence. I knew that everywhere, the clergy and the reactionary forces, particularly among Voltaire was regarded as the arch-fiend who had first
beliefs of
less
stood perplexed
and
angry. 'Basta!' the officer cried, and gave further orders in his language. I was hurried out of the room and re-
turned to
my
moved
the
to a
were herded topolitical prisoners. in indescribable filth and squalor; soldiers were gether scarce and in such circumstances a few armed men could guard a hundred prisoners with ease. There I remained for the best part of two years. I
of about a
hundred
others,
We
some ordinary
made many
efforts to
make myself
7'
understood, and to
my
lot redressed.
But
until I
had
my gaolers, it was impossible to present my case; and when, after several months' assiduous exercise with my fellow prisoners, I could at last express myself clearly and forcibly, my guilt was regarded as confirmed by
time and
my
acquiescence.
fellow prisoners, a numlanguage, but I met, among my ber of so-called Jacobins, some of whom had in the past been followers of the famous revolutionary general,
Those dreadful months were to determine my future life. Not only did I become an adept of the Spanish
Rafael del Riego. As I have already confessed, I began with a certain general sympathy for their point of view; when ambition and poverty are joined in an individual, such a tendency is almost inevitable. But now I came into contact with political realities. I learned of the to establish justice in struggle that had taken place of Riego's abortive revolt and of Ferdinand's Spain hateful reign. We talked often of the liberated colonies in America, of their democratic constitutions and the of establishing there a new world free from possibilities the oppression and injustice of the old world. The men I talked with were not by any means disinterested idealists; some, indeed, were no better than military ad-
and though they had acquired, for the purhad in view, a certain familiarity with Jacobin pose they doctrines, I had no reason to believe that their rule, should they ever come to power, would be any less
venturers,
of the existing monarchy. But tyrannous than that among my acquaintances two or three men of a different cast, men who had been youths at the time of the French Revolution, and who had then become imbued with enthusiasm for the cause of liberty,
there were
equality
and
fraternity.
These
72
men
me
my
to their cause.
The death of Ferdinand, and the proclamation new Queen, was made the occasion of a partial
from which
termined,
sented
I benefited.
amnesty,
Whilst
still
when once
in prison I
had
de-
released, to
make
my
prepossession twenty English guineas, sewn, after my former employer's example, into the lining of my waistcoat. With these I hoped to procure a passage to Buenos Ayres or Rio de Janeiro, failOn ing any method of working release, I at
itself. I still
my
fortune in whatever
way way
to the
had
in
my
my way.
my
ships, which under cover of the Spanish flag, intercepted the English trading vessels on their way from the revolted Colonies. In all but name we were pirates, our crew partially recruited from the prison I had just left. At sea, after we had successfully accosted two homeward bound vessels,
The story of my voyage would take too long At Cadiz I enlisted on one of those
to tell in
and deprived them of the best of their cargoes, we were surprised by an outward bound vessel, which gave us chase, and being unburdened and of sail,
larger quickly overtook us. We surrendered after the exchange of a futile shot or two, and I should have shared the fate of the rest of the crew, and been put into chains, had I not
revealed
my nationality
I
As
it
was,
captain, and made the go-between and interpreter in all his dealings with the captive vessel. Another English vessel having been sighted, a was formed and the
and explained my unhappy fate. was accepted in good faith by the English
convoy
captives conducted to Buenos Ayres, and there over to the authorities. I carried out the
tiations for the English captain,
handed
for
necessary nego-
73
my
release.
and when
had explained
my
intention to
was dismissed with a friendly handshake. It was late in the day when I left the English ship. I decided to find a lodging near the shore. Avoiding the main thoroughfare as likely to be above my fortune and appearance, I took a parallel but less frequented street,
him,
I
judged to be the centre of the town. After Cadiz, I was depressed by the flat and monotonous appearance of the place, and suddenly felt forlorn and helpless. The streets were deserted, and I had to walk for a long time past
sheds and quays before reaching the inhabited quarters. Most of the houses were of the familiar Spanish type
presenting blank walls and iron grilles to the street
front, occasionally offering,
a glimpse of the bright and flowery patio within. I saw nothing in the nature of a lodging-house, so decided to
and whilst having some food and drink, enquiries from the owner. No sooner had I made this decision, than I came by a house which differed from the usual type; instead of a patio, the open door led directly to a room, which was lit from a lamp suspended from the ceiling. It was a bare room, but seated round a rough table were several
enter a coffee-house,
make
men, drinking wine. In later days, when I thought back on this scene, it occurred to me that several things, but principally the solemn and intent mien of the whole company, should have deterred me; but at the time, tired and hungry, and very uncertain of my surroundI took the place for a modest wine-house, such as ings, I had seen in Cadiz and in other parts of Europe. I therefore entered. If you are to understand what fol74
My
sailor's
blanket; the few possessions I was left with were tied in a bundle which I carried in my hand. Until I reached the threshold of the room I was unperceived.
I
stood there, looking for someone I might address. But no sooner was I noticed than there was a general movement, the men at the table rising to their feet.
They made
of welcome, and greeted me with expressions a place for me at the head of the table. I was still under the impression that I had entered a public room, and was not a little astonished at the general
glass courtesy and respect shown to me. before me and filled with wine. I was conscious of a certain expectancy
was placed
among my
much unconcompanions, but sipped my wine with as cern as 1 could muster. For a period that seemed an Then a voice from across the eternity no one spoke. table addressed me The Sefior has had a good voyage?' I lifted my gaze slowly, determined to be cautious.
:
'Yes/
I replied,
God
arrived safely/
'You came by the English ship that anchored in the estuary this morning?'
'By the same.'
from Cadiz/ but the ways of the sea are not came,
yesterday, direct
answered blindly, at first with the desire to be comBut I had not taken these three steps before I plaisant.
75
my
to
sonal action, to the surrender of the self to the event. It is well/ added the same speaker. And then, as
if
my thoughts: 'The man of destiny cannot be defeated, not even by the elements/ We drank in silence again for some time. Then the
echo
same man spoke again 'We have arranged that you shall rest in this house for two days. By the end of that time the guides from Roncador will be here. If you proceed by river the journey will take you many weeks; we therefore advise you to travel on horseback, and then in about twenty days you
:
will reach your destination. You will wait in the hills for the revolutionary forces under General Santos. The rest
is
unknown/
was in possession of the facts essential to an understanding of the maze into which the obscure workme. The general situation in ings of destiny had directed America was well known to me from my converSouth
By then
sations with
my
tion of the
reflected,
even exaggerated, in her colonial dependenruled for the most part by tyrannous viceroys and cies, a result, a spirit of unrest had grown captains-general. As
up among the settlers and natives, against which Spain, distracted by foreign invasion and domestic strife, was
herself. Buonaparte's invasion of the powerless to assert Peninsula had been the final act in the fall of an Empire, warning the outer provinces that the time had come for
them to assert their independence, and bring into being new world. Though the doctrines of the French Revolution had penetrated into the American Colonies, in
a
76
and
in effect the
new
military juntas, to which the Spanish troops hastened to ally themselves. Though the revolutions were in nearly all cases bloodless, there was no continuous peace. The
juntas assembled
by the various dictators proved ignorant and there was not a single colony that was not involved in a period of hopeless discord. But in every colony a few idealists existed, men imbued with
and
intractable,
the true republican principles, desirous to govern their countries for the benefit of the inhabitants. For the most
part small traders, Creoles and peasants, they lacked the necessary qualities for political leadership, and were everywhere dependent on somewhat unscrupulous adven-
who envied the power of the and who therefore professed revolumilitary dictators, tionary principles in the hope of commanding sufficient
turers, generally lawyers
as I
was
somewhat
Formed
on the model of the Jacobin Club, it had as its object the conversion of the whole of South America to the principles of the Revolution, and the eventual federation
the former colonies into one Republic. For that purpose it was in communication with the revolutionof
all
in Spain, from whom it expected to receive accredited agents ready to act as political leaders in the endeavour. By what particular chain of coincidence my
aries
The spokesman of the group, whom the others addressed as Don Gregorio, asked me many questions in Spain, more especially those of relating to the affairs
77
own arrival answered to their immediate expectations, I was never to learn. I accepted my fate, and they on their part had no cause to question my good faith.
among my
been
Don
we
late fellow-prisoners were several who had Gregorio's associates in the past, and of these
friends
to the
talked for
some
time.
was weary,
Don
room
Gregorio suggested that I should retire that was prepared for me, which I did pres-
be alone to consider
too exhausted to
my
position
to
and
my
I fell asleep,
come
anv decision
that night, my mind full of doubt and perplexity. I slept dreams long, but often waking in fright and anxiety. were full of terror, but towards dawn I fell into a deeper
My
when I awoke, late in the morning, all this was forgotten; my mind was clear and a deeision soon made. To retire from the part I was playing seemed to me not only a base desertion of the Providence that
slumber, and
terror
had guided me
to this spot, but, in sober truth, a dancourse. If I revealed myself, I should have to congerous fess to the deception I had practised the previous night, with unknown consequences. If I attempted to escape, I
should have to reckon with the vengeance of men who to desperate measures, and who were not likely to tolerate the existence of a traitor at large. In addition, my actual chances of escape were remote, considering the fact that I was a stranger in the
city,
with no definite plans and no knowledge of where best to hide or in what way to extricate myself. I therefore decided to risk the possibility of discovery, and to continue to play the part for which destiny had cast me. I rose, and, when I had washed and dressed, made my way downstairs. In the room where the meeting had been held the previous night I found only an
78
old
of coffee
and a
loaf of bread. I decided not to question her, but to await events. About midday a young Spaniard appeared,
whom
one of the revolutionaries, followed by a native gaucho. The latter was introduced to me as the with guide who was to accompany me to Roncador, and
I
recognised as
discuss the plans for the journey, the other purchase of necessary equipment and food, and any
I
whom
might
details.
This man was an old post-rider, perfectly familiar with the method of travelling in that country, dependable, but not above arranging matters to his personal into advantage. I foresaw that I might have to take him entrusted him with a my confidence, and therefore liberal amount of gold with which to purchase a saddle,
pistols
informing him that if he made a good purchase he might have the surplus as a reward. I was still discussing the journey with him when
and other
necessaries,
his advice on Gregorio appeared, and, after adding invited me to dine with him. We went some
Don
particulars,
distance through the streets till we came to a pretty house with a patio or quadrangle, and there we joined Don Gregorio's family (his wife and two small children) at a copious and well-cooked meal, the best food, in fact, that I had tasted for more than two years. During the mission nor any other serious affairs meal neither
some
my
were discussed; but afterwards, when the rest of the Don Gregorio showed family had retired to their siesta, a cool room furnished with a table and a me his
library,
couch, a terrestrial globe and a collection of two or three hundred books, mostly of a political or legal character. of the volumes he exchanged opinions about some from the shelves, and then I was left to take my picked siesta on the library couch.
We
79
was four or
five o'clock
Don
Gregorio came and told me that leave Buenos Ayres at dawn the next
day, and should further preparations I felt necessary before retiring to my room for all the rest I could obtain. me to the best stores, and to He offered to
accompany
little I require any. But there was that I could think of as appropriate to my adventure. I purchased a pocket compass, some pencils and paper,
lend
me money should
and various
articles of clothing. Don Gregorio accomback to my original lodging, and there said panied good-bye to me. He gave me messages of fraternal goodwill for General Santos, and instructed me in a simple code by means of which I might transmit messages to himself or to any members of the Society in Buenos
me
Ayres. At four o'clock the next morning the gaucho came to wake me. He had a post horse at the door, with my saddle and equipment already in place. I filled the saddlewith some bags with my few possessions and mounted Although from boyhood used to riding
trepidation.
horseback, it was three or four years since I had been in the saddle, and never had I ridden the long distances before us. Dawn was just breaking as we clattered the deserted streets of Buenos Ayres. From my
through
to cover from sixty guide I learned that we might expect but I confided to him that I could to eighty miles a day, not contemplate so much the first day or two. When we reached the first post-house, about twenty miles from the
still felt tolerably fresh, city, I
and agreed
to press
on to
the next stage. Altogether we rode forty-three miles that at the post-house, a miserable thatched day, and put up hut, with no provision for the traveller beyond a hammock of dried hide, some roasted or boiled beef, and the
80
pampas. everywhere and almost wild, and covered the ground at a pace far swifter than the horses of this country. of that journey is still vivid in my mind. The
memory
I observed everything with interest and excitement. The wide grassy pampas are devoid of natural features, but their level immensity was itself most impressive, even awesome. The grasses that grew by the side of our road were of and
It
crowns and jagged branches like fantastic trees above our heads. Great herds of cattle moved like migrations over the plain; deer and ostriches bounded from our the bearded biscachas and path, and smaller animals, the mailed armadillo, met our onset with sudden surprise;
ridges would
The
But everywhere I found hospitable men paskeepers, farmers, sometimes a priest. post-house was unimpeded everyone assumed I was a trader, sage a prospector and for or part I adopted a
hundred yards a covey of partwhirring from under our feet. are less distinct, people I met on my journey in my memory by the more remarkable events
My
my perhaps but reserved attitude. At two of the larger towns pleasant we rested for a day, but at the end of twenty days I reckoned we had come about 1,200 miles, and were within a day's ride of our destination. We were at the
foot of a
mountain range that stretched as far as the eye could see on either side. The village we had reached, inhabited entirely by Indians, was at the end of the road. To the east the great river, that at a distance of never more than fifty miles had been our constant companion,
81
booming sound of which could be heard in our village. The pass into Roncador was merely a rocky and precipitous track, crossing the ridge about fifty miles to the west of the falls.
waterfalls, the
and immense
our journey I had had much opportunity to comwith myself, for the gaucho, though agreeable enough as a travelling companion, resourceful and faithful, had no great powers of conversation. He knew that I was bound on a political mission, but I doubt whether this meant anything to him. He had a fixed loathing of the Old Spaniards, as the foreign oppressors were called, and his political sympathies were racial rather than idealistic. Nor was his knowledge of the country to which we were bound very extensive; he had been there often as a courier and guide, but he had never lived there. He could add nothing essential to the information given to
On
mune
me by Don Gregorio.
The country
of the
former Spanish
provinces. It consisted of a high upland plateau, about the same size as Ireland. It was entirely pastoral in
character,
its
and only
its
economic and political identity. That identity would never have existed but for the activities of the Jesuits,
early in the seventeenth century had penetrated into this fertile district, established a mission there, converted and organised the Guarani Indians who had pre-
who
nomadic existence, taught them the principles of agriculture and trading, and some of the mechanical arts, such as shoe-making, carpentry and building. For a hundred and fifty years they had guided the destinies of the community they had been instruviously led a
more or
less
82
dent of the Spanish King, even in political matters (and, say, of the Pope in theological matters). They carried their intrigues and pretensions to such a length
some
King resolved to expel them from all his and prepared his plans with such thoroughness domains, and secrecy that in one night every Jesuit in the Spanish colonies was surprised and arrested by the civil and military authorities, sent to Buenos Ayres under escort, and from thence shipped off for Spain. This event had taken place between sixty and seventy
that finally the
years before
Jesuits
it
my
arrival in
had
had been
ordination, it expulsion of the Jesuits, the missions either fell into utter decay, the Indians reverting to their primitive mode of existence, or they fell, as was more often the case, into
and a half, and though and had kept the Indians in strict subhad been stable and efficient. After the
the hands of unscrupulous Spaniards and Creoles. were appointed Spanish governor and three lieutenants to each colony; to each town a civil administrator for
temporal affairs and two curates for spiritual affairs. Actually such government was a cloak for a system of and robbery; it is reckoned that in the four spoliation years following the expulsion of the Jesuits the wealth of
83
narrative with further facts. Sufficient to say that for the the colonies and missions had conpast sixty odd years tinued to decline in wealth, in population, and in all the outward signs of civilisation. When at the break-up of the colonies had declared their indethe
Spanish empire an impendence, all the inhabitants looked forward to and certainly, from the in their condition;
provement
of the settlers and traders who had adopted point of view the country as their own, everything was to be gained by the rejection of the Spanish dominion. The power fell into the hands of the officers of the local militia (forces assisted in formerly recruited by the Spanish garrisons), and a merchant or two. In most some cases by a lawyer cases a military dictatorship was established, but since such governments had no purpose beyond the selfof the dictator, they only served to
aggrandisement
complicated by in conflict with every dictatorship in turn, ing themselves in their power to impede administration. Meandid all while the unfortunate Indians found themselves worse off than ever; not only did they lack the political organisation and arms to make a revolt possible; they were even devoid of the necessary initiative. Utterly demoralvictims of whoever posised, they became the helpless the authority to oppress them. sessed of oppression the Society of Against this system was endeavouring to set the in Buenos Patriots
principles
in bloodshed intrigues invariably ending the action of the new priests, who, find-
were further
of the
tinent there was scarcely a man of political inclinations whose conduct was above the suspicion of venality, and who was free to devote himself to the cause of the oppressed people. The committee in Buenos Ayres consisted for the most part of men attached by affairs and families to that city, and fully occupied with their own political future. It was for this reason that they had besought their comrades in Cadiz to send out approved agents, one of whom I had unwittingly become. The efforts of such agents would have been quite futile but for the existence within most of the colonies of dissatisfied elements among the military forces. These forces, as I have already said, were not purely Spanish; in fact,
if
in Spain/ the purely Spanish in the remoter colonies, was but a element, especially minority. At the time of the secession of the colonies
by Spanish
is
meant 'born
many even
the nucleus of the military dictatorships. Apart from these, the greater number of the soldiers consisted of men born in the colonies, generally of a Spanish father and
an Indian mother. But there was no strict racial barrier, and even pure Indians were enrolled in the lower ranks. There existed, therefore, the possibility of making a division between the Spanish-born and the Americanborn military elements. The former, who had nothing but their military bravado to recommend them, were often intolerable in their bearing, as well as idle and corrupt in their manners; the latter, with families and
85
staff of officers
was,
as usual, out of all proportion to the size of the army, and twenty or including five generals, a dozen colonels,
was the extent of Roncador. But it had by the Society of Patriots that a sufficient support for a new government could be found, not only among the Indians, but even in the army, and secret negotiations had taken place between the committee in Buenos Ayores and Chrisanto Santos, the I was to report. Santos, although he general to whom had risen to the highest rank in the army, belonged to a in the colonies, whose blood was family long established not unmixed with that of the Indians with whom he
came
to
to change the existing sympathised. But though eager state of things, and to establish order and justice in the
and oppression, there was no one of place of chaos sufficient education or experience in the country with
86
he could felt, establish he had no stomach for the details of political administration, without which it is impossible to govern
order, but
whom
a community.
twenty-four hours, we left for hired the last short but arduous stage of our journey. and an extra man to act as guide. The path four mules, wound upwards through a rocky and precipitous valley,
We
sometimes following the bed of the stream, sometimes climbing high above the banks across thickly wooded we reached the summit of the slopes. About midday and there we rested four hours. Though we were at pass, least four thousand feet above the sea level, the autumn day was still and warm. My gaucho and the guide slept in the shade; the mules were busy stamping their feet
and twitching their hides to keep off the tiresome insects which infested them. I was now too excited to sleep, at once eager and apprehensive, on tiptoe, as it were, at the threshold of a country which held my destiny. The at my feet, the vista of wooded hills, the grassy track
vast open sky above me, all invited
secret promise.
I roused my companions towards four o'clock, and even cursed them for their sluggishness. Our destination was only six miles away, and the descent of a thousand feet more gradual. But the woodland paths were often impeded with new undergrowth and fallen branches, so that it was nearly seven o'clock when we finally reached a clearing and saw before us a low estancia or farmhouse,
me
forward with a
built of
wood and
clay-filled wattles.
We
halted on the
whilst our guide went forward to edge of the clearing warn the owner of our approach.
He
presently
came back,
signalling us to approach*
THE GREEN CHILD not differ much from many I had seen on
journey from the coast. It consisted of two long rooms, the first furnished with a table and a few rough chairs, the second with a couple of beds. An old man, his broad brown wrinkled face wreathed in silky white hair, came forward to greet us. This was Borja Yrabuye, the Indian in whose cottage I was to await the instructions of General Santos. He spoke a little Spanish, and was infinitely polite, indeed servile. In an incredibly short time he had ready an excellent meal of roast beef and
my
root, followed by yerba tea and cigars. Afterwards amused myself by attempting to talk with Yrabuye in the Guarani dialect and before bedtime had made some
yucca
I
progress.
the gaucho left early for Roncador, warn General Santos of my arrival, and to receive instructions. Roncador (the principal town having the same name as the country) was a full day's ride away, so
to
I could not expect Pedro's return for forty-eight hours. I sent the guide back with the mules, and spent the following two days in the excellent company of Yrabuye, from
whom,
much among
in spite of difficulties of communication, I learned of the customs of the country, the state of affairs
the
Indians,
their
complaints
settled
against
the
improve
my
government. knowledge of
the dialect. Pedro did not return the evening of the second day of his absence, as I expected, but on the third day he reGeneral Santos himself. Of appeared, accompanied by
the General made up for his exceptionally low stature, deficiencies by a fiery but good-humoured physical appearance, the effect mainly of his dark restless eyes and a black beard, streaked with grey, which radiated
88
response. Yrabuye, who was a dependant of the General's, and had often accompanied him on shooting expeditions, soon welcomed his master with a meal to his liking, which we all shared. Afterwards the General and I drew apart and held a long interchange of views. I call it an interchange of views, but my part of the conversation was mostly in the form of questions, which General Santos answered without reserve. Actually he was old enough to be my father, but he treated me without the least condescension, attributing to me a political wisdom and wide experience of affairs which I assumed without protest. In dealing with men of action I have always found that in matters which they regard as intellectual they have no perception nor possibility of judgment, and will readily accept the most superficial display of know-
ledge as a profound mystery beyond their grasp, provided always that the display is made with calmness and confidence. The General had let it be assumed that he had gone to the mountains for a day's shooting, so we had the
whole of the following day to discuss and elaborate our of the opinion that surprise must plans. The General was be the principle of our strategy. Once the city was occuthe Spanish officers under arrest, we need fear pied, and no further opposition from the people of Roncador. We
should, indeed, proclaim a popular government and innew constitution, a constitution which would follow the model indicated by the most
vite their assent to the
enlightened philosophers of Europe. The General could count on the fidelity of his
own
89
seemed to be no simple or straightforward solution of the problem. I then asked the General to give me some precise idea of the layout of the city and the land surrounding it. The city was simplicity itself, consisting of a central square, from each corner of which two streets branched off at right angles. There were some minor
streets or lanes intersecting these at irregular intervals.
round no considerable dimensions, ran through a stony bed, and was crossed by a single bridge of three arches span. The street to the bridge ran off from the northwest corner of the square, and was the principal
of
on the slopes and top of a semi(actually the escarpment of a plain) the foot of which a river flowed. The river, itself
mound
thoroughfare.
itself consisted for the most part of huts, on the east side of the square. There, more than except a hundred years ago, the Jesuits had constructed their cathedral, flanked by two lower stone buildings, one formerly the college of the Jesuits and now used as a barracks and military headquarters, the other a warehouse and seat of the civil administration. The whole of the army staff occupied quarters in the college, which was built round a large quadrangle, with a covered
The town
cloister
extending all the way round. only entrances to the cloisters were two: one direct from the square, a covered way capable of admitmen abreast; the other from the ting a cart, or four
The
90
our command.
Though he could
trust his
men
to follow
him
them
in person
General Santos despaired of even communicating to a secret plan of operations; nor could he answer for their reliability, because the very simplicity of their
characters prevented many of them understanding the subtle nature of an intrigue, or the necessity of silence. therefore finally dismissed any plan which involved
We
mass
action, and resolved on a swift operation employing very few men. Such action would have to be drastic and spectacular, and I, who had hitherto considered myself among the most humane and tender-hearted of men, found myself considering, and even urging, the method of assassination. Merely to arrest the Dictator
and
associates might provoke desperate the remaining officers; and however opposition among loyal our forces, and however favourable the populace, a victory would not be assured without a struggle involving untold bloodshed. decided that our plan should contemplate, in the first instance, the assassination of the Dictator alone;
his
immediate
We
other executions would only be carried out if the event provoked definite opposition. But the General was fairly confident that the death of the Dictator would not be regretted even among his associates, for those who were
We
spectacular.
private assassination
circumstances
people by free election of representatives. So much determined, the problem resolved itself into settling on the most suitable occasion. The General, after some thought, recalled that on the first Sunday of April (which was late autumn in the latitude) there took place
the ceremony of the presentation of the tithes. Originthis method of supporting ally introduced by the Jesuits, the clergy had been continued under the Spanish rule,
but owing to the rivalry of Church and State which had then developed, it had become difficult for the priests to enforce this tribute. Recently, under the military dictithes tatorship, the whole system had been revised, the
reduced to reasonable proportions, and their collection enforced by arms. To mark this new agreement between the Church and the Government, the Dictator had
established the custom of attending in state the ceremony of blessing the tithes. By great good fortune, General Santos had been entrusted with the necessary arrange-
ments for the military participation, this year as on former occasions. Our task seemed therefore to be enoroccurred to me then that we should be risking the success of the plot if in any way the assassination interfered with the ceremony in the cathedral, or if blood were shed in the immediate vicinity of a buildIt
mously
simplified.
92
head of the procession. We might even plant other men inside the church who, as soon as the shot was fired, would close the doors of the church and prevent the exit of the Dictator's bodyguard. Nothing could be neater than such a plan, but the General confirmed my fear that the deed might in that event distress the
of the people, and end by susceptibilities a martyr of the Dictator. making did not make any further progress with our plans that day, but as there were still three weeks to elapse
religious
We
morrow
it was decided that on the should accompany the General to his farm, which was situated about five miles to the west of the There we could elaborate the details of our plan of city.
patiently. That my presence at the noticed and reported in Roncador did farm might be not seem to the General to be a matter of great importance; he would never be suspected by his fellow-officers of harbouring a political agent, and among the people
action carefully
and
the knowledge of
my
diffusion of a certain
would be
to the
Accordingly the next day we were early in the saddle. I said farewell to the gentle Yrabuye, and promised to return and shoot partridges with him before many weeks
were past. gaucho, who might at this stage have returned to Buenos Ayres, begged me to retain him as a body-servant in this country of savages, and, the General consenting, I willingly engaged him, for he was the
My
image of
fidelity.
The country we
93
were the myriads of humming-birds which darted from tree to tree, or hovered suspended in
the air about us. I had often seen these little creatures some of them were no larger than insects on my way
up from the
gleam
coast,
Some
of
them seemed
actually to
like precious stones or bright metals, at once translucent and iridescent; their hues ran from cinnamon
then they emit that name, The General was pleased to see my delight in these 'angels/ as he called them, and explained that he loved them so much himself, that he had peopled his house with them. Here and there the land became more marshy, and we passed one or two lakes, covered with ducks, waterhens and snipe. Partridge and quail ran about the grassy clearings. Sometimes among the trees I spied a white-
and green. In flight, become invisible, and low murmur which gives them their
signs of cultivation
were frequent strips of cotton-plant, yucca, and tobaccoand sometimes, near the farmhouses, a fenced field plant, of Indian corn or sugar-cane. The inhabitants, such as we saw, were natives, living in extreme simplicity. At one cottage we stopped for water, which was brought to us in a rough earthenware jug by the master of the
94
no way a
We
all strangers, tribute to him. special rode easily and arrived at the General's
and was
in
farm about
less
five o'clock in
the evening.
wooded, but still fertile. Large herds of cattle and horses roamed about the open prairies. The farmhouse stood in the shelter of a group of trees a long low building, with an open verandah. Our arrival was the signal for a great
barking of dogs and fluttering of fowl. Young gauchos sprang from the shade to take our horses, and the General led me into his estancia. He lived here with a native wife and nine children, the eldest of whom was a
young woman of twenty-two. He kissed them all in turn, and then introduced me as Doctor Olivero a name we had agreed on as suitable for the country. We did not with the family, but made our way to the stay, however, own room, at one end of the house. Here I was General's introduced to the rest the most numerous part of the
General's family his humming-birds that lived in half a dozen cages hung round the walls of his room. There he fed them, and there they bred. He opened the cages
:
and they flew out with shrill little cries, fluttering round the General, who had furnished himself with quills filled with syrup, into which the hovering birds dipped their tongues. Others flew about his ears, hovered round his mouth, buzzed and fluttered about his head and hands. When tired of playing with them, he put the and then he gently waved his hands in the quills away; midst of them, at which signal they all returned to their
respective cages. In an alcove I noticed a
political
and and hummingleft me to meditate among birds. It was long before I could establish any intimate relationship with the latter, for no doubt my lean features and tall figure, compared with the General's short and shaggy frame, had all the strangeness of a new species. Among the books I found several of a nature, calculated to inspire a liberal and
sympathetic outlook among them Volney's great work, which had so much influenced my own youthful mind. In these surroundings I spent three of the most whole life. The climate was so pleasant weeks of my and temperate, the life of the household so gay bright and simple, so devoid of ceremony or conventions of any kind. I rose early and bathed in a near stream; I spent the morning shooting wild ducks and partridges, or sons about the estate; I riding with one of the General's
shaded siestas in the General's room; I spent the long read slowly and thoughtfully, refreshed occasionally by
cups of yerba tea, my senses lulled by fragrant freshly-made cigars. I found it very difficult to realise that I was the same being who a few years ago had been an English village; who had lived eating out his heart in varied scenes in London, Warsaw and Cadiz. through
and
96
My
mind utterly refused to believe in the concurrent existence of such diverse places; memory was a
my
long
thread, stained with these multi-coloured experiences, now coiled up in my brain. Beyond the present, no other
reality could exist for
me. General Santos came home every few days, and sometimes stayed for two days at a time. We spent many hours in conference, elaborating our plans. Two developments were in our favour. The Dictator had difficulty
in finding sufficient ready money to pay the army he kept mobilised, and a spirit of dissatisfaction was evident among them; and as the time for the paying of the
tithes
drew near, a
murmur-
ing, as usual, against this imposition. Roncador did not differ from other countries in this respect, that the
churches were filled with women and children, whilst the men, their days occupied by physical labour and
their nights
by necessary
sleep,
found
little
time,
and
indeed had little need, for the consolations of religion. This division was further accentuated by the priests and
friars,
means
who, to buttress their authority, sought every of acquiring a dominating influence over the womenfolk. As the day of action drew nearer, although we were in
fuller
command
inspiration for the actual stroke was lacking. I therefore resolved to accompany the General to Roncador, there
to survey as closely as possible the actual spot chosen for the act of liberation. For this purpose I exchanged clothes with my gaucho, and rode in as the General's attendant.
to
back with them. We arrived at the city without incident. I was interested to see how the reality of its situation compared with the mental image I had
in the market,
me
97
and more imposing appearance. Actually it was a pitiful and sheds, the sandy streets unpaved and unclean. The streets sloping towards the river were worn by rains and by water from open springs, and were more like the bed of a ravine. The plaza or central square presented a different appearance. The houses round three sides of it, mostly belonging to merchants and shopkeepers, were of larger dimensions, and generally two storeys high. The ground floor was recessed, to form an open arcade which ran round the square after the fashion of a cloister. Here and there booths were erected on the
other side of this covered way. The open square, about four acres of bare earth, was deserted when we arrived. The most remarkable feature of the place, however, was the eastern side of the square, occupied by the cathedral and two other buildings the barracks and the ayuntiatures completely
mento, or the administrative offices. These three strucdwarfed the rest of the town. The church was only to be judged by its facade, which was a
an enormous baldaquin perversion of the baroque style, in stone and stucco, to which was attached a wooden twisted columns and surportico flanked by spirally in a niche which was a veritable crow's-nest of mounted,
fantastic metal ornament,
by a
flight of about a dozen Virgin of the Assumption. wide steps led down to the level of the square. The other two buildings, each two storeys high, were by contrast
and prison-like; built of roughly hewn granite, windows were defended by iron grilles. We rode up to the building on the left of the cathedral and, passing a sentry, entered the courtyard, where we
severe
their
whitewashed
walls.
The droppings
and
presided over the melancholy scene. The high altar was stripped and obviously not in use, but in the side chapels a few candles were burning, and here and there an old
in prayer.
that for the Blessing of the Tithes the high altar would be temporarily refitted. The church would be filled with worshippers, the women on one side, the men on the other side separated a wide
aisle.
Down
by
this aisle
would
Bishop and
priests,
the choristers, the neophytes, and the virgins bearing the symbolic fruits. The Dictator would follow with his staff and the officers of the city, the judges and magistrates. They would take their places in front of the people, and then the tithes would be blessed. The procession would then re-form, the priests proceeding to the the secular officers and their followers sacristy, going out by the great western porch, down the steps to the Square. In the Square the Dictator would review his miniature army, drawn up there in parade formation. Standing at the foot of the steps, he would take the salute as the troops marched past on their way to the barracks, and then he would follow them. Afterwards, various
trian sports, including a sortija
eques-
and a
bull-fight,
would
99
I questioned the General closely about the procedure. Standing at the foot of the cathedral steps, where the
Dictator
himself would stand five days later, two thoughts occurred to me: i, a dictator should never venture before his people on foot; 2, a dictator should never march at the rear of his army.
little more we could do in the way of sightwithout attracting undue attention, so when we seeing had made some purchases we left the city, still somnolent in the evening sun. We were silent as we rode back, meditating on the desperate action now so near perform-
There was
ance.
Slowly a plan was taking shape in my mind a plan to me because it seemed to promise to the fantasy of a natural event. Man is always so possess clumsy and direct in his self-willed deeds; the knife, a there is no play between the intention bullet, poison and the crude act. When the ancient gods wished to kill
which appealed
tortoise in its
^Eschylus, they sent an eagle into the sky, carrying a claws an insecure and heavy burden, which presently slipping from its grasp, fell like a bolt
through the air and crushed the skull of the aged poet. In such a way I would have liked to bring about the death of the Dictator. plan was to stage the assassination as part of the festivities. In the Square a circular palisading would be erected, a temporary ring to hold back the spectators. On the south side of the Square a special box would be fitted up for the Dictator and his friends. Though I had never seen a bull-fight, I was familiar enough with its procedure from the conversation of my fellow-prisoners
My
100
and the
first
plan
stage in the fight the torero should entice the bull towards the Dictator's box, incite it so that he was compelled to take sudden refuge in the box itself, and there plunge his sword into the Dictator instead of into the bull. The General commended my ingenuity, but raised these objections: he doubted
this:
was
that at
some
skilful
enough
moreover, by the time the fight had reached its final stage, the suerte de malar, the bull was generally too dazed and exhausted to spring forward in a manner to make a resort to the Dictator's sufficiently surprising
box
I
feasible.
immediately saw the force of these objections, and turned my thoughts towards the other sport indulged in on such occasions. The sortija is a much simpler and more innocent amusement. frame, like that of a door, and wide enough to allow a horse and rider to pass through it with ease, is erected in an open space. From the middle of the horizontal bar of the frame a ring is
suspended by a slender cord. The horseman, taking his stand about two hundred yards away, gallops towards the frame at full speed and attempts to carry away the
ring on the point of a dagger or spear. Usually a successful rider receives a great ovation, and at Roncador would
prance round the arena, saluting the Dictator as he passed his box. The frame would be erected in the middle of the
Square, opposite the cathedral porch. The riders would take their stand at the north end, so that the Dictator would have a clear view of the event from his box, and would therefore, I perceived, be in the direct line of the rider could, before anyone realised onrushing horse.
101
what was happening, spur on his horse, leap the paliand there find a target less elusive than a susring.
pended
skilful
man
enough
At
of
first
my
plan; he
straight shooting, but when I pointed out the immense psychological effect of such a swift and surprising blow,
he was slowly convinced, and ended by adopting the idea with enthusiasm. That evening we discussed every
aspect of the plan -every possible eventuality; cided on the consequential steps to be taken.
and
de-
We
agreed
that as soon as the deed was accomplished, the barracks, the cathedral and the ayuntiamento should be occupied
re-
public should be at once declared and a proclamation issued; that the Spanish officers should all be arrested
and any resistance met by death. Once our plan was settled, we acted with resolution and intensity. Five days only were left for the completion of all the necessary arrangements. I anticipated that the most difficult part would be the provision of
knew
the actual assassin, but the General assured me that he a dozen men who would welcome the opportunity
of revenge men who had been insulted or ill-treated by the military dictatorship. The General himself was most concerned for the details of the proclamation, but this I offered to draft within twenty-four hours, and draft it in
such a way that all the classical dogmas of democratic government should be clearly embodied. The principles, I assured him, had long been settled by the Fathers of the Revolution (by which general title I designated such
philosophers as Rousseau, Raynal and Volney); 1 02
all
that
and with a wave of his hands, the with which he had dismissed his humminggesture birds, he turned to those animated companions of his,
intellectual arrogance,
and began
to feed
them from
at
He
ing.
left for
Roncador
kept of a
me long
new
I
of our last conversation had awake, and before I fell asleep the outlines constitution seemed to be clear in my mind.
and heavy, and it was only after several cups of yerba tea, and frequent recourse to Rousseau and Volney, that my phrases began to take form once again. Then I wrote swiftly and clearly, and
But when
awoke
I felt
dull
was able to spend the second day merely in reviewing and correcting the periods of our proclamation.
[Here follows a translation of the printed proclamation,
PROVISIONAL ORDINANCE OF
GOVERNMENT
To
be submitted to an Electoral Convention of the Republic of Roncador
Preamble
All men being endowed by Universal Providence with the same faculties, the same sensations, and the same
by by this very fact it was that they should have a right to an equal share of the earth's bounty. Since the bounty is sufficient for all needs, it follows that all men can exist in equal liberty,
needs,
intended
Providence
by
justice,
which men.
is
Articles of
Government
Article i. The province of Roncador is free and independent; its government is elective; its laws shall be published by the authority of a popular assembly, and administered without fear or favour.
Article 2. The authority to the people shall be given for a council of three persons, elected people; it shall deal with all
military,
govern in the
name
of
secretary (appointed by the Council) with power to act for any member of the Council in the case of his disability.
Article
3.
The province
of
Roncador adheres
to the
own
bishops and
conduct the education and administration of its own priesthood. Its revenues shall be provided by the willing charity of the worshippers in each parish. All compulsory tithes are abolished. Article 4. Besides the usual attributes of government, the Council shall possess the following powers: i, to
and military forces; 2, to levy taxes; amity and commerce; 4, to undertake public works; 5, to make regulations for buying and
provide
3, to
all
the
civil
form
treaties of
104
externally. Article 5.
shall be published a
general account of the revenues, the expenditures, and the balance in the treasury. Every three months there
shall be published a detailed account of the public revenues and expenditures.
Article
6.
The arrangement
of the promotions, plans of defence and everything that relates to military affairs, appertain to the commanderin-chief
,
who
shall
Council.
Article 7. Every male above the age of sixteen shall be ready to defend his country when required. Article 8. Justice shall be administered by a court of judges, who shall be paid a fixed salary by the State, but shall be otherwise independent of all political con-
being appointed by their own college, and removed by a petition of the people. In each parish there shall be a justice of the peace, appointed by the bench of judges and answerable to them for the administration of local
trol,
justice.
In each town or district there shall be a mayor, elected by the people, and responsible for the local administration of economic affairs. The mayor may, if the people so wish it, be a justice of the peace, but whilst a justice of the peace holds office at the bench of judges, a mayor is elected by pleasure of the
Article
9.
The
electors
man, and
of
widows who
affairs.
act as
The
priests
political
Article
Article
Secretary to the provincial government the illustrious Doctor Olivero, recently arrived from that classic land of liberty, England, and learned in her universally admired laws and institutions. The provisional government will be submitted to the approval of the people at a general assembly to be held this day four weeks hence. Dated at Roncador, ist May, 183-.]
After an absence of thirty-six hours, General Santos returned for an evening and a night. His plans had met with every success. That is to say, under the guise of making the usual arrangements for the festival, he had
interviewed
twelve
men
of his
company,
Creoles
or
Indians, who had all, upon being sworn to secrecy, professed a willingness to carry out any commands the General might give them. To each of these men he had
separately revealed our intention to proclaim a republic on the following Sunday, and he had brought them to-
gether and asked them to select from the roll of the Company the names of as many companions as they
each could rely on in the event of necessity. To these companions they were not to reveal our plan, but on the morning of the Festival each group was to be persuaded to meet on the east side of the Square to watch
the sports. The General himself, as officer in charge of the festivities, would be on duty and mounted. The leader of each group should keep a close watch, for at
a given
it
moment he proposed to draw his sword and lift above his head. At this signal they should all with106
guardroom of the barracks and arm themThey should immediately reappear on the Square, where he would take charge of them and direct
to the
further operations. To a query I raised, the General replied that the guard on duty at the barracks would be supplied by his own
offer
no
proposed to give the signal immediately the assassin had set out on his fatal ride. The few seconds that would elapse would not be sufficient for the concerted movement to be noticed before the deed had been
He
be on the
accomplished, especially as the general attention would rider; and it was essential to set the movement before the deed had been accomplished, because going otherwise the sudden general confusion might distract the soldiers from their purpose. For the assassin the General had selected an Indian
named Iturbide, who had recently been degraded by the Dictator. This man's magnificent physique and his skill on horseback had formerly made him a favourite with
the
officers,
lieutenant.
Some
presence of a native among their ranks, had induced him under the influence of wine to make bold and in-
comments on the Dictator's personal conduct, and had then reported these remarks to the Dictator himself. Furious at the thought that anyone to whom he had shown special favour should thus abuse his position, the Dictator without further enquiry had ordered a parade of the whole army, and had then publicly
cautious
of rank. Dismissed stripped off the lieutenant's badges
from the army, Iturbide had sunk into abject beggary and despair, in which condition he thought only of
revenging himself for this unjust humiliation.
107
To
treat
have been an
extreme
of the
risk.
men
Iturbide
had
and
his dis-
grace had not been of a nature to reinstate him in the regard of his companions. The man was therefore a social outcast, though still respected by the civilian youth of the place for his strength and ingenuity. Santos, how-
had sent his groom to seek out Iturbide, and persuaded him to be on the bridge when they passed on their way back to the farm. Knowing that the General had always been sympathetic towards him, Iturbide had readily agreed to the rendezvous. There they had met this very morning, and Iturbide had taken the groom's horse and ridden by the General's side. The plan was unfolded to him, and step by step the Indian pledged
ever,
himself to secrecy, and finally to his own implication in the plot. The General, on his part, had promised him full protection after the execution of the deed, and the rank of Captain in the republican army. Other details, such as the provision of a horse and a tilting spear, had
also
quickly to the city. reviewed our plan of operations until late in the covered many possible eventualities which I night.
We
We
but on only one point did we feel could imagine no means of having our proclamation printed in advance of the event. There existed only one printing press in the whole of Roncador,
cannot
recollect,
now
at a loss.
We
and
this
despair might have led us to a modification of our General Santos observed, late in the night, plans had not that not one citizen in a thousand could read a procla-
Our
mation even
if it
at
all,
but have
it
proclaimed
With the terms of the proclamation which I had drafted the General professed himself perfectly satisfied. He only doubted whether the Indians would understand a word of the preamble; he admitted, however, that eloquence was an essential instrument of government, and
therefore allowed
me
to retain
my
phrases.
The
actual
he found admirably adapted to the country and its people, and he was obviously impressed by my grasp of political affairs. Since I had been sent to him in such a capacity, I allowed this impression to remain undisturbed by any modest protestations. The time that was left to us was spent by me in a state of affected calmness; I was silent and to all appearance bemused, but I felt that the impetuous beating of my heart was only restrained by an effort of my will. I made several copies of the proclamation, but otherwise I could do nothing but wait. General Santos was kept in Roncador, but he returned on the eve of the Festival. All was in train. He had made certain more detailed
provisions, and certain stations in the barracks
men had been given definite and the cathedral. All else must
left the farm early in the morning to the ceremony of the Blessing of the Tithes. The dilapidated church had been decorated with a few tawdry banners, and the high altar was set out with
be present
bright vessels and lighted candles. The nave was filled with a crowd of country people, timid and pious in their demeanour. The ritual I have already described; it was carried out in a perfunctory and hasty manner; the singand the whole atmosphere listless. I ing was execrable took my place in the dark shadow behind the shaft of
109
soon to be forfeited. Presently I heard the regular tramping of feet and a harsh command. The march was halted, and then there entered, without music, a tall and solid figure, dressed in the uniform of a general. He was followed by five or six other officers, among whom was my friend Santos. When the service was finished I had a better opportunity to observe the Dictator, for he came directly towards the open doors, his face full in the brila face so heavy and dull, so devoid of gentleliant light ness and intelligence, that I looked on it without pity.
The Dictator stayed on the steps of the cathedral and there received a salute from the four companies that is
to say, the whole army which were drawn up in parade formation inside the improvised bull-ring, still unenclosed on the side towards the cathedral. bugle-call then pierced the expectant air, there was a roll of drums, followed by the usual words of command. The companies formed into column of march, wheeled round the ring, passed the Dictator, who again took their separate
The Dictator and on the steps; they abandoned their formal attitudes and walked leisurely away to the ayuntiamento, where refreshments were waiting for them. Meanwhile the ring was closed in and preparations made for the bull-fight. This was due to begin at eleven o'clock, and people began immediately to file into the
salutes,
and
benches.
They were
dressed in
all
and the scene was soon very animated. Myself, I had resolved to stay on the cathedral steps, where I could obtain some shade from the fierce sun, and where the whole proceedings would be perfectly visible.
no
About a
fight in Spain
was practised at Roncador. The espadas were clad in their ordinary riding-costumes, and a
poncho, or everyday cloak, served as a muleta. young bull was driven into the ring from a pen in the northwest corner of the Square; a picador on horseback appeared from the opposite corner. The bull was hardly to be tempted into action; only when goaded by the banderilleros did it display any anger. But in its timid
hesitations
and frustrated assaults it provided the spectators with sufficient cause for excited cries of execration
delight.
and
In spite of the general air of excitement, this part of the day seemed to me, and perhaps to everyone engaged in the conspiracy, to drag on interminably. In reality it did not last an hour, during which time three bulls were
dispatched. It was now midday, and I began to fear that the rest of the sports would be abandoned. But the people of Roncador have little sense of the passage of time, and in any case the sortija was far too popular a contest to suffer such a fate. The last bull had not yet
been dragged off the ring before men were erecting the framework in front of where I stood, whilst to the right
the mounted contestants gathered in order of entry. I was at a disadvantage in that I did not know which was Iturbide There were about a dozen entrants, figure
and
It
their appearance
ticular distinction to
was so various as not to lend parany one of them. was perhaps ten minutes before the course was
in
An
incessant
level
chattering rose
from the
cries of children, the shrill laughter of women, and above, in the high clear sky, the swerving scream of swallows. The heat of the sun sent the smell of dust, sweat and
blood.
The
sleek horses
impatiently under their riders. I looked towards the calm oasis; a group
people smoking cigars, hatless, their projecting from their huddled bodies, the Dictator himself bulky in the middle of them. I looked round the Square, and noticed Santos seated on his horse, at the side of the other horses, but a little
swords
stiffly
Then
the
men
apart.
fixing
spades and mallets and ran out of the ring. trumpet was blown and the chatter and the cries of the crowd died down. Only the swallows continued to scream.
their
came galloping down the ring, his body pitched forward, his lance levelled past the horse's head. He thundered through the frame, but left the ring oscilfirst
The
rider
and then another. The third horse stumbled and pitched its rider, and was led ignominiously off. In the this pause, whilst all eyes were occupied
by
lucky accident,
standing on
Santos
noticed a
side of
my
No
one
else
would
notice.
his sword.
Iturbide's horse
restless,
rearing on
its
hind
legs.
Flakes of lathery
foam flew off from its mouth. Then it was suddenly quiet and lurched forward. Its flanks
rippled like silk in the sunlight. Horse and rider crashed through the frame, the ring 112
Men
from
fell
astonished
cries.
together in confusion, uttering aimless and People were running across the ring
all sides.
Behind, unobserved, Santos and his soldiers were already emerging from the barracks, armed, in order. From the confusion the horse emerged, unattended,
riderless.
cry now, out of the confusion. The cry taking sounds becoming articulate. 'The Dictator! The shape,
Dictator!
The
broke. Three figures two soldiers with Iturbide between them. emerged Iturbide was alive. The crowd swarmed round them, crying out, questioning. Excited voices, fusion.
Then above
out clear.
it all
the
new
diversion,
solid phalanx.
them, a General mounted. General Santos. 'To your homes. On pain of death, to your homes/ the General cried. The order was taken up and cried across the whole Square. At the same time a detachment of soldiers was marching past the cathedral towards the south end of the ring. The crowd gave way before them as they advanced to113
officers,
upon
to the ready position. The corporal in charge called the officers to surrender their swords and return to
the barracks under escort. Confused by the assassination of the Dictator, without any resource in the emergency, the officers thus addressed
prepared to obey the order without protest. At that moment General Santos rode up to the group.
'Gentlemen/ he
'in the name command of
said,
officers,
of the people of Roncador I have assumed the army of the Republic. The deed you
is an act of justice, rendered necesand oppression. Henceforth the people sary by tyranny of this land propose to govern themselves in liberty and for ever from the yoke of military dicequality, freed tators. Gentlemen, you are under arrest. You shall come before a tribunal without delay, and your fate will there be decided with justice and clemency/'
have
just witnessed
astonished officers were not given a chance to a word from the General the detachment protest. At surrounded the officers, and the order was given to
The
re-
startled
jackals
to
the
shelter
of their
verandahs, looked out and saw the men who had for so criminals towards the long terrorised them led like
barracks.
Guards had meanwhile taken up their positions at all important stations. The arena was empty, except for the body of the Dictator, which lay on the ground beyond the broken palisading. General Santos now rode into the middle of the arena, and cried out in a loud voice
:
114
The
The
tyranny is at an end. Long live the republic 1' But such as heard him were too dazed by the events to respond. The General turned his horse and rode back towards the barracks. As he passed the cathedral steps he saw me standing there, and summoned me to follow him. My first business was to attend to the printing of the proclamation. The printing press was immediately requisitioned, and by evening a large number of sheets were
printed
freely distributed. Meanwhile ^the chief representatives of the law, certain magistrates and aldermen, were summoned to the barracks and asked to swear
and
government. Without exception, welcomed the new dispensation. It was decided everyone to have the body of the Dictator buried immediately, and without any kind of public ceremony. Two friars
fealty to the provisional
were instructed to carry out the necessary arrangements. Finally, the treasurer of the Dictator's government was summoned before us and asked to present an account of
the state's finances. All
moneys
in his possession,
and
found among the effects of the Dictator, were confiscated, and late that evening a month's wages were issued
to the troops.
We worked continuously all that day, but towards dark we relaxed our efforts and had food brought to the
headquarters we had established in the barracks. From time to time messengers came in to report the reception of the event among the people. After the first amaze-
ment when
there was general rejoicing, and late that evening, a majority of the soldiers had been dismissed,
there was great gaiety in the Square, the people dancing and singing until long past midnight. Thus the revolution was accomplished. It lacked many
we
knew, none regretted. There were no extraordinary demonstrations of joy. The dancing that went on in the Square was such as would in any case have taken place at the conclusion of a festival. There was no popular hero. General Santos had remained scrupulously modest in his demeanour, and the actual assassin, Iturbide, was satisfied to have escaped with his life. He did not even seek out his companions, but at the General's invitation stayed in the orderly-room, content to be a passive
witness to the results of his decisive act.
all slept in the barracks that night. The next day the business of reviewing the personnel of government
We
and appointing
provisional military
and
civil officers
was
nominated secretary to the rapidly concluded. I was and given an office with sleeping quarters, government both within the barracks. Beyond the conduct of immediate affairs, little could be done until a general assembly had given their approval to the articles of the ordinance of government, as set forth in the proclamation; and had
ever,
The payment of tithes, howwas suspended, an unauthorised act bitterly resented by the Bishop. This ecclesiastic was early in conference with General Santos, but his protests were without avail; everything, he was told, would be submitted
elected a governing council.
to the
their representatives.
devoid of the dignity his rank, poured usually associated with persons holding scorn on our liberal principles, and told us that the and ignorant to be capable of people were too simple were children who must be self-government, that they who without compultaught obedience to their masters, sion would lapse into the savagery from which the
Bishop,
utterly
The
who was
116
THE GREEN CHILD Church had rescued them. To this the General
answered
that he was determined the people should have the government they desired, even if it meant their ultimate ruin; but in his opinion that fate was not to be expected,
for the people were
industrious,
and
if
envious foreigners, General Santos asked me to make a review of the economic resources of the country, to draw up proposals for revenue and a budget of expenditure, and to estimate
the
by nature peaceful and reasonably protected from the exploitation of would live in contentment.
required for the conduct of the nation's affairs. All conclusions should be reduced to a simple form, capable
sentatives.
my
Messengers were sent to every village and district, a delegate to the conference aninviting them to send
nounced in the proclamation. Arrangements for the accommodation of these caciques, as they were called, who would probably arrive with their wives and children, were made in the city. Most of them would have to camp in the open square, or in the river valley and the
to it. slopes leading down over the detailed history of this provisional I shall pass found myself involved in an ever-increasing period. I for nobody yet pretended to multiplicity of functions, and in such circumstances the decision is inauthority, left to the chief executive officer. Somewhat to
variably
the duties surprise, I found myself enjoying devolved upon me. There is no joy comparable to that the joy of government, especially in circumstances of Not only inanimate things money, equipvirgin chaos. of every kind but even human beings, are ment, goods sense of so much plastic material for creative design.
my own
117
order
and
seeking a
mode
is
found difference between the man of action whose only end is action, a self-indulgent exercise of powerful muscles, and the man of action who moves towards some intellectual notion of order. There is also the man of action who only moves as the immediate circumstances dictate, jumping from one floating island to another as he is borne down the rapids. My first business was to estimate the economic resources of the country. The area of Roncador was computed to be some 30,000 square miles, but the boundaries to the north and east were somewhat indefinite. In spite of its considerable area, the population was very sparse; apart from the uninhabited mountain ranges which formed its borders on the east and west, the central
plains or
a pro-
pampas supported little human life. The villages were confined to the river basin; many streams had their source in the western ranges, spread over the marshy region in the north, and then gathered together as they turned south under the eastern watershed, eventually to river which formed the southern join the powerful
boundary of the state. Under the Spanish rule, the province had been divided for administrative purposes
into thirty districts, many of them not containing even the semblance of a village. Roncador itself was the only
town of any
size.
The
census I immediately
had made
revealed a population of 754 families, 3,064 souls, posof 4,632 tame cattle, 1,780 oxen, sessing an aggregate
118
mares, 501 mules, 198 asses, 4,648 goats. After numerous enquiries, I com-
puted the whole population of the state as about 14,000 families, totalling between 50,000 and 60,000 souls, with tame cattle in proportion, and wild cattle innumerable. The country was entirely agricultural, and alitiost entirely self-supporting. This naturally simplified the
problem of government. The only necessary imports were salt, carbines and uniforms for the army, paper, various tools and instruments, and a miscellaneous quantity of things which might be described as articles
of luxury. The exports consisted of hides, yerba mate, sugar and tobacco, and were more than sufficient to balance the value of the imports. I at once decided that the simplest policy would be one which kept the inhabitants of the country content with an agricultural status, which held in strict control the mercantile exploi-
tation of their products, and which so far as possible of government from the surplus of
export production. In other words, the imports might be taxed up to the limit of the value of the exports. Luckily I was not under the necessity of considering an adverse balance of exchange, and was of the opinion that such an eventuality should not be allowed to arise, even if it
of
Roncador from
all
commerce
no
buying and
selling
was done in
the city of Roncador, and virtually the only exit for commerce was by way of the pass which circumvented the rapids already mentioned. The river itself was the
Whilst I cogitated these matters, General Santos reviewed the personnel of the administration. All pure
119
month
hundred families
the
manner
arrived, and were accommodated in described. The convention itself was held in
the cathedral. It was a motley assembly. For the most part the delegates were clad in a jacket of white dimity, very short, and exceedingly tight; a bespangled waistcoat,
still
crimson
hanging down to the ankle; a blue silk sash; potro-boots open at the toes; large silver spurs on the heels; a very small hat of hide half-covering the head, from under which hung a long queue of plaited black hair. Few of them could read or write, and fewer still understood the were called upon to decide. But questions which they two things were very clear to them: the difference between a Spaniard and an Indian, and the incidence of
and taxes. them sat on the floor or lounged against the Most and walls. They treated the sacred building with pillars scant ceremony, smoking, spitting and talking freely. A dais had been erected in the transept, and punctually at the hour announced the de facto government entered through the cloister doorway and took their places on
all tithes
of
120
Our
difficulty
had been
in
to find
men
We
who were
particularly in
any case of no numerical strength, and that more considerable body of lawyers which, by reason of its claim to superiority in education, might in time usurp the authority we had wrested from the military party.
simple. In capacity as clerk of all recited the Proclamation, and then announced that in accordance with its provisions the assembly had been called together for the purpose
my
to the Council I
tinction,
of electing a governing council. Three citizens of dismen renowned for their honesty and patriotism, had agreed to submit their names to the approval of the to assembly, but it would be in order for the
assembly
Not
my statement and looked up at my audience. moved; none ventured to speak. I held the silence for perhaps two minutes, and then raising my voice to its most impressive pitch, cried
I finished
a soul
Tatriots of the free province of Roncador, assembled here in the name of the people, is it your will that for a
121
period of three years you should be governed by your servants, the General Chrisanto Santos, Don
If yes,
cry yes
answer came sharp and spontaneous, some crying out in Spanish, others in their dialects, but all signifying their assent. 'Furthermore, is it your will that I, Don Olivero, delegate of the Society of Patriots, should act as Secretary to the Supreme Council?"
That
Again they
assented,
legalised. General Santos rose to speak, and and well. described how once the
He
by an American people; how centuries ago the Spaniards had come and brought this people into subjection; how this tyranny had given place to the tyranny of unscrupulous and predatory dictators; how the people had
groaned under this oppression; how their possessions had dwindled and their homes decayed. He then spoke of the new spirit of liberty and equality, which, born in
Europe and there becoming established in every land, had now spread to America; in every province the dominion of Old Spain was at an end, and the people themselves, those who were born in the land, had now determined to be the guardians of their own destinies, to live in peace with each other and enjoy the bounty of the
earth in
common
happiness.
General Santos's speech concluded the proceedings. festival lasting until the end of the following day was declared. By evening flares were lit in the square, and to the music of three or four guitarreros the caciques and their wives and daughters danced with the citizens of Roncador. Another corrida was held, and this time six
122
In a few days' time the last visitor had left, and a stranger then arriving in Roncador would have found it difficult to realise that the peaceful life of the place had ever been disturbed. Here, he would have said, is a civilisation,
not elevated among the civilisations of the world, but founded on two eternal principles the dignity of work and the fear of God. But I, in my office, had no grounds for such complacency. General Santos had returned to his humming:
Arapati to the cares of his estancia, and Judge to the shade of his verandah. Iturbide had been made chief staff officer, or adjutant, and on him I could count for the conduct of military routine, whilst I applied myself to the problems of economics and
birds,
Chora
administration.
To
tell
the truth,
difficulties. Salt
I did not meet with any practical was made a government monopoly, and
promised
to provide a steady
The
taxes
on imports were
first
ad valorem, but within three months this was reduced to twenty per cent. It would be wearisome to recount all the acts of administration which I devised, and to which the Council gave their willing consent. Under their returned to the country and operation prosperity quickly
the people lived in great contentment.
Much more difficult to determine were the principles of government. If the inhabitant of Roncador had been rational being, dependent for his happiness on a
purely
his material prosperity, an efficient administration would for all his needs. Ideally his spiritual wellhave
provided have been the sole care of the Church, and being should the articles of the Constitution had been drawn up in
123
the colonies from the mother country, communications with the sovereign Pontiff of Rome had almost ceased.
In this aspect of
affairs I received
members
of the Council.
Though
all
men, professing the Catholic faith, they utterly despised the clergy, both secular and regular. The friars especially
of the open profligacy distrusted, only of their lives, but also because of the undue influence they exercised on the people. The people of Roncador were simple-minded, and carried over into their Christianity the superstitious force of a primitive religion. pai or holy father they reverenced as the immediate
were
not
because
representative of God; they blindly followed the simple instructions given to them, and did whatever was re-
members
quired with willing hearts. Many of the more licentious of the brotherhood took advantage of this
own moral
them by the
a general atmosphere of espionage and intrigue, from which they continually profited. Apart from authorising me to prepare measures to destroy the power of these conventicles, and to reform the hierarchical government
of the Church, the Council remained indifferent to the
problems involved; they were content to legislate from day to day in the light of the immediate circumstances. My plans for a more enlightened policy would have taken much longer to formulate but for the acquaintance I soon made with a certain Pai Lorenzo. I had
124
Church
enquiries for any books of the history of the in South America, and one this friar, who
Loyola, with the express purpose of evangelising the heathen. I knew that the members of the society submitted to a rigorous education and discipline. I knew
that their emissaries
countries of Asia, Africa
wandering
they represented themselves as descendants of St. Thomas, come with a message of eternal to the Indian race. I knew that in peace and happiness as in many other parts of the world, they had America,
whom
and had
finally
provoked the resentment, and perhaps the jealousy, of the secular powers, that they had been expelled, the sovereign Pontiff himself concurring.
I
now
their general policy had been of a kind far exceeding in idealism and disinterestedness any other kind of rule
which the unhappy Indians had experienced. I discovered that they came to a country whose peaceful natives were at the mercy of marauding bands of Portuguese settlers, who by fire and sword had spread terror over all the
land; that in spite of these perils they preached to the Indians, established them in colonies, instructed them in agriculture and the mechanical arts, as well as in the art
of self-defence.
Time and again these colonies were raided and destroyed, but there were always new Jesuits ready to replace those who had perished, gather together the scattered remnants of the missions, and begin again the
task of colonisation.
principle that they were a
In founding these colonies, the Jesuits acted upon the body distinct from either the civil or ecclesiastical powers of the community. Naturthey professed allegiance to the Pope as their and to the King, who ruled by divine right; but in practice their institutions were completely independent of all external authority, a paradoxical position which could only be maintained in the remote regions where their colonies were founded. The discipline of the Society within its own orders was unfaltering. They were governed by a superior who had his residence at Candelaria, a central point from which he could readily visit the other establishments. This
ally,
spiritual father,
superior had two lieutenants who lived, one on the banks of the Parana, and the other on the Uruguay. In addi-
126
had
its
and population. One curate was responsible community, ministered at the altar, and taught scanty elements of reading and writing. Another attended to temporal affairs, superintending the development of agriculture and the teaching
to its extent
the more imeach town or colony community, curate, assisted by one or more priests according
who conducted
of mechanical arts.
The Indians were instructed in the art of self-government. They had their mayor, judges and aldermen, who conducted courts and councils; but naturally a people so innocent of political traditions would be dependent to a
great extent on the advice of the curates, to whom they deferred their authority. The Jesuits insisted above all
principle of absolute equality, in social station, in hours of work, and even in matters of dress. Those elected to offices were to set a to
upon the
expected good example those not so honoured, and apparently earned nothing by way of reward beyond the respect of their fellows. In economic matters the establishments were con-
ducted upon the principle of community of goods. The herds of cattle and horses were the common property of the people; all agricultural produce was equally shared, or stored for common use. The profits of any sales were put into 'the fund of the community,' to be used for the building and adorning of their churches, and for the provision of common services, such as a hospital for the
sick
and a Within
school.
this
egalitarian
community the
curates
no
doubt exercised an autocratic power. They insisted on regular attendance at mass and maintained the strictest moral discipline. They even took steps to correct the
conjugal apathy o the Indians.
127
At
There can be no doubt that in the course of two cenaccumulated considerable wealth in South America, in lands, in herds of livestock, and in gold and silver vessels. As a result of this wealth they became a power too obvious and extensive to escape the jealousy of the civil and ecclesiastical authorities, who were directed from Europe and who in any case regarded
turies the Jesuits
the colonies as legitimate sources of plunder. The story of the expulsion of the Jesuits is common history. The consequences for the Indians were disastrous. They once
more became
and mal-
possessions decreased rapidly, and they gradually sank into a state of poverty and indifference. For many years they resented the
administration; their
numbers and
priests
and
and
were quite unable to understand the system of dual authority forced upon them. They had been accustomed
to the single authority of the Society, which through curates directed both spiritual and temporal affairs.
its
Now
they were asked to accept the authority of a priest in one sphere, and that of a layman in the other; and since these individuals represented a continuous conflict of interests, the Indians were left in a state of hopeless confusion.
The
priests
attend mass at inconvenient for the lay administrator. Neither authority would give way, with the result that the poor Indians whatever they did, suffered
might want them, for example, to a prescribed hour, which hour might be
exploita-
tagonism, and eventually aspired to the control of the land of their birth. They became advocates of liberty
and emancipation, in opposition to the Spanish dominion. Without their aid, as was already so obvious to
rne in Roncador, the formation of independent republics would never have been possible. From my study of Pai Lorenzo's manuscript I was led to several convictions which remained with me all through my life in Roncador. It is possible that the
picture of the Jesuit colonies given by the unknown chronicler was too favourable. It is possible, too, that I
read into his bare descriptions a conception of society already latent in my mind. Not many years before I had read Plato's Republic with extraordinary enthusiasm; unconsciously I may have imagined the Jesuit colonies
I then acquired. But only the conjunction of theory and history, and the possiaction in those particular circumstances, could bility of have given rise to the spirit of determination which from that moment was born in me.
saw
possible
would only be clearly that a stable government certain conditions which I began to forgiven
not single I did
Jesuits,
it
By
mean
is
necessarily resident in
on
the single authority of the Superior of their Society, but the government of each colony was entrusted to two
129
i
extent the authority within the state will be diminished. Its influence will leak out in bales of goods and bills of danexchange, and a competing authority, all the more
and impalpable, will become gerous for being invisible must be armed against invasion. established. The state
Again a dependent
will principle, for an unarmed state of predatory neighbours. The state provoke the envy must be incorruptible, or, as we might say, armed against sedition. Sedition is only provoked by injustice, but in-
only the failure to administer the common good, but also the
existence of unimpeachable injustices, chief of which is the inequality of wealth. The more I studied their history, the more firmly 1 became convinced that the Jesuits had only failed for
one reason they had provoked the envy of princes and marauders, first by their accumulation of wealth, and then by their inability to defend themselves against
:
invasion.
I had no difficulty in securing the consent of the Council to certain measures designed to enforce these of government. My own salary, and the pay principles of all officers and officials, was fixed at low but adequate sufficient to support a decent household, but not
an unused surplus. The professional for a cadre of officers, was abolished, but army, except each family was required to supply one able-bodied male,
figures,
enough
to leave
who should be
liable to
relief
was provided. of the state, marriage between Spaniards was forbidden the assimilation of all foreign elements was thereby automatically secured. No foreigner was to be allowed entry into the state except under licence; he could only settle in the
state
by taking a native
were abolished
law.
The
all
every human being had equal rights in freehold of all land was assumed by the state,
and
landowners or estancerias were required to conduct their estates for the common benefit, on pain of
forfeiture.
The only
distinction
from the
bilities of
division of labour:
state;
remaining would arise one man must govern a but inasmuch as the capa-
men
it
naturally took
many years for all the necessary adjustments to be Certain rebel elements, Spaniards all, had to be
made.
deported.
Certain merchants declared themselves bankrupt; they were offered estates in the prairie-lands, or given the alternative of leaving the country. Certain estancerias resented the impounding of their surplus produce, but
again the only alternative offered to them was emigration. In general, the difficulties were not such as would
be anticipated in an older
civilisation.
Though
slavery
and though the lowest grades of peasants were ignorant and impoverished, there existed no social barriers. It was, the a classless society, and our only problem Spaniards apart, was to devise means of equalising the wealth of all the members of this society.
in Roncador,
Briefly,
apart a certain
our method, introduced gradually, was to set number of days' labour for the benefit of
13*
the individual labourer, another portion for the benefit That portion set aside for the state was supervised by the estanceria, who collected the produce
and from
it
own
needs.
The
and warehouses
surplus in
each town and district, and there exchanged against the produce of the mechanical arts. Thus a shoemaker in the town would exchange, at a fixed rate, a pair of shoes
for so
much
The
surplus of
was collected in the capital, and there bartered with merchants against imports of foreign manufacture. Such imports were of various classes those for distribution, such as salt and articles of adornment; and those for the direct use of the state, such as
this local barter
equipment for the army. The excess of exports over imports might accumulate as a reserve of credit in the accounts of the foreign importers; an excess of imports was not under any circumstances permitted. Such was our simple economy, and I do not flatter that its design is one to be imitated myself by imagining in more complicated civilisations. But its suitability to the State of Roncador was never in doubt; at the end of the first three years of government there was a general air of peace and contentment. Men and women lived in a relationship of mutual confidence, cultivating the earth and living happily on the abundance of its fruits. One unforeseen result followed. At the end of three under the terms of the Constituyears it was necessary, to summon a General Assembly and re-elect a tion, Council of Government. As the time for this event came
near, I visited in turn each of the three Governors. I
first
Hermanegildo Chora. He had continually excused himself from attending meetings of the Council on the grounds of his age and infirmity. I found him
went
to
132
seated
on
officers.
Don Pasqual Arapati. I found him over the gathering of the yerba plants busy watching an operation requiring skill in one of its processes, when
I
the leaves are scorched over an open fire before being stripped from the branches. He kept me out in the open
fields until
on
and men all sitting together at one table and eating from the same dishes. It was a scene of great animation, overpowering in its gusto and its sweaty rewe had reached the final stage pletion. It was not until of cigars that I found an opportunity of explaining my mission. Don Pasqual would scarcely listen to me. 'When you return,' he said, 'tell the Assembly that they have the best government in the world, and that only fools will interfere with it/ For himself, he added, he was too busy to meddle further in the affairs of the state. It was work for learned men, such as Don Hermanegildo and General Santos.
tancia, master
my
the end of the day's labour, and then insisted company at dinner, which was held in the es-
You will see, therefore, that by the time I reached the farm of General Santos I was not a little perplexed. I found my friend as I always remembered him, with humming-birds fluttering round his quills of syrup, in odd community with these tamed creatures. When I had told him of the attitude of his two fellow-councillors towards the question of re-election, he smiled philososeemed in no way disturbed. He promised, phically, and
133
it for the several days required for a visit to the capital. Altogether more than two hundred caciques sent messages to this effect, many adding that they were content to be governed by Don Olivero and his Council. I naturally sent alarmed messages to General Santos, but he made no comments. The day of the election arrived, but there was no more stir in Roncador than on
the meeting in the cathedral. At the appointed hour General Santos and I entered from the cloister, accom-
panied by Iturbide. I spoke to the small gathering and explained the necessity, under the terms of the Constitution, of
now
electing a
new
its
duties, the one on account of his great age, the other because he wished to devote himself entirely to the cultivation of his estate. It was therefore the duty of the
Assembly
of serving
to propose
for the
honour
He
too,
he
said,
would
from
active participation in
He had
served Roncador
to devote his last years to the pleasures of a country life. He had come to the
'34
Assembly
to
elected.
then called for the names of the new candidates for election, but there was no response. Here and there each groups of caciques began to talk animatedly to to the other, without, however, making any proposals then after meeting. We waited for ten minutes or so, and consultation with General Santos, we decided to a the deleadjourn the meeting for one hour to enable to come to some decision. I made an announcegates ment accordingly, and then retired with the General and
I
were forthcoming, a proposal should be made to continue a provisional government under my direction, with the existing Council as a consultative committee.
among
much
and found it very duly returned to the Assembly, had departed for their dispersed; many delegates dinners, and the rest were arguing in groups, but judgI overheard, mainly on matters ing from the few words of cattle and crops, they were not exercised about the affairs of government. Called to silence, and asked for their decision, a tall and commanding Creole stepped forward. 'Gentlemen/ he said, 'why should we waste our
are well governed by Don Olivero; he is time here? learned in the art of government; let him therefore continue to rule us without hindrance. When we are dissatisfied, we can meet here again/ This proposal was received with acclamation, and the Assembly broke up
We
We
without leaving me time to protest, or to make even a of modesty. pretence In this manner I became sole governor of the state of
135
he displayed a cunning and bravery which in the battleEurope would have earned him immortal renown. But events in Roncador were not normally reIturbide had to be satisported to the outside world, so with the gratitude of his Governor and the love of fied
fields of
his people.
The Church proved a far more difficult problem, but the Pai Lorenzo had continued to win my confidence and respect, so that when at last the old and feebleminded Bishop died, I insisted on the translation of this father. I told him that the Church would be
worthy
allowed full liberty and authority in all spiritual matters, so long as it conducted itself according to the principles of its Founder, teaching men to love each other, adopta rule of poverty and chastity, ing for its priesthood to the sick and the dying, and performing all attending other corporal acts of mercy. Bishop Lorenzo had no other wish, but the task of cleansing the priesthood was To have unfrocked all that were one of difficulty.
great
left half
136
without a curate.
new
The
art
of
is
government
is
the
art
of delegating
:
authority. It
essential that the authority delegated held like a ball on an elastic string it does
large the ball, or how far the string is stretched, provided authority returns to its source at the inflection of a finger. The ideal governor is one who has
how
dispossessed himself of all authority, remaining merely as the mathematical centre in whom a thousand lines
converge:
invisible, perhaps only the potential, of a host of efficient marionettes. In more manipulator complex states the system of delegation will be divided
the
and subdivided, but such was the simplicity of the economy of Roncador that I myself was able to control
directly every post of administration.
When finally
without friction of
energies in the supervision of communal improvements. The funds in our treasury grew year by year, but I was
as quickly as
they accumu-
lated, for idle money is money wasted. I therefore devised of the capital, and of the plans for the improvement
communications leading to
dolite
and
chains, I
spaces,
decreed demolitions and rebuilding. I had the quarry from which the Jesuits extracted granite for their buildings rewith this stone repaved the principal streets opened, and of Roncador, built a hospital for the sick, and gradually
137
Arming myself with theothe streets and surrounding surveyed orientations and elevations, ordered
it.
upon disapproval, especially as they involved the compulsory use of private vehicles and the organisation of free service. But once the improvements began to assume a visible
reality
the citizens of Roncador took pride and pleasure in the enterprise, and yearly the city increased its beauty and practical convenience. I lavished a good deal of the state's income on the improvement of the army. The latest rifles were imported, and all our military equipment was of the fashions prevalent in Europe. I myself designed a new uniform, brighter and more elegant than any known in South America. principle here was to give the greatest grandeur to the lower ranks. Except for certain details, the army was entirely a corps of mounted rifles. The privates wore a scarlet tunic, with a plastron and
My
girdle of gold braid, and peach-yellow trousers of cuirassier cut. The collars and cuffs of the tunics were
peach-yellow, with dove-grey piping; the shoulder-straps dove-grey with yellow piping. Boots and head-dress were of black hide, the latter adorned on the left side with a silver cockade. The officers, whose numbers and ranks
had been
drastically reduced, wore uniforms which were of severe cut, devoid of facings, differing between each rank only in the colour of the tunics. The Commander-
in-Chief wore the uniform trousers, with a tunic of black, epaulettes and cockade of gold.
For myself, I took care to avoid any form of ostentawas seen invariably in a cloak, knee-breeches, and sombrero, all of black. In Roncador I lived simply in two rooms on the first floor of the barracks; I was attended by one personal servant. Nevertheless I recogtion. I
'38
daily with
(as
ceremony in front of the Government House the barracks were now called), and on all festivals and holidays the whole army appeared in the splendour
of parade order.
these occasions I appeared in public, horse, and received the full ceremonial salute of the assembled troops. Usually, how-
On
mounted on a white
ever, I
before none of
maintained an impenetrable reserve. I relaxed my subordinates, and was never seen in-
dulging in any popular pleasures. My only recreations were those I shared with General Santos, and after his death with his son, who succeeded to his estate. There I would often resort for the pleasures of the country, for
shooting and bathing, and there eventually I built a small lodge, where I might keep a few possessions my rifles, my fishing-rods, and a small library of books.
So the years passed, undisturbed by war or rebellion. In all this time only one incident of a violent nature ever took place, and this was partly of my own seeking. It occurred in the fourth year of my dictatorship, and in
this
manner
In the great pampas to the south and east of Roncador, vast tracts of country beyond the control of the governments to which they nominally belonged, there arose from time to time bands of freebooters who existed by raiding on land and by piracy on the river. They were
the terror of all the native settlements, and interfered establishment of commercial relations seriously with the
Ay res. The
political
uncertainty of the situation gave them every encouragement, especially in the form of recruits, experienced in
Among
these marauders a
had
arisen,
the indispensable
command
and
all
Indians,
Vargas by name, to which he added of General. He gathered under about a thousand followers, mainly admirable horsemen. Their chief needs
title
pasture for their horses and cattle to slaughter for food were satisfied without much danger or difficulty on the wide and fertile plains on which they made their
home. But for other essentials, of which the most important was ammunition, and for luxuries like wine and clothing, they were dependent on the river traffic. At the time of which I speak, General Vargas had established a camp about a hundred miles to the south
of the rapids which marked the boundary of Roncador. It was a well-chosen spot, for the river there opened out into a wide and sluggish reach, in the middle of which
stretched a low but luxuriantly wooded island. Vargas would hold up a vessel from the shore, which thus engaged
would then be taken by surprise by a boatful of ruffians advancing swiftly from under the cover of the island. At first he made no attempt to interfere with vessels
bound
of
it
for Roncador, but eventually, made bold by the general immunity he seemed to enjoy, he rifled a cargo
arms and uniforms, and held the trader in charge of a prisoner in the camp. This insolence was not to be tolerated, and knowing that any protests to the government nominally responsible for Vargas would be useless, I determined to act in the interests of the general security of the country. I decided, moreover, to lead this
punitive expedition myself. For although I enjoyed the all the citizens as an administrator, I had respect of
never taken part in any military action, and suffered a little from the suspicion that be doubted. Experience had already led
my pride my courage
me to the men of
might
danger; whilst the feebler introspective type, by virtue of the transforming power of his imagination, is much more capable of decisive action. Courage is the ability to act as if death were a fantasy. I elaborated the plans for our expedition with the help of Iturbide. Surprise was to be the determining factor, for I had no desire to engage our whole army in the affair. We decided to attack Vargas's camp from the river and from land, simultaneously, and judged that a force of about 150 men would be sufficient. Iturbide with
company of a hundred mounted men was to proceed overland to an agreed point, where he would await a signal from the river party. For the river our plans were more elaborate. They consisted in fitting out two vessels of the kind known as piraguas, which were much in use for heavy transport on the river. In shape these vessels were like a huge box, square and flat at the bottom, with of about twice sloping sides which met a square deck
a
the area of the bottom. Round the rim of this decapiand inverted pyramid a gallery or gangway was built, sufficiently broad to allow rowers to stand contated
it. The piragua was usually loaded with with the top of it, and on the top of the bales, square bales a deck of loose boards was laid, on which other
veniently
upon
a for a cabin roofed cargo could be loaded, leaving space hides. Such a vessel, capable of carrying a load of with 200 tons, is floated down the river, steered as well as may be by means of the oars.
141
We
bales of yerba
constructed two of these vessels, but instead of and hides we put on bales of sand of about
the same size and appearance, but leaving a hollow space within the middle of the vessel, and loopholes between the bales. built, in fact, two floating fort-
We
resses,
each garrisoned by twenty-four rifles. The piragua travels slowly, at not more than four
miles an hour. I calculated, therefore, that it would take us almost exactly twenty-four hours to reach a point near Vargas's camp. decided to attack soon after dawn, when most of Vargas's followers would still be
We
by
night,
with the two piraguas. Iturbide was to follow later with the horsemen, who would travel more quickly to the agreed point. I placed myself on the top of one of the
great tubs,
and
all
that day
we
travelled
pleasantly
being to keep the two vessels within reasonable distance of each other, for every now and then one of us would get taken up in an eddy, which kept us spinning on our own axis for a considerable time. The night was still and clear, the sky brilliant. The wooded banks were silent, and our clumsy and log-like motion seemed an intrusion on the placid elements around us. The men took turns at steering and sleeping, but I was far too excited by the event, and far too exalted by the beauty of the night, to do aught but stare ahead. The point where we were to concert with Iturbide was marked by a bend in the river, and a sandy beach, not easy to miss. We reached it about an hour before
difficulty
dawn, and steered our vessels against the opposite bank, where we fastened them to the trunks of stout trees.
142
came suddenly and hushed this overture, and then I saw a rider come down to the opposite beach and give the signal a white handkerchief waved three times in a semicircle. This meant that all was well with Iturbide, and that the attack could proceed. I gave the agreed response, and ordered the vessels to unmoor, and the
:
men to stand to their arms. It was still about three miles to the camp, but our progress was unhindered, and in half an hour we were at the opening of the broad reach, with the island in front of us. As soon
unoccupied
we were well within the current that ran to the left of the island, and therefore nearest the camp, I had a rope thrown between the vessels, to keep them together, and
as
men
all
were
We
were
now
it
ing-stage,
and
within four hundred yards of the landwas necessary, in accordance with our
plan, to create an immediate diversion. But there was not a human being in sight, and the actual tents and
huts of Vargas's
alternative, therefore,
in dead ground. I had no but to send a volley aimlessly shorewards. It had its effect, however, for a stray bullet wounded a tethered horse, which began to scream in its
camp were
pain. Two or three figures now appeared, and gazed in the direction of our shots. I now ordered three men with
rifles
as
if
to appear on deck, and then to kneel and take aim, drifted closer, they constituted our firing party.
We
single shot at the figures on the shore. retired, and angry shouts were heard in the disThey had drifted perhaps a hundred yards nearer tance. when a considerable body of men appeared with rifles
We
H3
and
We
were
now
so dense, that several men were hit retreated to the edge of the beach, ridge of high grass and bushes, and
so close, and they and fell. The rest where there was a from this vantage-
fire on the vessels, which, deprived of steering oars, drifted somewhat aimlessly in the slow current. But here the advantage of the piragua became evident, for whichever way we swerved we presented a broadside towards the shore. now kept up a
their
We
continuous
fire,
volume from the river bank; but their bullets for the most part buried themselves harmlessly in the sandbags, or went astray. Only occasionally a chance shot penetrated a loophole, and in this manner two of the men in my piragua were wounded, and another, in the second
vessel, killed.
sick
were now so near the critical moment that I was with suspense and excitement. The current had carried us midstream, which was as I had hoped; for by the time we were opposite the small landing-stage which Vargas had built, our rifles were getting hot, and the acrid stench of powder almost stifled us in our confined space; to have drifted into the shallows near the shore
We
would have delayed our progress and prolonged the fighting. But this was the concerted moment for Iturbide to ride down on the camp from the opposite direction. It was impossible to hear anything above the sound of our own firing, but the sudden cessation of firing from the shore was the only indication we needed. I rushed up to the deck, and at first could see nothing; but the hubbub told me that Iturbide was there with his men.
144
men
away to the south, I saw a scattered troop of riding like furies across a bare slope, obviously in 7
flight.
The rowers had now resumed their positions, and directed the vessels towards the bank, which we reached about half a mile below the landing-stage. I sent a man on shore to find a vantage-point and report the situation.
He
scout
plan had been more successful than we had believed possible. Iturbide and his troops had swept on the camp unperceived. Already alarmed by the attack from the river, the whole camp was in a state of confusion. Here
and there a desperate man had fired from behind a hut or a tent. Many had dashed half clothed to the horse ranks and ridden away without stopping to harness. The
were being disarmed and driven on to the beach. Taking the scout's horse, I galloped towards the camp. Our plan would not be completely successful unless Vargas himself was taken, dead or alive. Desultory firing was still to be heard, coming from the direction of the camp. I kept to the river bank and in a few minutes came upon some of our own men, guarding a crowd of about two hundred prisoners, who had been driven like sheep on to the crescent-shaped beach. Iturbide was with the party still clearing up the camp, so I hastened off in that
rest
direction.
a straggling assemblage of hovels, constructed of hides. In the centre a space was mostly cleared round a wooden hut of a more substantial kind, which was Vargas's headquarters. Here a party still kept
up
greeted shoulder.
resistance, firing from windows and loopholes. as I came within range, grazing
A shot
right
me
I
my
K
hastily dismounted,
145
charge of the situation, and myself took up a firing position behind a heap of hides.
The party in the hut could not number more than six or seven men, and their position was quite a hopeless one. Iturbide had given instructions to his men to cover the hut, but only to fire in answer to shots from the hut. After two hours of this slow duel, and after a silence of
half an hour, we decided to rush the hut and batter in the door with a tree trunk. But whilst we were
this
preparing
manoeuvre the door of the hut was suddenly flung open, and an unarmed man came towards us. He walked
slowly and deliberately, tance of us, lifted up his
tion
and cried: 'It is all over. The General is dying.' There was no reason to doubt such a dispirited hostage. We went forward and found the mud floor of the hut strewn with the bodies of wounded and dead men. An additional grimness was lent to the scene by the bullocks' skulls against which some of the wounded were leaning. These objects were often used as stools in a camp of this kind, but now, embraced by these desperate men, they seemed like symbols of death. Vargas was shot through the throat, and died speechless. There were altogether about forty dead, including seven of our own men. We laid their bodies against the wooden hut and built a vast pyre of the camp material,
and then set fire to it all. The stores of ammunition were taken to the beach, to await a vessel proceeding to Roncador. There still remained the prisoners to dispose of;
146
number
of
We
had no
desire to keep them as prisoners, nor even to punish them for the misdemeanours of Vargas. decided to load them on the and set them drift-
We
piraguas
down the river without oars. This involved a certain amount of reconstruction of the vessels, and it was nearly nightfall before we had accomplished everything. We then took a number of captured horses and rode away into the night. The funeral pyre still burned with a lurid
ing
light in the darkness
behind
spite of
hung
above Roncador. In
silent;
only the creaking of our saddles, and the jingle of our equipment, rose above the soft thunder of hooves. I had played a comparatively inactive part in the attack; the greatest danger had fallen to Iturbide, and on Iturbide I laid the formal honours of rank and reward. But a people, once it has made an individual the apex of
its
authority,
I
the virtues in
episode
anxious to gild him like an idol with all code. By this one brief and insignificant became for the citizens of Roncador the emis
its
bodiment of
ing
My public works, extending over many years and costthought and anxiety, had no such epic were the tyrannical and absolute aspect of They my dictatorship, and were accepted with appreciation or respect, but never with jubilation. They depended envalue.
tirely for their
me much
accomplishment on the singular energy of restlessly from one task to another. When I was reasonably satisfied with the plan of the capital, with its public buildings and its streets; when the army had been reformed and refitted then I
turned to smaller improvements: to the laying out of public gardens, to the design of tokens of exchange and currency-notes and to devising a national flag: a black
'47
any must be based the central dogmas of equality, fraternity and justice. But these ideas are vague enough to admit of very diverse interpretations. In decreeing the isolation of Roncador from the other free republics of America I had ensured the success of our experiment; but I had affirmed our indifference to the lot of the rest of the world, and our fraternal spirit, for example, had not extended beyond our boundaries. This had led to an early breach with the Society of Patriots in Buenos Ayres a breach I deeply regretted. I was not prepared, however, to sacrifice the tangible freedom of
my course had led me far away from the guiding principles of the revolutionary writers who had been my first inspiration. I could feel satisfied that I had adhered to the fundamental ideas on which
I perceived that
humane
society
our
own
my
dictatorship was
my
Buonaparte, had called ideological projects; by the complete absence, that is to say, of any desire to uplift the
state to the level of visionary speculations. If
we had
created an Utopia, it was a worldly and actual Utopia, made out of existing materials. I did not step beyond of the simple peasantry which was the the
aspirations
the priests, who were excellently trained in the seminary established at Roncador.
I
an occupation which employs all the energy and faculties of a normal man, it would have been a treason to the state to educate men above that station. Even the simple elements of reading and writing did not seem to be of much moment in our policy; for what little clerical work was necessary in a community could be done by
acted from day to day, always on the principle of removing any causes of friction, of making equality and
fraternity realities, and justice the normal procedure. Against such a policy there is no possibility of revolt;
for
vidual
any immoral and anti-social tendencies will be indiand self-proclaimed, powerless against the general
good.
stability
will for
may
I
mind. At first the doubts were not formulated as such; was merely seized by an uncontrollable depression, which I vainly tried to trace to climatic or physical conditions. But it soon became clear to me that the causes were mental, that I was enveloped in a spiritual lassitude for which profouncler explanations were necessary. No form of activity, neither my hunting-lodge nor my library, could assuage my restless and dissatisfied mind. This condition lasted for several years, until finally I could no longer evade the truth. My spiritual complaint was produced by the very stagnation around me which I regarded as the triumph of my policy. In the absence of
conflict, of
tion, I
cidity,
had induced
anguish and agitaenvironment a moral flacmy a fatness of living, an ease and a torpor which
contending
interests, of
into
149
ferment. I
knew
had
afflicted the
monasteries
they attempted to draw away from the world of action and live a life of contemplation. It is true that mine was not a life of contemplation, but it was becoming one of intellectual abstraction. So
practical affairs. into action. But
long as the republic was unformed, I was occupied in My ideas were immediately translated now no action was called for; my mind felt no resistance in facts, no tension in circum-
stance.
my speculations at this time I began to suspect that the Golden Age, of which such strong traditions exist in many parts of the world, may indeed have existed, but that it decayed for the very reasons which were now becoming apparent to me. Without eccentric elements,
no progress is possible; not even that simple progress which consists in whipping a spinning top from one
place to another. Try as I would, I could not solve my personal problem in social terms, I might have introduced a system of
education,
beings. I
In
a society of intellectual
might way have put an end to my but I should have disrupted the peace of the boredom, state by creating a class absorbed in visionary speculations, eager to translate their ideological projects into
action.
watched the Indians peacefully going about in the estancias, or the inhabitants of Roncador walking in the gardens, sitting in the shade by
I
As
their
work
the fountains, everywhere mirthful and contented, I dismissed such ideas. Better that I myself should perish
than that their serenity should be shattered. Along with this spiritual development, another change took place in my mental life which was to influence the
'5
my my
youth. Again, rny lack of an active occupation may have been the cause; and perhaps in case we all become
any we grow older, especially if we are exiles in a foreign land. But year by year these recollections grew more vivid, rose up from depths I had never realised, crowded in upon my daily thoughts. I developed an extreme longing or nostalgia for my native
more reminiscent
as
country. I lived over again all my childish experiences, my days at school and college, my humiliation as a
all these actual recollections were, I was most haunted by the thought of an experience missed the appearance in my village of the
green
children. I longed to know how that mystery had been solved, what had become of them in the course of the
years. I began to create an ideal image of them as they had grown up in our alien world: beings half-human and half-angel, intermediate between the grossness of earth and the purity of heaven.
I resolved to escape. But I could not simply take leave of a country that had been so long identified with my life, the creation of my mind. Let alone the sentimental
difficulties of
such a
my
and
of the country. I
any such deliberate action on debilitating effect on the morale should have to nominate a successor,
step,
machinery of popular and election. In my state of mind, such proassembly ceedings would have been an impossibility. I must thereto reinitiate all the obsolete
fore disappear suddenly, but without the effect of desertion. leaving must have the contrary effect of moral
My
and
must depart in a cloud of glory. I conceived that the only method which length all the desirable results would be that of would
I political stimulus.
At
give
and escape
So much decided, certain principles then determined the elaboration of my plans. The motive for assassination must be one that would bind the people together more firmly than ever. It must not be attributable to
must work of an alien; it must represent an attempt on the integrity and independence of Roncador
any
dissatisfaction or revolt within the state. It
therefore be the
itself.
elaborated
my plans
was some time before the heaven-sent opportunity occurred, but I felt the promise of solution one day when
It
I received a visit
He
asked
my
tains
An
old
tradition of the Indians spoke of former gold-mines in this region, though no gold had been discovered there by the Spaniards.
In ordinary circumstances I should have dismissed this adventurer at once, for the exploitation of such a commodity would completely upset the balanced economy of the state, lead to the external envy which had ruined the establishments of the Jesuits, and generintroduce a commercial spirit into our midst which
ally
would be disruptive of our harmony and modest contentment. But I stifled my reaction to the proposal, and
man permission to make a preliminary survey, condition that he acted with discretion and that his on were delivered direct to me, and that no further reports action in the matter should be taken without my consent.
gave the In about two months* time the prospector returned. His survey had been successful beyond any expectations. Not only did rich veins exist in the hills, but the river
152
my
a concession to mine the gold, and meanwhile asked to take up his residence in Roncador.
him
There
giving a
kept
him
decision.
He
character, and before long I was informed by spies that he had begun a correspondence with his principals in Buenos Ayres, and that a plot of the usual kind was hatching. A neighbouring state was to be enlisted by the
government, induced to pick a quarrel with Roncador, and then to invade us with all the forces which the prospect of gold can command. I now took Iturbide into my confidence. I did not reveal to him my final aim, which he would, in his simhave found incomprehensible. But I showed him plicity,
financial corruption of
its
the prospector's report, and gave him full details of the I confessed to a stupidity in intrigue that was hatching. ever allowing the prospector to enter Roncador, and
We must wait and watch until we had sufficient evidence to convince the world that we had acted in accordance with the precepts of international justice, and in self-defence. Iturbide promised to keep a strict watch on all movements on the frontier, and to be ready
to act swiftly in an emergency.
I then completed the personal part of my plans. I wrote a political testament, very simple and short, setting forth the principles on which I had governed Roncador
spiracy, nation.
asked his aid in countering the plot. To dismiss the prospector, I explained, was out of the would merely facilitate his plans. To imquestion. That or execute him on a vague charge of conprison him, would involve us in a quarrel with a powerful
153
years.
this as
who provides for his children; and I recommended Iturbide to the country as my successor. This document of the Archives, with instrucI deposited with the Clerk tions that it was only to be opened in the event of my
death.
then, in the privacy of my hunting-lodge, made a I had, of course, blasting charge of considerable power.
I
a free supply o powder for my shooting cartridges, and the military handbooks in my possession gave detailed of bridges, railways and instructions for the
blowing up
fortifications.
have already described the bridge of three arches which crossed the river on the west of Roncador. This I went to my country retreat, bridge I crossed whenever
I
and here
in prospect I staged
my mock assassination.
had
at
my building a thorough examination of the structure, and then decided to leave it standing, for the Jesuits
made
had
built
it
the course of
activities I
In one time
had
who
had
built well.
single arch ring springing from river; the points of highest pressituated at the crown and springings, sure were therefore
to be effective, must be placed within the of the arch, and not in the piers. I decided that stress the most effective point of all would be near the actual
and a charge,
crown.
of the bridge was constructed of granite about nine inches square, and was slightly camsets, bered. Centuries of use had worn ruts at each side, and
The road-bed
in
some
I
Returning from
my
sent
my
to
completed in
five
or ten minutes.
which included ten feet of fuse, were ready, I waited for a favourable occasion. I required two conditions: a river in spate and a moonlit night. I counted also on finding a canoe beached on the river bank, at a point just below the bridge where the Indians
materials,
When my
had a primitive
landing-stage. Finally, towards the middle of July, such conditions were promised, and I determined to act. I announced
my
my
minor
my
my
The second
night of
my
and then awoke my servant, him a letter I had myself prepared. I told him showing that I had been summoned to Roncador and must depart
o'clock in the morning,
at once.
my
horse, I packed
materials and was ready as soon as the horse. I told servant to wait until dawn, and then follow me with
my my my
usual baggage. I then rode away, the path clear before me in the moonlight. When I arrived within a hundred yards of the bridge, I left my horse untethered, and approached the bridge on foot. The moon was high in the sky above me; in front of me I could see the outlines of Roncador, huddled
hill, the white walls of a few buildings glimmering out of the darker mass. I looked over the parapet and saw the long black outlines of three canoes
and
silent
on the
'55
its
currents
me a cold chisel, and had no diffiin dislodging one of the granite blocks. The culty masonry below was broken and loose, so that without I scratched a hollow in the fabric of the arch.
had brought with
charge of gunpowder, with the fuse tamped it in with paper I had brought, ready and then with the dislodged rubble, finally replacing the granite block which I firmly prised against its neighbours with wooden wedges. I worked rapidly and in ten minutes all was ready. My horse had wandered down towards the bridge, but
difficulty There I placed
fixed. I
the moonlight.
my
must move him out of danger. I led him back along the road a hundred yards or so, and there said good-bye to an animal that was more dear to me than any human
being.
He
I
where
did not comprehend my actions, but stayed bid him stay; his presence there, riderless after
the explosion, was an essential detail of my plot. I returned to the bridge and took a final look round. As a last precaution I went down to the bank and drew
one of the canoes down to the water's edge. There was nothing else to detain me. I hastened back to the crown of the bridge, and under the shelter of the parados lit the fuse. I watched it splutter for an inch or two, and then ran back to the canoe. I pushed out into the current and floated away on its flood. It seemed an age before a loud detonation rent the air. I was far away by then, but presently I saw a cloud of dusty smoke drift across the face of the moon, and still later my boat rocked in the swell caused by the explosion.
156
water had no sooner closed over them than it A seemed to be sucked away from their bodies, to curve upwards at their feet, to arch over their heads, until it formed a perfect spheroid. They were standing within an immense bubble, against which the water
pressed in vain, the sandy particles quivering rapidly inner wall. At first they were aware of against its glassy a motion of descent, but soon this ceased, and they would not have known that they were moving but for of the water outside their bubble. the
agitation
Olivero still held the hand of the Green Child, but felt indifferently. they did not look at each other; they Time and its anguish were abolished; they felt a little
sleepy.
the water broke above their heads and without ascended having experienced any sense of reversal they in the middle of a pool. They found themselves in a blue in the large grotto, filled with an aqueous light, darker reaches, pale green towards the apparent outlet.
Then
rocky basin, rising in many green and mossy ledges, filled the floor of the grotto. The walls were irregular, and from the roof hung long glassy icicles, sometimes so long that they touched the floor and made round columns, tapering inwards towards their axes. Full self-awareness returned to them as soon as they were free of the water; they instantly struggled towards the rocky shore, which they reached without difficulty. The air about them was extremely warm, about equal to that of a glasshouse in summer; so that they did not
feel
wet
as
incommoded by their clothes, which had become they waded to the shore. But whether from the
158
perience he had just passed through, Olivero began to feel faint, and sank to the ground. There he rested until
to the atmosphere, the Green Child sitting by his side. When he had recovered, she told him that this was surely her native country, from which she and her brother had strayed thirty years ago. When they had rested there about an hour, they got
he became accustomed
end of the grotto which seemed light. grotto gradually contracted, and the entrance, when they reached it, was not above four feet high. They proceeded in a crouching attitude and soon came out, but not into what we should call the open;
for that
to
up and made
admit
The
though the space that they now gazed into was larger than that of the grotto they had left, nevertheless a roof arched wide over them, higher and of than the interior of any cathedral. The greater span light in this space was still dim, like the summer twifor
much
light in
England, but of a distinct greenish tinge. Olivero perceived that it was emitted from the walls of the vast cavern, and must be of a phosphorescent nature. The rock itself was of a crystalline formation.
now
Another phenomenon that immediately struck him was a sound of faint bells, which seemed to come from every direction. When he turned to the Green Child for an explanation, she pointed to an overhanging ledge, from which hung, suspended on strings, a series of rods
varying in length from eighteen inches to about three Agitated in the gentle breezes which circulated round the cavern, the rods struck against each other and gave off the bell-like tones which Olivero heard.
feet.
Later he discovered that these rods were of innumerable dimensions, the smallest being prismatic needles of crystalline rock two or three inches long, which tinkled like
'59
as deep and sombre as any metal bell. These larger rods were in fact stalagmites whose formation had been controlled over a long period of time, to ensure regularity
of mass and consequent purity of tone. Special caverns, which might be regarded as workshops or factories, were
set
The Green Child told Olivero that these bells or gongs were hung everywhere about the country to guide people
to another; for each direction had its note or chime and only by listening for this particular sound could an inhabitant of a country without sun or stars tell which way to go. All notes, or chimes, could
be traced back to the centre of this underground world; but if ever anyone strayed out of range of the bells, into uninhabited caverns or grottoes, they would lose all sense of direction, and might never find their way back was in this manner that she had strayed into again. It the cavern whose pool sank to the outer world. Listening now to the bells, they followed where the sound led, which was from one cavern to another, some of which were wide and immensely high, others long and narrow like a tunnel, others like a honeycomb of fissures. The same luminescence pervaded them all. The
least the majority of those they majority were dry at walked through; but in others water dripped from the roofs or ran down the walls to the rock bed, where it collected in pools. Here and there clear streams ran along channels cut in the floor, very narrow and in some cases obviously chiselled out by hand. The water was cooler than the air, and though somewhat sul-
slightly
to drink.
maximum
feet.
a tougher integument. In the damper grottoes, the of our tree-agaricus, growths had more the appearance and were often partially or wholly petrified. An altogether different type of vegetable growth
hung down
from the ceilings of the drier caverns, in the form of which were, however, not tangled and withered roots;
but hollow stems of even diameter, about as thick a common pencil, divided into nodules or cells which contained a kernel. As soon as they came across this subterranean plant, the Green Child seized a section of
roots,
as
and breaking open its dry and flimsy sheath, offered Olivero the kernels to eat. They were sweet and agreeable, and formed, the Green Child explained, the bread
it,
of her people.
first living thing they encountered was a bird, not bigger than a skylark, but more like an owl in apwas grey in colour, its downy feathers pearance; for it like fur at a distance, and each eye was surrounded by a ruff, or several rows of stiff concentric feathers. It differed from an owl, however, in having a straight beak;
The
much
and
its
as
from any bird on earth in the manner of its beak vertically upwards, it rose flight. Pointing as a stone sinks, and when it had reached a straight
differed
two-thirds the height of the grotto, gyrated point about on its own axis. It descended in a corkscrew swiftly motion and invariably took up its perch on a ledge about six feet from the ground. Another peculiarity was that
showed not the slightest sign of fear at the approach of Olivero and the Green Child, and would, indeed.
it
161
habits.
the Green they had traversed eight caverns, Child suddenly stopped and laid a hand on Olivero's
When
arm. They were near the entrance to a smaller grotto, an opening about the size of an ordinary doorway. As a music of a distinct kind they listened, they heard
Olivero to follow her, coming from within. Signalling the Green Child went up to the entrance, and fell on her knees. Olivero did likewise, and then gazed upwards. He
was looking into a grotto of small dimensions, perhaps But it was a grotto twenty feet deep and thirty feet high. of fairly regular proportions, rising in a conical formation, the walls a glittering mass of luminous crystals. At the back of the grotto was a human figure, a man with a high conical head, luminous green flesh like the Green Child's, and beard the colour of pale sea- weed. He was wearing a single diaphanous robe, and was seated on a low rock. Before him was a wide slab of rock, on which a few objects were standing. Most of these appeared to be polished crystals of black like obsidian, some colourless
various structure,
like
some
rock crystal.
But the object which was engaging the attention of the inhabitant of the grotto was a miniature gong of the kind already described, consisting of a frame from which were suspended nine crystal rods. Each rod when struck emitted a different note, and the man before them was ringing the changes on this crystal carillon that is to say, eveiy time he struck the notes, he struck them in a different order, until all the possible
orders were exhausted.
On a carillon of nine notes, such not be complete until 362,880 changes a peal would
162
the wise
men
of her country,
who
did not stop at any of these, but hastened onwards, guided by the chimes. After travelling for what seemed about six terrestrial hours, they came into a wide round space in which they saw a few figures moving about, carrying burdens. They emerged from grottoes on their right, proceeded across the hall and disappeared through an exit facing Olivero and the Green Child. The chime conducted them round the walls of the great hall, past the grottoes on the right. Into one of these they ventured to look. It was thick as a forest with stalactites and stalagmites, but a wide pathway had been cleared down the middle, and on each side were blocks of stone which proved to be moulds, made of alabaster or steatite, into which the petrous moisture dripped. In some cases the influx was increased by moisture from the walls of the caverns, carried to the moulds in stone
spouts.
In coming out of such a grotto, Olivero and the Green Child found themselves face to face with a group of five men. They were not dissimilar in appearance to the
same diaphanous gown, was green, and they wore whitish wispy beards. They stared in goggle-eyed amazement at the two intruders, but made no sound or movement. It was the Green Child who made the first approach. She had entirely forgotten the speech of her native
sage of the grotto; they wore the
their flesh
up
pointed to her green flesh, and then She gesticulated excitedly, trying to indicate that she wished to accompany them. But they continued to
bared her
arm and
to his.
stare at Olivero,
who felt
impelled to
But the moment he sign of friendly intention. moved towards them, they started back in horror, as
some
though they had been confronted with a ghost. And indeed, as such or worse than such, Olivero appeared to them; for actually the people of this country had no
belief in
disembodied
spirits,
species of human being; but only if you imagine a world in which there are no species, but only a single genus of mankind, can you get the measure of their surprise.
saw a
totally
new
They
followed
of pursuit.
peared was a short corridor leading into the vastest hall they had yet encountered; a large underground lake of three miles long and half as wide. Its space, perhaps was so high that its luminous expanse might ceiling have been taken for a sky by aifyone not habituated to the solid structure of the earth. The light, however, was perfectly even, and continued without the variations of
terrestrial light
:
an everlasting
light, a
summer evening
fixed at the
The
birds suddenly cease to sing. scene before them was too complex to be taken
moment
in at a single glance. The floor of the hall was a shallow oval basin, but the natural declivity of its sides had been interrupted by three wide terraces. The terraces were
cut across
tervals
by flights of steps, occurring at irregular inand apparently leading to the various exits one
164
many
and unencumbered. To Olivero it seemed as though he were in the interior of an immense beehive or pigeoncote.
The figures of the five men whom they had followed could be seen at the bottom of the steps, making straight across the arena at a running pace. They were approaching a dense group of people in the middle of the arena. Detached smaller groups could be distinguished on the
three ledges.
The Green Child did not hesitate; and because he saw no other course, Olivero followed her down the steps, which were broad and long, and took about five minutes
to descend. The floor of the hall, of greyish rock, was covered by an elaborate network of tunnels, designed to
carry
away
had
When they had advanced about half a mile, they were within hailing distance of the crowd they had seen
from the top of the steps. The five men had disappeared into their mass. The crowd was standing perfectly still,
facing the intruders. Olivero and the Green Child halted
when they came but although they stayed still for a fifty yards, long time, nobody moved in the crowd, or gave any sign of their intention. They were like a flock of sheep watching the movements of some stranger, alert but unwithin
certain
what action
to take. Olivero
would have
still
no
165
harm
They
of young men and women, but the distinction between the sexes was not very evident, since all wore the same diaphanous robe, and on some of the youths a beard was not yet very obvious. All wore their blond hair long, and had unshod feet. Their bodies were extheir heads egg-shaped; they had no cessively slender, but bright eyebrows, their eyes were tiny,
tirely
gave way before the approaching but turned when they had passed; there strangers, seemed to be about a hundred people in the group, and when Olivero and the Green Child went on, they all
nearest
followed. It was then that Olivero noticed that they, too, walked in pairs, with arms interlinked.
The
Here and there on the plain other groups could be seen moving about, but the Green Child made for the middle point, perhaps guided by some obscure memory. At first the crowd followed in silence, but after a while
other in quick low voices. they began to talk to each came to the middle of the plain, In this manner they where there was a bubbling lake of warm water. The
which was perhaps two hundred feet across, had been made into a regular ellipse and was surrounded by a low wall, cut out of rock. Round the basin was an annular trough, some ten feet wide, of semi-circular section, and in this trough a number of naked men and women were bathing, all apparently of the same age as the crowd already encountered. them prepare to Seeing some of those accompanying herself of her terrestrial bathe, the Green Child divested clothes and stepped into the basin. She was then in no
basin,
1
66
way
age;
different
there, except in
and perhaps her flesh was of a slightly duskier shade of green. Olivero was now left feeling very inconand pantaloons, not to mengruous in his black cloak tion his shoes and other vestments. Many who were
about continued to stare at him; so suppressing all feelhe threw off his cloak ings of shame or embarrassment, with his white body into and other clothes and stepped
the chalybeate water.
but presstung his flesh as from excessive saltiness, became one of glowing warmth, ently the sensation which penetrated his whole flesh. He turned to where the Green Child reclined against the side of the trough; her shoulder, and she her head had fallen
It
against
seemed almost
If
asleep.
slip
you go to sleep, he said, you might water and drown. He watched over her
to feel
into the
until
he too
He overpowered by a desire to sleep. began out on to the ledge of the trough and therefore got Child after him. The rock there was pulled the Green smooth as jade to the flesh. They lay there and warm, sank into a profound slumber. Since there was no measurement of time in this
consciousness of its passage, sensations country, nor any could only be judged by their own intensity. Sleep which took all sensation away, took away the sense of duration. They might have slept there five minutes or
five days or even five years; the same young people were about them when they awoke, but since these had never consciousness of time, none could tell experienced a them how long they had slept. Their terrestrial clothes at their feet they found each a diaphanous had
gone; robe of the kind worn by the Green People. In her sleep, perhaps because in such a state the
mind
Siloen;
which meant,
am
Siloen.
name
given
before she was lost, and perhaps, when she was the name of Sally on earth, it was because she
had
uttered this
hit
known to her. upon the nearest English name With the memory of her language, other memories had returned too, but only such as a child of ten or eleven would have. She remembered that certain of the wise men who dwelt in the caves governed the country
and decided all matters in dispute. Turning then to the nearest inhabitants, she enquired for the cave of the wise men who governed. 'Many years ago/ she exwandered away into the grottoes where there plained, 'I is no music and lost myself. Now I have returned with
one who comes from another country, but was lost too, and now wishes to dwell among us." Those to whom she spoke listened to her with grave innocent faces, and then pointed to a grotto beyond the third terrace, towards which a broad flight of steps led. When they had put on their robes, they climbed the came to this grotto, which was like the others steps and somewhat larger. they had seen on their journey, though five benches against the wall Here, at equal intervals on of the grotto, five bearded men were seated. The space before them was a bare space and into this stepped Siloen and Olivero.
or betray any awareness of the interruption. But presently the one in the middle, seated opposite the entrance, spoke in a calm voice, and asked them what brought them into the
The
five figures
did not
move
uttered one word, which meant: Proceed. When she had come to an end of her story, Siloen was told to take Olivero with her and wait outside the
cave until she heard a bell sounding within. So they went outside and sat there on a rock and looked down
into the arena.
about.
the three ledges were other groups, but progressively smaller. Those on the lowest ledge seemed to to be about fifty strong; those on the upper ledge only
On
They saw
five strong.
Other figures, sometimes in twos or threes, sometimes in stronger companies, moved up and down
the flights of steps, disappearing occasionally into the mouths of the remoter caverns. Whilst they waited outside the cave of the Judges, on a rock, they saw a group of five men sitting together them along the upper ledge. They were approaching
dressed in the same uniform robe, their conical heads were bald except for a fringe of hair above the ears,
and wispy. The one in the middle, speaking, walked with head erect; the others looked downwards and meditated on what he said. When he came to the end of his discourse, he too and the next of the adopted the meditative attitude, who wished to speak assumed the upright attigroup tude. They paid no attention to anything about them, and passed Olivero and Siloen without a sign. cave came a sound like a xyloPresently from the struck. When Olivero and Siloen phone being slowly
their beards were whitish
who was
the Judges, the one in the middle reappeared before and told them to descend to the lowest spoke again
169
and then, since his age already entitled him to pass beto the yond the second ledge, Olivero might proceed the pleasures of upper ledge, where he would enjoy that state he would stay a opinion and argument. In long time, until he was fit for the highest pleasure, which is solitary thought; and then he might retire to
a distant grotto.
These instructions were delivered in an impassive voice, unaccompanied by any gestures. When it was evident that the Judge had no more to say to them, Olivero and Siloen retreated slowly, and descended the
until they steps outside the grotto
ledge.
across,
came
to the lowest
There they joined the first group they came and were accepted as companions without wonder
or question. Most of the time, the people within the group were arm paired off, male and female. They walked together,
in arm, but with no appearance of excessively mutual devotion. Often, that is to say, when for any reason the
group broken up into single units, they would reassemble in different pairs, without comment. The groups themselves were not rigidly constant; for when they descended into the arena, where they bathed and played
games, the groups might become confused together, and on separating again, they would be composed of different units. There was no leadership within the group broke up into single units, they would reassemble limited to about fifty members. They spent much time bathing, and in playing games which reminded Olivero of kiss-in-the-ring,
170
rounders,
and such
events. Time, it canfrequency or the duration of these not exist for these people. not be too often repeated, did When one of the maidens became pregnant, she left the group and lived in another large grotto, where she was attended by matrons. When she had given birth to a child, she returned to the group and did not leave the which group until she was satiated with its pleasures, when she had borne perhaps three children. happened But as the chances of conception were uncertain, and the this period was not necessarily period of gestation slow,
short.
The Green Child at once assumed the habits and emotions of her people, but Olivero went through severe He could take part with a good grace in discipleship. all the games of these young people, but it was a long
time before he could regard the pleasures of the flesh with the same innocence. He was angry and jealous when he saw Siloen walking arm in arm with one of the youths, and hid his convulsed face when he saw her making love with others. But gradually he grew ashamed
of these terrestrial sentiments
and
finally
they no longer
disturbed him.
Olivero gradually learnt the simple language of these not difficult in itself, for it had no irregupeople; it was
lar inflexions
had
no Aryan known on
among them. As was natural, Olivero exhausted the pleasures of the third ledge much more quickly than Siloen, and by the
time he had learnt the language of the Green People, and incidentally, was fully disintoxicated of all his to proceed to the next sentiments, he was
eager
stage,
earthly
and learn more of the customs of this strange farewell to the group and country. He therefore bade second ledge. He and Siloen climbed the steps to the had already so merged themselves into the perfect
communion of the group, that it never occurred to them to make any eccentric display of feeling on this
occasion.
he found a gang (for might be called) caused by the promotion of a member with a vacancy to the superior ledge; for on the second ledge, a much stricter discipline prevailed, definite work being assumed from task to by each gang, and each gang proceeding task in a certain rotation. Olivero was lucky and fell in
to wait until
this ledge
with a gang of food-gatherers almost immediately. It was an appropriate gang for a beginner, because their task was the simplest of all. It was their duty to search the caverns and grottoes for the earth-nuts and the fungi on which the inhabitants lived; to replenish stores of food which existed on each ledge; and to deliver rations to the solitary sages in their caves. In this
way
of caverns
Olivero became familiar with the immense range and grottoes which constituted this under172
ground world.
confines,
because the gangs never went out of sound of the tinkall ling pendants, whose sound guided them through in basthe hollow intricacies. The fungi they collected kets woven from the dry roots of the earth-nuts; the earth-nuts were gathered with their pod-like stems comthe stems were plete, for when they had been shelled, but their pulverised not only used for making baskets, fibre was the raw material from which the diaphanous clothing worn by everybody was manufactured. From the food-gatherers, after an indeterminate time, Olivero passed to the spinners and weavers. Their
spindles were made of finely carved and polished crystal a thin rod tapering towards each end, weighted in the
middle with a
served to give
tion.
disc of obsidian or
chalcedony which
momentum and
having been separated in a stone mortar were twisted into a thread, which was then pestle, rotaattached to a notch at one end of the spindle. motion was given to the spindle by twirling it betory tween the thumb and fingers of the right hand, and then the fibres were drawn out in a fine uniform strand and so converted into yarn. Weaving was the simple interlacing of standard yarn, the woof being threaded by hand through a warp of about a hundred strands, fixed on a vertical frame of notched stone. The fabric made in this way was a loose gauze, silky in texture, but of broken surface. Some of the occupations followed by Olivero were not of sufficient interest to be worth describing (works of irrigation, sanitation, stone-polishing and such like), but two of the higher grades of employment deserve mention. The first was the manufacture of gongs and crystals. It is perhaps not necessary to add anything to what has
fibres,
The
and
173
passed on to another gang, whose business it was to arrange them in musical series now a regular scale for ringing changes, now a number of notes which, striking against each other in succession, would make a
nisable melody.
recog-
highest type of workman, however, was engaged on the polishing of crystals. For this purpose various kinds of rock were used opal, chalcedony, fluorspar, limonite but rock crystal was prized most on account
of
purity. The science which we call crystallography the study of the forms, properties and structure of was the most esteemed of all sciences in this crystals
its
The
sub terrestrial country; indeed, it might be regarded as science itself, for on it were based, not only all notions of the structure of the universe, but equally all notions of beauty, truth and destiny. These questions occupied
the sages on the uppermost ledge, and those who had retired like hermits to their solitary grottoes. It is important to realise that the knowledge of crystals was of this formal nature, because upon it was built, like a superstructure, the whole concept of beauty. To put the matter briefly, their whole aim was to make crystals which, while retaining the apparent structure of each class, departed from the strict natural order in some
subtle way. -^Esthetic pleasure was a perception of the degree of transgression between the artificial form and its natural prototype, and the greatest aesthetic emotion was aroused by those crystals which transgressed most
174
Such preferences probably correspond to various phases art in the terrestrial world at one extreme the baroque fantasy of the cubic system, at the other extreme
of
their careers
it
collection of the complete series. This was not so easy as might seem, for some of the classes were extremely
and it was necessary to search in the remote caves and grottoes beyond the zone of the musical guides. When the education of an apprentice was complete, he was allowed to experiment on some of the less precious stones. The more he experimented, the more he became aware of the difficulty of his task; for there was no law but his own instinct to guide him beyond the limits of natural forms. But when once he had become sure of his instinct, then no joy could equal the discovery of a form whose perfection was other than the perfection
rare,
of nature.
he had reached proficiency of opaque stones, the workman might then venture to use pure rock crystal. Though there was no actual control of the supply of this it would have been regarded as a kind of precious rock, to employ the material for an imperfect work. blasphemy When the workman was satisfied that he had succeeded in creating a perfect form, he might then test the result
he was
satisfied that
When
made
'75
sage,
and ascended
absolute beauty.
When they had admitted to themselves their failure, such workmen were invariably transferred to the other occupation which remains to be mentioned the care of
the caves of the dead.
must now be explained that the people of this country had notions of immortality diametrically opposed to those prevalent on earth. Perhaps because instead of an open and impalpable sky they had solid
It
rock above them; because they believed their universe and human beings to be numerable for whatever cause, they regarded the organic and vital elements of their bodies as disgusting and deplorable. Everything soft and labile filled them with a species of horror, and above all the human breath was the symptom of an original curse which could only be
to be limited in extent
Death itself was no horror to but nothing exceeded their dread of corruption them, and decay that, to them, was a return to the soft and the very element of their weakness and disgaseous, to Their sole desire was to become solid as solid grace. and perdurable as the rocks about them. They therefore the rites of petrifaction. When the hated breath
:
human
it was removed from its watery trough and carried like a recumbent statue to the halls of the dead caves in which the alabaster bodies were stacked, one above the other in dense rows, to wait for their final
beatitude,
crystallisation.
human,
the body, no longer recognisably but rather a pillar of salt, took on the mathe-
When
matical precision and perfect structure of crystal, then it was judged to have attained its final immortality. Slowly the caves were filling with these solid wedges. No man knew how far they extended into the infinite mass of the earth; all they knew was that the space they lived in was limited and that a time would come when the dwindling race would inhabit the last grotto, when the last of that race would plunge into the trough, and so fulfil the purpose of life, which is to attain
everlasting
perfection.
else
For
this people
more acceptable unto God, than to offer their body wholly to the earth, and to unite it most inwardly with
that earth. Then, they said, all their inward parts would when their bodies were perfectly united with the rejoice, earth. That was their whole desire to be one with the
:
physical
It will
harmony
of the universe.
be easily imagined that the attendance on these petrifying grottoes and halls of the dead occupied the time of many men, but these duties never fell to Olivero, because he became so fascinated by the work of polishing crystals, and became so proficient in
177
it,
that before
people
a group to prepare themselves for the perfect solitude of a grotto; but to make the transition to such a state more gradual, they to circulate for so long as they could were
left
beings on this upper ledge, and for last companions they were permitted to adopt a pet. Now the only living creatures in this underworld, except the birds already mentioned,
human
Usually speaking, liked beetles did not take to snakes, and vice versa; the respective characters of these two animals rather similar to those of our dogs and cats.
a sage
about the
size of a tortoise.
who
being
feet long, were with faint gleams of phosphorof a silver-grey colour, escent blue in their scales. When domesticated (and it was rare to find one in a wild state) they would live
The
snakes,
about the person of their masters, for preference coiling round his neck, the head on his breast, the tail down his back. The beetles, on the other hand, did not make themselves familiar with the persons of their masters; they scuttled at their heels with the speed of
cockroaches. Their shell-like wing-cases, of a blue metallic colour, were slightly striated in a longitudinal direction.
They ran on
mandibles and antennae were not conspicuous, but the females of the species (which did not greatly differ from
the males in other respects) emitted a luminous glow from the hinder end of their bodies. They lived on dung,
178
as scavengers as well as
com-
and made no
extreme
left,
objection; so Olivero took his place on the for this was the position of the novice. As
who
would
successively occupy the extreme right, the inner left and the inner right positions, until he himself finally became
the leader.
happened that the group joined by Olivero was in the midst of a discussion of the notion of Time. This
It so
was not a problem that occupied the sages much, because in a country where there were no heavenly bodies, no succession of night and day, nor any variation of season, the sense of time was very rudimentary. It had never
occurred to these people even to measure the passage of time, and they had no devices such as clocks and calendars. Nevertheless, they were sensible of change: the dripping of water in the grottoes, the trickling of streams, the ageing of the human body, and, above all,
the process of petrifaction, were all phenomena which called for an explanation. Of one thing they all seemed convinced: that time was of limited duration. They
and indestructibility of the rocks pointed to the solidity about them, and compared this mass, which to them was a more extensive element than space, with the of the things that change. When the last insignificance vital element had received its crystalline form, then the
sense of time would disappear. Time is change, they said, and a mark of our transitional nature.
179
all specific events; but this mode of reasoning was quite beyond their understanding. He ventured to suggest that the question should be judged from a standpoint wider than that of their present existence.
by
We
have no knowledge, he said, of the extent of the rock on every side of us; other worlds might hollowed out in its mass; and the solid universe
solid
exist
itself
might
there
float in some wider hollow. In this wider universe might be an endless process of change, and time, therefore, would be real and infinite. But they laughed at his notion of a solid floating in law which makes all solid space; it contradicted the things fall through the air and sink in water. It was
that other hollows existed in the possible, they admitted, universe, and they had to admit that the appearance of
Olivero himself was a proof of this; but Olivero's desworld he came from as one of boundless cription of the was received as a wild fantasy; it was not possible, space a space that was not bound in they held, to conceive of
have to moderate his sense of superior knowledge. Beyond a certain point, his experience would not be evidence was of no more value than that accepted. His of a man who had awoken from a vivid dream. His dream was real, but it was unique. It was not long before Olivero himself began to doubt the reality of his
longed to find Siloen again, to confirm his past But Siloen seemed to be for ever separated impressions. from him; and she herself, for that matter, was now that her whole earthly experience had firmly convinced been a nightmare, which had visited her whilst she lay
past.
1
He
80
is
all Disorder, for being confined to the body, The only sensual they create the illusion of self-hood. is true is that which shows us in perception which an unchanging Order; other perceptions, as everything of the manifold variety of things, creation, destruction and change, tend to create a sense of Disorder, and are
cause of
the cause of
all error.
Olivero, in acknowledging the force and perfection of this philosophy, ventured to suggest that the concepts of Order and Disorder might be taken as
When
life
and death when he put forward this view, which he did with difficulty for many of the images were meaningless to this people who, for example, lived in had no notion of darkness, they everlasting light and at him again, and said that it was the only laughed
of Disorder. grossest of heresies to suppose the necessity the group in their slow peregrination, the
Stopping
steam hung as basin of the grotto. slight cloud of usual above the warm waters of the spring; rose and in the soft currents of air that circulated drifted
away
life,
it
he
said, is like
from the
earth;
floats in
denses,
solid
element of water.
:
The
water in its turn changes its form, solidifying on the surface of the rock. Everything solidifies that is the law of the universe. The expression used by these sages, meaning the law of the universe, was the nearest approach they had to our conception of God. Not knowing fire, not being subinclement seasons, not afflicted with thunder, ject to and all the terrors of the upper world, they lightning had never evolved the instinct of fear. The universe to them was wholly passive, or only active in the gradual
inevitable establishment of order out of chaos. One without division of frontiers or language, they people, had no need to invoke supernatural aid. Neither sacri-
and
nor propitiation entered into their lives, because they had never endowed the law of the universe with personal attributes or human passions. Such a notion they
fice
182
to speak of beauty in this connection, for a system of aesthetics does not necessarily imply beauty in our sense.
were music and the construction we have already seen, was merely a mathematical exercise a ringing out of all the possible permutations on a given number of notes; and as such it was rather an exercise in the memory of order
Their only
fine arts
of crystals. Music, as
call
an
art.
The contemplation
of
different matter; it was not a crystals was, however, a contemplation of all the possible systems of crystallisation (though this was one of their studies), but a sensual
order. When pleasure in the transgression of natural of this eventually Olivero insisted on the discussion
topic, the leader
admitted that
it
difficult
problem
in their philosophy.
The only
absolute beauty,
the only beauty that was permanent and independent of temporal things, was the order of the universe as revealed in the structure of natural crystals. That was a truth admitted by everyone. But from the beginning of
men had taken pleasure in making forms were not exact imitations of the forms found in which the rocks, but which were nevertheless suggested by these. The usual explanation given for such an extravathe world
the mind rejoiced in natural gance was, that whilst the senses found pleasure in departing from these forms, forms not, it is true, to the extent of creating disbe a useless occupation; orderly shapes, which would
them the pleasure which acthe discovery of an unknown order. Such companies orders outside nature did not really exist; but it amused
but
to give sufficiently far
men
183
planation might be true that actually it was the senses which, measuring things, rejoiced in the perception of the exact order of nature; and that it was the mind, asserting its liberty, which rejoiced in the forms created
by man?
This question was discussed for many revolutions of the ledge (for that was the normal way of measuring the duration of their discussions); and was regarded as a bold paradox. It led them to an examination of the
nature of the mind, and its relation to the senses: in the course of which they traversed many of the arguments long familiar to men of the upper world. The general truth, that the mind was fed by the senses and only formed by the process of sensual perception, was admitted. But just as the formless water which drips from the walls of a grotto turns into the perfect form of a crystal, so, they held, the incoming perceptions of
the senses gradually formed an organ which had its own inherent sense of order. But this did not solve the
finally agreed to regard the forms of artificial as belonging to an intermediate state, crystals half-way between order and disorder. If this could be
They
accepted
it
crystal
the senses, saw in it an order created by the senses, and were pleased because such an experience gave them an
human power sufficient to quell disorder; and that others, approaching the crystal from the side of the mind, were made aware of the distinction which exists between the order created by man and the order
illusion of
184
When
this hypothesis
all
clear,
and
ac-
the group, then Olivero suggested that cepted by those who approached the crystals from the side of the senses were those who actually made the crystals; whilst them from the side of the mind those who
approached were the sages who accepted the crystals for contem-
press
was a proposition there Olivero from that moment advanced timation of the group. He found it his knowledge of another world
plation. To this
But by keeping this knowledge to worldly experience. himself, regarding it as a secret store of dream imagery, he had a great advantage over his companions in their discussions. They all marvelled at his eloquence and wisdom, but Olivero was not aware of any special effort on his part; for though thoughts were subtle in this were simple; and a certain complexity of country, lives essential to eloquence. For the rest, his experience is to provide continual scope for curiosity was sufficient
argument and enquiry. One by one the positions in the group were resigned to him, until he was finally elected leader. In that condition he might well have remained until his death, for he found it very pleasant to circle round that even the steady luminous atmosphere of the grotto. ledge, in food as they required and it was infinitesimal Such
them in baskets placed at intervals along the path. Water for drinking was found in stoups cut out in the surface of the rock. The temperature, now that Olivero
was acclimatised, was agreeable and constant.
'85
Illness,
When, very
the solitary tervals find a figure sitting rigid and silent in its grotto, his hand no longer ringing changes on the bells. Competently, without emotion, they would lay out the body of the sage, placing his favourite crystal on his breast.
old by our standards, they finally was peaceful. Going on their rounds to rare insages, the food-gatherers would at
Then they would inform the attendants on the caves of the dead, who went and fetched the body and brought
to the petrifying-trough. So indifferent were these people to death, that if such a procession passed a band
it
of youths and maidens playing, or a gang of workers or even a group of sages in disputation, these went on with their occupations no more attention was paid to
:
had passed, shaking notes from the hanging bells. The time came when Olivero felt that he should seek the solitary state, and his mind being fully made up, he announced his intention to the group. They accepted his decision without demur, for it was not usual to question the wisdom of a group leader. The only rule of the community was that a sage seeking solitude
the dead than
if
a breeze
should first present himself to the five judges, not that his decision should be questioned, but to give the leading judge himself an opportunity to retire. If he availed
place on the
himself of this opportunity, then the aspirant took the left of the judges, and resigned himself to
another cycle of promotion, one which might endure much longer than the one he had just passed through. 1 86
any concern
to
him but
own mind.
He would
willingly have dispensed with the solitary promenades with a pet; but when he made such a proto
posal to the judges, the leader strongly advised him not omit a ritual which had so much sound sense be-
hind
it;
for
it
dis-
sociating oneself from the community of men, but by living for a time in the company of an insect or a reptile,
creatures unable to
communicate
their thoughts,
the
communicat-
ing with inanimate things. For though these sages sought solitariness, they were well aware of the dangers of introspection, and therefore trained themselves to
direct their thoughts to an object outside themselves. Without an object to contemplate, they would say, the
eyes roll inwards, and we become blind. This object, by an ageless convention, was always a crystal. Olivero therefore went in search of a beetle, for he
preferred their hard precise form to the sinuous and sly snake. Young beetles awaiting a master were kept in a special grotto, to which a sage might repair and make
There was little difference between any of them, except in the matter of size, but Olivero selected one which, from the way it waved its mandibles, he judged to be of a lively disposition. For Olivero, in spite of his acclimatisation, was still more vigorous and mushis choice.
inconspicuous master. His mandibles and antennae might move playa second did his eyes, which profully, but never for truded like black glassy beads, shift their gaze, and the
called his beetle, was an ideal pet. If Cypher, Olivero stopped to rest, Cypher moved to the side of the track, and from an spot watched his
he
moment
into the
moved
intelligently
middle of the path, ready to speed along at his master's heels. Olivero was touched by such efficient devotion, and although he felt no temptation to lavish human sympathy on the beast, yet he found him but ever pleasant to talk at lively but dumb, patient
tiredness,
It is
symptoms of
this state,
how long Olivero continued in but certainly he found it more enjoyable and therefore more necessary than he had anticipated. But so accustomed to exteriorising finally he had become
his thoughts in the direction of Cypher, that he felt he could safely trust himself with the inanimate world,
and
He
that he should delay no longer to seek his grotto. Cypher for a last walk, and left him in the care of certain workers, who tended discarded
therefore took
pets.
Such pets were not given to strange masters, but were kept in special caves where with females of the their kind. species they propagated The manner in which it was customary to seek a The sage perambufinal retirement was this grotto for lated slowly round the upper ledge. As he came to every cavern that led off from the central grotto, he listened to the particular music of that cavern, and there were
:
88
would finally select that which pleased him best. Then he would set off down this cavern, and wherever he came to a crossing, again he would make a choice, and follow whither his ear dictated. As he went along, he would glance into the grottoes he passed, and at any point on his journey he might make his choice of an empty grotto. But naturally the best grottoes within near reach of the central grotto would be occupied, and unless he came across one recently vacated by a dead sage, he might have to wander a considerable distance. If in this process he came to a place where the music ceased, then he must wait in that place until the foodgatherers came, and from that point take them with him. His choice finally made, the food-gatherers returned and instructed the bell-makers to prepare gongs of the particular chime followed by the sage, which were
afterwards fixed as a guide for future food-gatherers. After twice circling the ledge, Olivero selected
a
cavern whose bells gave out a melody in the Lydian mode. For a long time he had stood at the entrance of this cavern, listening to the soft notes carried on the sweet air that swept gently along the passage. Like most of the melodies, it consisted of only seven notes,
but notes so delicately poised, so subtly modulated, that they carried in their pitch and intervals the sublimest sense of intellectual beauty. There could be no further hesitation, but Olivero indulged in that intensest
pleasure which is ours when we prolong that last instant of indecision, already aware of the joy awaiting us, but anxious to observe it before making it irrevoc-
when a
loses in acuteness
tion
and depth.
moments, wondered what kind of he was who invented the melody, but there was being no knowing since melodies sufficient for all the caverns had been composed by sages long ago, and were venerOlivero, in those
ated as intellectual heirlooms. It is possible, of course, that sages of his own time might be capable of combut no value was attached posing melodies as beautiful, to change in itself; a thing once beautiful, it was and the work of art was thought, was always beautiful, created only out of necessity. When he had indulged this mood of sensuous anticihis last journey. For some way, pation, Olivero began the music, he did not think to look into
the grottoes he passed. When finally he recollected his mission, he had gone far, and found the first grotto he entered vacant. It must have been occupied on some the seat of rock and the rock slab previous occasion, for the seat were already prepared. It was a in front of oval in section, conical in elevagrotto of medium size, walls were of a darker basic rock than any tion. Its
in perfect
enraptured by
being high
tilation.
a luminous obsidian, very formation. It was free from crystalline stalactites, and from all trace of moisture; the entrance, and wide, provided sufficient means of venOlivero
had previously
its
seen,
Olivero stood at the threshold, still and intent for a was growing round long time. The space of the grotto
real in all directions. Before committing himself to dwell for the rest of his mortal life in this room, he wished to test its confines, to make sure that its shape would continue to please him. He found it
him, becoming
190
bluish, like the freshly socket of a bone. To gaze upwards was like exposed gazing into the iris of an immense illuminated eye.
Olivero went over to the rocky bench, and seated himself facing the entrance. Against the even glow of the rock surface the aperture was hardly visible. It was, however, the direction from which he could still hear the chime of the bells. He now waited in that timeless atmosphere, very still, varying his posture. His body at first felt the
scarcely strain : the complete inactivity, the pressure of the hard rock. But the mind coaxed the body into endurance,
The
food-gatherers
brought him brought him them. It was exquisitely tuned, and Olivero found great
the changes. To ring a full peal pleasure in ringing as long as fourteen days, judged by terreswould take trial time; but now Olivero had lost all consciousness
of terrestrial time,
found him eventually, and of food and water. One day they supplies a chime of nine bells, and a rod to strike
and judged
all
herent duration.
Occasionally he was disturbed by crystal-cutters, who he decrystals to offer him. But the crystal sired was one which echoed in its proportions the
came with
his grotto.
That
is
to say,
should consist of seven planes without symmetry, but with axes meeting in a single point. Though he accepted other crystals which pleased him by their natural and
absolute beauty, he reserved the place of honour in the middle of his slab for a crystal that should have the of the music that had brought him particular harmony
191
gold and steely blue. Olivero now had all that he required for the life of of his body for contemplation, and for the preparation in the ecstasy of the perfection of death. When not lost he found the crystals and bells,
objective proportions, in anticipating the objectivity of death. greatest pleasure He looked forward to that time when the body is re-
leased
from the
soul,
and the
soul
acquired that final the soul a disturber of the peace wisdom, which sees in of the body. The soul it is that incites the senses to seek spiritual satisfactions. But the only satisfactions are
itself.
He had
body physical, measured real bliss until it has gathered into itself the wavering antennae of sight and hearing, when nothing from the
outer world troubles its inner perfection, when it has no sense or desire, but aspires after fixed and harmonious being. All absolute things, absolute beauty and absolute good, and the essence or true nature of everynot apprehended by the fickle senses, thing, these are the body itself when it casts off the but achieved
knows no
by
knowledge but a final state of existence. Nothing can exist finally but matter, and nothing can exist eternally but matter in harmonious form. What is chaos but matter disturbed by immaterial forces?
192
that has devoured it and filled it with itches and desires, and takes on a state of crystalline purity. Purest itself is not a shifting process of perception,
worm
When
Olivero considered
all
these things,
I
he was led
not found a path of action which brings me to the conclusion, that while we are alive, and the body is infected by the soul, our desires are never satisfied? For the soul is a source of endless trouble to us by reason of its lust for power; and is liable also to diseases which overtake us and impede us in the search for true existence: it fills us full of
to reflect in this
loves,
manner: Have
and lusts, and fears, and fancies of all kinds, and of pride; indeed, it often takes away from us the very capacity of action. When it moves us to action, then
often as not the action
is
destructive
of
the body.
rebellions?
the spirit and the lusts of the spirit? Wars are occasioned by the love of power and power has to be acquired by force to satisfy the demands of spiritual pride. By reason of all these incitements and disturbances,
we have no time in life to give to philosophy. Even if we find a moment's leisure, and give ourselves to some speculation, the soul is always breaking in upon us, causing turmoil and confusion in our enquiries, and so amazing us that we are prevented from seeing the truth. Experience has proved to me, that if we would have pure knowledge of anything we must be quit of the soul the body in itself must achieve a state of harmony and perfection. Then we attain the absolute beauty that we desire, and of which we say that we are lovers; not while we live, but after death. For then, and not till then, the body will be parted from the soul, and exist in itself alone. In this present life, we make the nearest approach to perfection when we have the
communion with
the soul,
are not surfeited with the spiritual nature, but keep ourselves pure until the hour when God is pleased to
and
193
And
we
o the
spirit,
thus having got rid of the fluctuations shall be pure and become part of the
in ourselves the law of
universal
the physical universe, which is no other than the law of truth. When my body shall have acquired this final harmony, then I know that I shall have come to the end of my journey, and attained that which has been the
my life. All that is misty and fluid, all that and labile, falls, precipitates, returns to the chaos of unformed matter; bi^t out of the same chaos is slowly formed all that is finite and solid, all that is hard and eternal, all that is fixed and harmonious. This harmony exists before life and after life; in worlds that are not yet fornaed and in worlds that are defunct, cold and extinct. Suck harmony is the harmony of the
pursuit of
soft
is
only obeying in
portions.
desire
is
to
my
harmony of the crystal; my become a part of that harmony, frame its immutable laws and pro-
When death came to Olivero, he felt with peculiar joy the gradual release of his limbs from the streams of blood and the agents of pain that had for so long kept and calmly watched the possession. He died slowly, the marmoreal stiffness gripping the pallor spreading, loose flesh, locking joints and ventricles. The beating of his heart was like the jumping of a flame in an empty
lamp. Summoning his last vital time that anxious agitation.
effort,
he
The
his
who
carried
body
met on
their
way
an-
other procession, coming from the grottoes where the matrons lived. These were carrying the body of Siloen, who had died at the same time. The two bodies were laid side by side in the same trough, and these two who
194
THE END