ia Ui . OF CALIF. LIBRARY, LOS ANGELES FROM SEA TO SEA The Works of Rudyard Kipling From Sea to Sea; Letters of Travel Volume Two New York Doubleday 6 McClure Company 1899 COPYRIGHT, 1899, BY EUDYAED KIPLING. J. S. Gushing & Co. - Berwick k Smith Norwood Mass. U.S.A. CONTENTS FROM SEA TO SEA XXV PAOB Tells how I dropped into Politics and the Tenderer Senti- ments. Contains a Moral Treatise on American Maidens and an Ethnological One on the Negro. Ends with a Banquet and a Type-writer 3 XXVI Takes me through Bret Harte's Country and to Portland with "Old Man California." Explains how Two Vagabonds became Homesick through looking at Other People's Houses 18 XXVII Shows how I caught Salmon in the Clackamas 33 XXVIII Takes me from Vancouver to the Yellowstone National Park 50 XXIX Shows how Yankee Jim introduced me to Diana of the Cross- ways on the Banks of the Yellowstone and how a German Jew said I was no True Citizen. Ends with the Celebra- tion of the 4th of July and a Few Lessons therefrom . 62 v 21306GB vi CONTENTS xxx PAGE Shows how I entered Mazanderan of the Persians and saw Devils of Every Colour, and Some Troopers. Hell and the Old Lady from Chicago. The Captain and the Lieutenant 73 XXXI Ends with the Cafion of the Yellowstone. The Maiden from New Hampshire Larry " Wrap-up-his-Tail " Tom The Old Lady from Chicago and a Few Natural Phenomena including One Briton .... 88 XXXII Of the American Army and the City of the Saints. The Temple, the Book of Mormon, and the Girl from Dorset. An Oriental Consideration of Polygamy .... 106 XXXIII How I met Certain People of Importance between Salt Lake and Omaha ' . . . 120 XXXIV Across the Great Divide ; and how the Man Gring showed me the Garments of the Ellewomen 130 XXXV How I struck Chicago, and how Chicago struck me. Of Religion, Politics, and Pig-sticking, and the Incarnation of the City among Shambles 139 XXXVI How I found Peace at Musquash on the Monongahela . .154 XXXVII An Interview with Mark Twain 167 CONTENTS vii THE CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT I PAGE A Real Live City 185 II The Reflections of a Savage 191 III The Council of the Gods 199 IV On the Banks of the Hugli 208 V With the Calcutta Police 217 VI The City of Dreadful Night 223 VII Deeper and Deeper Still 233 VIII Concerning Lucia 240 viii CONTENTS AMONG THE RAILWAY FOLK I PAGE A Railway Settlement 249 II The Shops 257 III Vulcan's Forge 200 THE GIRIDIH COAL-FIELDS I On the Surface 275 II In the Depths 284 III The Perils of the Pits . 291 IN AN OPIUM FACTORY 301 THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION The Cow-house Jirga 311 A Bazaar Dhulip 316 The Hands of Justice . . . . . . . .321 The Serai Cabal . . 324 CONTENTS ix PAGE The Story of a King 328 The Great Census 332 The Killing of Hatim Tai 33(3 A Self-made Man 341 The Vengeance of Lai Beg 345 Hunting a Miracle ......... 348 The Explanation of Mir Baksh 353 A Letter from Golam Singh ....... 357 The Writing of Yakub Khan 302 A King's Ashes 369 The Bride's Progress 372 " A District at Play " 380 What it comes to 386 The Opinions of Gunner Barnabas 395 FROM SEA TO SEA CONTINUED No. XXV TELLS HOW I DROPPED INTO POLITICS AND THE TEN- DERER SENTIMENTS. CONTAINS A MORAL TREATISE ON AMERICAN MAIDENS AND AN ETHNOLOGICAL ONE ON THE NEGRO. ENDS WITH A BANQUET AND A TYPE-WRITER. I HAVE been watching machinery in repose after read- ing about machinery in action. An excellent gentleman who bears a name honoured in the magazines writes, much as Disraeli orated, of " the sublime instincts of an ancient people," the certainty with which they can be trusted to manage their own affairs in their own way, and the speed with which they are making for all sorts of desirable goals. This he called a statement or pur- view of American politics. I went almost directly after- wards to a saloon where gentlemen interested in ward politics nightly congregate. They were not pretty per- sons. Some of them were bloated, and they all swore cheerfully till the heavy gold watch-chains on their fat stomachs rose and fell again ; but they talked over their liquor as men who had power and unquestioned access to places of trust and profit. The magazine-writer dis- cussed theories of government; these men the practice. They had been there. They knew all about it. They banged their fists on the table and spoke of political "pulls," the vending of votes, and so forth. Theirs was 3 4 FROM SEA TO SEA not the talk of village babblers reconstructing the affairs of the nation, but of strong, coarse, lustful men fighting for spoil and thoroughly understanding the best methods of reaching it. I listened long and intently to speech I could not understand, or only in spots. It was the speech of business, however. I had sense enough to know that, and to do my laughing outside the door. Then I began to understand why my pleasant and well-educated hosts in San Francisco spoke with a bitter scorn of such duties of citizenship as voting and taking an interest in the dis- tribution of offices. Scores of men have told me with no false pride that they would as soon concern themselves with the public affairs of the city or State as rake muck. Read about politics as the cultured writer of the magazines regards 'em, and then, and not till then, pay your respects to the gentlemen who run the grimy reality. I'm sick of interviewing night-editors, who, in response to my demand for the record of a prominent citizen, an- swer: "Well, you see, he began by keeping a saloon," etc. I prefer to believe that my informants are treating me as in the old sinful days in India I was used to treat our wan- dering Globe-trotters. They declare that they speak the truth, and the news of dog-politics lately vouchsafed to me in groggeries incline me to believe but I won't. The people are much too nice to slangander as recklessly as I have been doing. Besides, I am hopelessly in love with about eight American maidens all perfectly de- lightful till the next one comes into the room. 0-Toyo was a darling, but she lacked several things; conversa- tion, for one. You cannot live on giggles. She shall remain unmoved at Nagasaki while I roast a battered FKOM SEA TO SEA 5 heart before the shrine of a big Kentucky blonde who had for a nurse, when she was little, a negro " mammy." By consequence she has welded on to Californian beauty, Paris dresses, Eastern culture, Europe trips, and wild Western originality, the queer dreamy superstitions of the negro quarters, and the result is soul-shattering. And she is but one of many stars. Item, a maiden who believes in education and possesses it, with a few hundred thou- sand dollars to boot, and a taste for slumming. Item, the leader of a sort of informal salon where girls congregate, read papers, and daringly discuss metaphysical prob- lems and candy a sloe-eyed, black-browed, imperious maiden. Item, a very small maiden, absolutely without reverence, who can in one swift sentence trample upon and leave gasping half a dozen young men. Item, a millionnairess, burdened with her money, lonely, caustic, with a tongue keen as a sword, yearning for a sphere, but chained up to the rock of her vast possessions. Item, a typewriter-maiden earning her own bread in this big city, because she doesn't think a girl ought to be a bur- den on her parents. She quotes Theophile Gautier, and moves through the Avorld manfully, much respected, for all her twenty inexperienced summers. Item, a woman from Cloudland who has no history in the past, but is discreetly of the present, and strives for the con- fidences of male humanity on the grounds of "sym- pathy." (This is not altogether a new type.) Item, a girl in a " dive " blessed with a Greek head and eyes that seem to speak all that is best and sweetest in the world. But woe is me ! she has no ideas in this world or the next, beyond the consumption of beer (a com- mission on each bottle), and protests that she sings the 6 FROM SEA TO SEA songs allotted to her nightly with no more than the vaguest notion of their meaning. Sweet and comely are the maidens of Devonshire ; deli- cate and of gracious seeming those who live in the pleas- ant places of London; fascinating for all their demureness the damsels of France clinging closely to their mothers, and with large eyes wondering at the wicked world ; ex- cellent in her own place and to those who understand her is the Anglo-Indian "spin" in her second season; but the girls of America are above and beyond them all. They are clever; they can talk. Yea, it is said that they think. Certainly they have an appearance of so doing. They are original, and look you between the brows with unabashed eyes as a sister might look at her brother. They are instructed in the folly and van- ity of the male mind, for they have associated with " the boys " from babyhood, and can discerningly minis- ter to both vices, or pleasantly snub the possessor. They possess, moreover, a life among themselves, independ- ent of masculine associations. They have societies and clubs and unlimited tea-fights where all the guests are girls. They are self-possessed without parting with any tenderness that is their sex-right ; they understand ; they can take care of themselves; they are superbly inde- pendent. When you ask them what makes them so charming, they say: "It is because we are better edu- cated than your girls and and we are more sensible in regard to men. We have good times all round, but we aren't taught to regard every man as a possible husband. Nor is he expected to marry the first girl he calls on regularly." Yes, they have good times, their freedom is large, and they do not abuse it. They can go driving FROM SEA TO SEA 7 with young men, and receive visits from young men to an extent that would make an English mother wink with horror; and neither driver nor drivee have a thought beyond the enjoyment of a good time. As certain also of their own poets have said : " Man is fire and woman is tow, And the Devil he comes and begins to blow." In America the tow is soaked in a solution that makes it fire-proof, in absolute liberty and large knowledge ; consequently accidents do not exceed the regular percent- age arranged by the Devil for each class and climate under the skies. But the freedom of the young girl has its drawbacks. She is I say it with all reluctance irreverent, from her forty-dollar bonnet to the buckles in her eighteen-dollar shoes. She talks flippantly to her parents and men old enough to be her grandfather. She has a prescriptive right to the society of the Man who Arrives. The parents admit it. This is sometimes embarrassing, especially when you call on a man and his wife for the sake of information ; the one being a mer- chant of varied knowledge, the other a woman of the world. In five minutes your host has vanished. In another five his wife has followed him, and you are left with a very charming maiden doubtless, but cer- tainly not the person you came to see. She chatters and you grin ; but you leave with the very strong impression of a wasted morning. This has been my experience once or twice. I have even said as pointedly as I dared to a man : " I came to see you." " You'd better see me in my office, then. The house belongs to my women-folk to my daughter, that is to say." He spoke with truth. 8 FROM SEA TO SEA The American of wealth is owned by his family. They exploit him for bullion, and sometimes it seems to me that his lot is a lonely one. The women get the ha'- pence ; the kicks are all his own. Nothing is too good for an American's daughter (I speak here of the moneyed classes). The girls take every gift as a matter of course. Yet they develop greatly when a catastrophe arrives and the man of many millions goes up or goes down and his daughters take to stenography or type- writing. I have heard many tales of heroism from the lips of girls who counted the principals among their friends. The crash came ; Mamie or Hattie or Sadie gave up their maid, their carriages and candy, and with a No. 2 Remington and a stout heart set about earning their daily bread. "And did I drop her from the list of my friends? No, Sir," said a scarlet-lipped vision in white lace. "That might happen to me any day." It may be this sense of possible disaster in the air that makes San Franciscan society go with so captivating a rush and whirl. Recklessness is in the air. I can't ex- plain where it comes from, but there it is. The roaring winds off the Pacific make you drunk to begin with. The aggressive luxury on all sides helps out the intoxi- cation, and you spin for ever " down the ringing groves of change " (there is no small change, by the way, west of the Rockies) as long as money lasts. They make greatly and they spend lavishly ; not only the rich but the arti- sans, who pay nearly five pounds for a suit of clothes and for other luxuries in proportion. The young men rejoice in the days of their youth. They gamble, yacht, race, en- joy prize-fights and cock-fights the one openly, the other in secret they establish luxurious clubs; they break FROM SEA TO SEA 9 themselves over horse-flesh and other things ; and they are instant in quarrel. At twenty they are experienced in business ; embark in vast enterprises, take partners as experienced as themselves, and go to pieces with as much splendour as their neighbours. Remember that the men who stocked California in the Fifties were physically, and as far as regards certain tough virtues, the pick of the earth. The inept and the weakly died en route or went under in the days of construction. To this nucleus were added all the races of the Continent French, Italian, German, and, of course, the Jew. The result you shall see in large-boned, deep-chested, delicate-handed women, and long, elastic, well-built boys. It needs no little golden badge swinging from his watch-chain to ma.rk the Native Son of the Golden West the country -bred of California. Him I love because he is devoid of fear, car- ries himself like a man, and has a heart as big as his boots. I fancy, too, he knows how to enjoy the blessings of life that his world so abundantly bestows upon him. At least I heard a little rat of a creature with hock- bottle shoulders explaining that a man from Chicago could pull the eye-teeth of a Californian in business. Well, if I lived in Fairyland, where cherries were as big as plums, plums as big as apples, and strawberries of no account ; where the procession of the fruits of the seasons was like a pageant in a Drury Lane pantomime and where the dry air was wine, I should let business slide once in a way and kick up my heels with my fellows. The tale of the resources of California vegetable and mineral is a fairy tale. You can read it in books. You would never believe me. All manner of nourishing food from sea-fish to beef may be bought at the lowest prices ; and 10 FROM SEA TO SEA the people are well developed and of a high stomach. They demand ten shillings for tinkering a jammed lock of a trunk ; they receive sixteen shillings a day for working as carpenters; they spend many sixpences on very bad cigars, and they go mad over a prize-fight. When they disagree, they do so fatally, with firearms in their hands, and on the public streets. I was just clear of Mission Street when the trouble began between two gentlemen, one of whom perforated the other. When a policeman, whose name I do not recollect, "fatally shot Ed. Kearney," for attempting to escape arrest, I was in the next street. For these things I am thankful. It is enough to travel with a policeman in a tram-car and while he arranges his coat-tails as he sits down, to catch sight of a loaded re- volver. It is enough to know that fifty per cent of the men in the public saloons carry pistols about them. The Chinaman waylays his adversary and methodically chops him to pieces with his hatchet. Then the Press roar about the brutal ferocity of the Pagan. The Italian re- constructs his friend with a long knife. The Press com- plains of the waywardness of the alien. The Irishman and the native Calif ornian in their hours of discontent use the revolver, not once, but six times. The Press records the fact, and asks in the next column whether the world can parallel the progress of San Francisco. The American who loves this country will tell you that this sort of thing is confined to the lower classes. Just at present an ex-judge who was sent to jail by another judge (upon my word, I cannot tell whether these titles mean anything) is breathing red-hot vengeance against his enemy. The papers have interviewed both parties and confidently expect a fatal issue. FBOM SEA TO SEA 11 Now let me draw breath and curse the negro waiter and through him the negro in service generally. He has been made a citizen with a vote ; consequently both politi- cal parties play with him. But that is neither here nor there. He will commit in one meal every betise that a scullion fresh from the plough-tail is capable of, and he will continue to repeat those faults. He is as complete a heavy-footed, uncomprehending, bungle-fisted fool as any memsahib in the East ever took into her establish- ment. But he is according to law a free and independ- ent citizen consequently above reproof or criticism. He, and he alone, in this insane city will wait at table (the Chinaman doesn't count). He is untrained, inept, but he will fill the place and draw the pay. Now God and his father's Kismet made him intellectually inferior to the Oriental. He insists on pretending that he serves tables by accident as a sort of amusement. He wishes you to understand this little fact. You wish to eat your meals, and if possible to have them properly served. He is a big, black, vain baby and a man rolled into one. A coloured gentleman who insisted on getting me pie when I wanted something else, demanded information about India. I gave him some facts about wages. " Oh hell," said he, cheerfully, "that wouldn't keep me in cigars for a month." Then he fawned on me for a ten- cent piece. Later he took it upon himself to pity the natives of India "heathen" he called them, this Woolly One whose race has been the butt of every comedy on the Asiatic stage since the beginning. And I turned and saw by the head upon his shoulders that he was a Yoruba man, if there be any truth in ethnological castes. He did his thinking in English, but he was a Yoruba negro, 12 FROM SEA TO SEA and the race type had remained the same throughout his generations. And the room was full of other races some that looked exactly like Gallas (but the trade was never recruited from that side of Africa), some duplicates of Cameroon heads, and some Kroomen, if ever Kroomeii wore evening dress. The American does not consider little matters of descent, though by this time he ought to know all about " damnable heredity." As a general rule he keeps himself very far from the negro and says unpretty things about him. There are six million ne- groes more or less in the States, and they are increas- ing. The Americans once having made them citizens cannot unmake them. He says, in his newspapers, they ought to be elevated by education. He is trying this : but it is like to be a long job, because black blood is much more adhesive than white, and throws back with annoying persistence. When the negro gets a religion he returns, directly as a hiving bee, to the first instincts of his peo- ple. Just now a wave of religion is sweeping over some of the Southern States. Up to the present, two Messiahs and one Daniel have appeared ; and several human sacri- fices have been offered up to these incarnations. The Daniel managed to get three young men, who he insisted were Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, to walk into a blast furnace; guaranteeing non-combustion. They did not return. I have seen nothing of this kind, but I have attended a negro church. The congregation were moved by the spirit to groans and tears, and one of them danced up the aisle to the mourners' bench. The motive may have been genuine. The movements of the shaken body were those of a Zanzibar stick-dance, such as you see at Aden on the coal boats ; and even as I FROM SEA TO SEA 13 watched the people, the links that bound them to the white man snapped one by one, and I saw before me the hubshi (the Woolly One) praying to the God he did not understand. Those neatly dressed folk on the benches, the grey-headed elder by the window, were savages neither more nor less. What will the American do with the negro ? The South will not consort with him. In some States miscegenation is a penal offence. The North is every year less and less in need of his services. And he will not disappear. He will continue as a prob- lem. His friends will urge that he is as good as the white man. His enemies ... it is not good to be a negro in the land of the free and the home of the brave. But this has nothing to do with San Francisco and her merry maidens, her strong, swaggering men, and her wealth of gold and pride. They bore me to a banquet in honour of a brave Lieutenant Carlin, of the Van- dalia who stuck by his ship in the great cyclone at Apia and comported himself as an officer should. On that occasion 'twas at the Bohemian Club I heard oratory with the roundest of o's ; and devoured a dinner the memory of which will descend with me into the hungry grave. There were about forty speeches de- livered ; and not one of them was average or ordinary. It was my first introduction to the American Eagle screaming for all it was worth. The Lieutenant's hero- ism served as a peg from which those silver-tongued ones turned themselves loose and kicked. They ransacked the clouds of sunset, the thunderbolts of Heaven, the deeps of Hell, and the splendours of the Resurrection, for tropes and metaphors, and hurled the result at the head of the guest of the evening. Never since the 14 FROM SEA TO SEA morning stars sang together for joy, I learned, had an amazed creation witnessed such superhuman bravery as that displayed by the American navy in the Samoa cyclone. Till earth rotted in the phosphorescent star- and-stripe slime of a decayed universe that God-like gallantry would not be forgotten. I grieve that I can- not give the exact words. My attempt at reproducing their spirit is pale and inadequate. I sat bewildered on a coruscating Niagara of blatherumskite. It was magnificent it was stupendous; and I was conscious of a wicked desire to hide my face in a napkin and grin. Then, according to rule, they produced their dead, and across the snowy tablecloths dragged the corpse of every man slain in the Civil War, and hurled defiance at " our natural enemy " (England, so please you !) " with her chain of fortresses across the world." Thereafter they glorified their nation afresh, from the beginning, in case any detail should have been overlooked, and that made me uncomfortable for their sakes. How in the world can a white man, a Sahib of Our blood, stand up and plaster praise on his own country? He can think as highly as he likes, but his open-mouthed vehemence of adoration struck me almost as indeli- cate. My hosts talked for rather more than three hours, and at the end seemed ready for three hours more. But when the Lieutenant such a big, brave, gentle giant ! rose to his feet, he delivered what seemed to me as the speech of the evening. I re- member nearly the whole of it, and it ran something in this way: "Gentlemen it's very good of you to give me this dinner and to tell me all these pretty things, but what I want you to understand the fact FROM SEA TO SEA 15 is what we want and what we ought to get at once is a navy more ships lots of 'em " Then we howled the top of the roof off, and I, for one, fell in love with Carlin on the spot. Wallah ! He was a man. The Prince among merchants bade me take no heed to the warlike sentiments of some of the old Generals. "The sky-rockets are thrown in for effect," quoth he, " and whenever we get on our hind legs we always express a desire to chaw up England. It's a sort of family affair." And indeed, when you come to think of it, there is no other country for the American public speaker to trample upon. France has Germany ; we have Russia ; for Italy, Aus- tria is provided; and the humblest Pathaii possesses an ancestral enemy. Only America stands out of the racket ; and therefore, to be in fashion, makes a sand-bag of the mother-country, and bangs her when occasion requires. " The chain of fortresses " man, a fascinating talker, explained to me after the affair that he was com- pelled to blow off steam. Everybody expected it. When we had chanted " The Star-Spangled Banner " not more than eight times, we adjourned. America is a very great country, but it is not yet Heaven with electric lights and plush fittings, as the speakers professed to believe. My listening mind went back to the politicians in the saloon who wasted no time in talking about freedom, but quietly made arrangements to impose their will on the citizens. " The Judge is a great man, but give thy presents to the Clerk," as the proverb saith. And what more remains to tell ? I cannot write con- nectedly, because I am in love with all those girls 16 FKOM SEA TO SEA aforesaid and some others who do not appear in the invoice. The type-writer girl is an institution of which the comic papers make much capital, but she is vastly convenient. She and a companion rent a room in a business quarter, and copy manuscript at the rate of six annas a page. Only a woman can manage a type- writing machine, because she has served apprenticeship to the sewing-machine. She can earn as much as a hundred dollars a month, and professes to regard this form of bread-winning as her natural destiny. But oh how she hates it in her heart of hearts ! When I had got over the surprise of doing business and trying to give orders to a young woman of coldly clerkly aspect, intrenched behind gold-rimmed spectacles, I made in- quiries concerning the pleasures of this independence. They liked it indeed, they did. 'Twas the natural fate of almost all girls, the recognised custom in America, and I was a barbarian not to see it in that light. " Well, and after ? " said I. What happens ? " " We work for our bread." " And then what do you expect ? " " Then we shall work for our bread." "Till you die?" " Ye-es unless " " Unless what ? A man works till he dies." " So shall we." This without enthusiasm "I sup- pose." . Said the partner in the firm audaciously : " Some- times we marry our employers at least that's what the newspapers say." The hand banged on half a dozen of the keys of the machine at once. " Yes, I don't care. I FKOM SEA TO SEA 17 hate it I hate it I hate it, and you needn't look so!" The senior partner was regarding the rebel with grave- eyed reproach. " I thought you did," said I. " I don't suppose Ameri- can girls are much different from English ones in in- stinct." "Isn't it Theophile Gautier who says that the only differences between country and country lie in the slang and the uniform of the police ? " Now in the name of all the Gods at once, what is one to say to a young lady (who in England would be a Per- son) who earns her own bread, and very naturally hates the employ, and slings out-of-the-way quotations at your head ? That one falls in love with her goes without say- ing ; but that is not enough. A mission should be established. VOL. II C No. XXVI TAKES ME THROUGH BRET HARTE's COUNTRY, AND TO PORTLAND WITH " OLD MAN CALIFORNIA." EXPLAINS HOW TWO VAGABONDS BECAME HOMESICK THROUGH LOOKING AT OTHER PEOPLE'S HOUSES. " I walked in the lonesome even, And who so sad as I, As I saw the young men and maidens Merrily passing by ? " SAN FRANCISCO has only one drawback. 'Tis hard to leave. When like the pious Hans Breitmann I " cut that city by the sea " it was with regrets for the pleasant places left behind, for the men who were so clever, and the women who were so witty, for the " dives," the beer- halls, the bucket-shops, and the poker-hells where human- ity was going to the Devil with shouting and laughter and song and the rattle of dice-boxes. I would fain have stayed, but I feared that an evil end would come to me when my money was all spent and I descended to the street corner. A voice inside me said: "Get out of this. Go north. Strike for Victoria and Van- couver. Bask for a day under the shadow of the old flag." So I set forth from San Francisco to Portland in Oregon, and that was a railroad run of thirty-six hours. The Oakland railway terminus, whence all the main 18 FROM SEA TO SEA 19 lines start, does not own anything approaching to a platform. A yard with a dozen or more tracks is roughly asphalted, and the traveller laden with hand- bags skips merrily across the metals in search of his own particular train. The bells of half a dozen shunt- ing engines are tolling suggestively in his ears. If he is run down, so much the worse for him. "When the bell rings, look out for the locomotive." Long use has made the nation familiar and even contemptuous towards trains to an extent which God never intended. Women who in England would gather up their skirts and scud timorously over a level crossing in the country, here talk dress and babies under the very nose of the cow-catcher, and little children dally with the moving car in a manner horrible to behold. We pulled out at the wholly insignificant speed of twenty-five miles an hour through the streets of a suburb of fifty thousand, and in our progress among the carts and the children and the shop fronts slew nobody ; at which I was not a little disappointed. When the negro porter bedded me up for the night and I had solved the problem of undressing while lying down, I was much cheered by the thought that if anything happened I should have to stay where I was and wait till the kerosene lamps set the overturned car alight and burned me to death. It is easier to get out of a full theatre than to leave a Pullman in haste. By the time I had discovered that a profusion of nickel- plating, plush, and damask does not compensate for closeness and dust, the train ran into the daylight on the banks of the Sacramento Eiver. A few windows were gingerly opened after the bunks had been reconverted 20 FROM SEA TO SEA into seats, but that long coffin-car was by no means ventilated, and we were a gummy, grimy crew who sat there. At six in the morning the heat was distinctly unpleasant, but seeing with the eye of the flesh that I was in Bret Harte's own country, I rejoiced. There were the pines and madrone-clad hills his miners lived and fought among ; there was the heated red earth that showed whence the gold had been washed; the dry gulch, the red, dusty road where Hamblin was used to stop the stage in the intervals of his elegant leisure and superior card-play ; there was the timber felled and sweating resin in the sunshine ; and, above all, there was the quivering pungent heat that Bret Harte drives into your dull brain with the magic of his pen. When we stopped at a collection of packing-cases dignified by the name of a town, my felicity was complete. The name of the place was something offensive, Amber- ville or Jacksonburgh, but it owned a cast-iron fountain worthy of a town of thirty thousand. Next to the foun- tain was a " hotel," at least seventeen feet high including the chimney, and next to the hotel was the forest the pine, the oak, and the untrammelled undergrowth of the hillside. A cinnamon-bear cub Baby Sylvester in the very fur was tied to the stump of a tree oppo- site the fountain; a pack-mule dozed in the dust-haze, a red-shirted miner in a slouch hat supported the hotel, a, blue-shirted miner swung round the corner, and the two went indoors for a drink. A girl came out of the only other house but one, and shading her eyes with a brown hand stared at the panting train. She didn't recognise me, but I knew her had known her for years. She was M'liss. She never married the schoolmaster, FROM SEA TO SEA 21 after all, but stayed, always young and always fair, among the pines. I knew Red-Shirt too. He was one of the bearded men who stood back when Tennessee claimed his partner from the hands of the Law. The Sacramento River, a few yards away, shouted that all these things were true. The train went on while Baby Sylvester stood on his downy head, and M'liss swung her sun-bonnet by the strings. " What do you think ? " said a lawyer who was travel- ling with me. " It's a new world to you ; isn't it ? " " No. It's quite familiar. I was never out of Eng- land; it's as if I saw it all." Quick as light came the answer : " ' Yes, they lived once thus at Venice when the miners were the kings.' " I loved that lawyer on the spot. We drank to Bret Harte who, you remember, " claimed California, but California never claimed him. He's turned English." Lying back in state, I waited for the flying miles to turn over the pages of the book I knew. They brought me all I desired from the Man of no Account sitting on a stump and playing with a dog, to " that most sar- castic man, the quiet Mister Brown." He boarded the train from out of the woods, and there was venom and sulphur on his tongue. He had just lost a lawsuit. Only Yuba Bill failed to appear. The train had taken his employment from him. A nameless ruffian backed me into a corner and began telling me about the resources of the country, and what it would eventually become. All I remember of his lecture was that you could catch trout in the Sacramento River the stream that we followed so faithfully. Then rose a tough and wiry old man with grizzled hair 22 FKGM SEA TO SEA and made inquiries about the trout. To him was added the secretary of a life-insurance company. I fancy he was travelling to rake in the dead that the train killed. But he, too, was a fisherman, and the two turned to meward. The frankness of a Westerner is delightful. They tell me that in the Eastern States I shall meet another type of man and a more reserved. The Califor- iiian always speaks of the man from the New England States as a different breed. It is our Punjab and Madras over again, but more so. The old man was on a holiday in search of fish. When he discovered a brother-loafer he proposed a confederation of rods. Quoth the insur- ance-agent, " I'm not staying any time in Portland, but I will introduce you to a man there who'll tell you about fishing." The two told strange tales as we slid through the forests and saw afar off the snowy head of a great mountain. There were vineyards, fruit orchards, and wheat fields where the land opened out, and every ten miles or so, twenty or thirty wooden houses and at least three churches. A large town would have a popu- lation of two thousand and an infinite belief in its own capacities. Sometimes a flaring advertisement flanked the line, calling for men to settle down, take up the ground, and make their home there. At a big town we could pick up the local newspaper, narrow as the cutting edge of a chisel and twice as keen a journal filled with the prices of stock, notices of improved reaping and binding machines, movements of eminent citizens " whose fame beyond their own abode extends for miles along the Harlem road." There was not much grace about these papers, but all breathed the same need for good men, steady men who would plough, and till, FROM SEA TO SEA 23 and build schools for their children, and make a township in the hills. Once only I found a sharp change in the note and a very pathetic one. I think it was a young soul in trouble who was writing poetry. The editor had jammed the verses between the flamboyant advertisement of a real-estate agent a man who sells you land and lies about it and that of a Jew tailor who disposed of " nobby " suits at " cut-throat prices." Here are two verses ; I think they tell their own story : " God made the pine with its root in the earth, Its top in the sky ; They have burned the pine to increase the worth Of the wheat and the silver rye. " Go weigh the cost of the soul of the pine Cut off from the sky ; And the price of the wheat that grows so fine And the worth of the silver rye ! " The thin-lipped, keen-eyed men who boarded the train would not read that poetry, or, if they did, would not understand. Heaven guard that poor pine in the desert and keep " its top in the sky " ! When the train took to itself an extra engine and began to breathe heavily, some one said that we were ascending the Siskiyou Mountains. We had been climb-, ing steadily from San Francisco, and at last won to over four thousand feet above sea-level, always running through forest. Then, naturally enough, we came down, but we dropped two thousand two hundred feet in about thirteen miles. It was not so much the grinding of the brakes along the train, or the sight of three curves of track apparently miles below us, or even the vision of a goods- 24 FROM SEA TO SEA train apparently just under our wheels, or even the tunnels, that made me reflect; it was the trestles over which we crawled, trestles something over a hundred feet high and looking like a collection of match-sticks. "I guess our timber is as much a curse as a blessing," said the old man from Southern California. " These trestles last very well for five or six years ; then they get out of repair, and a train goes through 'em, or else a forest fire burns 'em up." This was said in the middle of a groaning, shivering trestle. An occasional plate-layer took a look at us as we went down, but that railway didn't Avaste men on inspection duty. Very often there were cattle on the track, against which the engine used a diabolical form of whistling. The old man had been a driver in his youth, and beguiled the way with cheery anecdotes of what might be expected if we fouled a young calf. "You see, they get their legs under the cow-catcher, and that'll put an engine off the line. I remember when a hog wrecked an excursion-train and killed sixty people. 'Guess the engineer will look out, though." There is considerably too much guessing about this large nation. As one of them put it rather forcibly: " We guess a trestle will stand for ever, and we guess that we can patch up a washout on the track, and we guess the road's clear, and sometimes we guess ourselves into the deepot, and sometimes we guess ourselves into Hell." The descent brought us far into Oregon and a timber and wheat country. We drove through wheat and pine FROM SEA TO SEA 25 in alternate slices, but pine chiefly, till we reached Port- land, which is a city of fifty thousand, possessing the electric light of course, equally, of course, devoid of pave- ments, and a port of entry about a hundred miles from the sea at which big steamers can load. It is a poor city that cannot say it has no equal on the Pacific coast. Portland shouts this to the pines which run down from a thousand-foot ridge clear up to the city. You may sit in a bedizened bar-room furnished with telephone and clicker, and in half an hour be in the woods. Portland produces lumber and jig-saw fittings for houses, and beer and buggies, and bricks and biscuit ; and, in case you should miss the fact, there are glorified views of the town hung up in public places with the value of the products set down in dollars. All this is excellent and exactly suitable to the opening of a new country ; but when a man tells you it is civilisation, you object. The first thing that the civilised man learns to do is to keep the dollars in the background, because they are only the oil of the machine that makes life go smoothly. Portland is so busy that it can't attend to its own sewage or paving, and the four-storey brick blocks front cobble-stones and plank sidewalks and other things much worse. I saw a foundation being dug out. The sewage of perhaps twenty years ago, had thoroughly soaked into the soil, and there was a familiar and Oriental look about the compost that flew up with each shovel-load. Yet the local papers, as was just and proper, swore there was no place like Portland, Oregon, U.S.A., chronicled the per- formances of Oregonians, "claimed" prominent citizens elsewhere as Oregonians, and fought tooth and- nail for 26 FKOM SEA TO SEA dock, rail, and wharfage projects. And you could find men who had thrown in their lives with the city, who were bound up in it, and worked their life out for what they conceived to be its material prosperity. Pity it is to record that in this strenuous, labouring town there had been, a week before, a shooting-case. One well-known man had shot another on the street, and was now pleading self-defence because the other man had, or the murderer thought he had, a pistol about him. Not content with shooting him dead, he squibbed off his revolver into him as he lay. I read the pleadings, and they made me ill. So far as I could judge, if the dead man's body had been found with a pistol on it, the shooter would have gone free. Apart from the mere murder, cowardly enough in itself, there was a refinement of cowardice in the plea. Here in this civilised city the surviving brute was afraid he would be shot fancied he saw the other man make a motion to his hip-pocket, and so on. Eventually the jury disagreed. And the degrading thing was that the trial was reported by men who evidently understood all about the pistol, was tried before a jury who were versed in the etiquette of the hip-pocket, and was discussed on the streets by men equally initiate. But let us return to more cheerful things. The in- surance-agent introduced us as friends to a real-estate man, who promptly bade us go up the Columbia Eiver for a day while he made inquiries about fishing. There was no overwhelming formality. The old man was addressed as "California," I answered indifferently to " England " or " Johnny Bull," and the real-estate man was " Portland." This was a lofty and spacious form of address. FROM SEA TO SEA 27 So California and I took a steamboat, and upon a sump- tuous blue and gold morning steered up the Willamette River, on which Portland stands, into the great Colum- bia the river that brings the salmon that goes into the tin that is emptied into the dish when the extra guest arrives in India. California introduced me to the boat and the scenery, showed me the " texas," the difference between a " tow-head" and a "sawyer," and the precise nature of a "slue." All I remember is a delightful feeling that Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn and Mississippi Pilot were quite true, and that I could almost recognise the very reaches down which Hack and Jim had drifted. We were on the border line between Oregon State and Washington Territory, but that didn't matter. The Columbia was the Mississippi so far as I was concerned. We ran along the sides of wooded islands whose banks were caving in with per- petual smashes, and we skipped from one side to another of the mile-wide stream in search of a channel, exactly like a Mississippi steamer, and when we wanted to pick up or set down a passenger we chose a soft and safe place on the shore and ran our very snub nose against it. California spoke to each new passenger as he came aboard and told me the man's birthplace. A long- haired tender of kine crashed out of the underwood, waved his hat, and was taken aboard forthwith. " South Carolina," said California, almost without looking at him. "When he talks you will hear a softer dialect than mine." And it befell as he said: whereat I mar- velled, and California chuckled. Every island in the river carried fields of rich wheat, orchards, and a white, wooden house; or else, if the pines grew very thickly, 28 FKOM SEA TO SEA a sawmill, the tremulous whine of whose saws flickered across the water like the drone of a tired bee. From remarks he let fall I gathered that California owned timber ships and dealt in lumber, had ranches too, a partner, and everything handsome about him ; in addition to a chequered career of some thirty -five years. But he looked almost as disreputable a loafer as I. "Say, young feller, we're going to see scenery now. You shout and sing," said California, when the bland wooded islands gave place to bolder outlines, and the steamer ran herself into a hornet's nest of black-fanged rocks not a foot below the boiling broken water. We were trying to get up a slue, or back channel, by a short cut, and the stern-wheel never spun twice in the same direction. Then we hit a floating log with a jar that ran through our system, and then, white- bellied, open-gilled, spun by a dead salmon a lordly twenty-pound Chinook salmon who had perished in his pride. "You'll see the salmon-wheels 'fore long," said a man who lived " way back on the Washoogle," and whose hat was spangled with trout-flies. "Those Chinook salmon never rise to the fly. The canneries take them by the wheel." At the next bend we sighted a wheel an infernal arrangement of wire-gauze com- partments worked by the current and moved out from a barge in shore to scoop up the salmon as he races up the river. California swore long and fluently at the sight, and the more fluently when he was told of the weight of a good night's catch some thousands of pounds. Think of the black and bloody murder of it ! But you out yonder insist in buying tinned salmon, and the canneries cannot live by letting down lines. 29 About this time California was struck Avith madness. I found him dancing on the fore-deck shouting, "Isn't she a daisy ? Isn't she a darling ? " He had found a waterfall a blown thread of white vapour that broke from the crest of a hill a waterfall eight hundred and fifty feet high whose voice was even louder than the voice of the river. "Bridal Veil," jerked out the purser. " D n that purser and the people who christened her ! Why didn't they call her Mechlin lace Falls at fifty dol- lars a yard while they were at it ? " said California. And I agreed with him. There are many " bridal veil " falls in this country, but few, men say, lovelier than those that come down to the Columbia Eiver. Then the scenery began poured forth with the reckless profusion of Na- ture, who when she wants to be amiable succeeds only in being oppressively magnificent. The river was penned between gigantic stone walls crowned with the ruined bastions of Oriental palaces. The stretch of green water widened and was guarded by pine-clad hills three thou- sand feet high. A wicked devil's thumb nail of rock shot up a hundred feet in midstream. A sand-bar of blinding white sand gave promise of flat country that the next bend denied ; for, lo ! we were running under a triple tier of fortifications, lava-topped, pine-clothed, and terrible. Behind them the white dome of Mount Hood ran fourteen thousand feet into the blue, and at their feet the river threshed among a belt of cottonwood trees. There I sat down and looked at California half out of the boat in his anxiety to see both sides of the river at once. He had seen my note-book, and it offended him. "Young feller, let her go and you shut your head. It's not you nor anybody like you can put this 30 FROM SEA TO SEA down. Black, the novelist, he could. He can describe salmon-fishing, he can." And he glared at me as though he expected me to go and do likewise. " I can't. I know it," I said humbly. " Then thank God that you came along this way." We reached a little railway, on an island, which was to convey us to a second steamer, because, as the purser explained, the river was "a trifle broken." We had a six-mile run, sitting in the sunshine on a dummy wagon, whirled just along the edge of the river-bluffs. Some- times we dived into the fragrant pine woods, ablaze with flowers; but we generally watched the river now nar- rowed into a turbulent millrace. Just where the whole body of water broke in riot over a series of cascades, the United States Government had chosen to build a lock for steamers, and the stream was one boiling, spout- ing mob of water. A log shot down the race, struck on a rock, split from end to end, and rolled over in white foam. I shuddered because my toes were not more than sixty feet above the log, and I feared that a stray splinter might have found me. But the train ran into the river on a sort of floating trestle, and I was upon another steamer ere I fully understood why. The cascades were not two hundred yards below us, and when we cast off to go upstream, the rush of the river, ere the wheel struck the water, dragged us as though we had been towed. Then the country opened out, and California mourned for his lost bluffs and crags, till we struck a rock wall four hundred feet high, crowned by the gigan- tic figure of a man watching us. On a rocky island we saw the white tomb of an old-time settler who had made his money in San Francisco, but had chosen to be FROM SEA TO SEA 31 buried in an Indian bury ing-ground. A decayed wooden "wickyup," where the bones of the Indian dead are laid, almost touched the tomb. The river ran into a canal of basaltic rock, painted in yellow, vermilion, and green by Indians and, by inferior brutes, adorned with advertise- ments of "bile beans." We had reached The Dalles the centre of a great sheep and wool district, and the head of navigation. When an American arrives at a new town it is his bounden duty to "take it in." California swung his coat over his shoulder with the gesture of a man used to long tramps, and together, at eight in the evening, we explored The Dalles. The sun had not yet set, and it would be light for at least another hour. All the in- habitants seemed to own a little villa and one church apiece. The young men were out walking with the young maidens, the old folks were sitting on the front steps, not the ones that led to the religiously shuttered best drawing-room, but the side-front-steps, and the hus- bands and wives were tying back pear trees or gather- ing cherries. A scent of hay reached me, and in the stillness we could hear the cattle bells as the cows came home across the lava-sprinkled fields. California swung down the wooden pavements, audibly criticising the housewives' hollyhocks and the more perfect ways of pear-grafting, and, as the young men and maidens passed, giving quaint stories of his youth. I felt that I knew all the people aforetime, I was so interested in them and their life. A woman hung over a gate talking to another woman, and as I passed I heard her say, " skirts," and again, " skirts," and " I'll send you over the pattern " ; and I knew they were talking dress. We 32 FROM SEA TO SEA stumbled upon a young couple saying good-by in the twi- light, and " When shall I see you again ? " quoth he ; and I understood that to the doubting heart the tiny little town we paraded in twenty minutes might be as large as all London and as impassable as an armed camp. I gave them both my blessing, because "When shall I see you again ? " is a question that lies very near to hearts of all the world. The last garden gate shut with a click that travelled far down the street, and the lights of the comfortable families began to shine in the confidingly uncurtained windows. "Say, Johnny Bull, doesn't all this make you feel lonesome ? " said California. " Have you got any folks at home ? So've I a wife and five children and I'm only on a holiday." "And I'm only on a holiday," I said, and we went back to the Spittoon-wood Hotel. Alas ! for the peace and purity of the little town that I had babbled about. At the back of a shop, and discreetly curtained, was a room where the young men who had been talking to the young maidens could play poker and drink and swear, and on the shop were dime novels of bloodshed to corrupt the mind of the little boy, and prurient servant-girl-slush yarns to poison the mind of the girl. California only laughed grimly. He said that all these little one-house towns were pretty much the same all over the States. That night I dreamed I was back in India with no place to sleep in ; tramping up and down the Station mall and asking everybody, " When shall I see you again ? " No. XXVII SHOWS HOW I CAUGHT SALMON IN THE CLACKAMAS. ' ' The race is neither to the swift nor the battle to the strong ; but time and chance cometh to all." I HAVE lived ! The American Continent may now sink under the sea, for I have taken the best that it yields, and the best was neither dollars, love, nor real estate. Hear now, gentlemen of the Punjab Fishing Club, who whip the reaches of the Tavi, and you who painfully import trout to Ootacamund, and I will tell you how " old man California " and I went fishing, and you shall envy. We returned from The Dalles to Port- land by the way we had come, the steamer stopping en route to pick up a night's catch of one of the salmon wheels on the river, and to deliver it at a cannery down- stream. When the proprietor of the wheel announced that his take was two thousand two hundred and thirty pounds' weight of fish, " and not a heavy catch, neither," I thought he lied. But he sent the boxes aboard, and I counted the salmon by the hundred huge fifty-pound- ers, hardly dead, scores of twenty and thirty-pounders, and a host of smaller fish. The steamer halted at a rude wooden warehouse built on piles in a lonely reach of the river, and sent in the fish. I followed them up a scale-strewn, fishy incline that led to the cannery. The crazy building was quiv- VOL. n D 33 34 FROM SEA TO SEA ering with the machinery on its floors, and a glittering bank of tin-scraps twenty feet high showed where the waste was thrown after the cans had been punched. Only Chinamen were employed on the work, and they looked like blood-besmeared yellow devils, as they crossed the rifts of sunlight that lay upon the floor. When our consignment arrived, the rough wooden boxes broke of themselves as they were dumped down under a jet of water, and the salmon burst out in a stream of quicksilver. A Chinaman jerked up a twenty-pounder, beheaded and de-tailed it with two swift strokes of a knife, flicked out its internal arrangements with a third, and cast it into a bloody-dyed tank. The headless fish leaped from under his hands as though they were facing a rapid. Other Chinamen pulled them from the vat and thrust them under a thing like a chaff-cutter, which, descending, hewed them into unseemly red gobbets fit for the can. More Chinamen with yellow, crooked fin- gers, jammed the stuff into the cans, which slid down some marvellous machine forthwith, soldering their own tops as they passed. Each can was hastily tested for flaws, and then sunk, with a hundred companions, into a vat of boiling water, there to be half cooked for a few minutes. The cans bulged slightly after the operation, and were therefore slidden along by the trolleyf ul to men with needles and soldering irons, who vented them, and soldered the aperture. Except for the label, the " finest Columbia salmon " was ready for the market. I was im- pressed, not so much with the speed of the manufacture, as the character of the factory. Inside, on a floor ninety by forty, the most civilised and murderous of machinery. Outside, three footsteps, the thick-growing pines and the FBOM SEA TO SEA 35 immense solitude of the hills. Our steamer only stayed twenty minutes at that place, but I counted two hundred and forty finished cans, made from the catch of the pre- vious night, ere I left the slippery, blood-stained, scale- spangled, oily floors, and the offal-smeared Chinamen. We reached Portland, California and I, crying for salmon, and the real-estate man, to whom we had been in- trusted by " Portland " the insurance man, met us in the street saying that fifteen miles away, across country, we should come upon a place called Clackanaas where we might perchance find what we desired. And California, his coat-tails flying in the wind, ran to a livery stable and chartered a wagon and team forthwith. I could push the wagon about with one hand, so light was its structure. The team was purely American that is to say, almost human in its intelligence and docility. Some one said that the roads were not good on the way to Clackamas and warned us against smashing the springs. "Port- land," who had watched the preparations, finally reck- oned " he'd come along too," and under heavenly skies we three companions of a day set forth ; California care- fully lashing our rods into the carriage, and the by- standers overwhelming us with directions as to the sawmills we were to pass, the ferries we were to cross, and the sign-posts we were to seek signs from. Half a mile from this city of fifty thousand souls we struck (and this must be taken literally) a plank-road that would have been a disgrace to an Irish village. Then six miles of macadamised road showed us that the team could move. A railway ran between us and the banks of the Willamette, and another above us through the mountains. All the land was dotted with 36 FROM SEA TO SEA small townships, and the roads were full of farmers in their town wagons, bunches of tow-haired, boggle-eyed urchins sitting in the hay behind. The men generally looked like loafers, but their women were all well dressed. Brown hussar-braiding on a tailor-made jacket does not, however, consort with hay-wagons. Then we struck into the woods along what California called a " camina reale," a good road, and Portland a "fail- track." It wound in and oiit among fire-blackened stumps, under pine trees, along the corners of log-fences, through hollows which must be hopeless marsh in the winter, and up absurd gradients. But nowhere through- out its length did I see any evidence of road-making. There was a track, you couldn't well get off it, and it was all you could do to stay on it. The dust lay a foot thick in the blind ruts, and under the dust we found bits of planking and bundles of brushwood that sent the wagon bounding into the air. Sometimes we crashed through bracken; anon where the blackberries grew rankest we found a lonely little cemetery, the wooden rails all awry, and the pitiful stumpy headstones nodding drunkenly at the soft green mulleins. Then with oaths and the sound of rent underwood a yoke of mighty bulls would swing down a " skid " road, hauling a forty-foot log along a rudely made slide. A valley full of wheat and cherry trees succeeded, and halting at a house we bought ten pound weight of luscious black cherries for something less than a rupee and got a drink of icy -cold water for noth- ing, while the untended team browsed sagaciously by the roadside. Once we found a wayside camp of horse- dealers lounging by a pool, ready for a sale or a swap, and once two sun-tanned youngsters shot down a hill on FROM SEA TO SEA 37 Indian ponies, their full creels banging from the high- pommelled saddles. They had been fishing, and were our brethren therefore. We shouted aloud in chorus to scare a wild-cat ; we squabbled over the reasons that had led a snake to cross a road ; we heaved bits of bark at a venturesome chipmunk, who was really the little grey squirrel of India and had come to call on me ; we lost our way and got the wagon so beautifully fixed on a steep road that we had to tie the two hind-wheels to get it down. Above all, California told tales of Nevada and Arizona, of lonely nights spent out prospecting, of the slaughter of deer and the chase of men ; of woman, lovely woman, who is a firebrand in a Western city, and leads to the popping of pistols, and of the sudden changes and chances of Fortune, who delights in making the miner or the lumberman a quadruplicate millionnaire, and in " busting " the railroad king. That was a day to be remembered, and it had only begun when we drew rein at a tiny farmhouse on the banks of the Clackamas and sought horse-feed and lodging ere we hastened to the river that broke over a weir not a quarter of a mile away. Imagine a stream seventy yards broad divided by a pebbly island, running over seductive riffles, and swirling into deep, quiet pools where the good salmon goes to smoke his pipe after meals. Set such a stream amid fields of breast-high crops surrounded by hills of pines, throw in where you please quiet water, log-fenced mead- ows, and a hundred-foot bluff just to keep the scenery from growing too monotonous, and you will get some faint notion of the Clackamas. Portland had no rod. He held the gaff and the whisky. California sniffed upstream and downstream 38 FROM SEA TO SEA across the racing water, chose his ground, and let the gaudy spoon drop in the tail of a riffle. I was getting my rod together when I heard the joyous shriek of the reel and the yells of California, and three feet of living silver leaped into the air far across the water. The forces were engaged. The salmon tore up stream, the tense line cut- ting the water like a tide-rip behind him, and the light bamboo bowed to breaking. What happened after I cannot tell. California swore and prayed, and Portland shouted advice, and I did all three for what appeared to be half a day, but was in reality a little over a quarter of an hour, and sullenly our fish came home with spurts of temper, dashes head-on, and sarabands in the air; but home to the bank came he, and the remorseless reel gath- ered up the thread of his life inch by inch. We landed him in a little bay, and the spring-weight checked at eleven and a half pounds. Eleven and one-half pounds of fighting salmon ! We danced a war dance on the peb- bles, and California caught me round the waist in a hug that went near to breaking my ribs while he shouted : " Partner ! Partner ! This is glory ! Now you catch your fish ! Twenty-four years I've waited for this ! " I went into that icy-cold river and made my cast just above a weir, and all but foul-hooked a blue and black water-snake with a coral mouth who coiled herself on a stone and hissed maledictions. The next cast ah, the pride of it, the regal splendour of it ! the thrill that ran down from finger-tip to toe ! The water boiled. He broke for the fly and got it ! There remained enough sense in me to give him all he wanted when he jumped not once but twenty times before the upstream flight that ran my line out to the last half-dozen turns, and I 39 saw the nickled reel-bar glitter under the thinning green coils. My thumb was burned deep when I strove to stopper the line, but I did not feel it till later, for my soul was out in the dancing water praying for him to turn ere he took my tackle away. The prayer was heard. As I bowed back, the butt of the rod on my left hip-bone and the top joint dipping like unto a weeping willow, he turned, and I accepted each inch of slack that I could by any means get in as a favour from on High. There be several sorts of success in this world that taste well in the moment of enjoyment, but I question whether the stealthy theft of line from an able-bodied salmon who knows exactly what you are doing and why you are doing it is not sweeter than any other victory within human scope. Like California's fish, he ran at me head-on and leaped against the line, but the Lord gave me two hun- dred and fifty pairs of fingers in that hour. The banks and the pine trees danced dizzily round me, but I only reeled reeled as for life reeled for hours, and at the end of the reeling continued to give him the butt while he sulked in a pool. California was farther up the reach, and with the corner of my eye I could see him casting with long casts and much skill. Then he struck, and my fish broke for the weir in the same instant, and down the reach we came, California and I ; reel answering reel even as the morning stars sung together. The first wild enthusiasm of capture had died away. We were both at work now in deadly earnest to prevent the lines fouling, to stall off a downstream rush for deep water just above the weir, and at the same time to get the fish into the shallow bay downstream that gave the best practicable landing. Portland bade us both be 40 FROM SEA TO SEA of good heart, and volunteered to take the rod from my hands. I would rather have died among the pebbles than surrender my right to play and land my first salmon, weight unknown, on an eight-ounce rod. I heard California, at my ear it seemed, gasping : " He's a fighter from Fightersville sure ! " as his fish made a fresh break across the stream. I saw Portland fall off a log fence, break the overhanging bank, and clatter down to the pebbles, all sand and landing-net, and I dropped on a log to rest for a moment. As I drew breath the weary hands slackened their hold, and I forgot to give him the butt. A wild scutter in the water, a plunge and a break for the head-waters of the Clackamas was my reward, and the hot toil of reeling- in with one eye under the water and the other on the top joint of the rod, was renewed. Worst of all, I was block- ing California's path to the little landing-bay aforesaid, and he had to halt and tire his prize where he was. " The Father of all Salmon ! " he shouted. " For the love of Heaven, get your trout to bank, Johnny Bull." But I could no more. Even the insult failed to move me. The rest of the game was with the salmon. He suffered himself to be drawn, skipping with pretended delight at getting to the haven where I would fain have him. Yet no sooner did he feel shoal water under his ponderous belly than he backed like a tor- pedo-boat, and the snarl of the reel told me that my labour was in vain. A dozen times at least this happened ere the line hinted he had given up that battle and would be towed in. He was towed. The landing-net was use- less for one of his size, and I would not have him gaffed. I stepped into the shallows and heaved him out with a FROM SEA TO SEA 41 respectful hand under the gill, for which kindness he battered me about the legs with his tail, and I felt the strength of him and was proud. California had taken my place in the shallows, his fish hard held. I was up the bank lying full length on the sweet-scented grass, and gasping in company with my first salmon caught, played and landed on an eight-ounce rod. My hands were cut and bleeding. I was dripping with sweat, spangled like harlequin with scales, wet from the waist down, iiose- peeled by the sun, but utterly, supremely, and consum- mately happy. He, the beauty, the darling, the daisy, my Salmon Bahadur, weighed twelve pounds, and I had been seven and thirty minutes bringing him to bank ! He had been lightly hooked on the angle of the right jaw, and the hook had not wearied him. That hour I sat among princes and crowned heads greater than them all. Be- low the bank we heard California scuffling with his salmon, and swearing Spanish oaths. Portland and I assisted at the capture, and the fish dragged the spring- balance out by the roots. It was only constructed to weigh up to fifteen pounds. We stretched the three fish on the grass, the eleven and a half, the twelve, and fif- teen pounder, and we swore an oath that all who came after should merely be weighed and put back again. How shall I tell the glories of that day so that you may be interested ? Again and again did California and I prance down that reach to the little bay, each with a salmon in tow, and land him in the shallows. Then Portland took my rod, and caught some ten-pounders, and my spoon was carried away by an unknown levia- than. Each fish, for the merits of the three that had died so gamely, was hastily hooked on the balance and 42 FROM SEA TO SEA flung back, Portland recording the weight in a pocket- book, for he was a real-estate man. Each fish fought for all he was worth, and none more savagely than the smallest a game little six-pounder. At the end of six hours we added up the list. Total : 16 fish, aggregate weight 142 Ibs. The score in detail runs something like this it is only interesting to those concerned : 16, 11, 12, 10, 9f , 8, and so forth ; as I have said, nothing under six pounds, and three ten-pounders. Very solemnly and thankfully we put up our rods it was glory enough for all time and returned weeping in each other's arms weeping tears of pure joy to that simple bare-legged family in the packing-case house by the waterside. The old farmer recollected days and nights of fierce warfare with the Indians " way back in the Fifties," when every ripple of the Columbia River and her tributaries hid covert danger. God had dowered him with a queer crooked gift of expression, and a fierce anxiety for the welfare of his two little sons tanned and reserved children who attended school daily, and spoke good English in a strange tongue. His wife was an austere woman who had once been kindly and per- haps handsome. Many years of toil had taken the elasticity out of step and voice. She looked for noth- ing better than everlasting work the chafing detail of housework, and then a grave somewhere up the hill among the blackberries and the pines. But in her grim way she sympathised with her eldest daughter, a small and silent maiden of eighteen, who had thoughts very far from the meals she tended or the .pans she scoured. We stumbled into the household at a crisis ; and there was a deal of downright humanity in that same. A bad, FEOM SEA TO SEA 43 wicked dressmaker had promised the maiden a dress in time for a to-morrow's railway journey, and, though the barefooted Georgie, who stood in very wholesome awe of his sister, had scoured the woods on a pony in search, that dress never arrived. So with sorrow in her heart, and a hundred Sister Anne glances up the road, she waited upon the strangers, and, I doubt not, cursed them for the wants that stood between her and her need for tears. It was a genuine little tragedy. The mother in a heavy, passionless voice rebuked her impatience, yet sat bowed over a heap of sewing for the daughter's benefit. These things I beheld in the long marigold- scented twilight and whispering night, loafing round the little house with California, who unfolded himself like a lotus to the moon ; or in the little boarded bunk that was our bedroom, swapping tales with Portland and the old man. Most of the yarns began in this way : "Ked Larry was a bull-puncher back of Lone County, Montanna," or "There was a man riding the trail met a jack-rabbit sitting in a cactus," or "'Bout the time of the San Diego land boom, a woman from Monterey," etc. You can try to piece out for yourselves what sort of stories they were. And next day California tucked me under his wing and told me we were going to see a city smitten by a boom, and catch trout. So we took a train and killed a cow she wouldn't get out of the way, and the locomo- tive " chanced " her and slew and crossing into Wash- ington Territory won the town of Tacoma, which stands at the head of Puget . Sound upon the road to Alaska and Vancouver. California was right. Tacoma was literally staggering under a boom of the boomiest. I do not quite remember 44 FROM SEA TO SEA what her natural resources were supposed to be, though every second man shrieked a selection in my ear. They included coal and iron, carrots, potatoes, lumber, ship- ping, and a crop of thin newspapers all telling Port- land that her days were numbered. California and I struck the place at twilight. The rude boarded pave- ments of the main streets rumbled under the heels of hundreds of furious men all actively engaged in hunting drinks and eligible corner-lots. They sought the drinks first. The street itself alternated five-storey business blocks of the later and more abominable forms of architecture with board shanties. Overhead the drunken telegraph, telephone, and electric-light wires tangled on the tottering posts whose butts were half-whittled through by the knife of the loafer. Down the muddy, grimy, unnietalled thoroughfare ran a horse-car line the metals three inches above road level. Beyond this street rose many hills, and the town was thrown like a broken set of dominoes over all. A steam tramway it left the track the only time I used it was nosing about the hills, but the most prominent features of the landscape were the foundations in brick and stone of a gigantic opera house and the blackened stumps of the pines. California sized up the town with one compre- hensive glance. " Big boom," said he ; and a few instants later : " About time to step off, / think," mean- ing thereby that the boom had risen to its limit, and it would be expedient not to meddle with it. We passed down ungraded streets that ended abruptly in a fifteen-foot drop and a nest of brambles ; along pavements that beginning in pine-plank ended in the living tree; by hotels with Turkish mosque trinketry on their shame- FROM SEA TO SEA 45 less tops, and the pine stumps at their very doors ; by a female seminary, tall, gaunt and red, which a native of the town bade us marvel at, and we marvelled ; by houses built in imitation of the ones on Nob Hill, San Francisco, after the Dutch fashion ; by other houses plenteously befouled with jig-saw work, and others flaring with the castlemented, battlemented bosh of the wooden Gothic school. "You can tell just about when those fellers had theii houses built," quoth California. "That one yonder wanted to be Jtalian, and his architect built him what he wanted. The new houses with the low straddle roofs and windows pitched in sideways and red brick walls are Dutch. That's the latest idea. I can read the his- tory of the town." I had no occasion so to read. The natives were only too glad and too proud to tell me. The hotel walls bore a flaming panorama of Tacoma in which by the eye of faith I saw a faint resemblance to the real town. The hotel stationary advertised that Tacoma bore on its face all the advantages of the highest civilisation, and the newspapers sang the same tune in a louder key. The real-estate agents were selling house- lots on unmade streets miles away for thousands of dol- lars. On the streets the rude, crude streets, where the unshaded electric light was fighting with the gentle northern twilight men were babbling of money, town lots, and again money how Alf or Ed had done such and such a thing that had brought him so much money ; and round the corner in a creaking boarded hall the red-jersey ed Salvationists were calling upon mankind to renounce all and follow their noisy God. The men dropped in by twos and threes, listened silently for 46 a while, and as silently went their way, the cymbals clashing after them in vain. I think it was the raw, new smell of fresh sawdust everywhere pervading the air that threw upon me a desolating homesickness. It brought back in a moment all remembrances of that terrible first night at school when the establishment has been newly whitewashed, and a soft smell of escaping gas mingles with the odour of trunks and wet overcoats. I was a little boy, and the school was very new. A vagabond among collarless vagabonds, I loafed up the street, looking into the fronts of little shops where they sold slop shirts at fancy prices, which shops I saw later described in the papers as " great." California had gone off to investigate on his own account, and presently re- turned, laughing noiselessly. " They are all mad here," he said, "all mad. A man nearly pulled a gun on me because I didn't agree with him that Tacoma was going to whip San Francisco on the strength of carrots and potatoes. I asked him to tell me what the town pro- duced, and I couldn't get anything out of him except those two darned vegetables. Say, what do you think." I responded firmly, " I'm going into British territory a little while to draw breath." " I'm going up the Sound, too, for a while," said he, " but I'm coming back coming back to our salmon on the Clackamas. A man has been pressing me to buy real estate here. Young feller, don't you buy real estate here." California disappeared with a kindly wave of his overcoat into worlds other than mine, good luck go with him for he was a true sportsman! and I took a steamer up Puget Sound for Vancouver, which is the EROM SEA TO SEA 47 terminus of the Canadian Pacific Railway. That was a queer voyage. The water, landlocked among a thousand islands, lay still as oil under our bows, and the wake of the screw broke up the unquivering reflections of pines and cliffs a mile away. 'Twas as though we were trampling on glass. No one, not even the Government, knows the number of islands in the Sound. Even now you can get one almost for the asking; can build a house, raise sheep, catch salmon, and become a king on a small scale your subjects the Indians of the reserva- tion, who glide among the islets in their canoes and scratch their hides monkeywise by the beach. A Sound Indian is unlovely and only by accident picturesque. His wife drives the canoe, but he himself is so thorough a mariner that he can spring up in his cockle-craft and whack his wife over the head with a paddle without tipping the whole affair into the water. This I have seen him do unprovoked. I fancy it must have been to show off before the whites. Have I told you anything about Seattle the town that was burned out a few weeks ago when the insurance men at San Francisco took their losses with a grin ? In the ghostly twilight, just as the forest fires were begin- ning to glare from the unthrifty islands, we struck it struck it heavily, for the wharves had all been burned down, and we tied up where we could, crashing into the rotten foundations of a boathouse as a pig roots in high grass. The town, like Tacoma, was built upon a hill. In the heart of the business quarters there was a horrible black smudge, as though a Hand had come down and rubbed the place smooth. I know now what being wiped out means. The smudge seemed to be about a mile long, 48 FROM SEA TO SEA and its blackness was relieved by tents in which men were doing business with the wreck of the stock they had saved. There were shouts and counter-shouts from the steamer to the temporary wharf, which was laden with shingles for roofing, chairs, trunks, provision-boxes, and all the lath and string arrangements out of which a western town is made. This is the way the shouts ran: " Oh, George ! What's the best with you ? " " Nawthin'. Got the old safe out. She's burned to a crisp. Books all gone." " ' Save anythin' ? " " Bar'l o' crackers and my wife's bonnet. Goin' to start store on them though." " Bully for you. Where's that Emporium ? I'll drop in." "Corner what used to be Fourth and Main little brown tent close to militia picquet. Sa-ay ! We're under martial law, an' all the saloons are shut down." " Best for you, George. Some men gets crazy with a fire, an' liquor makes 'em crazier." "'Spect any creator-condemned son of a female dog who has lost all his fixin's in a conflagration is going to put ice on his head an' run for Congress, do you? How'd you like us act?" The Job's comforter on the steamer retired into him- self. " Oh George " dived into the bar for a drink. P. S. Among many curiosities I have unearthed one. It was a Face on the steamer a face above a pointed straw-coloured beard, a face with thin lips and eloquent eyes. We conversed, and presently I got at the ideas of FKOM SEA TO SEA 49 the Face. It was, though it lived for nine months of the year in the wilds of Alaska and British Columbia, an authority on the canon law of the Church of England a zealous and bitter upholder of the supremacy of the aforesaid Church. Into my amazed ears, as the steamer plodded through the reflections of the stars, it poured the battle-cry of the Church Militant here on earth, and put forward as a foul injustice that in the prisons of British Columbia the Protestant chaplain did not always belong to the Church. The Face had no official connec- tion with the august body, and by force of his life very seldom attended service. " But," said he, proudly, " I should think it direct diso- bedience to the orders of my Church if I attended any other places of worship than those prescribed. I was once for three months in a place where there was only a Wesleyan Methodist chapel, and I never set foot in it once, Sir. Never once. 'Twould have been heresy. Bank heresy." And as I leaned over the rail methought that all the little stars in the water were shaking with austere merriment! But it may have been only the ripple of the steamer, after all. VOL. II E No. XXVIII TAKES ME FROM VANCOUVER TO THE YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK. " But who shall chronicle the ways Of common folk, the nights and days Spent with rough goatherds on the snows, And travellers come whence no man knows ? " THIS day I know how a deserter feels. Here in Vic- toria, a hundred and forty miles out of America, the mail brings me news from our Home the land of regrets. I was enjoying myself by the side of a trout-stream, and I feel inclined to apologise for every rejoicing breath I drew in the diamond clear air. The sickness, they said, is heavy with you ; from Rewari to the south good men are dying. Two names come in by the mail of two strong men dead men that I dined and jested with only a little time ago, and it seems unfair that I should be here, cut off from the chain-gang and the shot-drill of our weary life. After all, there is no life like it that we lead over yonder. Americans are Americans, and there are millions of them; English are English; but we of India are Us all the world over, knowing the mysteries of each other's lives and sorrowing for the death of a brother. How can I sit down and write to you of the mere joy of being alive ? The news has killed the pleasure of the day for me, and I am ashamed 50 FKOM SEA TO SEA 51 of myself. There are seventy brook trout lying in a creel, fresh drawn from Harrison Hot Springs, and they do not console me. They are like the stolen apples that clinch the fact of a bad boy's playing truant. I would sell them all, with my heritage in the woods and air and the delight of meeting new and strange people, just to be back again in the old galling harness, the heat and the dust, the gatherings in the evenings by the flooded tennis- courts, the ghastly dull dinners at the Club when the very last woman has been packed off to the hills and the four or five surviving men ask the doctor the symptoms of incubating smallpox. I should be troubled in body, but at peace in the soul. excellent and toil-worn public of mine men of the brotherhood, griffins new joined from the February troopers, and gentlemen wait- ing for your off-reckonings take care of yourselves and keep well ! It hurts so when any die. There are so few of Us, and we know one another too intimately. Vancouver three years ago was swept off by fire in sixteen minutes, and only one house was left standing. To-day it has a population of fourteen thousand people, and builds its houses out of brick with dressed granite fronts. But a great sleepiness lies on Vancouver as compared with an American town: men don't fly up and down the streets telling lies, and the spittoons in the delightfully comfortable hotel are unused; the baths are free and their doors are unlocked. You do not have to dig up the hotel clerk when you want to bathe, which shows the inferiority of Vancouver. An American bade me notice the absence of bustle, and was alarmed when in 52 FROM SEA TO SEA a loud and audible voice I thanked God for it. " Give me granite hewn granite and peace," quoth I, "and keep your deal boards and bustle for yourselves." The Canadian Pacific terminus is not a very gorgeous place as yet, but you can be shot directly from the window of the train into the liner that will take you in fourteen days from Vancouver to Yokohama. The Parthia, of some five thousand tons, was at her berth when I came, and the sight of the ex-Cunard on what seemed to be a little lake was curious. Except for certain currents which are not much mentioned, but which make the entrance rather unpleasant for sailing-boats, Vancouver possesses an almost perfect harbour. The town is built all round and about the harbour, and young as it is, its streets are better than those of western America. Moreover, the old flag waves over some of the buildings, and this is cheering to the soul. The place is full of English- men who speak the English tongue correctly and with clearness, avoiding more blasphemy than is necessary, and taking a respectable length of time to getting outside their drinks. These advantages and others that I have heard about, such as the construction of elaborate workshops and the like by the Canadian Pacific in the near future, moved me to invest in real estate. He that sold it me was a delightful English Boy who, having tried for the Army and failed, had somehow meandered into a real-estate office, where he was doing well. I couldn't have bought it from an American. He would have over- stated the case and proved me the possessor of the origi- nal Eden. All the Boy said was : " I give you my word it isn't on a cliff or under water, and before long the town ought to move out that way. I'd advise you to FEOM SEA TO SEA 53 take it." And I took it as easily as a man buys a piece of tobacco. Me void, owner of some four hun- dred well-developed pines, a few thousand tons of granite scattered in blocks at the roots of the pines, and a sprin- kling of earth. That's a town-lot in Vancouver. You or your agent hold to it till property rises, then sell out and buy more land further out of town and repeat the process. I do not quite see how this sort of thing helps the growth of a town, but the English Boy says that it is the ''essence of speculation," so it must be all right. But I wish there were fewer pines and rather less granite on my ground. Moved by curiosity and the lust of trout, I went seventy miles up the Canadian Pacific in one of the cross-Con- tinent cars, which are cleaner and less stuffy than the Pullman. A man who goes all the way across Canada is liable to be disappointed not in the scenery, but in the progress of the country. So a batch of wandering politicians from England told me. They even went so far as to say that Eastern Canada was a failure and un- profitable. The place didn't move, they complained, and whole counties they said provinces lay under the rule of the Roman Catholic priests, who took care that the peo- ple should not be overcumbered with the good things of this world to the detriment of their souls. My inter- est was in the line the real and accomplished railway which is to throw actual fighting troops into the East some day when our hold of the Suez Canal is temporarily loosened. All that Vancouver wants is a fat earthwork fort upon a hill, there are plenty of hills to choose from, a selection of big guns, a couple of regiments of infantry, and later on a big arsenal. The raw self-consciousness 54 PKOM SEA TO SEA of America would be sure to make her think these arrangements intended for her benefit, but she could be enlightened. It is not seemly to leave unprotected the head-end of a big railway; for though Victoria and Esquimalt, our naval stations on Vancouver Island, are very near, so also is a place called Vladivostok, and though Vancouver Narrows are strait, they allow room enough for a man-of-war. The people I did not speak to more than two hundred of them do not know about Russia or military arrangements. They are trying to open trade with Japan in lumber, and are raising fruit, wheat, and sometimes minerals. All of them agree that we do not yet know the resources of British Columbia, and all joyfully bade me note the climate, which was distinctly warm. "We never have killing cold here. It's the most perfect climate in the world." Then there are three perfect climates, for I have tasted 'em California, Washington Territory, and British Colum- bia. I cannot say which is the loveliest. When I left by steamer and struck across the Sound to our naval station, at Victoria, Vancouver Island, I found in that quite English town of beautiful streets quite a colony of old men doing nothing but talking, fishing, and loafing at the Club. That means that the retired go to Victoria. On a thousand a year pension a man would be a millionnaire in these parts, and for four hundred he could live well. It was at Victoria they told me the tale of the fire in Vancouver. How the inhabitants of New Westminster, twelve miles from Vancouver, saw a glare in the sky at six in the evening, but thought it was a forest fire; how later bits of burnt paper flew about their streets, and they FKOM SEA TO SEA 55 guessed that evil had happened; how an hour later a man rode into the city crying that there was no Vancouver left. All had been wiped out by the flames in sixteen minutes. How, two hours later, the Mayor of New Westminster having voted nine thousand dollars from the Municipal funds, relief-wagons with food and blankets were pouring into where Vancouver stood. How fourteen people were supposed to have died in the fire, but how even now when they laid new founda- tions the workmen unearth charred skeletons, many more than fourteen. " That night," said the teller, " all Vancouver was houseless. The wooden town had gone in a breath. Next day they began to build in brick, and you have seen what they have achieved." The sight afar off of three British men-of-war and a torpedo-boat consoled me as I returned from Victoria to Tacoma and discovered en route that I was surfeited with scenery. There is a great deal in the remark of a discontented traveller: "When you have seen a fine forest, a bluff, a river, and a lake you have seen all the scenery of western America. Sometimes the pine is three hundred feet high, and sometimes the rock is, and sometimes the lake is a hundred miles long. But it's all the same, don't you know. I'm getting sick of it." I dare not say getting sick. I'm only tired. If Provi- dence could distribute all this beauty in little bits where people most wanted it, among you in India, it would ^ be well. But it is en masse, overwhelming, with nobody but the tobacco-chewing captain of a river steamboat to look at it. Men said if I went to Alaska I should see islands even more wooded, snow-peaks loftier, and rivers more lovely than those around me. That decided me 56 FKOM SEA TO SEA not to go to Alaska. I went east east to Montana, after another horrible night in Tacoma among the men who spat. Why does the Westerner spit ? It can't amuse him, and it doesn't interest his neighbour. But I am beginning to mistrust. Everything good as well as everything bad is supposed to come from the East. Is there a shooting-scrape between prominent cit- izens ? Oh, you'll find nothing of that kind in the East. Is there a more than usually revolting lynching ? They don't do that in the East. I shall find out when I get there whether this unnatural perfection be real. Eastward then to Montana I took my way for the Yel- lowstone National Park, called in the guide-books " Won- derland." But the real Wonderland began in the train. We were a merry crew. One gentleman announced his intention of paying no fare and grappled the conductor, who neatly cross-buttocked him through a double plate- glass window. His head was cut open in four or five places. A doctor on the train hastily stitched up the biggest gash, and he was dropped at a wayside station, spurting blood at every hair a scarlet-headed and ghastly sight. The conductor guessed that he would die, and volunteered the information that there was no profit in monkeying with the North Pacific Railway. Night was falling as we cleared the forests and sailed out upon a wilderness of sage brush. The desolation of .Montgomery, the wilderness of Sind, the hummock- studded desert of Bikaneer, are joyous and homelike com- pared to the impoverished misery of the sage. It is blue, it is stunted, it is dusty. It wraps the rolling hills as a mildewed shroud wraps the body of a long-dead man. It makes you weep for sheer loneliness, and there is no get- FROM SEA TO SEA 57 ting away from it. When Childe Roland came to the dark Tower he traversed the sage brush. Yet there is one thing worse than sage unadulterated, and that is a prairie city. We stopped at Pasco Junction, and a man told me that it was the Queen City of the Prairie. I wish Americans didn't tell such useless lies. I counted fourteen or fifteen frame-houses, and a portion of a road that showed like a bruise on the untouched sur- face of the blue sage, running away and away up to the setting sun. The sailor sleeps with a half-inch plank between himself and death. He is at home beside the handful of people who curl themselves up o' nights with nothing but a frail scantling, almost as thin as a blanket, to shut out the unmeasurable loneliness of the sage. When the train stopped on the road, as it did once or twice, the solid silence of the sage got up and shouted at us. It was like a nightmare, and one not in the least im- proved by having to sleep in an emigrant-car ; the regu- larly ordained sleepers being full. There was a row in our car toward morning, a man having managed to get querulously drunk in the night. Up rose a Cornish- man with a red head full of strategy, and strapped the obstreperous one, smiling largely as he did so, and a deli- cate little woman in a far bunk watched the fray and called the drunken man a " damned hog," which he cer- tainly was, though she needn't have put it quite so coarsely. Emigrant cars are clean, but the accommoda- tion is as hard as a plank bed. Later we laid our bones down to crossing the Rockies. An American train can climb up the side of a house if need be, but it is not pleasant to sit in it. We clomb till we struck violent cold and an Indian reservation, and 58 FROM SEA TO SEA the noble savage came to look at us. He was a Flat- head and unlovely. Most Americans are charmingly frank about the Indian. " Let us get rid of him as soon as possible," they say. "We have no use for him." Some of the men I meet have a notion that we in India are exterminating the native in the same fashion, and I have been asked to fix a date for the final extinguish- ment of the Aryan. I answer that it will be a long busi- ness. Very many Americans have an offensive habit of referring to natives as " heathen." Mahometans and Hindus are heathen alike in their eyes, and they vary the epithet with "pagan" and "idolater." But this is beside the matter, which is the Stampede Tunnel our actual point of crossing the Eockies. Thank Heaven, I need never take that tunnel again ! It is about two miles long, and in effect is nothing more than the gallery of a mine shored with timber and lighted with electric lamps. Black darkness would be preferable, for the lamps just reveal the rough cutting of the rocks, and that is very rough indeed. The train crawls through, brakes down, and you can hear the water and little bits of stone falling on the roof of the car. Then you pray, pray fervently, and the air gets stiller and stiller, and you dare not take your unwilling eyes off the timber shoring, lest a prop should fall, for lack of your moral support. Before the tunnel was built you crossed in the open air by a switch- back line. A watchman goes through the tunnel after each train, but that is no protection. He just guesses that another train will pull through, and the engine- driver guesses the same thing. Some day between the two of them there will be a cave in the tunnel. Then the enterprising reporter will talk about the shrieks and FROM SEA TO SEA 59 groans of the buried and the heroic efforts of the Press in securing first information, and that will be all. Human life is of small account out here. I was listening to yarns in the smoking-compartment of the Pullman, all the way to Helena, and with very few exceptions, each had for its point, violent, brutal, and ruffianly murder murder by fraud and the craft of the savage murder unavenged by the law, or at the most by an outbreak of fresh lawlessness. At the end of each tale I was assured that the old days had passed away, and that these were anecdotes of five years' stand- ing. One man in particular distinguished himself by holding up to admiration the exploits of some cowboys of his acquaintance, and their skill in the use of the revolver. Each tale of horror wound up with "and that's the sort of man he was," as who should say : " Go and do likewise." Remember that the shootings, the cuttings, and the stabbings were not the outcome of any species of legitimate warfare ; the heroes were not forced to fight for their lives. Far from it. The brawls were bred by liquor in which they assisted in saloons and gambling-hells they were wont to " pull their guns " on a man, and in the vast majority of cases without provocation. The tales sickened me, but taught one thing. A man who carries a pistol may be put down as a coward a person to be shut out from every decent mess and club, and gathering of civilised folk. There is neither chivalry nor romance in the weapon, for all that American authors have seen fit to write. I would I could make you understand the full measure of con- tempt with which certain aspects of Western life have inspired me. Let us try a comparison. Sometimes it 60 FKOM SEA TO SEA happens that a young, a very young, man, whose first dress-coat is yet glossy, gets slightly flushed at a dinner- party among his seniors. After the ladies are gone, he begins to talk. He talks, you will remember, as a " man of the world" and a person of varied experiences, an authority on all things human and divine. The grey heads of the elders bow assentingly to his wildest state- ment ; some one tries to turn the conversation when what the youngster conceives to be wit has offended a sensi- bility; and another deftly slides the decanters beyond him as they circle round the table. You know the feel- ing of discomfort pity mingled with aversion over the boy who is making an exhibition of himself. The same emotion came back to me, when an old man who ought to have known better appealed from time to time for admiration of his pitiful sentiments. It was right in his mind to insult, to maim, and to kill ; right to evade the law where it was strong and to trample over it where it was weak ; right to swindle in politics, to lie in affairs of State, and commit perjury in matters of municipal administration. The car was full of little children, utterly regardless of their parents, fretful, peevish, spoilt beyond anything I have ever seen in Anglo-India. They in time would grow up into men such as sat in the smoker, and had no regard for the law ; men who would conduct papers siding " with defiance of any and every law." But it's of no consequence, as Mr. Toots says. During the descent of the Rockies we journeyed for a season on a trestle only two hundred and eighty- six feet high. It was made of iron, but up till two years ago a wooden structure bore up the train, and was used long after it had been condemned by the FEOM SEA TO SEA 61 civil engineers. Some day the iron one will come down, just as Stampede Tunnel will, and the results will be even more startling. Late in the night we ran over a skunk ran over it in the dark. Everything that has been said about the skunk is true. It is an Awesome Stink. No. XXIX SHOWS HOW YANKEE JIM INTRODUCED ME TO DIANA OF THE CROSSWAYS ON THE BANKS OF THE YELLOW- STONE, AND HOW A GERMAN JEW SAID I WAS NO TRUE CITIZEN. ENDS WITH THE CELEBRATION OF THE 4TH OF JULY AND A FEW LESSONS THEREFROM. LIVINGSTONE is a town of two thousand people, and the junction for the little side-line that takes you to the Yellowstone National Park. It lies in a fold of the prairie, and behind it is the Yellowstone River and the gate of the mountains through which the river flows. There is one street in the town, where the cow- boy's pony and the little foal of the brood-mare in the buggy rest contentedly in the blinding sunshine while the cowboy gets himself shaved at the only other barber's shop, and swaps lies at the bar. I exhausted the town, including the saloons, in ten minutes, and got away on the rolling grass downs where I threw myself to rest. Directly under the hill I was on, swept a drove of horses in charge of two mounted men. That was a picture I shall not soon forget. A light haze of dust went up from the hoof-trodden green, scarcely veiling the unfettered deviltries of three hundred horses who very much wanted to stop and graze. " Yow ! Yow ! Yow ! " yapped the mounted men in chorus like coyotes. The column moved forward at a trot, divided as it met 62 FROM SEA TO SEA 63 a hillock and scattered into fan shape all among the suburbs of Livingstone. I heard the " snick " of a stock whip, half a dozen " Yow, yows," and the mob had come together again, and, with neighing and whickering and squealing and a great deal of kicking on the part of the youngsters, rolled like a wave of brown water toward the uplands. I was within twenty feet of the leader, a grey stallion lord of many brood-mares all deeply concerned for the welfare of their fuzzy foals. A cream-coloured beast I knew him at once for the bad character of the troop broke back, taking with him some frivolous fillies. I heard the snick of the whips somewhere in the dust, and the fillies came back at a canter, very shocked and indignant. On the heels of the last rode both the stockmen picturesque ruffians who wanted to know " what in hell " I was doing there, waved their hats, and sped down the slope after their charges. When the noise of the troop had died there came a wonderful silence on all the prairie that silence, they say, which enters into the heart of the old-time hunter and trapper and marks him off from the rest of his race. The town disappeared in the darkness, and a very young moon showed herself over a bald-headed, snow- flecked peak. Then the Yellowstone, hidden by the water-willows, lifted up its voice and sang a little song to the mountains, and an old horse that had crept up in the dusk breathed inquiringly on the back of my neck. When I reached the hotel I found all manner of preparation under way for the 4th of July, and a drunken man with a Winchester rifle over his shoulder patrolling the sidewalk. I do not think he wanted any 64 FKOM SEA TO SEA one. He carried the gun as other folk carry walking- sticks. None the less I avoided the direct line of fire and listened to the blasphemies of miners and stockmen till far into the night. In every bar-room lay a copy of the local paper, and every copy impressed it upon the inhabitants of Livingstone that they were the best, finest, bravest, richest, and most progressive town, of the most progressive nation under Heaven ; even as the Tacoma and Portland papers had belauded their readers. And yet, all my purblind eyes could see was a grubby little hamlet full of men without clean collars and per- fectly unable to get through one sentence unadorned by three oaths. They raise horses and minerals round and about Livingstone, but they behave as though they raised cherubims with diamonds in their wings. From Livingstone the National Park train follows the Yellowstone River through the gate of the mountains and over arid volcanic country. A stranger in the cars saw me look at the ideal trout-stream below the windows and murmured softly: "Lie off at Yankee Jim's if you want good fishing." They halted the train at the head of a narrow valley, and I leaped literally into the arms of Yankee Jim, sole owner of a log hut, an indefinite amount of hay-ground, and constructor of twenty-seven miles of wagon-road over which he held toll right. There was the hut the river fifty yards away, and the polished line of metals that disappeared round a bluff. That was all. The railway added the finishing touch to the already complete loneliness of the place. Yankee Jim was a picturesque old man with a talent for yarns that Ananias might have envied. It seemed to me, presumptuous in my ignorance, that I might FROM SEA TO SEA 65 hold my own with the old-timer if I judiciously painted up a few lies gathered in the course of my wanderings. Yankee Jim saw every one of my tales and went fifty better on the spot. He dealt in bears and Indians never less than tAventy of each ; had known the Yellow- stone country for years, and bore upon his body marks of Indian arrows ; and his eyes had seen a squaw of the Crow Indians burned alive at the stake. He said she screamed considerable. In one point did he speak the truth as regarded the merits of that particular reach of the Yellowstone. He said it was alive with trout. It was. I fished it from noon till twilight, and the fish bit at the brown hook as though never a fat trout-fly had fallen on the water. From pebbly reaches, quivering in the heat-haze where the foot caught on stumps cut four- square by the chisel-tooth of the beaver ; past the fringe of the water-willow crowded with the breeding trout-fly and alive with toads and water-snakes ; over the drifted timber to the grateful shadow of big trees that darkened the holes where the fattest fish lay, I worked for seven hours. The mountain flanks on either side of the valley gave back the heat as the desert gives it, and the dry sand by the railway track, where I found a rattle- snake, was hot-iron to the touch. But the trout did not care for the heat. They breasted the boiling river for my fly and they got it. I simply dare not give my bag. At the fortieth trout I gave up counting, and I had reached the fortieth in less than two hours. They were small fish, not one over two pounds, but they fought like small tigers, and I lost three flies before I could un- derstand their methods of escape. Ye gods ! That was fishing, though it peeled the skin from my nose in strips. VOL. II F 66 FROM SEA TO SEA At twilight Yankee Jim bore me off, protesting, to supper in the hut. The fish had prepared me for any surprise, wherefore when Yankee Jim introduced me to a young woman of five-and-twenty, with eyes like the deep-fringed eyes of the gazelle, and " on the neck the small head buoyant, like a bell-flower in its bed," I said nothing. It was all in the day's events. She was Cali- fornia-raised, the wife of a man who owned a stock-farm "up the river a little ways," and, with her husband, tenant of Yankee Jim's shanty. I know she wore list slippers and did not wear stays ; but I know also that she was beautiful by any standard of beauty, and that the trout she cooked were fit for a king's supper. And after supper strange men loafed up in the dim delicious twilight, with the little news of the day how a heifer had " gone strayed " from Nicholson's ; how the widow at Grant's Fork wouldn't part with a little hayland nohow, though " she's an' her big brothers can't manage more than ha-af their land now. She's so darned proud." Diana of the Crossways entertained them in queenly wise, and her husband and Yankee Jim bade them sit right down and make themselves at home. Then did Yankee Jim uncurl his choicest lies on Indian warfare aforetime ; then did the whisky-flask circle round the little crowd ; then did Diana's husband 'low that he was quite handy with the lariat, but had seen men rope a steer by any foot or horn indicated; then did Diana unburden herself about her neighbours. The nearest house was three miles away, "but the women aren't nice, neighbourly folk. They talk so. They haven't got anything else to do seem- ingly. If a woman goes to a dance and has a good time, they talk, and if she wears a silk dress, they want to FEOM SEA TO SEA 67 know how jest ranchin' folks folk on a ranche come by such things ; and they make mischief down all the lands here from Gardiner City way back up to Living- stone. They're mostly Montanna raised, and they haven't been nowheres. Ah, how they talk ! " " Were things like this," demanded Diana, " in the big world outside, whence I had come ? " " Yes," I said, " things were very much the same all over the world," and I thought of a far-away station in India where new dresses and the having of good times at dances raised cackle more grammatical perhaps, but no less venomous than the gossip of the " Montanna-raised " folk on the ranches of the Yellowstone. Next morn I fished again and listened to Diana telling the story of her life. I forget what she told me, but I am distinctly aware that she had royal eyes and a mouth that the daughter of a hundred earls might have envied so small and so delicately cut it was. " An' you come back an' see us again," said the simple-minded folk. "Come back an' we'll show you how to catch six- pound trout at the head of the canon." To-day I am in the Yellowstone Park, and I wish I were dead. The train halted at Cinnabar station, and we were decanted, a howling crowd of us, into stages, vari- ously horsed, for the eight-mile drive to the first spec- tacle of the Park a place called the Mammoth Hot Springs. " What means this eager, anxious throng ? " I asked the driver. "You've struck one of Eayment's excursion parties that's all a crowd of creator-con- demned fools mostly. Aren't you one of 'em ? " " No," I said. "May I sit up here with you, great chief and man with a golden tongue? I do not know Mister 68 FROM SEA TO SEA Rayment. I belong to T. Cook and Son." The other person, from the quality of the material he handles, must be the son of a sea-cook. He collects masses of Down-Easters from the New England States and else- where and hurls them across the Continent and into the Yellowstone Park on tour. A brake-load of Cook's Continental tourists trapezing through Paris (I've seen 'em) are angels of light compared to the Rayment trippers. It is not the ghastly vulgarity, the oozing, rampant Bessemer-steel self-sufficiency and ignorance of the men that revolts me, so much as the display of these same qualities in the women-folk. I saw a new type in the coach, and all my dreams of a better and more perfect East died away. " Are these um per- sons here any sort of persons in their own places?" I asked a shepherd who appeared to be herding them. " Why, certainly. They include very many prominent and representative citizens from seven States of the Union, and most of them are wealthy. Yes, sir. Representative and prominent." We ran across bare hills on an unmetalled road under a burning sun in front of a volley of playful repartee from the prominent citizens inside. It was the 4th of July. The horses had American flags in their head- stalls, some of the women wore flags and coloured hand- kerchiefs in their belts, and a young German on the box-seat with me was bewailing the loss of a box of crackers. He said he had been sent to the Continent to get his schooling and so had lost his American accent ; but no Continental schooling writes German Jew all over a man's face and nose. He was a rabid American FROM SEA TO SEA 69 citizen one of a very difficult class to deal with. As a general rule, praise unsparingly, and without dis- crimination. That keeps most men quiet: but some, if you fail to keep up a continuous stream of praise, proceed to revile the Old Country Germans and Irish who are more Americans than the Americans are the chief offenders. This young American began to attack the English army. He had seen some of it on parade and he pitied the men in bearskins as "slaves." The citizen, by the way, has a contempt for his own army which exceeds anything you meet among the most illiberal classes in England. I admitted that our army was very poor, had done nothing, and had been nowhere. This exasperated him, for he expected an argument, and he trampled on the British Lion generally. Failing to move me, he vowed that I had no patriotism like his own. I said I had not, and further ventured that very few Englishmen had; which, when you come to think of it, is quite true. By the time he had proved conclu- sively that before the Prince of Wales came to the throne we should be a blethering republic, we struck a road that overhung a river, and my interest in " politics " was lost in admiration of the driver's skill as he sent his four big horses along that winding road. There was no room for any sort of accident a shy or a swerve would have dropped us sixty feet into the roaring Gar- diner River. Some of the persons in the coach remarked that the scenery was "elegant." Wherefore, even at the risk of my own life, I did urgently desire an acci- dent and the massacre of some of the more prominent citizens. What " elegance " lies in a thousand-foot pile of honey-coloured rock, riven into peak and battlement, 70 FROM SEA TO SEA the highest peak defiantly crowned by an eagle's nest, the eaglet peering into the gulf and screaming for his food, I could not for the life of me understand. But they speak a strange tongue. En route we passed other carriages full of trippers, who had done their appointed five days in the Park, and yelped at us fraternally as they disappeared in clouds of red dust. When we struck the Mammoth Hot Spring Hotel a huge yellow barn a sign-board informed us that the altitude was six thousand two hundred feet. The Park is just a howling wilderness of three thousand square miles, full of all imaginable freaks of a fiery nature. An hotel company, assisted by the Secretary of State for the Interior, appears to control it; there are hotels at all the points of interest, guide-books, stalls for the sale of minerals, and so forth, after the model of Swiss summer places. The tourists may their master die an evil death at the hand of a mad locomotive ! poured into that place with a joyful whoop, and, scarce washing the dust from themselves, began to celebrate the 4th of July. They called it " patriotic exercises " ; elected a clergyman of their own faith as president, and, sitting on the land- ing of the first floor, began to make speeches and read the Declaration of Independence. The clergyman, rose tip and told them they were the greatest, freest, sub- limest, most chivalrous, and richest people on the face of the earth, and they all said Amen. Another clergyman asserted in the words of the Declaration that all men were created equal, and equally entitled to Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness. I should like to know whether the wild and woolly West recognises this first FEOM SEA TO SEA 71 right as freely as the grantors intended. The clergyman then bade the world note that the tourists included repre- sentatives of seven of the New England States ; whereat I felt deeply sorry for the New England States in their latter days. He opined that this running to and fro upon the earth, under the auspices of the excellent Kayment, would draw America more closely together, especially when the Westerners remembered the perils that they of the East had surmounted by rail and river. At duly appointed intervals the congregation sang " My country, 'tis of thee" to the tune of " God save the Queen" (here they did not stand up) and the " Star-Spangled Banner " (here they did), winding up the exercise with some dog- grel of their own composition to the tune of "John Brown's Body," movingly setting forth the perils before alluded to. They then adjourned to the verandahs and watched fire-crackers of the feeblest, exploding one by one, for several hours. What amazed me was the calm with which these folks gathered together and commenced to belaud their noble selves, their country, and their " institootions " and everything else that was theirs. The language was, to these bewildered ears, wild advertisement, gas, bunkum, blow, anything you please beyond the bounds of com- mon sense. An archangel, selling town-lots on the Glassy Sea, would have blushed to the tips of his wings to describe his property in similar terms. Then they gathered round the pastor and told him his little sermon was " perfectly glorious," really grand, sublime, and so forth, and he bridled ecclesiastically. At the end a perfectly unknown man attacked me and asked me what I thought of American patriotism. I said there 72 FKOM SEA TO SEA was nothing like it in the Old Country. By the way, always tell an American this. It soothes him. Then said he : " Are you going to get out your letters, your letters of naturalisation ? " " Why ? " I asked. " I presoom you do business in this country, and make money out of it, and it seems to me that it would be your dooty." "Sir," said I, sweetly, "there is a forgotten little island across the seas called England. It is not much bigger than the Yellowstone Park. In that island a man of your country could work, marry, make his for- tune or twenty fortunes, and die. Throughout his career not one soul wo'uld ask him whether he were a British subject or a child of the Devil. Do you under- stand ? " I think he did, because he said something about " Britishers " which wasn't complimentary. No. XXX SHOWS HOW I ENTERED MAZANDERAN OF THE PERSIANS AND SAW DEVILS OF EVERY COLOUR, AND SOME TROOPERS. HELL AND THE OLD LADY FROM CHI- CAGO. THE CAPTAIN AND THE LIEUTENANT. " That desolate land and lone Where the Big Horn and Yellowstone Eoaf down their mountain path." TWICE have I written this letter from end to end. Twice have I torn it up, fearing lest those across the water should say that I had gone mad on a sudden. Now we will begin for the third time quite solemnly and soberly. I have been through the Yellowstone National Park in a buggy, in the company of an ad- venturous old lady from Chicago and her husband, who disapproved of scenery as being " ongodly." I fancy it scared them. We began, as you know, with the Mammoth Hot Springs. They are only a gigantic edition of those pink and white terraces not long ago destroyed by earthquake in New Zealand. At one end of the little valley in which the hotel stands the lime-laden springs that break from the pine-covered hillsides have formed a frozen cataract of white, lemon, and palest pink forma- tion, through and over and in which water of the warm- 73 74 FKOM SEA TO SEA est bubbles and drips and trickles from pale-green lagoon to exquisitely fretted basin. The ground rings hollow as a kerosene-tin, and some day the Mammoth Hotel, guests and all, will sink into the caverns below and be turned into a stalactite. When I set foot on the first of the ter- races, a tourist-trampled ramp of scabby grey stuff, I met a stream of iron-red hot water which ducked into a hole like a rabbit. Followed a gentle chuckle of laugh- ter, and then a deep, exhausted sigh from nowhere in particular. Fifty feet above my head a jet of stream rose up and died out in the blue. It was worse than the boiling mountain at Myanoshita. The dirty white de- posit gave place to lime whiter than snow; and I found a basin which some learned hotel-keeper has christened Cleopatra's pitcher, or Mark Antony's whisky-jug, or something equally poetical. It was made of frosted silver ; it was filled with water as clear as the sky. I do not know the depth of that wonder. The eye looked down beyond grottoes and caves of beryl into an abyss that communicated directly with the central fires of earth. And the pool was in pain, so that it could not refrain from talking about it; muttering and chatter- ing and moaning. From the lips of the lime-ledges, forty feet under water, spurts of silver bubbles would fly up and break the peace of the crystal atop. Then the whole pool would shake and grow dim, and there were noises. I removed myself only to find other pools all equally unhappy, rifts in the ground, full of running, red-hot water, slippery sheets of deposit overlaid with greenish grey hot water, and here and there pit-holes dry as a rifled tomb in India, dusty and waterless. Else- where the infernal waters had first boiled dead and then FROM SEA TO SEA 7,1 embalmed the pines and underwood, or the forest trees had taken heart and smothered up a blind formation with greenery, so that it was only by scraping the earth you could tell what fires had raged beneath. Yet the pines will win the battle in years to come, because Na- ture, who first forges all her work in her great smithies, has nearly finished this job, and is ready to temper it in the soft brown earth. The fires are dying down; the hotel is built where terraces have overflowed into flat wastes of deposit; the pines have taken possession of the high ground whence the terraces first started. Only the actual curve of the cataract stands clear, and it is guarded by soldiers who patrol it with loaded six-shooters, in order that the tourist may not bring up fence-rails and sink them in a pool, or chip the fretted tracery of the formations with a geological hammer, or, walking where the crust is too thin, foolishly cook himself. I manoeuvred round those soldiers. They were cavalry in a very slovenly uniform, dark-blue blouse, and light- blue trousers unstrapped, cut spoon-shape over the boot ; cartridge belt, revolver, peaked cap, and worsted gloves black buttons ! By the mercy of Allah I opened con- versation with a spectacled Scot. He had served the Queen in the Marines and a Line regiment, a,nd the " go-fever " being in his bones, had drifted to America, there to serve Uncle Sam. We sat on the edge of an extinct little pool, that under happier circumstances would have grown into a geyser, and began to discuss things generally. To us appeared yet another soldier. No need to ask his nationality or to be told that the troop called him " The Henglishman." A cockney was he, who had seen something of warfare in Egypt, and 76 FROM SEA TO SEA had taken his discharge from a Fusilier regiment not unknown to you. " And how do things go ? " ".Very much as you please," said they. " There's not half the discipline here that there is in the Queen's service not half nor the work either, but what there is, is rough work. Why, there's a sergeant now with a black eye that one of our men gave him. They won't say anything about that, of course. Our punishments ? Fines mostly, and then if you carry on too much you go to the cooler that's the clink. Yes, Sir. Horses ? Oh, they're devils, these Montanna horses. Bronchos mostly. We don't slick 'em up for parade not much. And the amount of schooling that you put into one Eng- lish troop-horse would be enough for a whole squadron of these creatures. You'll meet more troopers further up the Park. Go and look at their horses and their turnouts. I fancy it'll startle you. I'm wearing a made tie and a breastpin under my blouse ? Of course I am ! I can wear anything I darn please. We aren't particular here. I shouldn't dare come on parade no, nor yet fatigue duty in this condition in the Old Country ; but it don't matter here. But don't you forget, Sir, that it's taught me how to trust to myself, and my shooting irons. I don't want fifty orders to move me across the Park, and catch a poacher. Yes, they poach here. Men come in with an outfit and ponies, smuggle in a gun or two, and shoot the bison. If you interfere, they shoot at you. Then you confiscate all their outfit and their ponies. We have a pound full of them now down be- low. There's our Captain over yonder. Speak to him if you want to know anything special. This service isn't FROM SEA TO SEA. 77 a patch on the Old Country's service ; but you look, if it was worked up it would be just a Hell of a service. But these citizens despise us, and they put us on to road-mending, and such like. 'ISTough to ruin any army." To the Captain I addressed myself after my friends had gone. They told me that a good many American offi- cers dressed by the French army. The Captain certainly might have been mistaken for a French officer of light cavalry, and he had more than the courtesy of a French- man. Yes, he had read a good deal about our Indian bor- der warfare, and had been much struck with the likeness it bore to Red Indian warfare. I had better, when I reached the next cavalry post, scattered between two big geyser basins, introduce myself to a Captain and Lieuten- ant. They could show me things. He himself was de- voting all his time to conserving the terraces, and sur- reptitiously running hot water into dried-up basins that fresh pools might form. " I get very interested in that sort of thing. It's not duty, but it's what I'm put here for." And then he began to talk of his troop as I have heard his brethren in India talk. Such a troop ! Built up carefully, and watched lovingly ; " not a man that I'd wish to exchange, and, what's more, I believe not a man that would wish to leave on his own account. We're different, I believe, from the English. Your officers value the horses; we set store on the men. We train them more than we do the horses." Of the American trooper I will tell you more here- after. He is not a gentleman to be trifled with. Next dawning, entering a buggy of fragile construc- tion, with the old people from Chicago, I embarked on 78 FROM SEA TO SEA my perilous career. We ran straight up a mountain till we could see, sixty miles away, the white houses of Cook City on another mountain, and the whiplash-like trail leading thereto. The live air made me drunk. If Tom, the driver, had proposed to send the mares in a bee-line to the city, I should have assented, and so would the old lady, who chewed gum and talked about her symptoms. The tub-ended rock-dog, which is but the translated prairie-dog, broke across the road under our horses' feet, the rabbit and the chipmunk danced with fright; we heard the roar of the river, and the road went round a corner. On one side piled rock and shale, that enjoined silence for fear of a general slide-down; on the other a sheer drop, and a fool of a noisy river below. Then,' apparently in the middle of the road, lest any should find driving too easy, a post of rock. Nothing beyond that save the flank of a cliff. Then my stomach departed from me, as it does when you swing, for we left the dirt, which was at least some guarantee of safety, and sailed out round the curve, and up a steep incline, on a plank-road built out from the cliff. The planks were nailed at the outer edge, and did not shift or creak very much but enough, quite enough. That was the Golden Gate. I got my stomach back again when we trotted out on to a vast upland adorned with a lake and hills. Have you ever seen an untouched land the face of virgin Nature ? It is rather a curious sight, because the hills are choked with timber that has never known an axe, and the storm has rent a way through this tim- ber, so that a hundred thousand trees lie matted together in swathes ; and, since each tree lies where it falls, you may behold trunk and branch returning to the earth FEOM SEA TO SEA 79 whence they sprang exactly as the bodj of man re- turns each limb making its own little grave, the grass climbing above the bark, till at last there remains only the outline of a tree upon the rank undergrowth. Then we drove under a cliff of obsidian, which is black glass, some two hundred feet high ; and the road at its foot was made of black glass that crackled. This was no great matter, because half an hour before Tom had pulled up in the woods that we might sufficiently admire a mountain who stood all by himself, shaking with laughter or rage. The glass cliff overlooks a lake where the beavers built a dam about a mile and a half long in a zig- zag line, as their necessities prompted. Then came the Government and strictly preserved them, and, as you shall learn later on, they be damn impudent beasts. ' The old lady had hardly explained the natural history of beavers before we climbed some hills it really didn't matter in that climate, because we could have scaled the stars and (this mattered very much indeed) shot down a desperate, dusty slope, brakes shrieking on the wheels, the mares clicking among un- seen rocks, the dust dense as a fog, and a wall of trees on either side. " How do the heavy four-horse coaches take it, Tom ? " I asked, remembering that some twenty- three souls had gone that way half an hour before. " Take it at the run ! " said Tom, spitting out the dust. Of course there was a sharp curve, and a bridge at the bottom, but luckily nothing met us, and we came to a wooden shanty called an hotel, in time for a crazy tiffin served by very gorgeous handmaids with very pink cheeks. When health fails in other and more exciting 80 FROM SEA TO SEA pursuits, a season as " help " in one of the Yellowstone hotels will restore the frailest constitution. Then by companies after tiffin we walked chattering to the uplands of Hell. They call it the Norris Geyser Basin on Earth. It was as though the tide of desolation had gone out, but would presently return, across innu- merable acres of dazzling white geyser formation. There were no terraces here, but all other horrors. Not ten yards from the road a blast of steam shot up roaring every few seconds, a mud volcano spat filth to Heaven, streams of hot water rumbled under foot, plunged through the dead pines in steaming cataracts and died on a waste of white where green-grey, black-yellow, and link pools roared, shouted, bubbled, or hissed as their wicked fan- cies prompted. By the look of the eye the place should have been frozen over. By the feel of the feet it was warm. I ventured out among the pools, carefully fol- lowing tracks, but one unwary foot began to sink, a squirt of water followed, and having no desire to descend quick into Tophet I returned to the shore where the mud and the sulphur and the nameless fat ooze-vegetation of Lethe lay. But the very road rang as though built over a gulf ; and besides, how was I to tell when the raving blast of steam would find its vent insufficient and blow the whole affair into Nirvana? There was a potent stench of stale eggs everywhere, and crystals of sulphur crumbled under the foot, and the glare of the sun on the white stuff was blinding. Sitting under a bank, to me appeared a young trooper ex-Cape mounted Rifles, this man : the real American seems to object to his army mounted on a horse half-maddened by the noise and steam and smell. He carried only the six-shooter and FEOM SEA TO SEA 81 cartridge-belt. On service the Springfield carbine (which is clumsy) and a cartridge-belt slung diagonally complete equipment. The sword is no earthly use for Border warfare and, except at state parades, is never worn. The saddle is the McClellan tree over a four-folded blanket. Sweat-leathers you must pay for yourself. And the beauty of the tree is that it necessitates first very careful girthing and a thorough knowledge of tricks with the blanket to suit the varying conditions of the horse a broncho will bloat in a night if he can get at a bellyful and, secondly, even more care- ful riding to prevent galling. Crupper and breast-band do not seem to be used, but they are casual about their accoutrements, and the bit is the single, jaw-breaking curb which American war-pictures show us. That young man was very handsome, and the grey service hat most like the under half of a seedy terai shaded his strong face admirably as his horse backed and shivered and sidled and plunged all over the road, and he lectured from his saddle, one foot out of the heavy -hooded stir- rup, one hand on the sweating neck. "He's not used to the Park, this brute, and he's a confirmed bolter oil parade; but we understand each other." IVIioosh! went the steam -blast down the road with a dry roar. Round spun the troop horse prepared to bolt, and, his momentum being suddenly checked, reared till I thought he would fall back on his rider. " Oh no ; we've settled that little matter when I was breaking him," said Cen- taur. " He used to try to fall back on me. Isn't he a devil ? I think you'd laugh to see the way our regi- ments are horsed. Sometimes a big Montana beast like mine has a thirteen-two broncho pony for neighbour, and VOL. II G 82 FKOM SEA TO SEA it's annoying if you're used to better things. And oh, how you have to ride your mount ! It's necessary ; but I can tell you at the end of a long day's march, when you'd give all the world to ride like a sack, it isn't sweet to get extra drill for slouching. When we're turned out, we're turned out for anything not a fifteen-mile trot, but for the use and behoof of all the Northern States. I've been in Arizona. A trooper there who had been in India told me that Arizona was like Afghanistan. There's nothing under Heaven there except horned toads and rattlesnakes and Indians. Our trouble is that we only deal with Indians and they don't teach us much, and of course the citizens look down on us and all that. As a matter of fact, I suppose we're really only mounted infantry, but remember we're the best mounted infantry in the world." And the horse danced a fandango in proof. " My faith ! " said I, looking at the dusty blouse, grey hat, soiled leather accoutrements, and whalebone poise of the wearer. " If they are all like you, you are." " Thanks, whoever you may be. Of course if we were turned into a lawn-tennis court and told to resist, say, your heavy cavalry, we'd be ridden off the face of the earth if we couldn't get away. We have neither the weight nor the drill for a charge. My horse, for in- stance, by English standards, is half-broken, and like all the others, he bolts when we're in line. But cavalry charge against cavalry charge doesn't happen often, and if it did, well all our men know that up to a hun- dred yards they are absolutely safe behind this old thing." He patted his revolver pouch. " Absolutely safe from any shooting of yours. What man do you FKOM SEA TO SEA 83 think would dare to use a pistol at even thirty yards, if his life depended on it ? Not one of your men. They can't shoot. We can. You'll hear about that down the Park further up." Then he added, courteously : " Just now it seems that the English supply all the men to the American Army. That's what makes them so good perhaps." And with mutual expressions of good-will we parted he to an outlying patrol fifteen miles away, I to my buggy and the old lady, who, regarding the horrors of the fire-holes, could only say, " Good Lord ! " at thirty-second inter- vals. Her husband talked about " dreff el waste of steam- power," and we went on in the clear, crisp afternoon, speculating as to the formation of geysers. " What I say," shrieked the old lady apropos of mat- ters theological, " and what I say more, after having seen all that, is that the Lord has ordained a Hell for such as disbelieve his gracious works." Nota bene. Tom had profanely cursed the near mare for stumbling. He looked straight in front of him and said no word, but the left corner of his left eye flickered in my direction. " And if," continued the old lady, " if we find a thing so dreffel as all that steam and sulphur allowed on the face of the earth, musn't we believe that there is some- thing ten thousand times more terrible below prepared untoe our destruction ? " Some people have a wonderful knack of extracting comfort from things. I am ashamed to say I agreed ostentatiously with the old lady. She developed the personal view of the matter. " Now I shall be able to say something to Anna Fin- 84 FROM SEA TO SEA cher abcmt her way of living. Shan't I, Blake ? " This to her husband. " Yes," said he, speaking slowly after a heavy tiffin. " But the girl's a good girl ; " and they fell to arguing as to whether the luckless Anna Fincher really stood in need of lectures edged with Hell fire (she went to dances I believe), while I got out and walked in the dust along- side of Tom. " I drive blame cur'ous kinder folk through this place," said he. " Blame cur'ous. ' Seems a pity that they should ha' come so far just to liken Norris Basin to Hell. ' Guess Chicago would ha' served 'em, speaking in comparison, jest as good." We curved the hill and entered a forest of spruce, the path serpentining between the tree-boles, the wheels run- ning silent on immemorial mould. There was nothing alive in the forest save ourselves. Only a river was speak- ing angrily somewhere to the right. For miles we drove till Tom bade us alight and look at certain falls. Where- fore we stepped out of that forest and nearly fell down a cliff which guarded a tumbled river and returned demanding fresh miracles. If the water had run uphill, we should perhaps have taken more notice of it; but 'twas only a waterfall, and I really forget whether the water was warm or cold. There is a stream here called Firehole Eiver. It is fed by the overflow from the various geysers and basins, a warm and deadly river wherein no fish breed. I think we crossed it a few dozen times in the course of a day. Then the sun began to sink, and there was a taste of frost about, and we went swiftly from the forest into the open, dashed across a branch of the Firehole River FROM SEA TO SEA 85 and found a wood shanty, even rougher than the last, at which, after a forty-mile drive, we were to dine and sleep. Half a mile from this place stood, on the banks of the Firehole River, a " beaver-lodge," and there were rumours of bears and other cheerful monsters in the woods on the hill at the back of the building. In the cool, crisp quiet of the evening I sought that river, and found a pile of newly gnawed sticks and twigs. The beaver works with the cold-chisel, and a few clean strokes suffice to level a four-inch bole. Across the water on the far bank glimmered, with the ghastly white of peeled dead timber, the beaver-lodge a mass of dishevelled branches. The inhabitants had dammed the stream lower down and spread it into a nice little lake. The question was would they come out for their walk before it got too dark to see. They came blessings on their blunt muzzles, they came as shadows come, drifting down the stream, stirring neither foot nor tail. There were three of them. One went down to investi- gate the state of the dam ; the other two began to look for supper. There is only one thing more startling than the noiselessness of a tiger in the jungle, and that is the noiselessness of a beaver in the water. The straining ear could catch no sound whatever till they began to eat the thick green river-scudge that they call beaver-grass. I, bowed among the logs, held my breath and stared with all my eyes. They were not ten yards from me, and they would have eaten their dinner in peace so long as I had kept absolutely still. They were dear and desirable beasts, and I was just preparing to creep a step nearer when that wicked old lady from Chicago clattered down the bank, an umbrella in her hand, shrieking : " Beavers, 86 FKOM SEA TO SEA beavers ! Young man, whurr are those beavers ? Good Lord ! What was that now ? " The solitary watcher might have heard a pistol shot ring through the air. I wish it had killed the old lady, but it was only the beaver giving warning of danger with the slap of his tail on the water. It was exactly like the "phink" of a pistol fired with damp powder. Then there were no more beavers not a whisker-end. The lodge, however, was there, and a beast lower than any beaver began to throw stones at it because the old lady from Chicago said : " P'raps, if you rattle them up they'll come out. I do so want to see a beaver." Yet it cheers me to think I have seen the beaver in his wilds. Never will I go to the Zoo. That even, after supper 'twere flattery to call it dinner a Captain and a Subaltern of the cavalry post appeared at the hotel. These were the officers of whom the Mammoth Springs Captain had spoken. The Lieutenant had read every- thing that he could lay hands on about the Indian army, especially our cavalry arrangements, and was very full of a scheme for raising the riding Red Indians it is not every noble savage that will make a trooper into frontier levies a sort of Khyber guard. "Only," as he said ruefully, "there is no frontier these days, and all our Indian wars are nearly over. Those beautiful beasts will die out, and nobody will ever know what splendid cavalry they can make." The Captain told stories of Border warfare of am- bush, firing on the rear-guard, heat that split the skull better than any tomahawk, cold that wrinkled the very liver, night-stampedes of baggage-mules, raiding of cattle, and hopeless stern-chases into inhospitable hills, when FEOM SEA TO SEA 87 the cavalry knew that they were not only being outpaced but outspied. Then he spoke of one fair charge when a tribe gave battle in the open and the troopers rode in swordless, firing right and left with their revolvers and it was excessively uncomfy for that tribe. And I spoke of what men had told me of huntings in Burma, of hill-climbing in the Black Mountain affair, and so forth. " Exactly ! " said the Captain. " Nobody knows and nobody cares. What does it matter to the Down-Easter who Wrap-up-his-Tail was ? " " And what does the fat Briton know or care about Boh Hla-Oo ? " said I. Then both together : " Depend upon it, my dear Sir, the army in both Anglo-Saxon countries is a mischievously underestimated institution, and it's a pleasure to meet a man who," etc., etc. And we nodded triangularly in all good will, and swore eter- nal friendship. The Lieutenant made a statement which rather amazed me. He said that, on account of the scar- city of business, many American officers were to be found getting practical instruction from little troubles among the South American Republics. When the need broke out they would return. " There is so little for us to do, and the Republic has a trick of making us hedge and ditch for our pay. A little road-making on service is not a bad thing, but continuous navvying is enough to knock the heart out of any army." I agreed, and we sat up till two in the morning swap- ping the lies of East and West. As that glorious chief Man-afraid-of -Pink-Eats once said to the Agent on the Eeservation : " 'Melican officer good man. Heap good man. Drink me. Drink he. Drink me. Drink he. Drink lie. Me blind. Heap good man ! " No. XXXI ENDS WITH THE CANON OF THE YELLOWSTONE. THE MAIDEN FROM NEW HAMPSHIRE LARRY " WRAP-UP- HIS-TAIL " TOM THE OLD LADY FROM CHICAGO AND A FEW NATURAL PHENOMENA INCLUDING ONE BRITON. " What man would read and read the selfsame faces And like the marbles which the windmill grinds, Rub smooth forever with the same smooth minds, This year retracing last year's every year's dull traces, When there are woods and umnanstifled places ? ' ' Lowell. ONCE upon a time there was a carter who brought his team and a friend into the Yellowstone Park with- out due thought. Presently they came upon a few of the natural beauties of the place, and that carter turned his team into his friend's team howling : " Get back o' this, Jim. All Hell's alight under our noses." And they call the place Hell's Half-acre to this day. We, too, the old lady from Chicago, her husband, Tom, and the good little mares came to Hell's Half-acre, which is about sixty acres, and when Tom said : " Would you like to drive over it ? " we said : " Certainly no, and if you do, we shall report you to the authorities." There was a plain, blistejed and peeled and abominable, and it was given over to the sportings and spoutings of devils who threw mud and steam and dirt at each other with 88 FEOM SEA TO SEA 89 whoops and halloos and bellowing curses. The place smelt of the refuse of the Pit, and that odour mixed with the clean, wholesome aroma of the pines in our nostrils throughout the day. Be it known that the Park is laid out, like Ollendorf, in exercises of progressive difficulty. Hell's Half-acre was a prelude to ten or twelve miles of geyser formation. We passed hot streams boiling in the forest ; saw whiffs of steam beyond these, and yet other whiffs breaking through the misty green hills in the far distance; we trampled on sulphur, and sniffed things much worse than any sulphur which is known to the upper world ; and so came upon a park-like place where Torn suggested we should get out and play with the geysers. Imagine mighty green fields splattered with lime beds : all the flowers of the summer growing up to the very edge of the lime. That was the first glimpse of the geyser basins. The buggy had pulled up close to a rough, broken, blistered cone of stuff between ten and twenty feet high. There was trouble in that place moaning, splashing, gurgling, and the clank of machinery. A spurt of boiling water jumped into the air and a wash of water followed. I removed swiftly. The old lady from Chicago shrieked. " What a wicked waste ! " said her husband. I think they call it the Riverside Geyser. Its spout was torn and ragged like the mouth of a gun when a shell has burst there. It grumbled madly for a moment or two and then was still. I crept over the steaming lime it was the burning marl on which Satan lay and looked fearfully down its mouth. You should never look a gift geyser in the mouth. I beheld a hor- rible slippery slimy funnel with water rising and falling 90 FEOM SEA TO SEA ten feet at a time. Then the water rose to lip level with a rush and an infernal bubbling troubled this Devil's Bethesda before the sullen heave of the crest of a wave lapped over the edge and made me run. Mark the nature of the human soul ! I had begun with awe, not to say terror. I stepped back from the flanks of the Eiverside Geyser saying : " Pooh ! Is that all it can do ? " Yet for aught I knew the whole thing might have blown up at a minute's notice; she, he, or it being an arrangement of uncertain temper. We drifted on up that miraculous valley. On either side of us were hills from a thousand to fifteen feet high and wooded from heel to crest. As far as the eye could range forward were columns of steam in the air, mis- shapen lumps of lime, most like preadamite monsters, still pools of turquoise blue, stretches of blue corn- flowers, a river that coiled on itself twenty times, boulders of strange colours, and ridges of glaring, star- ing white. The old lady from Chicago poked with her parasol at the pools as though they had been alive. On one particu- larly innocent-looking little puddle she turned her back for a moment, and there rose behind her a twenty-foot column of water and steam. Then she shrieked and pro- tested that " she never thought it would ha' done it," and the old man chewed his tobacco steadily, and mourned for steam power wasted. I embraced the whitened stump of a middle-sized pine that had grown all too close to a hot pool's lip, and the whole thing turned over under my hand as a tree would do in a nightmare. From right and left came the trumpetings of elephants at play. I stepped into a pool of old dried blood rimmed with the FKOM SEA TO SEA 91 nodding cornflowers; the blood changed to ink even as I trod ; and ink and blood were washed away in a spurt of boiling sulphurous water spat out from the lee of a bank of flowers. This sounds mad, doesn't it ? A moonfaced trooper of German extraction never was Park so carefully patrolled came up to inform us that as yet we had not seen any of the real geysers, that they were all a mile or so up the valley, tastefully scat- tered round the hotel in which we would rest for the night. America is a free country, but the citizens look down on the soldier. I had to entertain that trooper. The old lady from Chicago would have none of him ; so we loafed along together, now across half-rotten pine logs sunk in swampy ground, anon over the ringing geyser formation, then knee-deep through long grass. " And why did you 'list ? " said I. The moonfaced one's face began to work. I thought he would have a fit, but he told me a story instead such a nice tale of a naughty little girl who wrote love letters to two men at once. She was a simple village wife, but a wicked " Family Novelette " countess couldn't have accomplished her ends better. She drove one man nearly wild with her pretty little treachery; and the other man abandoned her and came West to forget. Moonface was that man. We rounded a low spur of hill, and came out upon a field of aching snowy lime, rolled in sheets, twisted into knots, riven with rents and diamonds and stars, stretching for more than half a mile in every direction. In this place of despair lay most of the big geysers who know when there is trouble in Krakatoa, who tell the pines when there is a cyclone on the Atlantic seaboard, and who are ex- 92 FKOM SEA TO SEA hibited to visitors under pretty and fanciful names. The first mound that I encountered belonged to a goblin splashing in his tub. I heard him kick, pull a shower-bath on his shoulders, gasp, crack his joints, and rub himself down with a towel ; then he let the water out of the bath, as a thoughtful man should, and it all sank down out of sight till another goblin arrived. Yet they called this place the Lioness and the Cubs. It lies not very far from the Lion, which is a sullen, roaring beast, and they say that when it is very active the other geysers presently follow suit. After the Krakatoa eruption all the geysers went mad together, spouting, spurting, and bellowing till men feared that they would rip up the whole field. Mysterious sympathies exist among them, and when the Giantess speaks (of her more anon) they all hold their peace. I was watching a solitary spring, when, far across the fields, stood up a plume of spun glass, iridescent and superb, against the sky. " That," said the trooper, " is Old Faithful. He goes off every sixty-five minutes to the minute, plays for five minutes, and sends up a column of water a hundred and fifty feet high. By the time you have looked at all the other geysers he will be ready to play." So we looked and we wondered at the Beehive, whose mouth is built up exactly like a hive; at the Turban (which is not in the least like a turban) ; and at many, many other geysers, hot holes, and springs. Some of them rumbled, some hissed, some went off spasmodically, and others lay still in sheets of sapphire and beryl. Would you believe that even these terrible creatures have to be guarded by the troopers to prevent the irrever- FROM SEA TO SEA 93 ent American from chipping the cones to pieces, or worse still, making the geysers sick ? If you take of soft-soap a small barrelful and drop it down a geyser's mouth, that geyser will presently be forced to lay all before you and for days afterwards will be of an irritated and inconsis- tent stomach. When they told me the tale I was filled with sympathy. Now I wish that I had stolen soap and tried the experiment on some lonely little beast of a geyser in the woods. It sounds so probable and so human. Yet he would be a bold man who would administer emetics to the Giantess. She is flat-lipped, having no mouth, she looks like a pool, fifty feet long and thirty wide, and there is no ornamentation about her. At irregular intervals she speaks, and sends up a column of water over two hundred feet high to begin with ; then she is angry for a day and a half sometimes for two days. Owing to her peculiarity of going mad in the night not many people have seen the Giantess at her finest; but the clamour of her unrest, men say, shakes the wooden hotel, and echoes like thunder among the hills. When I saw her trouble was brewing. The pool bubbled seri- ously, and at five-minute intervals, sank a foot or two, then rose, washed over the rim, and huge steam bubbles broke on the top. Just before an eruption the water entirely disappears from view. Whenever you see the water die down in a geyser-mouth get away as fast as you can. I saw a tiny little geyser suck in its breath in this way, and instinct made me retire while it hooted after me. Leaving the Giantess to swear, and spit, and thresh about, we went over to Old Faithful, who by reason of 94 FROM SEA TO SEA his faithfulness has benches close to him whence you may comfortably watch. At the appointed hour we heard the water flying up and down the mouth with the sob of waves in a cave. Then came the preliminary gouts, then a roar and a rush, and that glittering col- umn of diamonds rose, quivered, stood still for a minute. Then it broke, and the rest was a confused snarl of water not thirty feet high. All the young ladies not more than twenty in the tourist band remarked that it was "elegant," and betook themselves to writing their names in the bottoms of shallow pools. Nature fixes the insult indelibly, and the after-years will learn that "Hattie," "Sadie," "Mamie," "Sophie," and so forth, have taken out their hair-pins, and scrawled in the face of Old Faithful. The congregation returned to the hotel to put down their impressions in diaries and note-books which they wrote up ostentatiously in the verandahs. It was a sweltering hot day, albeit we stood somewhat higher than the summit of Jakko, and I left that raw pine- creaking caravanserai for the cool shade of a clump of pines between whose trunks glimmered tents. A batch of troopers came down the road, and flung themselves across country into their rough lines. Verily the 'Meli- can cavalry-man can ride, though he keeps his accoutre- ments pig, and his horse cow-fashion. I was free of that camp in five minutes free to play with the heavy lumpy carbines, to have the saddles stripped, and punch the horses knowingly in the ribs. One of the men had been in the fight with "Wrap-up- his-Tail " before alluded to, and he told me how that great chief, his horse's tail tied up in red calico, swaggered FROM SEA TO SEA 95 in front of the United States cavalry, challenging all to single combat. But he was slain, and a few of his tribe with him. " There's no use in an Indian, anyway," concluded my friend. A couple of cowboys real cowboys, not the Buffalo Bill article jingled through the camp amid a shower of mild chaff. They were on their way to Cook City, I fancy, and I know that they never washed. But they were picturesque ruffians with long spurs, hooded stir- rups, slouch hats, fur weather-cloths over their knees, and pistol-butts easy to hand. "The cowboy's goin' under before long," said my friend. " Soon as the country's settled up he'll have to go. But he's mighty useful now. What should we do without the cowboy ? " " As how ? " said I, and the camp laughed. " He has the money. We have the know-how. He comes in in winter to play poker at the military posts. We play poker a few. When he's lost his money we make him drunk and let him go. Sometimes we get the wrong man." And he told a tale of an innocent cowboy who turned up, cleaned out, at a post, and played poker for thirty-six hours. But it was the post that was cleaned out when that long-haired Caucasian Ah Sin removed himself, heavy with everybody's pay, and de- clining the proffered liquor. " Naow," said the his- torian, " I don't play with no cowboy unless he's a little bit drunk first." Ere I departed I gathered from more than one man that significant fact that up to one hundred yards he felt absolutely secure behind his revolver. "In England, I understand," quoth a limber youth 96 FROM SEA TO SEA from the South, " in England a man aren't allowed to play with no firearms. He's got to be taught all that when he enlists. I didn't want much teaching how to shoot straight 'fore I served Uncle Sam. And that's just where it is. But you was talking about your horse guards now ? " I explained briefly some peculiarities of equipment connected with our crackest crack cavalry. I grieve to say the camp roared. " Take 'em over swainpy ground. Let 'em run around a bit an' work the starch out of 'em, an' then, Almighty, if we wouldn't plug 'em at ease I'd eat their horses ! " " But suppose they engaged in the open ? " said I. "Engage the Hades. Not if there was a tree-trunk within twenty miles they couldn't engage in the open ! " Gentlemen, the officers, have you ever seriously con- sidered the existence on earth of a cavalry who by preference would fight in timber ? The evident sin- cerity of the proposition made me think hard as I* moved over to the hotel and joined a party exploration, which, diving into the woods, unearthed a pit pool of burn- ingest water fringed with jet black sand all the ground near by being pure white. But miracles pall when they arrive at the rate of twenty a day. A flaming dragon- fly flew over the pool, reeled and dropped on the water, dying without a quiver of his gorgeous wings, and the pool said nothing whatever, but sent its thin steam wreaths up to the burning sky. I prefer pools that talk. There was a maiden a very trim maiden who had just stepped out of one of Mr. James's novels. She owned a delightful mother and an equally delightful 97 father, a heavy-eyed, slow-voiced man of finance. The parents thought that their daughter wanted change. She lived in New Hampshire. Accordingly, she had dragged them up to Alaska, to the Yosemite Valley, and was now returning leisurely via the Yellowstone just in time for the tail-end of the summer season at Saratoga. We had met once or twice before in the Park, and I had been amazed and amused at her critical commendation of the wonders that she saw. From that very resolute little mouth I received a lecture on American literature, the nature and inwardness of Washington society, the pre- cise value of Cable's works as compared with " Uncle Remus " Harris, and a few other things that had nothing- whatever to do with geysers, but were altogether delight- ful. Now an English maiden who had stumbled on a dust-grimed, lime-washed, sun-peeled, collarless wanderer come from and going to goodness knows where, would, her mother inciting her and her father brandishing his umbrella, have regarded him as a dissolute adventurer. Not so those delightful people from New Hampshire. They were good enough to treat me it sounds almost incredible as a human being, possibly respectable, probably not in immediate need of financial assistance. Papa talked pleasantly and to the point. The little maiden strove valiantly with the accent of her birth and that of her reading, and mamma smiled benignly in the background. Balance this with a story of a young English idiot I met knocking about inside his high collars, attended by a valet. He condescended to tell me that "you can't be too careful who you talk to in these parts," and stalked on, fearing, I suppose, every minute for his social chas- VOL. II H 98 FROM SEA TO SEA tity. Now that man was a barbarian (I took occasion to tell him so), for he comported himself after the manner of the head-hunters of Assam, who are at perpetual feud one with another. You will understand that these foolish tales are introduced in order to cover the fact that this pen can- not describe the glories of the Upper Geyser basin. The evening I spent under the lee of the Castle Geyser sitting on a log with some troopers and watching a baronial keep forty feet high spouting hot water. If the Castle went off first, they said the Giantess would be quiet, and vice versa; and then they told tales till the moon got up and a party of campers in the woods gave us all some- thing to eat. Next morning Tom drove us on, promising new won- ders. He pulled up after a few miles at a clump of brushwood where an army was drowning. I could hear the .sick gasps and thumps of the men going under, but when I broke through the brushwood the hosts had fled, and there were only pools of pink, black, and white lime, thick as turbid honey. They shot up a pat of mud every minute or two, choking in the effort. It was an uncanny sight. Do you wonder that in the old days the Indians were careful to avoid the Yellowstone ? Geysers are permissible, but nrnd is terrifying. The old lady from Chicago took a piece of it, and in half an hour it died into lime-dust and blew away between her fingers. All maya, illusion, you see ! Then we clinked over sulphur in crystals; there was a waterfall of boiling water; and a road across a level park hotly contested by the beavers. Every winter they build their dam and flood the low-lying land; every summer that dam FROM SEA TO SEA 99 is torn up by the Government, and for half a mile you must plough axle-deep in water, the willows brushing into the buggy, and little waterways branching off right and left. The road is the main stream just like the Bolan line in flood. If you turn up a byway, there is no more of you, and the beavers work your buggy into next year's dam. Then came soft, turfy forest that deadened the wheels, and two troopers on detachment duty came noise- lessly behind us. One was the Wrap-up-his-Tail man, and we talked merrily while the half-broken horses bucked about among the trees till we came to a mighty hill all strewn with moss agates, and everybody had to get out and pant in that thin air. But how intoxicating it was ! The old lady from Chicago clucked like an emancipated hen as she scuttled about the road cram- ming pieces of rock into her reticule. She sent me fifty yards down the hill to pick up a piece of broken bottle which she insisted was moss agate. "I've some o' that at home an' they shine. You go get it, young feller." As we climbed the long path the road grew viler and viler till it became without disguise the bed of a torrent ; and just when things were at their rockiest we emerged into a little sapphire lake but never sapphire was so blue called Mary's Lake; and that between eight and nine thousand feet above the sea. Then came grass downs, all on a vehement slope, so that the buggy follow- ing the new-made road ran on to the two off-wheels mostly, till we dipped head-first into a ford, climbed up a cliff, raced along a down, dipped again and pulled up dishevelled at " Larry's " for hinch and an hour's rest. Only " Larry " could have managed that school- 100 FKOM SEA TO SEA feast tent on the lonely hillside. Need I say that he was an Irishman ? His supplies were at their lowest ebb, but Larry enveloped us all in the golden glamour of his speech ere we had descended, and the tent with the rude trestle-table became a palace, the rough fare, delicacies of Delmonico, and we, the abashed recipients of Larry's imperial bounty. It was only later that I dis- covered I had paid eight shillings for tinned beef, biscuits, and beer, but on the other hand Larry had said : " Will I go out an' kill a buffalo ? " And I felt that for me and for me alone would he have done it. Everybody else felt that way. Good luck go with Larry ! " An' now you'll all go an' wash your pocket-handker- chiefs in that beautiful hot spring round the corner," said he. " There's soap an' a washboard ready, an' 'tis not every day that ye can get hot water for nothing." He waved us large-handedly to the open downs while he put the tent to rights. There Avas no sense of fatigue on the body or distance in the air. Hill and dale rode on the eyeball. I could have clutched the far- off snowy peaks by putting out my hand. Never was such maddening air. Why we should have washed pocket-handkerchiefs Larry alone knows. It appeared to be a sort of religious rite. In a little valley over- hung with gay painted rocks ran a stream of velvet brown and pink. It was hot hotter than the hand could bear and it coloured the boulders in its course. There was the maiden from New Hampshire, the old lady from Chicago, papa, mamma, the woman who chewed gum, and all the rest of them, gravely bending over a washboard and soap. Mysterious virtues lay in that queer stream. It turned the linen white as driven snow FROM SEA TO SEA 101 in five minutes, and then we lay on the grass and laughed with sheer bliss of being alive. This have I known once in Japan, once on the banks of the Columbia, what time the salmon came in and " California " howled, and once again in the Yellowstone by the light of the eyes of the maiden from New Hampshire. Four little pools lay at my elbow : one was of black water (tepid), one clear water (cold), one clear water (hot), one red water (boiling) ; my newly washed handkerchief covered them all. We marvelled as children marvel. " This evening we shall do the grand canon of the Yellowstone?" said the maiden. " Together ? " said I ; and she said yes. The sun was sinking when we heard the roar of falling waters and came to a broad river along whose banks we ran. And then oh, then ! I might at a pinch describe the infernal regions, but not the other place. Be it known to you that the Yellowstone Eiver has occasion to run through a gorge about eight miles long. To get to the bottom of the gorge it makes two leaps, one of about one hundred and twenty and the other of three hundred feet. I investigated the upper or lesser fall, which is close to the hotel. Up to that time nothing particular happens to the Yellowstone, its banks being only rocky, rather steep, -and plentifully adorned with pines. At the falls it comes round a corner, green, solid, ribbed with a little foam and not more than thirty yards wide. Then it goes over still green and rather more solid than before. After a minute or two you, sitting upon a rock directly above the drop, begin to understand that something has occurred ; that the river has jumped a huge distance between solid cliff walls and 102 FEOM SEA TO SEA what looks like the gentle froth of ripples lapping the sides of the gorge below is really the outcome of great waves. And the river yells aloud ; but the cliffs do not allow the yells to escape. That inspection began with curiosity and finished in terror, for it seemed that the whole world was sliding in chrysolite from under my feet. I followed with the others round the corner to arrive at the brink of the canon : we had to climb up a nearly perpendicular ascent to begin with, for the ground rises more than the river drops. Stately pine woods fringe either lip of the gorge, which is the Gorge of the Yellowstone. All I can say is that without warning or preparation I looked into a gulf seventeen hundred feet deep with eagles and fish-hawks circling far below. And the sides of that gulf were one wild welter of colour crimson, emerald, cobalt, ochre, amber, honey splashed with port- wine, snow-white, vermilion, lemon, and silver-grey, in wide washes. The sides did not fall sheer, but were graven by time and water and air into monstrous heads of kings, dead chiefs, men and women of the old time. So far below that no sound of its strife could reach us, the Yellowstone River ran a finger-wide strip of jade- green. The sunlight took those wondrous walls and gave fresh hues to those that nature had already laid there. Once I saw the dawn break over a lake in Eaj- putana and the sun set over the Oodey Sagar amid a circle of Holman Hunt hills. This time I was watch- ing both performances going on below me upside down you understand and the colours were real ! The canon was burning like Troy town ; but it would burn for ever, and, thank goodness, neither pen nor brush could ever FROM SEA TO SEA 103 portray its splendours adequately. The Academy would reject the picture for a chromolithograph. The public would scoff at the letter-press for Daily Telegraphese. " I will leave this thing alone," said I ; " 'tis my peculiar property. Nobody else shall share it with me." Even- ing crept through the pines that shadowed us, but the full glory of the day flamed in that canon as we went out very cautiously to a jutting piece of rock blood- red or pink it was that overhung the deepest deeps of all. Now I know what it is to sit enthroned amid the clouds of sunset. Giddiness took away all sensation of touch or form ; but the sense of blinding colour re- mained. When I reached the mainland again I had sworn that I had been floating. The maid from New Hampshire said no word for a very long time. She then quoted poetry, which was perhaps the best thing she could have done. " And to think that this show-place has been going on all these days an' none of we ever saw it," said the old lady from Chicago, with an acid glance at her husband. "No, only the Injuns," said he, unmoved; and the maiden and I laughed long. Inspiration is fleeting, beauty is vain, and the power of the mind for wonder limited. Though the shining hosts themselves had risen choiring from the bottom of the gorge they would not have prevented her papa and one baser than himself from rolling stones down those stupendous rainbow- washed slides. Seventeen hundred feet of steepest pitch and rather more than seventeen hundred colours for log or boulder to whirl through ! So we heaved things and saw them gather way and bound from white rock to red or yellow, dragging behind them torrents of 104 FKOM SEA TO SEA colour, till the noise of their descent ceased and they bounded a hundred yards clear at the last into the Yellowstone. " I've been down there," said Tom that evening. " It's easy to get down if you're careful just sit and slide; but getting up is worse. An' I found, down below there, two rocks just marked with a pictur of the canon. I wouldn't sell those rocks not for fifteen dollars." And papa and I crawled down to the Yellowstone just above the first little fall to wet a line for good luck. The round moon carne up and turned the cliffs and pines into silver; a two-pound trout came up also, and we slew him among the rocks, nearly tumbling into that wild river. Then out and away to Livingstone once more. The maiden from New Hampshire disappeared; papa and mamma with her disappeared. Disappeared, too, the old lady from Chicago and all the rest, while I thought of all that I had not seen the forest of petrified trees with amethyst crystals in their black hearts; the great Yellowstone Lake where you catch your trout alive in one spring and drop him into another to boil him; and most of all of that mysterious Hoodoo region where all the devils not employed in the geysers live and kill the wandering bear and elk, so that the scared hunter finds in Death Gulch piled carcasses of the dead whom no man has smitten. Hoodoo-land with the overhead noises, the bird and beast and devil-rocks, the mazes and the bottomless pits, all these things I missed. On the re- turn road Yankee Jim and Diana of the Crossways gave FEOM SEA TO SEA 105 me kindly greeting as the train paused an instant before their door, and at Livingstone whom should I see but Tom the driver? " I've done with the Yellowstone and decided to clear out East somewheres," said he. "Your talkin' about movin' round so gay an' careless made me kinder rest- less ; I'm movin' out." Lord f orgie us for our responsibility one to another ! " And your partner ? " said I. "Here's him," said Tom, introducing a gawky youth with a bundle ; and I saw those two young men turn their faces to the East. No. XXXII OF THE AMERICAN ARMY AND THE CITY OF THE SAINTS. THE TEMPLE, THE UOOK OF MORMON, AND THE GIRL FROM DORSET. AN ORIENTAL CONSIDERA- TION OF POLYGAMY. "A fool also is full of words : a man cannot tell what shall be ; and what shall be after him who can tell ? " IT has just occurred to me with great force that de- lightful as these letters are to myself their length and breadth and depth may be just the least little bit in the world wearisome to you over there. I will compress myself rigorously, though I should very much like to deliver a dissertation on the American Army and the possibilities of its extension. The American army is a beautiful little army. Some day, when all the Indians are happily dead or drunk, it ought to make the finest scientific and survey corps that the world has ever seen. It does excellent work now, but there is this defect in its nature : it is officered, as you know, from West Point, but the mischief of it is that West Point seems to be created for the purpose of spreading a general knowledge of military matters among the people. A boy goes up to that institution, gets his pass, and returns to civil life, so they tell me, with a dangerous knowledge that he is a sucking Moltke, and may apply his learning when occasion offers. Given trouble, that man will be a nuisance, because he 106 PROM SEA TO SEA 107 \ is a hideously versatile American to begin with, as cock sure of himself as a man can be, and with all the racial disregard for human life to back him through his demi- semi-professional generalship. In a country where, as the records of the daily papers show, men engaged in a conflict with police or jails are all too ready to adopt a military formation, and get heavily shot in a sort of cheap, half-instructed warfare instead of being decently scared by the appearance of the military, this sort of arrangement does not seem wise. The bond between the States is of amazing tenuity. So long as they do not absolutely march into the District of Columbia, sit on the Washington statues, and invent a flag of their own, they can legislate, lynch, hunt negroes through swamps, divorce, railroad, and rampage as much as ever they choose. They do not need knowledge of their own military strength to back their genial law- lessness. That Eegular Army, which is a dear little army, should be kept to itself, blooded on detachment duty, turned into the paths of science, and now and again assembled at feasts of Freemasons and so forth. It's too tiny to be a political power. The immortal wreck of the Grand Army of the Republic is a political power of the largest and most unblushing description. It ought not to help to lay the foundations of an amateur military power that is blind and irresponsible. . . . Be thankful that the balance of this lecture is sup- pressed, and with it the account of a " shiveree " which I attended in Livingstone City : and the story of the edi- tor and the sub-editor (the latter was a pet cougar, or mountain lion, who used, they said, skilfully to sub-edit disputants in the office) of the Livingstone daily paper. 108 FROM SEA TO SEA Omitting a thousand matters of first importance, let me pick up the thread of things on a narrow-gauge line that took me down to Salt Lake. The run between Delhi and Ahmedabad on a May day would have been bliss compared to this torture. There was nothing but glare and desert and alkali dust. There was no smok- ing-accommodation. I sat in the lavatory with the conductor and a prospector who told stories about Indian atrocities in the voice of a dreaming child oath following oath as smoothly as clotted cream laps the mouth of the jug. I don't think he knew he was saying anything out of the way, but nine or ten of those oaths were new to me, and one even made the conductor raise his eyebrows. "And when a man's alone mostly, leadin' his horse across the hills, he gets to talk aloud to himself as it was," said the weather-worn retailer of tortures. A vision rose before me of this man trampling the Ban- nack City trail under the stars swearing, always swearing. Bundles of rags that were pointed out as Red Indians, boarded the train from time to time. Their race privi- leges allow them free transit on the platforms of the cars. They mustn't come inside of course, and equally of course the train never thinks of pulling up for them. I saw a squaw take us flying and leave us in the same manner when we were spinning round a curve. Like the Punjabi, the Red Indian gets out by preference on the trackless plain and walks stolidly to the horizon. He never says where he is going. . . . Salt Lake. I am concerned for the sake of Mr. Phil Robinson, his soul. You will remember that he wrote FROM SEA TO SEA 109 a book called Saints and Sinners in which he proved very prettily that the Mormon was almost altogether an esti- mable person. Ever since my arrival at Salt Lake I have been wondering what made him write that book. On mature reflection, and after a long walk round the city, I am inclined to think it was the sun, which is very powerful hereabouts. By great good luck the evil-minded train, already delayed twelve hours by a burnt bridge, brought me to the city on a Saturday by way of that valley which the Mormons aver their efforts had caused to blossom like the rose. Some hours previously I had entered a new world where, in conversation, every one was either a Mormon or a Gentile. It is not seemly for a free and independent citizen to dub himself a Gentile, but the Mayor of Ogden which is the Gentile city of the valley told me that there must be some distinc- tion between the two flocks. Long before the fruit orchards of Logan or the shining levels of the Salt Lake had been reached that Mayor himself a Gentile, and one renowned for his dealings with the Mormons told me that the great question of the existence of the power within the power was being gradually solved by the ballot and by education. " We have," quoth he, " hills round and about here, stuffed full of silver and gold and lead, and all Hell atop of the Mormon church can't keep the Gentile from flocking in when that's the case. At Ogden, thirty miles from Salt Lake, this year the Gen- tile vote swamped the Mormon at the Municipal elec- tions, and next year we trust that we shall be able to repeat our success in Salt Lake itself. In that city the Gentiles are only one-third of the total population, 110 FKOM SEA TO SEA but the mass of 'em are grown men, capable of voting. Whereas the Mormons are cluttered up with children. I guess as soon as we have purely Gentile officers in the township, and the control of the policy of the city, the Mormons will have to back down considerable. They're bound to go before long. My own notion is that it's the older men who keep alive the opposition to the Gentile and all his works. The younger ones, spite of all the elders tell 'em, will mix with the Gentile, and read Gentile books, and you bet your sweet life there's a holy influence working toward con- version in the kiss of an average Gentile specially when the girl knows that he won't think it necessary for her salvation to load the house up with other woman-folk. I guess 'the younger generation are giv- ing sore trouble to the elders. What's that you say about polygamy? It's a penal offence now under a Bill passed not long ago. The Mormon has to elect one wife and keep to her. If he's caught visiting any of the others do you see that cool and restful brown stone building way over there against the hill- side ? That's the penitentiary. He is sent there to consider his sins, and he pays a fine, too. But most of the police in Salt Lake are Mormons, and I don't sup- pose they are too hard on their friends. I presoom there's a good deal of polygamy practised on the sly. But the chief trouble is to get the Mormon to see that the Gentile isn't the doubly-damned beast that the elders represent. Only get the Gentiles well into the State, and the whole concern is bound to go to pieces in a very little time." And the wish being father to the thought, " Why, cer- FROM SEA TO SEA 111 tainly," said I, and began to take in the valley of Dese- ret, the home of the latter-day saints, and the abode perhaps of as much misery as has ever been compressed into forty years. The good folk at home will not under- stand, but you will, what follows. You know how in Bengal to this day the child-wife is taught to curse her possible co-wife, ere yet she has gone to her husband's house? And the Bengali woman has been accustomed to polygamy for a few hundred years. You know, too, the awful jealousy between mother wife and barren behind the purdah the jealousy that culminates sometimes in the poisoning of the well-beloved son ? Now and again, an Englishwoman employs a high-caste Mussulman nurse, and in the offices of that hire women are apt to forget the differences of colour, and to speak unreservedly as twin daughters under Eve's curse. The nurse tells very strange and awful things. She has, and this the Mormons count a privilege, been born into polygamy ; but she loathes and detests it from the bottom of her jealous soul. And to the lot of the Bengali co-wife " the cursed of the cursed the daughter of the dunghill the scald-head and the barren-mute" (you know the rest of that sweet commination-service) one creed, of all the White creeds to-day, deliberately introduces the white woman taken from centuries of training, which have taught her that it is right to control the undivided heart of one man. To quench her most natural rebellion, that amazing creed and fantastic jumble of Mahometan- ism, the Mosaical law, and imperfectly comprehended fragments of Freemasonry, calls to its aid all the powers of a hell conceived and elaborated by coarse-minded hedgers and ditchers. A sweet view, isn't it? 112 FROM SEA TO SEA All the beauty of the valley could not make me forget it. But the valley is very fair. Bench after bench of land, flat as a table against the flanks of the ringing hills, marks where the Salt Lake rested for a while as it sunk from an inland sea to a lake fifty miles long and thirty broad. Before long the benches Avill be covered with houses. At present these are hidden among the green trees on the dead flat of the valley. You have read a hundred times how the streets of Salt Lake City are very broad, furnished with rows of shade trees and gutters of fresh water. This is true, but I struck the town in a season of great drouth that same drouth which is playing havoc with the herds of Montana. The trees were limp, and the rills of sparkling water that one reads about were represented by dusty, paved courses. Main Street appears to be inhabited by the commercial Gentile, who has made of it a busy, bustling thorough- fare, and, in the eye of the sun, swigs the ungodly lager and smokes the improper cigar all day long For which I like him. At the head of Main Street stand the lions of the place; the Temple and the Tabernacle, the Tithing House, and the houses of Brigham Young, whose portrait is on sale in most of the booksellers' shops. Incidentally it may be mentioned that the late Amir of Utah does not unremotely resemble His Highness the Amir of Afghanistan, whom these fortunate eyes have seen. And I have no desire to fall into the hands of the Amir. The first thing to be seen was, of course, the Temple, the outward exponent of a creed. Armed with a copy of the Book of Mormon, for better compre- hension, I went to form rash opinions. Some day the Temple will be finished. It was begun only thirty years FROM SEA TO SEA 113 ago, and up to date rather more than three million dol- lars and a half have been expended in its granite bulk. The walls are ten feet thick ; the edifice itself is about a hundred feet high ; and its towers will be nearly two hun- dred. And that is all there is of it, unless you choose to inspect more closely; always reading the Book of Mor- mon as you walk. Then the wondrous puerility, of what I suppose we must call the design, becomes apparent. These men, directly inspired from on High, heaped stone on stone and pillar on pillar, without achieving either dignity, relief, or interest. There is, over the main door, some pitiful scratching hi stone representing the all-see- ing eye, the Masonic grip, the sun, moon, and stars, and, perhaps, other skittles. The flatness and meanness of the thing almost makes you weep when you look at the mag- nificent granite in blocks strewn abroad, and think of the art that three million dollars might have called in to the aid of the church. It is as though a child had said: "Let us draw a great, big, fine house finer than any house that ever was," and in that desire had laboriously smudged along with a ruler and pencil, piling meaning- less straight lines on compass-drawn curves, with his tongue following every movement of the inept hand. Then sat I down on a wheelbarrow and read the Book of Mormon, and behold the spirit of the book was the spirit of the stone before me. The estimable Joseph and Hyrum Smith struggling to create a new Bible, when they knew nothing of the history of Old and New Testament, and the inspired architect muddling with his bricks they were brothers. But the book was more interesting than the building. It is written, and all the -world has read, how to Joseph Smith an angel TOL. u i 114 FKOM SEA TO SEA came down from Heaven with a pair of celestial gig- lamps, whereby he was marvellously enabled to inter- pret certain plates of gold scribbled over with dots and scratches, and discovered by him in the ground. Which plates Joseph Smith did translate only he spelt the mysterious characters " caractors " and out of the dots and scratches produced a volume of six hundred closely printed pages, containing the books of Nephi, first and second, Jacob, Enos, Jarorn, Omni, Mor- mon, Mosiah, the Kecord of Zeniff, the book of Alma Helaman, the third of Nephi, the book of Ether (the whole thing is a powerful anaesthetic, by the way), and the final book of Mononi. Three men, of whom one I believe is now living, bear solemn witness that the angel with the spectacles appeared unto them; eight other men swear solemnly that they have seen the golden plates of the revelation ; and upon this testimony the book of Mormon stands. The Mormon Bible begins at the days of Zedekiah, King of Judah, and ends in a wild and weltering quagmire of tribal fights, bits of revelation, and wholesale cribs from the Bible. Very sincerely did I sympathise with the inspired brothers as I waded through their joint production. As a humble fellow-worker in the field of fiction, I knew what it was to get good names for one's characters. But Joseph and Hyrum were harder bestead than ever I have been ; and bolder men to boot. They created Teancum and Corian- tumy Pahorau, Kishkumen, and Gadianton, and other priceless names which the memory does not hold; but of geography they wisely steered clear, and were astutely vague as to the localities of places, because you see they were by no means certain what lay in the next county FKOM SEA TO SEA 115 to their own. They marched and countermarched blood- thirsty armies across their pages; and added new and amazing chapters to the records of the New Testament, and reorganised the heavens and the earth as it is always lawful to do in. print. But they could not achieve style, and it was foolish of them to let into their weird Mosaic pieces of the genuine Bible whenever the labouring pen dropped from its toilsome parody to a sentence or two of vile, bad English or downright "penny dreadfulism." "And Moses said unto the people of Israel: 'Great Scott! what air you doing?"' There is no sentence in the Book of Mormon word for word like the foregoing; but the general tone is not widely different. There are the makings of a very fine creed about Mor- monism. To begin with, the Church is rather more abso- lute than that of Eome. Drop the polygamy plank in the platform, but on the other hand deal lightly with certain forms of excess. Keep the quality of the re- cruits down to a low mental level and see that the best of the agricultural science available is in the hands of the Elders, and you have there a first-class engine for pioneer work. The tawdry mysticism and the borrow- ings from Freemasonry serve the low-caste Swede and the Dane, the Welshman and the Cornish cottar, just as well as a highly organised Heaven. I went about the streets and peeped into people's front windows, and the decorations upon the tables were after the manner of the year 1850. Main Street was full of country folk from the outside come in to trade with the Zion Mercantile Co-operative Institute. The Church, I fancy, looks after the finances of this thing, and it consequently pays good dividends. The faces of 116 FROM SEA TO SEA the women were not lovely. Indeed, but for the cer- tainty that ugly persons are just as irrational in the mat- ter of undivided love as the beautiful, it seemed that polygamy was a blessed institution for the women, and that only the spiritual power could drive the hulking, board-faced men into it. The women wore hideous gar- ments, and the men seemed to be tied up with string. They would market all that afternoon, and on Sunday go to the praying-place. I tried to talk to a few of them, but they spoke strange tongues and stared and behaved like cows. Yet one woman, and not an altogether ugly one, confided to me that she hated the idea of Salt Lake City being turned into a show-place for the amusement of the Gentile. " If we 'ave our own institutions, that ain't no reason why people should come 'ere and stare at us, his it ? " The dropped " h " betrayed her. " And when did you leave England ? " I said. " Summer of '84. I am from Dorset," she said. " The Mormon agents was very good to us, and we was very poor. Now we're better off my father an' mother an' me." "Then you like the State ? " She misunderstood at first. " Oh, I ain't livin' in the state of polygamy. Not me yet. I ain't married. I like where I am. I've got things o' my own and some land." " But I suppose you will " "Not me. I ain't like them Swedes an' Danes. I ain't got nothin' to say for or against polygamy. It's the Elders' business, an' between you an' me I don't think it's going on much longer. You'll 'ear them in the 'ouse FROM SEA TO SEA 117 to-morrer talkin' as if it was spreadin' all over America. The Swedes they think it his. I know it hisn't." " But you've got your land all right." "Oh, yes, we've got our land an' we never say aught against polygamy o' course father an' mother an' me." It strikes me that there is a fraud somewhere. You've never heard of the rice-Christians, have you ? I should have liked to have spoken to the maiden at length, but she dived into the Zion Co-op, and a man cap- tured me, saying that it was my feounden duty to see the sights of Salt Lake. These comprised the egg-shaped Tabernacle, the Beehive, and town houses of Brigham Young; the same great ruffian's tomb with assorted samples of his wives sleeping round him (just as the eleven faithful ones sleep round the ashes of Run jit Singh outside Fort Lahore), and one or two other curiosi- ties. But all these things have been described by abler pens than mine. The animal-houses where Brigham used to pack his wives are grubby villas ; the Tabernacle is a shingled fraud, and the Tithing House where all the revenue returns seem to be made, much resembles a stable. The Mormons have a paper currency of their own ecclesiastical bank-notes which are exchanged for local produce. But the little boys of the place prefer the bullion of the Gentiles. It is not pleasant to be taken round a township with your guide stopping before every third house to say : " That's where Elder so and so kept Amelia Bathershins, his fifth wife no, his third. Amelia she was took on after Keziah, but Keziah was the Elder's pet, an' he didn't dare to let Amelia come across Keziah for fear of her spilin' Keziah's beauty." The Mussulmans are quite right. 118 FEOM SEA TO SEA The minute that all the domestic details of polygamy are discussed in the mouths of the people, that institu- tion is ready to fall. I shook off my guide when he had told me his very last doubtful tale, and went on alone. An ordered peace and a perfection of quiet lux- ury is the note of the city of Salt Lake. The houses stand in generous and well-groomed grass-plots, none very much worse or better than their neighbours. Creepers grow over the house fronts, and there is a very pleasant music of wind among the trees in the vast empty streets bringing a smell of hay and the flowers of summer. On a tableland overlooking all the city stands the United States garrison of infantry and artillery. The State of Utah can do nearly anything it pleases until that much-to-be-desired hour when the Gentile vote shall quietly swamp out Mormonism; but the garrison is kept there in case of accidents. The big, shark- mouthed, pig-eared, heavy-boned farmers sometimes take to their creed with wildest fanaticism, and in past years have made life excessively unpleasant for the Gentile when he was few in the land. But to-day, so far from killing openly or secretly, or burning Gentile farms, it is all the Mormon dares do to feebly try to boycott the interloper. His journals preach defiance to the United States Government, and in the Tabernacle of a Sunday the preachers follow suit. When I went down there the place was full of people who would have been much better for a washing. A man rose up and told them that they were the chosen of God, the elect of Israel, that they were to obey their priest, and that there was a good time coming. I fancy that they had heard all FROM SEA TO SEA 119 this before so many times it produced no impression whatever; even as the sublimest mysteries of another Faith lose salt through constant iteration. They breathed heavily through their noses and stared straight in front of them impassive as flatfish. And that evening I went up to the garrison post one of the most coveted of all the army commands and overlooked the City of the Saints as it lay in the circle of its forbidding hills. You can speculate a good deal about the mass of human misery, the loves frustrated, the gentle hearts broken, and the strong souls twisted from the law of life to a fiercer following of the law of death, that the hills have seen. How must it have been in the old days when the footsore emigrants broke through into the circle and knew that they were cut off from hope of return or sight of friends were handed over to the power of the friends that called themselves priests of the Most High ? " But for the grace of God there goes Richard Baxter," as the eminent divine once said. It seemed good that fate did not order me to be a brick in the up-building of the Mormon church, that has so aptly established herself by the borders of a lake bitter, salt, and hopeless. No. XXXIII HOW I MET CERTAIN PEOPLE OF IMPORTANCE BETWEEN SALT LAKE AND OMAHA. " Much have I seen, Cities and men." LET there be no misunderstanding about the matter. I love this People, and if any contemptuous criticism has to be done, I will do it myself. My heart has gone out to them beyond all other peoples ; and for the life of me I carfnot tell why. They are bleeding-raw at the edges, almost more conceited than the English, vulgar with a massive vulgarity which is as though the Pyramids were coated with Christmas-cake sugar-works. Cocksure they are, lawless and as casual as they are cocksure; but I love them, and I realised it when I met an Englishman who laughed at them. He proved conclusively that they were all wrong, from their tariff to their go-as-you-please Civil Service, and beneath the consideration of a true Briton. "I admit everything," said I. "Their Government's provisional ; their law's the notion of the moment ; their railways are made of hairpins and match-sticks, and most of their good luck lives in their woods and mines and rivers and not in their brains ; but for all that, they be the biggest, finest, and best people on the surface of the globe ! Just you wait a hundred years and see how 120 FROM SEA TO SEA 121 they'll behave when they've had the screw put on them and have forgotten a few of the patriarchal teachings of the late Mister George Washington. Wait till the Anglo- American-German-Jew the Man of the Future is prop- erly equipped. He'll have just the least little kink in his hair now and again ; he'll carry the English lungs above the Teuton feet that can walk for ever ; and he will wave long, thin, bony Yankee hands with the big blue veins on the wrist, from one end of the earth to the other. He'll be the finest writer, poet, and dramatist, 'specially dramatist, that the world as it recollects itself has ever seen. By virtue of his Jew blood just a little, little drop he'll be a musician and a painter too. At present there is too much balcony and too little Romeo in the life- plays of his fellow-citizens. Later on, when the propor- tion is adjusted and he sees the possibilities of his land, he will produce things that will make the effete East stare. He will also be a complex and highly composite administrator. There is nothing known to man that he will not be, and his country will sway the world with one foot as a man tilts a see-saw plank ! " "But this is worse than the Eagle at its worst. Do you seriously believe all that ? " said the Englishman. "If I believe anything seriously, all this I most firmly believe. You wait and see. Sixty million people, chiefly of English instincts, who are trained from youth to believe that nothing is impossible, don't slink through the centuries like Russian peasantry. They ai?e bound to leave their mark somewhere, and don't you forget it." But isn't it sad to think that with all Eternity behind and before us we cannot, even though we would pay for it with sorrow, filch from the Immensities one hundred 122 FKOM SEA TO SEA poor years of life, wherein to watch, the two Great Experiments? A hundred years hence India and America will be worth observing. At present the one is burned out and the other is only just stoking up. When I left my opponent there was much need for faith, because I fell into the hands of a perfectly delight- ful man whom I had met casually in the street, sitting in a chair on the pavement, smoking a huge cigar. He was a commercial traveller, and his beat lay through Southern Mexico, and he told me tales, of forgotten cities, stone gods up to their sacred eyes in forest growth, Mexican priests, rebellious, and dictatorships, that made my hair curl. It was he who dragged me forth to bathe in Salt Lake, which is some fifteen miles away from the city, and reachable by many trains which are but open tram-cars. The track, like all American tracks, was terrifying in its roughness ; and the end of the journey disclosed the nakedness of the accommoda- tion. There were piers and band houses and refresh- ment stalls built over the solid grey levels of the lake, but they only accentuated the utter barrenness of the place. Americans don't mix with their scenery as yet. And " Have faith," said the commercial traveller as he walked into water heavy as quicksilver. " Walk ! " I walked, and I walked till my legs flew up and I had to walk as one struggling with a high wind, but still I rode head and shoulders above the water. It was a horrible feeling, this inability to sink. Swimming was not much use. You couldn't get a grip of the water, so I e'en sat me down and drifted like a luxurious anemone among the hundreds that were bathing in that place. You could wallow for three-quarters of an FKOM SEA TO SEA 123 hour in that warm, sticky brine and fear no evil con- sequences; but when you came out you were coated with white salt from top to toe. And if you acci- dentally swallowed a mouthful of the water, ypu died. This is true, because I swallowed half a mouthful and was half-dead in consequence. The commercial traveller on our return journey across the level flats that fringe the lake's edge bade me note some of the customs of his people. The great open railway car held about a hundred men and maidens, "coming up with a song from the sea." They sang and they shouted and they exchanged witticisms of the most poignant, and comported themselves like their brothers and sisters over the seas the 'Arries and 'Arriets of the older world. And there sat behind me two modest maidens in white, alone and unattended. To these the privileged youth of the car a youth of a marvellous range of voice proffered undying affec- tion. They laughed, but made no reply in words. The suit was renewed, and with extravagant imagery ; the nearest seats applauding. When we arrived at the city the maidens turned and went their way up a dark tree- shaded street, and the boys elsewhere. Whereat, recol- lecting what the London rough was like, I marvelled that they did not pursue. "It's all right," said the commercial traveller. "If they had followed well, I guess some one would ha' shot 'em." The very next day on those very peaceful cars returning from the Lake some one was shot dead. He was what they call a " sport," which is American for a finished " leg," and he had an argument with a police officer, and the latter slew him. I saw his funeral go down the 124 FROM SEA TO SEA main street. There were nearly thirty carriages, filled with doubtful men, and women not in the least doubt- ful, and the local papers said that deceased had his merits, but it didn't much matter, because if the Sheriff hadn't dropped him he would assuredly have dropped the Sheriff. Somehow this jarred on my sensitive feel- ings, and I went away, though the commercial traveller would fain have entertained me in his own house, he know- ing not my name. Twice through the long hot nights we talked, tilting up our chairs on the sidewalk, of the future of America. You should hear the Saga of the States reeled off by a young and enthusiastic citizen who had just carved out for himself a home, filled it with a pretty little wife, and is preparing to embark on commerce on his own account. I was tempted to believe that pistol-shbts were regrettable accidents and lawlessness only the top scum on the great sea of humanity. I am tempted to believe that still, though baked and dusty Utah is very many miles behind me. Then chance threw me into the arms of another and very different commercial traveller, as we pulled out of Utah on our way to Omaha via the Rockies. He travelled in biscuits, of which more anon, and Fate had smitten him very heavily, having at one stroke knocked all the beauty and joy out of his poor life. So he journeyed with a case of samples as one dazed, and his eyes took no pleasure in anything that he saw. In his despair he had withdrawn himself to his re- ligion, he was a Baptist, and spoke of its consolation with the artless freedom that an American generally exhibits when he is talking about his most sacred FBOM SEA TO SEA 125 private affairs. There was a desert beyond Utah, hot and barren as Mian Mir in May. The sun baked the car-roof, and the dust caked the windows, and through the dust and the glare the man with the biscuits bore witness to his creed, which seems to include one of the greatest miracles in the world the immediate un- foreseen, self-conscious redemption of the soul by means very similar to those which turned Paul to the straight path. "You must experience religion," he repeated, his mouth twitching and his eyes black-ringed with his recent loss. " You must experience religion. You can't tell when you're goin' to get, or haow ; but it will come it will come, Sir, like a lightning stroke, an' you will wrestle with yourself before you receive full conviction and assurance." " How long does that take ? " I asked reverently. "It may take hours. It may take days. I knew a man in San Jo who lay under conviction for a month an' then he got the sperrit as you must git it." And then ? " " And then you are saved. You feel that, an' you kin endure anything," he sighed. " Yes, anything. I don't care what it is, though I allow that some things are harder than others." " Then you have to wait for the miracle to be worked by powers outside yourself. And if the miracle doesn't work ? " " But it must. I tell you it must. It comes to all who profess with faith." I learned a good deal about that creed as the train fled on; and I wondered as I learned. It was a strange 126 FROM SEA TO SEA thing to watch that poor human soul, broken and bowed by its loss, nerving itself against each new pang of pain with the iterated assurance that it was safe against the pains of Hell. The heat was stifling. We quitted the desert and launched into the rolling green plains of Colorado. Dozing uneasily with every removable rag removed, I was roused by a blast of intense cold and the drumming of a hundred drums. The train had stopped. Far as the eye could range the land was white under two feet of hail each hailstone as big as the top of a sherry- glass. I saw a yung colt by the side of the track standing with his poor little fluffy back to the pitiless pelting. He was pounded to death. An old horse met his doom on the run. He galloped wildly towards the train, but his hind legs dropped into a hole half water and half ice. He beat the ground with his fore-feet for a minute and then rolling over on his side submitted quietly to be killed. When the storm ceased, we picked our way cautiously and crippledly over a track that might give way at any moment. The Western driver urges his train much as does the Subaltern the bounding pony, and 'twould seem with an equal sense of responsibility. If a foot does go wrong, why there you are, don't you know, and if it is all right, why all right it is, don't you know. But I would sooner be on the pony than the train. This seems a good place wherein to preach on Ameri- can versatility. When Mr. Howells writes a novel, when a reckless hero dams a flood by heaving a dyna- mite-shattered mountain into it, or when a notoriety- hunting preacher marries a couple in a balloon, you shall FROM SEA TO SEA 127 hear the great American press rise on its hind legs and walk round mouthing over the versatility of the Ameri- can citizen. And he is versatile ' horribly so. The un- limited exercise of the right of private judgment (which, by the way, is a weapon not one man in ten is competent to handle), his blatant cocksureness, and the dry-air-bred restlessness that makes him crawl all over the furniture when he is talking to you, conspire to make him ver- satile. But what he calls versatility the impartial by- stander of Anglo-Indian extraction is apt to deem mere casualness, and dangerous casualness at that. No man can grasp the inwardness of an employ by the light of pure reason even though that reason be republican. He must serve an apprenticeship to one craft and learn that craft all the days of his life if he wishes to excel therein. Otherwise he merely " puts the thing through somehow;" and occasionally he doesn't. But wherein lies the beauty of this form of mental suppleness ? Old man California, whom I shall love and respect always, told me one or two anecdotes about American versatility and its consequences that came back to my mind with direful force as the train progressed. We didn't upset, but I don't think that that was the fault of the driver or the men who made the track. Take up you can easily find them the accounts of ten consecutive rail- way catastrophes not little accidents, but first-class fatalities, when the long cars turn over, take fire, and roast the luckless occupants alive. To seven out of the ten you shall find appended the cheerful state- ment: "The accident is supposed to have been due to the rails spreading." That means the metals were spiked down to the ties with such versatility that the 128 FKOM SEA TO SEA spikes or the tracks drew under the constant vibration of the traffic, and the metals opened out. No one is hanged for these little affairs. We began to climb hills, and then we stopped at night in darkness, while men threw sand under the wheels and crowbarred the track and then "guessed" that we might proceed. Not being in the least anxious to face my Maker half asleep and rubbing my eyes, I went forward to a common car, and was rewarded by two hours' conversation with the stranded, broken-down, husband- abandoned actress of a fourth-rate, stranded, broken- down, manager-bereft company. She was muzzy with beer, reduced to her last dollar, fearful that there would be no one to meet her at Omaha, and wept at intervals because she had given the conductor a five-dollar bill to change, and he hadn't come back. He was an Irishman, so I knew he couldn't steal, and I addressed myself to the task of consolation. I was rewarded, after a decent interval, by the history of a life so wild, so mixed, so des- perately improbable, and yet so simply probable, and above all so quick not fast in its kaleidoscopic changes that the Pioneer would reject any summary of it. And so you will never know how she, the beery woman with the tan- gled blond hair, was once a girl on a farm in far-off New Jersey. How he, a travelling actor, had wooed and won her, " but Paw he was always set against Alf," and how he and she embarked all their little capital on the word of a faithless manager who disbanded his com- pany a hundred miles from nowhere, and how she and Alf and a third person who had not yet made any noise in the world, had to walk the railway-track and beg from the farm-houses; how that third person arrived and FKOM SEA TO SEA 129 went away again with a wail, and how Alf took to the whisky and other things still more calculated to make a wife unhappy ; and how after barn-stormings, insults, shooting-scrapes, and pitiful collapses of poor compa- nies she had once won an encore. It was not a cheer- ful tale to listen to. There was a real actress in the Pullman, such an one as travels sumptuously with a maid and dressing-case, and my draggle-tail thought of appealing to her for help, but broke down after several attempts to walk into the car jauntily as befitted a sister in the profession. Then the conductor reappeared, the five-dollar bill honestly changed, and she wept by reason of beer and gratitude together, and then fell asleep waveringly, alone in the car, and became almost beautiful and quite kissable; while the Man with the Sorrow stood at the door between actress and actress and preached grim sermons on the certain end of each if they did not mend their ways and find regeneration through the miracle of the Baptist creed. Yes, we were a queer company going up to the Eockies together. I was the luckiest, because when a breakdown occurred, and we were delayed for twelve hours, I ate all the Baptist's sample-biscuits. They were various in composi- tion, but nourishing. Always travel with a "drummer." VOL. II K Ho. XXXIV ACROSS THE GREAT DIVIDE; AND HOW THE MAN GRING SHOWED ME THE GARMENTS OF THE ELLEWOMEN. AFTER much dallying and more climbing we came to a pass like all the Bolan Passes in the world, and the Black Canon of the Gunnison called they it. We had been climbing for very many hours, and attained a modest elevation of some seven or eight thousand feet above the sea, when we entered a gorge, remote from the sun, where the rocks were two thousand feet sheer, and where a rock-splintered river roared and howled ten feet below a track which seemed to have been built on the simple principle of dropping miscellaneous dirt into the river and pinning a few rails a-top. There was a glory and a wonder and a mystery about that mad ride which I felt keenly (you will find it properly dressed up in the guide-books), until I had to offer prayers for the safety of the train. There was no hope of seeing the track two hundred yards ahead. We seemed to be running into the bowels of the earth at the invitation of an irresponsible stream. Then the solid rock would open and disclose a curve of awful twistfulness. Then the driver put on all steam, and we would go round that curve on one wheel chiefly, the Gunnison River gnash- ing its teeth below. The cars overhung the edge of the water, and if a single one of the rails had chosen to 130 FKOM SEA TO SEA 131 spread, nothing in the wide world could have saved us from drowning. I knew we should damage something in the end the sombre horrors of the gorge, the rush of the jade-green water below, and the cheerful tales told by the conductor made me certain of the catastrophe. We had just cleared the Black Canon and another gorge, and were sailing out into open country nine thou- sand feet above the level of the sea, when we came most suddenly round a corner upon a causeway across a waste water half dam and half quarry-pool. The locomotive gave one wild " Hoo ! Hoo ! Hoo ! " but it was too late. He was a beautiful bull, and goodness only knows why he had chosen the track for a constitutional with his wife. She was flung to the left, but the cow-catcher caught him, and turning him round, heaved him shoulder deep into the pool. The expression of blank, blind be- wilderment on his bovine, jovine face was wonderful to behold. He was not angry. I don't think he was even scared, though he must have flown ten yards through the air. All he wanted to know was: "Will some- body have the goodness to tell a respectable old gentle- man what in the world, or out of it, has occurred?" And five minutes later the stream that had been snap- ping at our heels in the gorges split itself into a dozen silver threads on a breezy upland, and became an innocent trout beck, and we halted at a half-dead city, the name of which does not remain with me. It had originally been built on the crest of a wave of prosperity. Once ten thousand people had walked its street; but the boom had collapsed. The great brick houses and the factories were empty. The population livecl in little timber shinties on the fringes of the 132 FROM SEA TO SEA deserted town. There were some railway workshops and things, and the hotel (whose pavement formed the platform of the railway) contained one hundred and more rooms empty. The place, in its half- inhabitedness, was more desolate than Amber or Chitor. But a man said : " Trout' six pounds two miles away," and the Sorrowful Man and myself went in search of 'em. The town was ringed by a circle of hills all alive with little thunder-storms that broke across the soft green of the plain in wisps and washes of smoke and amber. To our tiny party associated himself a lawyer from Chicago. We foregathered on the question of flies, but I didn't expect to meet Elijah Pogram in the flesh. He delivered orations on the future of England and America, and of the Great Federation that the years will bring forth when America and England will belt the globe with their linked hands. According to the notions of the British, he made an ass of himself, but for all his high-falutin he talked sense. I might knock through England on a four months' tour and not find a man cap- able of putting into words the passionate patriotism that possessed the little Chicago lawyer. And he was a man with points, for he offered me three days' shooting in Illinois, if I would step out of my path a little. I might travel for ten years up and down England ere I found a man who would give a complete stranger so much as a sandwich, and for twenty ere I squeezed as much en- thusiasm out of a Britisher. He and I talked politics and trout-flies all one sultry day as we wandered up and down the shallows of the stream aforesaid. Little fish are sweet. I spent two hours whipping a ripple for a FROM SEA TO SEA 133 fish that I knew was there, and in the pasture-scented dusk caught a three-pounder on a ragged old brown hackle and landed him after ten minutes' excited argu- ment. He was a beauty. If ever any man works the Western trout-streams, he would do well to bring out with him the dingiest flies he possesses. The natives laugh at the tiny English hooks, but they hold, and duns and drabs and sober greys seem to tickle the aesthetic tastes of the trout. For salmon (but don't say that I told you) use the spoon gold on one side, silver on the other. It is as killing as is a similar article with fish of another calibre. The natives seem to use much too coarse tackle. It was a search for a small boy who should know the river that revealed to me a new phase of life slack, slovenly, and shiftless, but very interesting. There was a family in a packing-case hut on the outskirts of the town. They had seen the city when it was on the boom and made pretence of being the metropolis of the Eockies ; and when the boom was over, they did not go. She was affable, but deeply coated with dirt ; he was grim and grimy, and the little children were simply caked with filth of various descriptions. But they lived in a certain sort of squalid luxury, six or eight of them in two rooms ; and they enjoyed the local society. It was their eight-year-old son whom I tried to take out with me, but he had been catching trout all his life and " guessed he didn't feel like coming," though I proffered him six shillings for what ought to have been a day's pleasuring. "I'll stay with Maw," he said, and from that attitude I could not move him. Maw didn't attempt to argue with him. " If he says he won't come, he 134 FROM SEA TO SEA won't," she said, as though he were one of the elemental forces of nature instead of a spankable brat ; and " Paw," lounging by the store, refused to interfere. Maw told me that she had been a school-teacher in her not-so-distant youth, but did not tell me what I was dying to know how she arrived at this mucky tenement at the back of beyond, and why. Though preserving the prettinesses of her New England speech, she had come to regard washing as a luxury. Paw chewed tobacco and spat from time to time. Yet, when he opened his mouth for other purposes, he spoke like a well-educated man. There was a story there, but I couldn't get at it. Next day the Man with the Sorrow and myself and a few others began the real ascent of the Kockies ; up to that time our climbing didn't count. The train ran violently up a steep place and was taken to pieces. Five cars were hitched on to two locomotives, and two cars to one locomotive. This seemed to be a kind and thoughtful act, but I was idiot enough to go forward and watch the eoupling-on of the two rear cars in which Caesar and his fortunes were to travel. Some one had lost or eaten the regularly ordained coupling, and a man picked up from the tailboard of the engine a single iron link about as thick as a fetter-link watch-chain, and " guessed it would do." Get hauled up a Simla cliff by the hook of a lady's parasol if you wish to appreciate my sentiments when the cars moved uphill and the link drew tight. Miles away and two thousand feet above our heads rose the shoulder of a hill epauletted with the long line of a snow-tunnel. The first section of the cars crawled a quarter of a mile ahead of us, the track snaked and looped behind, and there was a black drop to the FROM SEA TO SEA 135 left. So we went up and up and up till the thin air grew thinner and the chunk-chunk-chunk, of the labour- ing locomotive was answered by the oppressed beating of the exhausted heart. Through the chequed light and shade of the snow tunnels (horrible caverns of rude tim- bering) we ground our way, halting now and again to allow a down-train to pass. One monster of forty min- eral-cars slid past, scarce held by four locomotives, their brakes screaming and chortling in chorus ; and in the end, after a glimpse at half America spread mapwise leagues below us, we halted at the head of the longest snow tunnel of all, on the crest of the divide, between ten and eleven thousand feet above the level of the sea, The locomotive wished to draw breath, and the passen- gers to gather the flowers that nodded impertinently through the chinks of the boarding. A lady passenger's nose began to bleed, and other ladies threw themselves down on the seats and gasped with the gasping train, while a wind as keen as a knife-edge rioted down the grimy tunnel. Then, despatching a pilot-engine to clear the way, we began the downward portion of the journey with every available brake on, and frequent shrieks, till after some hours we reached the level plain, and later the city of Denver, where the Man with the Sorrow went his way and left me to journey on to Omaha alone, after one hasty glance at Denver. The pulse of that town was too like the rushing mighty wind in the Rocky Mountain tunnel. It made me tired because complete strangers desired me to do something to mines which were in mountains, and to purchase building blocks upon inac- cessible cliffs; and once, a woman urged that I should 136 FROM SEA TO SEA supply her with strong drinks. I had almost forgotten that such attacks were possible in any land, for the out- ward and visible signs of public morality in American towns are generally safe-guarded. For that I respect this people. Omaha, Nebraska, was but a halting-place on the road to Chicago, but it revealed to me horrors that I would not willingly have missed. The city to casual investigation seemed to be populated entirely by Germans, Poles, Slavs, Hungarians, Croats, Magyars, and all the scum of the Eastern European States, but it must have been laid out by Americans. No other people would cut the traffic of a main street with two streams of railway lines, each some eight or nine tracks wide, and cheerfully drive tram-cars across the metals. Every now and again they have horrible railway-crossing accidents at Omaha, but nobody seems to think of build- ing an overhead-bridge. That would interfere with the vested interests of the undertakers. Be blessed to hear some details of one of that class. There was a shop the like of which I had never seen before : its windows were filled with dress-coats for men, and dresses for women. But the studs of the shirts were made of stamped cloth upon the shirt front, and there were no trousers to those coats nothing but a sweep of cheap black cloth falling like an abbe's frock. In the doorway sat a young man reading Pollock's Course of Time, and by that I knew that he was an un- dertaker. His name was Gring, which is a beautiful name, and I talked to him on the mysteries of his Craft. He was an enthusiast and an artist. I told him how corpses were burnt in India. Said he : " We're vastly superior. We hold that is to say, embalm our dead. FKOM SEA TO SEA 137 So ! " Whereupon he produced the horrible weapons of his trade, and most practically showed me how you " held " a man back from that corruption which is his birthright. " And I wish I could live a few generations just to see how my people keep. But I'm sure it's all right. Nothing can touch' em after I've embalmed 'em." Then he displayed one of those ghastly dress-suits, and when I laid a shuddering hand upon it, behold it crum- pled to nothing, for the white linen was sewn on to the black cloth and there was no back to it! That was the horror. The garment was a shell. " We dress a man in that," said Gring, laying it out tastily on the counter. " As you see here, our caskets have a plate- glass window in front" (Oh me, but that window in the coffin was fitted with plush like a brougham-window !), " and you don't see anything below the level of the man's waistcoat. Consequently . . ." He unrolled the terrible cheap black cloth that falls down over the stark feet, and I jumped back. " Of course a man can be dressed in his own clothes if he likes, but these are the regular things : and for women look at this ! " He took up the body of a high-necked dinner-dress in subdued lilac, slashed and puffed and bedeviled with black, but, like the dress-suit, backless, and below the waist turning to shroud. " That's for an old maid. But for young girls we give white with imitation pearls round the neck. That looks very pretty through the window of the casket you see there's a cushion for the head with flowers banked all round." Can you imagine anything more awful than to take your last rest as much of a dead fraud as ever you were a liv- ing lie to go into the darkness one half of you shaved, trimmed and dressed for an evening party, while the 138 FROM SEA TO SEA other half the half that your friends cannot see is enwrapped in a napping black sheet ? I know a little about burial customs in various places in the world, and I tried hard to make Mr. Gring com- prehend dimly the awful heathendom that he was re- sponsible for the grotesquerie the giggling horror of it all. But he couldn't see it. Even when he showed me a little boy's last suit, he couldn't see it. He said it was quite right to embalm and trick out and hypocritically bedizen the poor innocent dead in their superior cush- ioned and pillowed caskets with the window in front. Bury me cased in canvas like a fishing-rod, in the deep sea ; burn me on a back-water of the Hughli with damp wood and no oil ; pin me under a Pullman car and let the lighted stove do its worst ; sizzle me with a fallen electric wire or whelm me in the sludge of a broken river dam ; but may I never go down to the Pit grinning out of a plate-glass window, in a backless dress-coat, and the front half of a black stuff dressing-gown ; not though I were " held " against the ravage of the grave for ever and ever. Amen ! No. XXXV HOW I STRUCK CHICAGO, AND HOW CHICAGO STRUCK ME. OF RELIGION, POLITICS, AND PIG-STICKING, AND THE INCARNATION OF THE CITY AMONG SHAMBLES. " I know thy cunning and thy greed, Thy hard, high lust and wilful deed, And all thy glory loves to tell Of specious gifts material." I HAVE struck a city, a real city, and they call it Chicago. The other places do not count. San Fran- cisco was a pleasure-resort as well as a city, and Salt Lake was a phenomenon. This place is the first American city I have encountered. It holds rather more than a million people with bodies, and stands on the same sort of soil as Calcutta. Having seen it, I urgently desire never to see it again. It is inhabited by savages. Its water is the water of the Hugli, and its air is dirt. Also it says that it is the "boss" town of America. I do not believe that it has anything to do with this country. They told me to go to the Palmer House, which is a gilded and mirrored rabbit-warren, and there I found a huge hall of tessellated marble, crammed with people talking about money and spitting about every- where. Other barbarians charged in and out of this inferno with letters and telegrams in their hands, and 139 140 FROM SEA TO SEA yet others shouted at each other. A man who had drunk quite as much as was good for him told me that this was "the finest hotel in the finest city on God Almighty's earth." By the way, when an American wishes to indicate the next county or State he says, " God A'mighty's earth." This prevents discussion and flatters his vanity. Then I went out into the streets, which are long and flat and without end. And verily it is not a good thing to live in the East for any length of time. Your ideas grow to clash with those held by every right-thinking white man. I looked down interminable vistas flanked with nine, ten, and fifteen storied houses, and crowded with men and women, and the show impressed me with a great horror. Except in London and I have for- gotten what London is like I had never seen so many white people together, and never such a collection of miserables. There was no colour in the street and no beauty only a maze of wire-ropes overhead and dirty stone flagging underfoot. A cab-driver volunteered to show me the glory of the town for so much an hour, and with him I wandered far. He conceived that all this turmoil and squash was a thing to be reverently ad- mired ; that it was good to huddle men together in fifteen < layers, one atop of the other, and to dig holes in the ground for offices. He said that Chicago was a live town, and that all the creatures hurrying by me were engaged in business. That is to say, they were trying to make some money, that they might not die through lack of food to put into their bellies. He took me to canals, black as ink, and filled with untold abomina- tions, and bade me watch the stream of traffic across the FBOM SEA TO SEA 141 bridges. He then took me into a saloon, and, while I drank, made me note that the floor was covered with coins sunk into cement. A Hottentot would not have been guilty of this sort of barbarism. The coins made an effect pretty enough, but the man who put them there had no thought to beauty, and therefore he was a savage. Then my cab-driver showed me business-blocks, gay with signs and studded with fantastic and absurd advertise- ments of goods, and looking down the long street so adorned it was as though each vender stood at his door howling : " For the sake of money, employ or buy of me and me only ! " Have you ever seen a crowd at our famine relief distributions ? You know then how men leap into the air, stretching out their arms above the crowd in the hope of being seen ; while the women dolorously slap the stomachs of their children and whimper. I had sooner watch famine-relief than the white man engaged in what he calls legitimate competition. The one I understand. The other makes me ill. And the cabman said that these things were the proof of progress ; and by that I knew he had been reading his newspaper, as every intelligent American should. The papers tell their readers in language fitted to their comprehension that the snarling together of telegraph wires, the heaving up of houses, and the making of money is progress. I spent ten hours in that huge wilderness, wandering through scores of miles of these terrible streets, and jos- tling some few hundred thousand of these terrible people who talked money through their noses. The cabman left me : but after a while I picked up another man who was full of figures, and into my ears he poured them as occasion required or the big blank factories suggested. 142 FROM SEA TO SEA Here they turned out so many hundred thousand dollars' worth of such and such an article ; there so many million other things ; this house was worth so many million dol- lars ; that one so many million more or less. It was like listening to a child babbling of its hoard of shells. It was like watching a fool playing with buttons. But I was expected to do more than listen or watch. He de- manded that I should admire; and the utmost that I could say was : " Are these things so ? Then I am very sorry for you." That made him angry, and he said that insular envy made me unresponsive. So you see I could not make him understand. About four and a half hours after Adam was turned out of the garden of Eden he felt hungry, and so, bidding Eve take care that her head was not broken by the de- scending fruit, shinned up a cocoanut palm. That hurt his legs, cut his breast, and made him breathe heavily, and Eve was tormented with fear lest her lord should miss his footing and so bring the tragedy of this world to an end ere the curtain had fairly risen. Had I met Adam then, I should have been sorry for him. To-day I find eleven hundred thousand of his sons just as far advanced as their father in the art of getting food, and immeasurably inferior to him in that they think that their palm-trees lead straight to the skies. Consequently I am sorry in rather more than a million different ways. In our East bread comes naturally even to the poorest by a little scratching or the gift of a friend not quite so poor. In less favoured countries one is apt to forget. Then I went to bed. And that was on a Saturday night. Sunday brought me the queerest experience of all a revelation of barbarism complete. I found a place that FKOM SEA TO SEA 143 was officially described as a church. It was a circus really, but that the worshippers did not know. There were flow- ers all about the building, which was fitted up with plush and stained oak and much luxury, including twisted brass candlesticks of severest Gothic design. To these things, and a congregation of savages, entered suddenly a wonder- ful man completely in the confidence of their God, whom he treated colloquially and exploited very much as a newspaper reporter would exploit a foreign potentate. But, unlike the newspaper reporter, he never allowed his listeners to forget that he and not He was the centre of attraction. With a voice of silver and with imagery borrowed from the auction-room, he built up for his hearers a heaven on the lines of the Palmer House (but with all the gilding real gold and all the plate-glass diamond) and set in the centre of it a loud-voiced, argu- mentative, and very shrewd creation that he called God. One sentence at this point caught my delighted ear. It was apropos of some question of the Judgment Day and ran : "No ! I tell you God doesn't do business that way." He was giving them a deity whom they could compre- hend, in a gold and jewel heaven in which they could take a natural interest. He interlarded his performance with the slang of the streets, the counter, and the Ex- change, and he said that religion ought to enter into daily life. Consequently I presume he introduced it as daily life his own and the life of his friends. Then I escaped before the blessing, desiring no bene- diction at such hands. But the persons who listened seemed to enjoy themselves, and I understood that I had met with a popular preacher. Later on when I had perused the sermons of a gentleman called Talmage and 144 FROM SEA TO SEA some others, I perceived that. I had been listening to a very mild specimen. Yet that man, with Ids brutal gold and silver idols, his hands-in-pocket, cigar-in-mouth, and hat-on-the-back-of-the-head style of dealing with the sacred vessels would count himself spiritually quite competent to send a mission to convert the Indians. All that Sunday I listened to people who said that the mere fact of spiking down strips of iron to wood and getting a steam and iron thing to run along them was progress. That the telephone was progress, and the network of wires overhead was progress. They repeated their state- ments again and again. One of them took me to their city hall and board of trade works and pointed it out with pride. It was very ugly, but very big, and the streets in front of it were narrow and unclean. When I saw the faces of the men who did business in that building I felt that there had been a mistake in their billeting. By the way, 'tis a consolation to feel that I am not writing to an English audience. Then should I have to fall into feigned ecstasies over the marvellous progress of Chicago since the days of the great fire, to allude casually to the raising of the entire city so many feet above the level of the lake which it faces, and generally to grovel before the golden calf. But you, who are desperately poor, and therefore by these standards of no account, know things, and will understand when I write that they have managed to get a million of men to- gether on flat land, and that the bulk of these men appear to be lower than mahajans and not so companion- able as a punjabi jat after harvest. But I don't think it was the blind hurry of the people, their argot, and their FEOM SEA TO SEA 145 grand ignorance of things beyond their immediate inter- ests that displeased me so much as a study of the daily papers of Chicago. Imprimis, there was some sort of dispute between New York and Chicago as to which town should give an exhibition of products to be here- after holden, and through the medium of their more dignified journals the two cities were ya-hooing and hi- yi-ing at each other like opposition newsboys. They called it humour, but it sounded like something quite different. That was only the first trouble. The second lay in the tone of the productions. Leading articles which include gems such as: "Back of such and such a place," or " We noticed, Tuesday, such an event," or "don't" for "does not" are things to be accepted with thankfulness. All that made me want to cry was that, in these papers, were faithfully reproduced all the war- cries and " back-talk " of the Palmer House bar, the slang of the barbers' shops, the mental elevation and integrity of the Pullman-car porter, the dignity of the Dime Museum, and the accuracy of the excited fishwife. I am sternly forbidden to believe that the paper educates the public. Then I am compelled to believe that the public educate the paper? Just when the sense of unreality and oppression were strongest upon me, and when I most wanted help, a man sat at my side and began to talk what he called politics. I had chanced to pay about six shillings for a travelling- cap worth eighteen pence, and he made of the fact a text for a sermon. He said that this was a rich country and that the people liked to pay two hundred per cent on the value of a thing. They could afford it. He said that the Government imposed a protective duty of from ten VOL. II L 146 FROM SEA TO SEA to seventy per cent on foreign-made articles, and that the American manufacturer consequently could sell his goods for a healthy sum. Thus an imported hat would, with duty, cost two guineas. The American manufac- turer would make a hat for seventeen shillings and sell it for one pound fifteen. In these things, he said, lay the greatness of America and the effeteness of England. Competition between factory and factory kept the prices down to decent limits, but I was never to forget that this people were a rich people, not like the pauper Conti- nentals, and that they enjoyed paying duties. To my weak intellect this seemed rather like juggling with counters. Everything that I have yet purchased costs about twice as much as it would in England, and when native-made is of inferior quality. Moreover, since these lines were first thought of I have visited a gentleman who owned a factory which used to produce things. He owned the factory still. Not a man was in it, but he was drawing a handsome income from a syndicate of firms for keeping it closed in order that it might not produce things. This man said that if protection were abandoned, a tide of pauper labour would flood the coun- try, and as I looked at his factory I thought how entirely better it was to have no labour of any kind whatever, rather than face s.o horrible a future. Meantime, do you remember that this peculiar country enjoys paying money for value not received. I am an alien, and for the life of me cannot see why six shillings should be paid for eighteen-penny caps, or eight shillings for half- crown cigar-cases. When the country fills up to a de- cently populated level a few million people who are not aliens will be smitten with the same sort of blindness. FBOM SEA TO SEA 147 But my friend's assertion somehow thoroughly suited the grotesque ferocity of Chicago. See now and judge ! In the village of Isser Jang on the road to Montgomery there be four changar women who winnow corn some seventy bushels a year. Beyond their hut lives Puran Dass, the money-lender, who on good security lends as much as five thousand rupees in a year. Jowala Singh, the lohar, mends the village ploughs some thirty, broken at the share, in three hundred and sixty- five days; and Hukm Chund, who is letter-writer and head of the little club under the travellers' tree, generally keeps the village posted in such gossip as the barber and the midwife have not yet made public property. Chicago husks and winnows her wheat by the million bushels, a hundred banks lend hundreds of millions of dollars in the year, and scores of factories turn out plough gear and machinery by steam. Scores of daily papers do work which Hukm Chund and the barber and the mid- wife perform, with due regard for public opinion, in the village of . Isser Jang. So far as manufactures go, the difference between Chicago on the lake and Isser Jang on the Montgomery road is one of degree only, and not of kind. As far as the understanding of the uses of life goes Isser Jang, for all its seasonal cholera, has the advantage over Chicago. Jowala Singh knows and takes care to avoid the three or four ghoul-haunted fields on the outskirts of the village ; but he is not urged by millions of devils to run about all day in the sun and swear that hia ploughshares are the best in the Punjab; nor does Puran Dass fly forth in a cart more than once or twice a year, and he knows, on a pinch, how to use the railway and the telegraph as well as any son 148 FROM SEA TO SEA of Israel in Chicago. But this is absurd. The East is not the West, and these men must continue to deal with the machinery of life, and to call it progress. Their very preachers dare not rebuke them. They gloss over the hunting for money and the twice-sharpened bitter- ness of Adam's curse by saying that such things dower a man with a larger range of thoughts and higher aspira- tions. They do not say: "Free yourself from your own slavery," but rather, " If you can possibly manage it, do not set quite so much store on the things of this world." And they do not know what the things of this world are. I went off to see cattle killed by way of clearing my head, which, as you will perceive, was getting muddled. They say every Englishman goes to the Chicago stock- yards. You shall find them about six miles from the city; and once having seen them will never forget the sight. As far as the eye can reach stretches a township of cattle-pens, cunningly divided into blocks so that the animals of any pen can be speedily driven out close to an inclined timber path which leads to an elevated cov- ered way straddling high above the pens. These via- ducts are two-storied. On the upper storey tramp the doomed cattle, stolidly for the most part. On the lower, with a scuffling of sharp hooves and multitudi- nous yells, run the pigs. The same end is appointed for each. Thus you will see the gangs of cattle wait- ing their turn as they wait sometimes for days; and they need not be distressed by the sight of their fellows running about in the fear of death. All they know is that a man on horseback causes their next-door -neigh- bours to move by means of a whip. Certain bars and FROM SEA TO SEA 149 fences are unshipped, and, behold, that crowd have gone up the mouth of a sloping tunnel and return no more. It is different with the pigs. They shriek back the news of the exodus to their friends, and a hundred pens skirl responsive. It was to the pigs I first addressed myself. Selecting a viaduct which was full of them, as I could hear though I could not see, I marked a sombre building whereto it ran, and went there, not unalarmed by stray cattle who had managed to escape from their proper quarters. A pleasant smell of brine warned me of what was coming. I entered the factory and found it full of pork in barrels, and on another storey more pork unbarrelled, and in a huge room, the halves of swine for whose use great lumps of ice were being pitched in at the window. That room was the mortuary chamber where the pigs lie for a little while in state ere they begin their progress through such passages as kings may sometimes travel. Turning a corner and not noting an overhead arrangement of greased rail, wheel, and pulley, I ran into the arms of four eviscerated car- casses, all pure white and of a human aspect, being pushed by a man clad in vehement red. When I leaped aside, the floor was slippery under me. There was a flavour of farmyard in my nostrils and the shouting of a multitude in my ears. But there was no joy in that shouting. Twelve men stood in two lines six a-side. Between them and overhead ran the railway of death that had nearly shunted me through the window. Each man carried a knife, the sleeves of his shirt were cut off at the elbows, and from bosom to heel he was blood- red. The atmosphere was stifling as a night in the Rains, by reason of the steam and the crowd. I 150 FROM SEA TO SEA climbed to the beginning of things and, perched upon a narrow beam, overlooked very nearly all the pigs ever bred in Wisconsin. They had just been shot out of the mouth of the viaduct and huddled together in a large pen. Thence they were flicked persuasively, a few at a time, into a smaller chamber, and there a man fixed tackle on their hinder legs so that they rose in the air suspended from the railway of death. Oh ! it was then they shrieked and called on their mothers and made promises of amendment, till the tackle-man punted them in their backs, and they slid head down into a brick-floored passage, very like a big kitchen sink that was blood-red. There awaited them a red man with a knife which he passed jauntily through their throats, and the full-voiced shriek became a sputter, and then a fall as of heavy tropical rain. The red man who was backed against the passage wall stood clear of the wildly kicking hoofs and passed his hand over his eyes, not from any feeling of com- passion, but because the spurted blood was in his eyes, and he had barely time to stick the next arrival. Then that first stuck swine dropped, still kicking, into a great vat of boiling water, and spoke no more words, but wallowed in obedience to some unseen machinery, and presently came forth at the lower end of the vat and was heaved on the blades of a blunt paddle-wheel-thing which said, " Hough ! Hough ! Hough ! " and skelped all the hair off him except what little a couple of men with knives could remove. Then he was again hitched by the heels to that said railway and passed down the line of the twelve men each man with a knife leaving with each man a certain amount of his indi- FROM SEA TO SEA 151 viduality which was taken away in a wheel-barrow, and when he reached the last man he was very beautiful to behold, but immensely unstuffed and limp. Prepon- derance of individuality was ever a bar to foreign travel. That pig could have been in no case to visit you in India had he not parted with some of his most cherished notions. The dissecting part impressed me not so much as the slaying. They were so excessively alive, these pigs. And then they were so excessively dead, and the man in the dripping, clammy, hot passage did not seem to care, and ere the blood of such an one had ceased to foam on the floor, such another, and four friends with him, had shrieked and died. But a pig is only the Unclean animal forbidden by the Prophet. I was destined to make rather a queer discovery when I went over to the cattle-slaughter. All the buildings here were on a much larger scale, and there was no sound of trouble, but I could smell the salt reek of blood before I set foot in the place. The cattle did not come directly through the viaduct as the pigs had done. They de- bouched into a yard by the hundred, and they were big red brutes carrying much flesh. In the centre of that yard stood a red Texan steer with a headstall on his wicked head. No man controlled him. He was, so to speak, pick- ing his teeth and whistling in an open byre of his own when the cattle arrived. As soon as the first one had fear- fully quitted the viaduct, this red devil put his hands in his pockets and slouched across the yard, no man guid- ing him. Then he lowed something to the effect that he was the regularly appointed guide of the establishment and would show them round. They were country folk, 152 FROM SEA TO SEA but they knew how to behave; and so followed Judas some hundred strong, patiently, and with a look of bland wonder in their faces. I saw his broad back jogging in advance of them, up a lime-washed incline where I was forbidden to follow. Then a door shut, and in a minute back came Judas with the air of a virtuous plough-bullock and took up his place in his byre. Some- body laughed across the yard, but I heard no sound of cattle from the big brick building into which the mob had disappeared. Only Judas chewed the cud with a malignant satisfaction, and so I knew there was trouble, and ran round to the front of the factory and so entered and stood aghast. Who takes count of the prejudices which we absorb through the skin by way of our surroundings ? It was not the spectacle that impressed me. The first thought that almost spoke itself aloud was: "They are kill- ing kine ; " and it was a shock. The pigs were nobody's concern, but cattle the brothers of the Cow, the Sacred Cow were quite otherwise. The next time an M.P. tells me that India either Sultanises or Brahminises a man, I shall believe about half what he says. It is un- pleasant to watch the slaughter of cattle when one has laughed at the notion for a few years. I could not see actually what was done in the first instance, because the row of stalls in which they lay was separated from me by fifty impassable feet of butchers and slung carcasses. All I know is that men swung open the doors of a stall as occasion required, and there lay two steers already stunned, and breathing heavily. These two they pole- axed, and half raising them by tackle they cut their throats. Two men skinned each carcase, somebody cut FROM SEA TO SEA 153 off the head, and in half a minute more the overhead rail carried two sides of beef to their appointed place. There was clamour enough in the operating room, but from the waiting cattle, invisible on the other side of the line of pens, never a sound. They went to their death, trusting Judas, without a word. They were slain at the rate of five a minute, and if the pig men were spattered with blood, the cow butchers were bathed in it. The blood ran in muttering gutters. There was no place for hand or foot that was not coated with thicknesses of dried blood, and the stench of it in the nostrils bred fear. And then the same merciful Providence that has show- ered good things on my path throughout sent me an embodiment of the city of Chicago, so that I might remember it forever. Women come sometimes to see the slaughter, as they would come to see the slaughter of men. And there entered that vermilion hall a young woman of large mould, with brilliantly scarlet lips, and heavy eyebrows, and dark hair that came in a " widow's peak " on the forehead. She was well and healthy and alive, and she was dressed in flaming red and black, and her feet (know you that the feet of American women are like unto the feet of fairies ?) her feet, I say, were cased in red leather shoes. She stood in a patch of sunlight, the red blood under her shoes, the vivid carcasses tacked round her, a bullock bleeding its life away not six feet away from her, and the death factory roaring all round her. She looked curiously, with hard, bold eyes, and was not ashamed. Then said I : " This is a special Sending. I have seen the City of Chicago." And I went away to get peace and rest. No. XXXVI HOW I FOUND PEACE AT MUSQUASH ON THE MONOXGAHELA. "Prince, blown by many a western breeze Our vessels greet you treasure-laden ; We send them all but best of these A free and frank young Yankee maiden." IT is a mean thing and an unhandsome to " do " a continent in five-hundred-mile jumps. But after those swine and bullocks at Chicago I felt that complete change of air would be good. The United States at present hinge in or about Chicago, as a double-leaved screen hinges. To be sure, the tiny New England States call a trip to Pennsylvania " going west," but the larger- minded citizen seems to reckon his longitude from Chi- cago. Twenty years hence the centre of population that shaded square on the census map will have shifted, men say, far west of Chicago. Twenty years later it will be on the Pacific slope. Twenty years after that America will begin to crowd up, and there will be some trouble. People will demand manufactured goods for their reduced-establishment households at the cheapest possible rates, and the cry that the land is rich enough to afford protection will cease with a great abruptness. At present it is the farmer who pays most dearly for the luxury of high prices. In the old days, 154 FROM SEA TO SEA 155 when the land was fresh and there was plenty of it and it cropped like the garden of Eden, he did not mind paying. Now there is not so much free land, and the old acres are needing stimulants, which cost money, and the farmer, who pays for everything, is beginning to ask questions. Also the great American nation, which indi- vidually never shuts a door behind its noble self, very seldom attempts to put back anything that it has taken from Nature's shelves. It grabs all it can and moves on. But the moving-on is nearly finished and the grabbing must stop, and then the Federal Government will have to establish a Woods and Forests Department the like of which was never seen in the world before. And all the peo- ple who have been accustomed to hack, mangle, and burn timber as they please will object, with shots and protes- tations, to this infringement of their rights. The nigger will breed bounteously, and Tie will have to be reckoned with; and the manufacturer will have to be contented with smaller profits, and he will have to be reckoned with ; and the railways will no longer rule the countries through which they run, and they will have to be reck- oned with. And nobody will approve of it in the least. Yes ; it will be a spectacle for all the world to watch, this big, slashing colt of a nation, that has got off with a flying start on a freshly littered course, being pulled back to the ruck by that very mutton-fisted jockey Neces- sity. There will be excitement in America when a few score millions of " sovereigns " discover that what they considered the outcome of their own Government is but the rapidly diminishing bounty of Nature ; and that if they want to get on comfortably they must tackle every single problem from labour to finance humbly, without 156 FROM SEA TO SEA gasconade, and afresh. But at present they look "that all the to-morrows shall be as to-day," and if you argue with them they say that the Democratic Idea will keep things going. They believe in that Idea, and the less well-informed fortify themselves in their belief by curi- ous assertions as to the despotism that exists in Eng- land. This is pure provincialism, of course; but it is very funny to listen to, especially when you compare the theory with the practice (pistol, chiefly) as proven in the newspapers. I have striven to find out where the central authority of the land lies. It isn't at Washing- ton, because the Federal Government can't do anything to the States save run the mail and collect a Federal tax or two. It isn't in the States, because the town- ships can do as they like ; and it isn't in the townships, because these are bossed by alien voters or rings of patriotic homebred citizens. And it certainly is not in the citizens, because they are governed and coerced by despotic power of public opinion as represented by their papers, preachers, or local society. I found one man who told me that if anything went wrong in this huge congress of kings, if there was a split or an upheaval or a smash, the people in detail would be subject to the Idea of the sovereign people in mass. This is a survival from the Civil War, when, you remem- ber, the people in a majority did with guns and swords slay and wound the people in detail. All the same, the notion seems very much like the worship by the savage of the unloaded rifle as it leans against the wall. But the men and women set Us an example in patriot- ism. They believe in their land and its future, and its honour, and its glory, and they are not ashamed to say so. FROM SEA TO SEA 157 From the largest to the least runs this same proud, pas- sionate conviction to which I take off my hat and for which I love them. An average English householder seems to regard his country as an abstraction to supply him with policemen and fire-brigades. The cockney cad cannot understand what the word means. The bloomin' toffs he knows, and the law, and the soldiers that supply him with a spectacle in the Parks ; but he would laugh in your face at the notion of any duty being owed by himself to his land. Pick an American of the second generation anywhere you please from the cab-rank, the porter's room, or the plough-tail, 'specially the plough-tail, and that man will make you understand in five minutes that he understands what manner of thing his Republic is. He might laugh at a law that didn't suit his convenience, draw your eye-teeth in a bargain, and applaud 'cuteness on the outer verge of swindling : but you should hear him stand up and sing : " My country 'tis of thee, Sweet land of liberty, Of thee I sing !" I have heard a few thousand of them engaged in that employment. I respect him. There is too much Romeo and too little balcony about our National Anthem. With the American article it is all balcony. There must be born a poet who shall give the English the song of their own, own country which is to say, of about half the world. Remains then only to compose the greatest song of all The Saga of the Anglo-Saxon all round the earth a paean that shall combine the terrible slow swing of the Battle Hymn of the Republic (which, if you know not, 158 FROM SEA TO SEA get chanted to you) with Britannia needs no Bulwarks, the skirl of the British Grenadiers with that perfect quickstep, Marching through Georgia, and at the end the wail of the Dead March. For We, even We who share the earth between us as no gods have ever shared it, we also are mortal in the matter of our single selves. Will any one take the contract ? It was with these rambling notions that I arrived at the infinite peace of the tiny township of Musquash on the Monongahela Eiver. The clang and tumult of Chi- cago belonged to another world. Imagine a rolling, wooded, English landscape, under softest of blue skies, dotted at three-mile intervals with fat little, quiet little villages, or aggressive little manufacturing towns that the trees and the folds of the hills mercifully prevented from betraying their presence. The golden-rod blazed in the pastures against the green of the mulleins, and the cows picked their way home through the twisted paths between the blackberry bushes. All summer was on the orchards, and the apples such apples as we dream of when we eat the woolly imitations of Kashmir were ripe and toothsome. It was good to lie in a hammock with half-shut eyes, and, in the utter stillness, to hear the apples dropping from the trees, and the tinkle of the cowbells as the cows walked statelily down the main road of the village. Everybody in that restful place seemed to have just as much as he wanted; a house with all com- fortable appliances, a big or little verandah wherein to spend the day, a neatly shaved garden with a wild wealth of flowers, some cows, and an orchard. Everybody knew everybody else intimately, and what they did not know, the local daily paper a daily for a village of twelve FROM SEA TO SEA 159 hundred people ! supplied. There was a court-house where justice was done, and a jail where some most en- viable prisoners lived, and there were four or five churches of four or five denominations. Also it was impossible to buy openly any liquor in that little paradise. But and this is a very serious but you could by procuring a medical certificate get strong drinks from the chemist. That is the drawback of prohibition. It makes a man who wants a drink a shirker and a contriver, which things are not good for the soul of a man, and presently, 'specially if he be young, causes him to believe that he may just as well be hanged for a sheep as for a lamb ; and the end of that young man is not pretty. Nothing except a rattling fall will persuade an average colt that a fence is not meant to be jumped over ; whereas if he be turned out into the open he learns to carry himself with discretion. One heard a good deal of this same dread of drink in Musquash, and even the maidens seemed to know too much about its effects upon certain unregenerate youths, who, if they had been once made thoroughly, effectually, and persistently drunk with a tepid brandy and soda thrust before their goose-fleshed noses on the terrible Next Morning would perhaps have seen the futility of their ways. It was a sin by vil- lage canons to imbibe lager, though experto crede you can get dropsy on that stuff long before you can get drunk. "But what man knows his mind? " Besides, it was all their own affair. The little community seemed to be as self-contained as an Indian village. Had the rest of the land sunk under the sea, Musquash would have gone on sending its sons to school in order to make them "good citizens," which is 160 FROM SEA TO SEA the constant prayer of the true American father, settling its own road-making, local cesses, town-lot arbitrations, and internal government by ballot and vote and due re- spect to the voices of the headmen (which is the salvation of the ballot), until such time as all should take their places in the cemetery appointed for their faith. Here were Americans and no aliens men ruling themselves by themselves and for themselves and their wives and their children in peace, order, and decency. But what went straightest to this heart, though they did not know it, was that they were Methody folk for the most part ay, Methody as ever trod a Yorkshire Moor, or drove on a Sunday to some chapel of the Faith in the Dales. The old Methody talk was there, with the discipline whereby the souls of the Just are, some- times to their intense vexation, made perfect on this earth in order that they may " take out their letters and live and die in good standing." If you don't know the talk, you won't know what that means. The discipline, or discipline, is no thing to be trifled with, and its work- ing among a congregation depends entirely upon the tact, humanity, and sympathy of the leader who works it. He, knowing what youth's desires are, can turn the soul in the direction of good, gently, instead of wrenching it savagely towards the right path only to see it break away quivering and scared. The arm of the Discipline is long. A maiden told me, as a new and strange fact and one that would interest a foreigner, of a friend of hers who had once been admonished by some elders somewhere not in Musquash for the heinous crime of dancing. She, the friend, did not in the least like it. She would not. Can't you imagine the de- FKOM SEA TO SEA 161 lightful results of a formal wigging administered by a youngish, and austere elder who was not accustomed to make allowances for the natural dancing instincts of the young of the human animal ? The hot irons that are held forth to scare may also sear, as those who have ever lain under an unfortunate exposition of the old Faith can attest. But it was all immensely interesting the absolutely fresh, wholesome, sweet life that paid due reverence to the things of the next world, but took good care to get enough tennis in the cool of the evening ; that con- cerned itself as honestly and thoroughly with the daily round, the trivial task (and that same task is anything but trivial when you are " helped " by an American " help " ) as with the salvation of the soul. I had the honour of meeting in the flesh, even as Miss Louisa Alcott drew them, Meg and Joe and Beth and Amy, whom you ought to know. There was no affectation of concealment in their lives who had nothing to con- ceal. There were many " little women " in that place, because, even as is the case in England, the boys had gone out to seek their fortunes. Some were working in the thundering, clanging cities, others had removed to the infinite West, and others had disappeared in the languid, lazy South; and the maidens waited their return, which is the custom of maidens all over the world. Then the boys would come back in the soft sunlight, attired in careful raiment, their tongues cleansed of evil words and discourtesy. They had just come to call bless their carefully groomed heads so they had, and the maidens in white dresses glimmered like ghosts on the stoop and received them according to YOt, II M 162 FEOM SEA TO SEA their merits. Mamma had nothing to do with this, nor papa either, for he was down-town trying to drive reason into the head of a land surveyor; and all along the shaded, lazy, intimate street you heard the garden- gates click and clash, as the mood of the man varied, and bursts of pleasant laughter where three or four be sure the white muslins were among them, dis- cussed a picnic past or a buggy-drive to come. Then the couples went their ways and talked together till the young men had to go at last on account of the trains, and all trooped joyously down to the station and thought no harm of it. And, indeed, why should they ? Prom her fifteenth year the American maiden moves among " the boys " as a sister among brothers. They are her servants to take her out riding, which is driving, to give her flowers and candy. The last two items are expensive, and this is good for the young man, as teaching him to value friendship that costs a little in cash and may necessitate economy on the cigar side. As to the maiden, she is taught to respect herself, that her fate is in her own hands, and that she is the more stringently bound by the very measure of the liberty so freely accorded to her. Wherefore, in her own language, "she has a lovely time" with about two or three hundred boys who have sisters of their own, and a very accurate perception that if they were unworthy of their trust a syndicate of other boys would probably pass them into a world where there is neither marrying nor giving in marriage. And so time goes till the maiden knows the other side of the house, knows that a man is not a demi-god nor a mysteriously veiled monster, but an average, egotistical, vain, glutton- FEOM SEA TO SEA 163 ous, but on the whole companionable, sort of person, to be soothed, fed, and managed knowledge that does not come to her sister in England till after a few years of matrimony. And then she makes her choice. The Golden Light touches eyes that are full of compre- hension ; but the light is golden none the less, for she makes just the same sweet, irrational choices that an English girl does. With this advantage : she knows a little more, has experience in entertaining, insight into the businesses, employ, and hobbies of men, gathered from countless* talks with the boys, and talks with the other girls who find time at those mysterious con- claves to discuss what Tom, Ted, Stuke, or Jack have been doing. Thus it happens that she is a companion, in the fullest sense of the word, of the man she weds, zealous for the interest of the firm, to be consulted in time of stress and to be called upon for help and sym- pathy in time of danger. Pleasant it is that one heart should beat for you ; but it is better when the head above that heart has been thinking hard on your behalf, and when the lips, that are also very pleasant to kiss, give wise counsel. When the American maiden I speak now for the rank and file of that noble army is once married, why, it is finished. She has had her lovely time. It may have been five, seven, or ten years according to circumstances. She abdicates promptly with startling speed, and her place knows her no more except as with her husband. The Queen is dead, or looking after the house. This same household work seems to be the thing that ages the American woman. She is infamously " helped " by the Irish trollop and the negress alike. It is not fair upon 164 FROM SEA TO SEA her, because she has to do three parts of the housework herself, and in dry, nerve-straining air the " chores " are a burden. Be thankful, O my people, for Mauz Baksh, Kadir Baksh, and the ayah while they are with you. They are twice as handy as the unkempt slatterns of the furnished apartments to which you will return, Commis- sioners though you be; and five times as clever as the Amelia Araminta Kebellia Secessia Jackson (coloured) under whose ineptitude and insolence the young Ameri- can housewife groans. But all this is far enough from peaceful, placid Musquash and its boundless cordiality, its simple, genuine hospitality, and its what's the French word that just covers all? gra gracieuseness, isn't it? Oh, be good to an American wherever you meet him. Put him up for the club, and he will hold you listening till three in the morning; give him the best tent, and the gram-fed mutton. I have incurred a debt of salt that I can never repay, but do you return it piecemeal to any of that Nation, and the account will be on my head till our paths in the world cross again. He drinks iced water just as we do ; but he doesn't quite like our cigars. And how shall I finish the tale? Would it interest you to learn of the picnics in the hot, still woods that overhang the Monongahela, when those idiotic Ameri- can buggies that can't turn round got stuck among the brambles and all but capsized ; of boating in the blazing sun on the river that but a little time before had cast at the feet of the horrified village the corpses of the Johnstown tragedy ? I saw one, only one, remnant of that terrible wreck. He had been a minister. House, church, congregation, wife, and children had been swept FEOM SEA TO SEA 165 away from him in one night of terror. He had no em- ployment ; he could have employed himself at nothing ; but God had been very good to him. He sat in the sun and smiled a little weakly. It was in his poor blurred mind that something had happened he was not sure what it was, but undoubtedly something had occurred. One could only pray that the light would never return. But there be many pictures on my mind. Of a huge manufacturing city of three hundred thousand souls lighted and warmed by natural gas, so that the great valley full of flaming furnaces sent up no smoke wreaths to the clear sky. Of Musquash itself lighted by the same mysterious agency, flares of gas eight feet long, roaring day and night at the corners of the grass-grown streets because it wasn't worth while to turn them out ; of fleets of coal-flats being hauled down the river on an interminable journey to St. Louis; of factories nestling in woods where all the axe-handles and shovels in the world seemed to be manufactured daily ; and last, of that quaint forgotten German community, the Brother- hood of Perpetual Separation, who founded themselves when the State was yet young and land cheap, and are now dying out because they will neither marry nor give in marriage and their recruits are very few. The ad- vance in the value of land has almost smothered these poor old people in a golden affluence that they never desired. They live in a little village where the houses are built old Dutch fashion, with their front doors away from the road, and cobbled paths all about. The clois- tered peace of Musquash is a metropolitan riot beside the hush of that village. And there is, too, a love-tale tucked away among the flowers. It has taken seventy 166 FROM SEA TO SEA years in the telling, for the brother and sister loved each other well, but they loved their duty to the brotherhood more. So they have lived and still do live, seeing each other daily, and separated for all time. Any trouble that might have been is altogether wiped out of their faces, which are as calm as those of very little chil- dren. To the uninitiated those constant ones resemble extremely old people in garments of absurd cut. But they love each other, and that seems to bring one back quite naturally to the girls and the boys in Mus- quash. The boys were nice boys graduates of Yale of course ; you mustn't mention Harvard here but none the less skilled in business, in stocks and shares, the boring for oil, and the sale of everything that can be sold by one sinner to another. Skilled, too, in base- ball, big-shouldered, with straight eyes and square chins but not above occasional diversion and mild orgies. They will make good citizens and possess the earth, and eventually wed one of the nice white muslin dresses. There are worse things in this world than being " one of the boys" in Musquash. No. XXXVII AN INTERVIEW WITH MARK TWAIN. You are a contemptible lot, over yonder. Some of you are Commissioners, and some Lieutenant-Governors, and some have the V. C., and a few are privileged to walk about the Mall arm in arm with the Viceroy; but I have seen Mark Twain this golden morning, have shaken his hand, and smoked a cigar no, two cigars with him, and talked with him for more than two hours! Understand clearly that I do not despise you; indeed, I don't. I am only very sorry for yo\\, from the Viceroy downward. To soothe your envy and to prove that I still regard you as my equals, I will tell you all about it. They said in Buffalo that he was in Hartford, Conn. ; and again they said " perchance he is gone upon a journey to Portland"; and a big, fat drummer vowed that he knew the great man intimately, and that Mark was spending the summer in Europe which information so upset me that I embarked upon the wrong train, and was incontinently turned out by the conductor three- quarters of a mile from the station, amid the wilderness of railway tracks. Have you ever, encumbered with great-coat and valise, tried to dodge diversely -minded locomotives when the sun was shining in your eyes ? 167 168 FROM SEA TO SEA But I forgot that you have not seen Mark Twain, you people of no account ! Saved from the jaws of the cowcatcher, me wandering devious a stranger met. " Elmira is the place. Elmira in the State of Xew York this State, not two hundred miles away;" and he added, perfectly unnecessarily, " Slide, Kelley, slide." I slid on the West Shore line, I slid till midnight, and they dumped me down at the door of a frowzy hotel in Elmira. Yes, they knew all about " that man Clem- ens," but reckoned he was not in town; had gone East somewhere. I had better possess my soul in patience till the morrow, and then dig up the " man Clemens' " brother-in-law, who was interested in coal. The idea of chasing half a dozen relatives in addition to Mark Twain up and down a city of thirty thousand inhabitants kept me awake. Morning revealed Elmira, whose streets were desolated by railway tracks, and whose suburbs were given up to the manufacture of door-sashes and window-frames. It was surrounded by pleasant, fat, little hills, rimmed with timber and topped with cultivation. The Chemung River flowed generally up and down the town, and had just finished flooding a few of the main streets. The hotel-man and the telephone-man assured me that the much-desired brother-in-law was out of town, and no one seemed to know where " the man Clemens " abode. Later on I discovered that he had not summered in that place for more than nineteen seasons, and so was com- paratively a new arrival. A friendly policeman volunteered the news that he had seen Twain or "some one very like him" driving FROM SEA TO SEA 169 a buggy the day before. This gave me a delightful sense of nearness. Fancy living in a town where you could see the author of Tom Sawyer, or " some one very like him," jolting over the pavements in a buggy! "He lives out yonder at East Hill," said the police- man; "three miles from here." Then the chase began in a hired hack, up an awful hill, where sunflowers blossomed by the roadside, and crops waved, and Harper's Magazine cows stood in eli- gible and commanding attitudes knee-deep in clover, all ready to be transferred to photogravure. The great man must have been persecuted by outsiders aforetime, and fled up the hill for refuge. Presently the driver stopped at a miserable, little, white wood shanty, and demanded "Mister Clemens." "I know he's a big-bug and all that," he explained, "but you can never tell what sort of notions those sort of men take into their heads to live in, anyways." There rose up a young lady who was sketching thistle- tops and goldenrod, amid a plentiful supply of both, and set the pilgrimage on the right path. "It's a pretty Gothic house on the left-hand side a little way farther on." "Gothic h ," said the driver. "Very few of the city hacks take this drive, specially if they know they are coming out here," and he glared at me savagely. It was a very pretty house, anything but Gothic, clothed with ivy, standing in a very big compound, and fronted by a verandah full of chairs and hammocks. The roof of the verandah was a trellis-work of creepers, and the sun peeping through moved on the shining boards below. 170 FROM SEA TO SEA Decidedly this remote place was an ideal one for work, if a man could work among these soft airs and the murmur of the long-eared crops. Appeared suddenly a lady used to dealing with ram- pageous outsiders. " Mr. Clemens has just walked down- town. He is at his brother-in-law's house." Then he was within shouting distance, after all, and the chase had not been in vain. With speed I fled, and the driver, skidding the wheel and swearing audibly, arrived at the bottom of that hill without accidents. It was in the pause that followed between ringing the brother-in-law's bell and getting an answer that it oc- curred to me for the first time Mark Twain might pos- sibly have other engagements than the entertainment of escaped lunatics from India, be they never so full of admiration. And in another man's house anyhow, what had I come to do or say? Suppose the drawing- room should be full of people, suppose a baby were sick, how was I to explain that I only wanted to shake hands with him? Then things happened somewhat in this order. A big, darkened drawing-room; a huge chair; a man with eyes, a mane of grizzled hair, a brown mustache cover- ing a mouth as delicate as a woman's, a strong, square hand shaking mine, and the slowest, calmest, levellest voice in all the world saying : " Well, you think you owe me something, and you've come to tell me so. That's what I call squaring a debt handsomely." " Piff ! " from a cob-pipe (I always said that a Mis- souri meerschaum was the best smoking in the world), and, behold! Mark Twain had curled himself up in the FKOM SEA TO SEA 171 big armchair, and I was smoking reverently, as befits one in the presence of his superior. The thing that struck me first was that he was an elderly man; yet, after a minute's thought, I perceived that it was otherwise, and in five minutes, the eyes look- ing at me, I saw that the grey hair was an accident of the most trivial. He was quite young. I was shaking his hand. I was smoking his cigar, and I was hearing him talk this man I had learned to love and admire fourteen thousand miles away. Eeading his books, I had striven to get an idea of his personality, and all my preconceived notions were wrong and beneath the reality. Blessed is the man who finds no disillusion when he is brought face to face with a revered writer. That was a moment to be remembered ; the landing of a twelve-pound salmon was nothing to it. I had hooked Mark Twain, and he was treating me as though under certain circumstances I might be an equal. About this time I became aware that he was discussing the copyright question. Here, so far as I remember, is what he said. Attend to the words of the oracle through this unworthy medium transmitted. You will never be able to imagine the long, slow surge of the drawl, and the deadly gravity of the countenance, the quaint pucker of the body, one foot thrown over the arm of the chair, the yellow pipe clinched in one corner of the mouth, and the right hand casually caressing the square chin : "Copyright? Some men have morals, and some men have other things. I presume a publisher is a man. He is not born. He is created by circumstances. Some publishers have morals. Mine have. They pay me for the English productions of my books. When 172 FEOM SEA TO SEA you hear men talking of Bret Harte's works and other works and my books being pirated, ask them to be sure of their facts. I think they'll find the books are paid for. It was ever thus. "I remember an unprincipled and formidable pub- lisher. Perhaps he's dead now. He used to take my short stories I can't call it steal or pirate them. It was beyond these things altogether. He took my stories one at a time and made a book of it. If I wrote an essay on dentistry or theology or any little thing of that kind just an essay that long (he indicated half an inch on his finger), any sort of essay that publisher would amend and improve my essay. " He would get another man to write some more to it or cut it about exactly as his needs required. Then he would publish a book called Dentistry by Mark Tivain, that little essay and some other things not mine added. Theology would make another book, and so on. I do not consider that fair. It's an insult. But he's dead now, I think. I didn't kill him. " There is a great deal of nonsense talked about inter- national copyright. The proper way to treat a copyright is to make it exactly like real-estate in every way. " It will settle itself under these conditions. If Con- gress were to bring in a law that a man's life was not to extend over a hundred and sixty years, somebody would laugh. That law wouldn't concern anybody. The man would be out of the jurisdiction of the court. A term of years in copyright comes to exactly the same thing. No law can make a book live or cause it to die before the appointed time. "Tottletown, Cal., was a new town, with a popu- FROM SEA TO SEA 173 lation of three thousand banks, fire-brigade, brick buildings, and all the modern improvements. It lived, it flourished, and it disappeared. To-day no man can put his foot on any remnant of Tottletown, Cal. It's dead. London continues to exist. Bill Smith, author of a book read for the next year t. There steals over the listener a numbing sense of nightmare. He has heard all this before some- where yea; even down to J. S. Mill and the references to the "true interests of the ratepayers." He sees what is coming next. Yes, there is the old Sabha, Aujuman journalistic formula "Western education is an exotic plant of recent importation." How on earth did this man drag Western education into this discussion ? Who knows ? Perhaps Sir Steuart Bay ley does. He CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 203 seems to be listening. The others are looking at their watches. The spell of the level voice sinks the listener yet deeper into a trance. He is haunted by the ghosts of all the cant of all the political platforms of Great Britain. He hears all the old, old vestry phrases, and once more he smells the Smell. That is no dream. Western education is an exotic plant. It is the upas tree, and it is all our fault. We brought it out from England exactly as we brought out the ink-bottles and the patterns for the chairs. We planted it and it grew monstrous as a banian. Now we are choked by the roots of it spreading so thickly in this fat soil of Bengal. The speaker continues. Bit by bit we builded this dome, visible and invisible, the crown of Writers' Buildings, as we have built and peopled the buildings. Now we have gone too far to retreat, being " tied and bound with the chain of our own sins." The speech continues. We made that florid sentence. That torrent of verbiage is Ours. We taught him what was constitutional and what was unconstitutional in the days when Calcutta smelt. Calcutta smells still, but We must listen to all that he has to say about the plurality of votes and the threshing of wind and the weaving of ropes of sand. It is our own fault. The speech ends, and there rises a grey Englishman in a black frock-coat. He looks a strong man, and a worldly. Surely he will say, " Yes, Lala Sahib, all this may be true talk, but there's a vile smell in this place, and everything must be cleaned in a week, or the Deputy Commissioner will not take any notice of you in durbar." He says nothing of the kind. This is a Legislative Council, where they call each other 204 FROM SEA TO SEA "Honourable So-and-So's." The Englishman in the frock-coat begs all to remember that " we are discussing principles, and no consideration of the details ought to influence the verdict on the principles." Is he then like the rest? How does this strange thing come about? Perhaps these so English office fittings are responsible for the warp. The Council Chamber might be a London Board-room. Perhaps after long years among the pens and papers its occupants grew to think that it really is, and in this belief give resumes of the history of Local Self -Government in England. The black frock-coat, emphasising his points with his spectacle-case, is telling his friends how the parish was first the unit of self-government. He then explains how burgesses were elected, and in tones of deep fervour announces, " Commissioners of Sewers are elected in the same way." Whereunto all this lecture? Is he trying to run a motion through under cover of a cloud of words, essaying the well-known "cuttle-fish trick" of the West? He abandons England for a while, and now we get a glimpse of the cloven hoof in a casual reference to Hindus and Mahometans. The Hindus will lose nothing by the complete establishment of plurality of votes. They will have the control of their own wards as they used to have. So there is race-feeling, to be explained away, even among these beautiful desks. Scratch the Council, and you come to the old, old trouble. The black frock-coat sits down, and a keen-eyed, black- bearded Englishman rises with one hand in his pocket to explain his views on an alteration of the vote quali- fication. The idea of an amendment seems to have just 205 struck him. He hints that he will bring- it forward later on. He is academical like the others, but not half so good a speaker. All this is dreary beyond words. Why do they talk and talk about owners and occupiers and burgesses in England and the growth of autonomous institutions when the city, the great city, is here crying out to be cleansed? "What has England to do with Cal- cutta's evil, and why should Englishmen be forced to wander through mazes of unprofitable argument against men who cannot understand the iniquity of dirt? A pause follows the black-bearded man's speech. Rises another native, a heavily built Babu, in a black gown and a strange head-dress. A snowy white strip of cloth is thrown duster-wise over his shoulders. His voice is high, and not always under control. He begins, "I will try to be as brief as possible." This is ominous. By the way, in Council there seems to be no necessity for a form of address. The orators plunge in medias res, and only when they are well launched throw an occa- sional " Sir " towards Sir Steuart Bayley, who sits with one leg doubled under him and a dry pen in his hand. This speaker is no good. He talks, but he says nothing, and he only knows where he is drifting to. He says : "We must remember that we are legislating for the Metropolis of India, and therefore we should borrow our institutions from large English towns, and not from parochial institutions." If you think for a minute, that shows a large and healthy knowledge of the history of Local Self-Government. It also reveals the attitude of Calcutta. . If the city thought less about itself as a metropolis and more as a midden, its state would be better. The speaker talks patronisingly of "my friend," 206 FEQM SEA TO SEA alluding to the black frock-coat. Then he flounders afresh, and his voice gallops up the gamut as he de- clares, "and therefore that makes all the difference." He hints vaguely at threats, something to do with the Hindus and the Mahometans, but what he means it is difficult to discover. Here, however, is a sentence taken verbatim. It is not likely to appear in this form in the Calcutta papers. The black frock-coat had said that if a wealthy native " had eight votes to his credit, his vanity would prompt him to go to the polling-booth, because he would feel better than half-a-dozen ghari-wans or petty traders." (Fancy allowing a ghari-wan to vote! He has yet to learn how to drive !) Hereon the gentleman with the white cloth : " Then the complaint is that in- fluential voters will not take the trouble to vote ? In my humble opinion, if that be so, adopt voting-papers. That is the way to meet them. In the same way The Calcutta Trades' Association you abolish all plurality of votes: and that is the way to meet them." Lucid, is it not? Up flies the irresponsible voice, and delivers this statement, " In the election for the House of Com- mons plurality are allowed for persons having interest in different districts." Then hopeless, hopeless fog. It is a great pity that India ever heard of anybody higher than the heads of the Civil Service. Once more a whiff of the Stink. The gentleman gives a defiant jerk of his shoulder-cloth, and sits down. Then Sir Steuart Bayley: "The question before the Council is," etc. There is a ripple of "Ayes" and "Noes," and the "Noes" have it, whatever it may be. The black-bearded gentleman springs his amendment about the voting qualifications. A large senator in a CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 207 white waistcoat, and with, a most genial smile, rises and proceeds to smash up the amendment. Can't see the use of it. Calls it in effect rubbish. The black dressing-gown, he who spoke first of all, speaks again, and talks of the " sojourner who comes here for a little time, and then leaves the land." Well it is for the black gown that the sojourner does come, or there would be no comfy places wherein to talk about the power that can be measured by wealth and the intellect " which, sir, I submit, cannot be so measured." . The amendment is lost; and trebly and quadruply lost is the listener. In the name of sanity and to preserve the tattered shirt- tails of a torn illusion, let us escape. This is the Cal- cutta Municipal Bill. They have been at it for several Saturdays. Last Saturday Sir Steuart Bayley pointed out that at their present rate they would be about two years in getting it through. Now they will sit till dusk, unless Sir Steuart Bayley, who wants to see Lord Connemara off, puts up the black frock-coat to move an adjournment. It is not good to see a Government close to. This leads to the formation of blatantly self-satisfied judgments, which may be quite as wrong as the cramping system with which we have encompassed ourselves. And in the streets outside Englishmen summarise the situa- tion brutally, thus : " The whole thing is a farce. Time is money to us. We can't stick out those everlasting speeches in the municipality. The natives choke us off, but we know that if things get too bad the Government will step in and interfere, and so we worry along some- how." Meantime Calcutta continues to cry out for the bucket and the broom. CHAPTER IV ON THE BANKS OF THE HUGLI. THE clocks of the city have struck two. Where can a man get food? Calcutta is not rich in respect of dainty accommodation. You can stay your stomach at Peliti's or Bonsard's, but their shops are not to be found in Hastings Street, or in the places where brokers fly to and fro in office-jauns, sweating and growing visibly rich. There must be some sort of entertainment where sailors congregate. "Honest Bombay Jack" supplies nothing but Burma cheroots and whisky in liqueur-glasses, but in Lai Bazar, not far from "The Sailors' Coffee-rooms," a board gives bold advertisement that " officers and sea- men can find good quarters." In evidence a row of neat officers and seamen are sitting on a bench by the " hotel " door smoking. There is an almost military likeness in their clothes. Perhaps "Honest Bombay Jack" only keeps one kind of felt hat and one brand of suit. When Jack of the mercantile marine is sober, he is very sober. When he is drunk he is but ask the river police what a lean, mad Yankee can do with his nails and teeth. These gentlemen smoking on the bench are impassive almost as Red Indians. Their attitudes are unre- strained, and they do not wear braces. Nor, it would appear from the bill of fare, are they particular as to what they eat when they attend tdble d'hdte. The fare is 208 CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 209 substantial and the regulation " peg " every house has its own depth of peg if you will refrain from stopping Ganymede something to wonder at. Three fingers and a trifle over seems to be the use of the officers and seamen who are talking so quietly in the doorway. One says he has evidently finished a long story " and so he shipped for four pound ten with a first mate's certifi- cate and all; and that was in a German barque." An- other spits with conviction and says genially, without raising his voice, " That was a hell of a ship. Who knows her?" No answer from the assembly, but a Dane or a German wants to know whether the Myra is " up " yet. A dry, red-haired man gives her exact position in the river (How in the world can he know?) and the probable hour of her arrival. The grave debate drifts into a discussion of a recent river accident, whereby a big steamer was damaged, and had to put back and dis- charge cargo. A burly gentleman who is taking a con- stitutional down Lai Bazar strolls up and says : " I tell you she fouled her own chain with her own forefoot. Hev you seen the plates?" "No." "Then how the can any like you say what it well was?" He passes on, having delivered his highly flavored opinion without heat or passion. No one seems to resent the garnish. Let us get down to the river and see this stamp of men more thoroughly. Clarke Russell has told us that their lives are hard enough in all conscience. What are their pleasures and diversions? The Port Office, where live the gentlemen who make improvements in the Port of Calcutta, ought to supply information. It stands large and fair, and built in an orientalised manner after the VOL. II P 210 FROM SEA TO SEA Italians at the corner of Fairlie Place upon the great Strand Road, and a continual clamour of traffic by land and by sea goes up thoughout the day and far into the night against its windows. This is a place to enter more reverently than the Bengal Legislative Council, for it controls the direction of the uncertain Hugli down to the Sandheads, owns enormous wealth, and spends huge sums on the f rontaging of river banks, the expansion of jetties, and the manufacture of docks costing two hundred lakhs of rupees. Two million tons of sea-going shippage yearly find their way up and down the river by the guidance of the Port Office, and the men of the Port Office know more than it is good for men to hold in their heads. They can without reference to telegraphic bul- letins give the position of all the big steamers, coming up or going down, from the Hugli to the sea, day by day, with their tonnage, the names of their captains and the nature of their cargo. Looking out from the verandah of their office over a lancer-regiment of masts, they can declare truthfully the name of every ship within eye- scope, with the day and hour when she will depart. In a room at the bottom of the building lounge big men, carefully dressed. Now there is a type of face which belongs almost exclusively to Bengal Cavalry officers majors for choice. Everybody knows the bronzed, black-moustached, clear-speaking Native Cav- alry officer. He exists unnaturally in novels, and naturally on the Frontier. These men in the big room have his cast of face so strongly marked that one mar- vels what officers are doing by the river^ "Have they come to book passengers for home?" " Those men! They're pilots. Some of them draw between two and CITY OF DKEADFUL KIGHT 211 three thousand rupees a month. They are responsible for half-a-million pounds' worth of cargo sometimes." They certainly are men, and they carry themselves as such. They confer together by twos and threes, and appeal frequently to shipping lists. " Isn't a pilot a man who always wears a pea-jacket and shouts through a speaking-trumpet? " " Well, you can ask those gentlemen if you like. You've got your notions from Home pilots. Ours aren't that kind exactly. They are a picked service, as carefully weeded as the Indian Civil. Some of 'em have brothers in it, and some belong to the old Indian army families." But they are not all equally well paid. The Calcutta papers echo the groans of the junior pilots who are not allowed the handling of ships over a certain tonnage. As it is yearly growing cheaper to build one big steamer than two little ones, these juniors are crowded out, and, while the seniors get their thousands, some of the youngsters make at the end of one month exactly thirty rupees. This is a grievance with them; and it seems well-founded. In the flats above the pilot's room are hushed and chapel-like offices, all sumptuously fitted, where Eng- lishmen write and telephone and telegraph, and deft Babus for ever draw maps of the shifting Hugli. Any hope of understanding the work of the Port Commis- sioners is thoroughly dashed by being taken through the Port maps of a quarter of a century past. Men have played with the Hugli as children play with a gutter- runnel, and, in return, the Hugli once rose and played with men and ships till the Strand Eoad was littered with the raffle and the carcasses of big ships. There 212 FROM SEA TO SEA are photos on the walls of the cyclone of '64, when the Tliunder came inland and sat upon an American barque, obstructing all the traffic. Very curious are these photos, and almost impossible to believe. How can a big, strong steamer have her three masts razed to deck level? How can a heavy, country boat be pitched on to the poop of a high-walled liner? and how can the side be bodily torn out of a ship? The photos say that all these things are possible, and men aver that a cyclone may come again and scatter the craft like chaff. Outside the Port Office are the export and import sheds, buildings that can hold a ship's cargo apiece, all standing on reclaimed ground. Here be several strong smells, a mass of railway lines, and a multitude of men. " Do you see where that trolly is standing, behind the big P. and 0. berth? In that place as nearly as may be the Govindpur went down about twenty years ago, and began to shift out! " "But that is solid ground." "She sank there, and the next tide made a scour-hole on one side of her. The return- ing tide knocked her into it. Then the mud made up behind her. Next tide the business was repeated always the scour-hole in the mud and the filling up behind her. So she rolled, and was pushed out and out until she got in the way of the shipping right out yonder, and we had to blow her up. When a ship sinks in mud or quicksand she regularly digs her own grave and wriggles herself into it deeper and deeper till she reaches moderately solid stuff. Then she sticks." Hor- rible idea, is it not, to go down and down with each tide into the foul Hugli mud? Close to the Port Offices is the Shipping Office, where the captains engage their crews. The men must produce CITY OF DBEADFUL NIGHT 213 their discharges from their last ships in the presence of the shipping master, or, as they call him, "The Deputy Shipping." He passes them after having satis- fied himself that they are not deserters from other ships, and they then sign articles for the voyage. This is the ceremony, beginning with the "dearly beloved" of the crew-hunting captain down to the "amazement" of the deserter. There is a dingy building, next door to the Sailors' Home, at whose gate stand the cast-ups of all 'the seas in all manner of raiment. There are the Seedee boys, Bombay serangs and Madras fishermen of the salt villages, Malays who insist upon marrying Calcutta women, grow jealous and run amok; Malay- Hindus, Hindu-Malay-whites, Burmese, Burma-whites, Burma-native-whites, Italians with gold earrings and a thirst for gambling, Yankees of all the States, with Mulattoes and pure buck -niggers, red and rough Danes, Cingalese, Cornish boys fresh taken from the plough- tail, "corn-stalks" from colonial ships where they got four pound ten a month as seamen, tun-bellied Ger- mans, Cockney mates keeping a little aloof from the crowd and talking in knots together, unmistakable " Tommies " who have tumbled into seafaring life by some mistake, cockatoo-tufted Welshmen spitting and swearing like cats, broken-down loafers, grey-headed, penniless, and pitiful, swaggering boys, and very quiet men with gashes and cuts on their faces. It is an ethnological museum where all the specimens are play- ing comedies and tragedies. The head of it all is the "Deputy Shipping," and he sits, supported by an English policeman whose fists are knobby, in a great Chair of State. The " Deputy Shipping " knows all the 214 FROM SEA TO SEA iniquity of the river-side, all the ships, all the captains, and a fair amount of the men. He is fenced off from the crowd by a strong wooden railing behind which are gathered the unemployed of the mercantile marine. They have had their spree poor devils and now they will go to sea again on as low a wage as three pound ten a month, to fetch up at the end in some Shanghai stew or San Francisco hell. They have turned their backs on the seductions of the Howrah boarding-houses and the delights of Colootollah. If Fate will, " Nightingale's " will know them no more for a season. But what skipper will take some of these battered, shattered wrecks whose hands shake and whose eyes are red? Enter suddenly a bearded captain, who has made his selection from the crowd on a previous day, and now wants to get his men passed. He is not fastidious in his choice. His eleven seem a tough lot for such a mild- eyed, civil-spoken man to manage. But the captain in the Shipping Office and the captain on his ship are two different things. He brings his crew up to the " Deputy Shipping's" bar, and hands in their greasy, tattered discharges. But the heart of the "Deputy Shipping" is hot within him, because, two days ago, a Howrah crimp stole a whole crew from a down-dropping ship, insomuch that the captain had to come back and whip up a new crew at one o'clock in the day. Evil will it be if the " Deputy Shipping " finds one of these bounty- jumpers in the chosen crew of the Blerikindoon. The "Deputy Shipping" tells the story with heat. "I didn't know they did such things in Calcutta," says the captain. "Do such things! They'd steal the eye-teeth out of your head there, Captain." He CITY OF DBEADFUL NIGHT 215 picks up a discharge and calls for Michael Donelly, a loose-knit, vicious-looking Irish- American who chews. "Stand up, man, stand up!" Michael Donelly wants to lean against the desk, and the English policeman won't have it. "What was your last ship?" "Fairy Queen." "When did you leave her?" "'Bout 'leven days." "Captain's name?" "Flahy." "That'll do. Next man: Jules Anderson." Jules Anderson is a Dane. His statements tally with the discharge-certifi- cate of the United States, as the Eagle attesteth. He is passed and falls back. Slivey, the Englishman, and David, a huge plum-coloured negro who ships as cook, are also passed. Then comes Bassompra, a little Italian, who speaks English. " What's your last ship? " "Ferdinand." "No, after that?" "German barque." Bassompra does not look happy. "When did she sail? " " About three weeks ago. " " What's her name ? " " Haidee." " You deserted from her?" " Yes, but she's left port. " The " Deputy Shipping " runs rapidly through a shipping-list, throws it down with a bang. " 'T won't do. No German barque Haidee here for three months. How do I know you don't belong to the Jackson's crew? Cap'en, I'm afraid you'll have to ship another man. He must stand over. Take the rest away and make 'em sign." The bead-eyed Bassompra seems to have lost his chance of a voyage, and his case will be inquired into. The captain departs with his men and they sign articles for the voyage, while the "Deputy Shipping" tells strange tales of the sailorman's life. "They'll quit a good ship for the sake of a spree, and catch on again at three pound ten, and by Jove, they'll let their skippers 216 FROM SEA TO SEA pay 'em at ten rupees to the sovereign poor beggars! As soon as the money's gone they'll ship, but not before. Every one under rank of captain engages here. The competition makes first-mates ship sometimes for five pounds or as low as four ten a month." (The gentle- man in the boarding-house was right, you see.) "A first mate's wages are seven ten or eight, and foreign captains ship for twelve pounds a month and bring their own small stores everything, that is to say, except beef, peas, flour, coffee, and molasses." These things are not pleasant to listen to while the hungry-eyed men in the bad clothes lounge and scratch and loaf behind the railing. What comes to them in the end? They die, it seems, though that is not alto- gether strange. They die at sea in strange and horrible ways; they die, a few of them, in the Kintals, being lost 'and suffocated in the great sink of Calcutta; they die in strange places by the water-side, and the Hugli takes them away under the mooring chains and the buoys, and casts them up on the sands below, if the Eiver Police have missed the capture. They sail the sea because they must live ; and there is no end to their toil. Very, very few find haven of any kind, and the earth, whose ways they do not understand, is cruel to them, when they walk upon it to drink and be merry after the manner of beasts. Jack ashore is a pretty thing when he is in a book or in the blue jacket of the Navy. Mer- cantile Jack is not so lovely. Later on, we will see where his " sprees " lead him. CHAPTER V WITH THE CALCUTTA POLICE. " The City was of Night perchance of Death, But certainly of Night." The City of Dreadful Night. IN the beginning, the Police were responsible. They said in a patronising way that they would prefer to take a wanderer round the great city themselves, sooner than let him contract a broken head on his own account in the slums. They said that there were places and places where a white man, unsupported by the arm of the Law, would be robbed and mobbed; and that there were other places where drunken seamen would make it very unpleasant for him. "Come up to the fire look-out in the first place, and then you'll be able to see the city." This was at No. 22, Lai Bazar, which is the headquarters of the Calcutta Police, the centre of the great web of telephone wires where Justice sits all day and all night looking after one million people and a floating population of one hundred thousand. But her work shall be dealt with later on. The fire look-out is a little sentry-box on the top of the three-storied police offices. Here a native watchman waits to give warning to the brigade below if the smoke rises by day or the flames by night in any ward of the city. From this eyrie, in the warm 217 218 FEOM SEA TO SEA night, one hears the heart of Calcutta beating. North- ward, the city stretches away three long miles, with three more miles of suburbs beyond, to Dum-Dum and Barrackpore. The lamplit dusk on this side is full of noises and shouts and smells. Close to the Police Office, jovial mariners at the sailors' coffee-shop are roaring hymns. Southerly, the city's confused lights give place to the orderly lamp-rows of the maiddn and Chowringhi, where the respectabilities live and the Police have very little to do. From the east goes up to the sky the clamour of Sealdah, the rumble of the trams, and the voices of all Bow Bazar chaffering and making merry. Westward are the business quarters, hushed now; the lamps of the shipping on the river; and the twinkling lights on the Howrah side. " Does the noise of traffic go on all through the hot weather? " " Of course. The hot months are the busiest in the year and money's tightest. You should see the brokers cutting about at that season. Calcutta can't stop, my dear sir." "What happens then?" "Nothing happens; the death-rate goes up a little. That's all!" Even in February, the weather would, up-country, be called muggy and stifling, but Calcutta is convinced that it is her cold season. The noises of the city grow perceptibly; it is the night side of Calcutta waking up and going abroad. Jack in the sailors' coffee-shop is singing joyously : " Shall we gather at the River the beautiful, the beautiful, the Kiver?" There is a clatter of hoofs in the courtyard below. Some of the Mounted Police have come in from some- where or other out of the great darkness. A clog-dance of iron hoofs follows, and an Englishman's voice is heard soothing an agitated horse who seems to be stand- CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 219 ing on his hind legs. Some of the Mounted Police are going out into the great darkness. "What's on?" "A dance at Government House. The Reserve men are being formed up below. They're calling the roll." The Reserve men are all English, and big English at that. They form up and tramp out of the courtyard to line Government Place, and see that Mrs. Lollipop's brougham does not get smashed up by Sirdar Chucker- butty Bahadur's lumbering C-spring barouche with the two raw Walers. Very military men are the Calcutta European Police in their set-up, and he who knows their composition knows some startling stories of gentleman- rankers and the like. They are, despite the wearing cli- mate they work in and the wearing work they do, as fine a five-score of Englishmen as you shall find east of Suez. Listen for a moment from the fire look-out to the voices of the night, and you will see why they must be so. Two thousand sailors of fifty nationalities are adrift in Calcutta every Sunday, and of these perhaps two hun- dred are distinctly the worse for liquor. There is a mild row going on, even now, somewhere at the back of Bow Bazar, which at nightfall fills with sailormen who have a wonderful gift of falling foul of the native population. To keep the Queen's peace is of course only a small por- tion of Police duty, but it is trying. The burly presi- dent of the lock-up for European drunks Calcutta central lock-up is worth seeing rejoices in a sprained thumb just now, and has to do his work left-handed in consequence. But his left hand is a marvellously per- suasive one, and when on duty his sleeves are turned up to the shoulder that the jovial mariner may see that there is no deception. The president's labours are 220 FEOM SEA TO SEA handicapped in that the road of sin to the lock-up runs through a grimy little garden the brick paths are worn deep with the tread of many drunken feet where a man can give a great deal of trouble by sticking his toes into the ground and getting mixed up with the shrubs. A straight run-in would be much more convenient both for the president and the drunk. Generally speak- ing and here Police experience is pretty much the same all over the civilised world a woman-drunk is a good deal worse than a man-drunk. She scratches and bites like a Chinaman and swears like several fiends. Strange people may be unearthed in the lock-ups. Here is a perfectly true story, not three weeks old. A visitor, an unofficial one, wandered into the native side of the spacious accommodation provided for those who have gone or done wrong. A wild-eyed Babu rose from the fixed charpoy and said in the best of English, "Good morning, sir." " Good morning. Who are you, and what are you in for?" Then the Babu, in one breath: " I would have you know that I do not go to prison as a criminal but as a reformer. You've read the Vicar of Wakefield?" "Ye-es." "Well, 7am the Vicar of Ben- gal at least that's what I call myself." The visitor collapsed. He had not nerve enough to continue the conversation. Then said the voice of the authority: "He's down in connection with a cheating case at Serampore. May be shamming insane, but he'll be looked to in time." The best place to hear about the Police is the fire look- out. From that eyrie one can see how difficult must be the work of control over the great, growling beast of a city. By all means let us abuse the Police, but let us CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 221 see what the poor wretches have to do with their three thousand natives and one hundred Englishmen. From Howrah and Bally and the other suburbs at least a hun- dred thousand people come in to Calcutta for the day and leave at night. Then, too, Chandernagore is handy for the fugitive law-breaker, who can enter in the even- ing and get away before the noon of the next day, having marked his house and broken into it. a But how can the prevalent offence be house-breaking in a place like this?" "Easily enough. When you've seen a little of the city you'll see. Natives sleep and lie about all over the place, and whole quarters are just so many rabbit-warrens. Wait till you see the Machua Bazar. Well, besides the petty theft and burglary, we have heavy cases of forgery and fraud, that leave us with our wits pitted against a Bengali's. When a Ben- gali criminal is working a fraud of the sort he loves, he is about the cleverest soul you could wish for. He gives us cases a year long to unravel. Then there are the mur- ders in the low houses very curious things they are. You'll see the house where Sheikh Babu was murdered presently, and you'll understand. The Burra Bazar and Jora Bagan sections are the two worst ones for heavy cases; but Colootollah is the most aggravating. There's Colootollah over yonder that patch of darkness beyond the lights. That section is full of tuppenny-ha'penny petty cases, that keep the men up all night and make 'em swear. You'll see Colootollah, and then perhaps you'll understand. Bamun Bustee is the quietest of all, and Lai Bazar and Bow Bazar, as you can see for your- self, are the rowdiest. You've no notion what the natives come to the police station for. A man will conie 222 FROM SEA TO SEA in and want a summons against his master for refusing him half-an-hour's leave. I suppose it does seem rather revolutionary to an up-country man, but they try to do it here. Now wait a minute, before we go down into the city and see the Fire Brigade turned out. Business is slack with them just now, but you time 'em and see." An order is given, and a bell strikes softly thrice. There is a rush of men, the click of a bolt, a red fire- engine, spitting and swearing with the sparks flying from the furnace, is dragged out of its shelter. A huge brake, which holds supplementary horses, men, and hatchets, follows, and a hose-cart is the third on the list. The men push the heavy things about as though they were pith toys. The men clamber up, some one says softly, "All ready there," and with an angry whistle the fire-engine, followed by the other two, flies out into Lai Bazar. Time 1 min. 40 sees. "They'll find out it's a false alarm, and come back again in five minutes." "Why?" "Because there will be no constables on the road to give 'em the direc- tion of the fire, and because the driver wasn't told the ward of the outbreak when he went out ! " " Do you mean to say that you can from this absurd pigeon-loft locate the wards in the night-time?" "What would be the good of a look-out if the man couldn't tell where the fire was?" "But it's all pitchy black, and the lights are so confusing." "You'll be more confused in ten minutes. You'll have lost your way as you never lost it before. You're going to go round Bow Bazar section." " And the Lord have mercy on my soul ! " Calcutta, the darker portion of it, does not look an inviting place to dive into at night. CHAPTER VI THE CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT. " And since they cannot spend or use aright The little time here given them in trust, But lavish it in weary undelight Of foolish toil, and trouble, strife and lust They naturally clamour to inherit The Everlasting Future that their merit May have full scope. . . . As surely is most just." The City of Dreadful Night. THE difficulty is to prevent this account from growing steadily unwholesome. But one cannot rake through a big city without encountering muck. The Police kept their word. In five short minutes, as they had prophesied, their charge was lost as he had never been lost before. " Where are we now? " " Some- where off the Chitpore Road, but you wouldn't under- stand if you were told. Follow now, and step pretty much where we step there's a good deal of filth here- abouts." The thick, greasy night shuts in everything. We have gone beyond the ancestral houses of the Ghoses of the Boses, beyond the lamps, the smells, and the crowd of Chitpore Road, and have come to a great wilderness of packed houses just such mysterious, conspiring tenements as Dickens would have loved. There is no breeze here, and the air is perceptibly warmer. If Cal- 223 224 FROM SEA TO SEA cutta keeps such luxuries as Commissioners of Sewers and Paving, they die before they reach this place. The air is heavy with a faint, sour stench the essence of long-neglected abominations and it cannot escape from among the tall, three-storied houses. "This, my dear Sir, is a perfectly respectable quarter as quarters go. That house at the head of the alley, with the elaborate stucco- work round the top of the door, was built long ago by a celebrated midwife. Great people used to live here once. Now it's the Aha! Look out for that carriage." A big mail-phaeton crashes out of the darkness and, reck- lessly driven, disappears. The wonder is how it ever got into this maze of narrow streets, where nobody seems to be moving, and where the dull throbbing of the city's life only comes faintly and by snatches. " Now it's the what?" " The St. John's Wood of Calcutta for the rich Babus. That 'fitton ' belonged to one of them." " Well, it's not much of a place to look at! " "Don't judge by appearances. About here live the women who have beggared kings. We aren't going to let you down into unadulterated vice all at once. You must see it first with the gilding on and mind that rotten board." Stand at the bottom of a lift shaft and look upwards. Then you will get both the size and the design of the tiny courtyard round which one of these big dark houses is built. The central square may be perhaps ten feet every way, but the balconies that run inside it overhang, and seem to cut away half the available space. To reach the square a man must go round many corners, down a covered-in way, and up and down two or three baffling and confused steps. "Now you will understand," say the Police, kindly, as their charge blunders, shin-first CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 225 into a well-dark winding staircase, "that these are not the sort of places to visit alone." "Who wants to? Of all the disgusting, inaccessible dens Holy Cupid, what's this?" A glare of light on the stair-head, a clink of innumer- able bangles, a rustle of much fine gauze, and the Dainty Iniquity stands revealed, blazing literally blazing with jewellery from head to foot. Take one of the fair- est miniatures that the Delhi painters draw, and multiply it by ten; throw in one of Angelica Kaufmann's best portraits, and add anything that you can think of from Beckford to Lalla Kookh, and you will still fall short of the merits of that perfect face! For an instant, even the grim, professional gravity of the Police is relaxed in the presence of the Dainty Iniquity with the gems, who so prettily invites every one to be seated, and proffers such refreshments as she conceives the palates of the barbarians would prefer. Her maids are only one degree less gorgeous than she. Half a lakh, or fifty thousand pounds' worth it is easier to credit the latter statement than the former are disposed upon her little body. Each hand carries five jewelled rings which are connected by golden chains to a great jewelled boss of gold in the centre of the back of the hand. Ear-rings weighted with emeralds and pearls, diamond nose-rings, and how many other hundred articles make up the list of adornments. English furniture of a gorgeous and gimcrack kind, unlimited chandeliers, and a collection of atrocious Continental prints are scattered about the house, and on every landing squats or loafs a Bengali who can talk English with unholy fluency. The re- currence suggests only suggests, mind a grim pos- VOL. II Q 226 FROM SEA TO SEA sibility of the affectation of excessive virtue by day,, tempered with the sort of unwholesome enjoyment after dusk this loafing and lobbying and chattering and smoking, and unless the bottles lie, tippling, among the foul-tongued handmaidens of the Dainty Iniquity. How many men follow this double, deleterious sort of life? The Police are discreetly dumb. "Now don't go talking about 'domiciliary visits ' just because this one happens to be a pretty woman. We've got to know these creatures. They make the rich man and the poor spend their money; and when a man can't get money for 'em honestly, he conies under our notice. Now do you see? If there was any domiciliary 'visit' about it, the whole houseful would be hidden past our finding as soon as we turned up in the courtyard. We're friends to a certain extent." And, indeed, it seemed no difficult thing to be friends to any extent with the Dainty Iniquity who was so surpassingly different from all that experience taught of the beauty of the East. Here was the face from which a man could write Lalla RooJchs by the dozen, and believe every work that he wrote. Hers was the beauty that Byron sang of when he wrote " Remember, if you come here alone, the chances are that you'll be clubbed, or stuck, or, anyhow, mobbed. You'll understand that this part of the world is shut to Europeans absolutely. Mind the steps, and follow on." The vision dies out in the smells and gross dark- ness of the night, in evil, time-rotten brickwork, and another wilderness of shut-up houses. Follows, after another plunge into a passage of a courtyard, and up a staircase, the apparition of a Fat CITY OF DKEADFUL NIGHT 227 Vice, in whom is no sort of romance, nor beauty, but unlimited coarse humour. She too is studded with jewels, and her house is even finer than the house of the other, and more infested with the extraordinary men who speak such good English and are so deferen- tial to the Police. The Fat Vice has been a great leader of fashion in her day, and stripped a zemindar Raja to his last acre insomuch that he ended in the House of Correction for a theft committed for her sake. Xative opinion has it that she is a "monstrous well-preserved woman." On this point, as on some others, the races will agree to differ. The scene changes suddenly as a slide in a magic lantern. Dainty Iniquity and Fat Vice slide away on a roll of streets and alleys, each more squalid than its predecessor. We are "somewhere at the back of the Machua Bazar," well in the heart of the city. There are no houses here nothing but acres and acres, it seems, of foul wattle-and-dab huts, any one of which would be a disgrace to a frontier village. The whole arrangement is a neatly contrived germ and fire trap, reflecting great credit upon the Calcutta Municipality. "What happens when these pigsties catch fire?" "They're built up again," say the Police, as though this were the natural order of things. "Land is im- mensely valuable here." All the more reason, then, to turn several Hausmanns loose into the city, with in- structions to make barracks for the population that cannot find room in the huts and sleeps in the open ways, cherishing dogs and worse, much worse, in its unwashen bosom. "Here is a licensed coffee-shop. This is where your servants go for amusement and 228 FROM SEA TO SEA to see nautches." There is a huge thatch shed, in- geniously ornamented with insecure kerosene lamps, and crammed with drivers, cooks, small store-keepers and the like. Never a sign of a European. Why? "Because if an Englishman messed about here, he'd get into trouble. Men don't come here unless they're drunk or have lost their way." The hack-drivers they have the privilege of voting, have they not? look peaceful enough as they squat on tables or crowd by the doors to watch the nautch that is going forward. Five pitiful draggle-tails are huddled together on a bench under one of the lamps, while the sixth is squirm- ing and shrieking before the impassive crowd. She sings of love as understood by the Oriental the love that dries the heart and consumes the liver. In this place, the words that would look so well on paper have an evil and ghastly significance. The men stare or sup tumblers and cups of a filthy decoction, and the kunchenee howls with renewed vigour in the presence of the Police. Where the Dainty Iniquity was hung with gold and gems, she is trapped with pewter and glass; and where there was heavy embroidery on the Fat Vice's dress, defaced, stamped tinsel faithfully reduplicates the pattern on the tawdry robes of the kunchenee. Two or three men with uneasy consciences have quietly slipped out of the coffee-shop into the mazes of the huts. The Police laugh, and those nearest in the crowd laugh applausively, as in duty bound. Perhaps the rabbits grin uneasily when the ferret lands at the bottom of the burrow and begins to clear the warren. " The c/kmdoo-shops shut up at six, so you'll have to CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 229 see opium-smoking before dark some day. No, you won't, though." The detective makes for a half -opened door of a hut whence floats the fragrance of the Black Smoke. Those of the inhabitants who are able promptly clear out they have no love for the Police .and there remain only four men lying down and one standing up. This latter has a pet mongoose coiled round his neck. He speaks English fluently. Yes, he has no fear. It was a private smoking party and "No business to- night show how you smoke opium." "Aha! You want to see. Very good, I show. Hiya ! you " he kicks a man on the floor "show how opium-smoke." The kickee grunts lazily and turns on his elbow. The mongoose, always keeping to the man's neck, erects every hair of its body like an angry cat, and chatters in its owner's ear. The lamp for the opium-pipe is the only one in the room, and lights a scene as wild as any- thing in the witches' revel; the mongoose acting as the familiar spirit. A voice from the ground says, in tones of infinite weariness : " You take afitn, so " a long, long pause, and another kick from the man possessed of the devil the mongoose. "You take ctfim?" He takes a pellet of the black, treacly stuff on the end of a knitting-needle. "And light qfim." He plunges the pellet into the night-light, where it swells and fumes greasily. "And then you put it in your pipe." The smoking pellet is jammed into the tiny bowl of the thick, bamboo-stemmed pipe, and all speech ceases, ex- cept the unearthly clutter of the mongoose. The man on the groiind is sucking at his pipe, and when the smoking pellet has ceased to smoke will be halfway to Nibban. "Now you go," says the man with the mongoose. "I 230 FROM SEA TO SEA am going smoke." The hut door closes upon a red-lit view of huddled legs and bodies, and the man with the mongoose sinking, sinking on to his knees, his head bowed forward, and the little hairy devil chattering on the nape of his neck. After this the fetid night air seems almost cool, for the hut is as hot as a furnace. "Now for Colootollah. Come through the huts. There is no decoration about this vice." The huts now gave place to houses very tall and spacious and very dark. But for the narrowness of the streets we might have stumbled upon Chowringhi in the dark. An hour and a half has passed, and up to this time we have not crossed our trail once. " You might knock about the city for a night and never cross the same line. Recollect Calcutta isn't one of your poky up- country cities of a lakh and a half of people." "How long does it take to know it then? " " About a lifetime, and even then some of the streets puzzle you." "How much has the head of a ward to know?" "Every house in his ward if he can, who owns it, what sort of charac- ter the inhabitants are, who are their friends, who go out and in, who loaf about the place at night, and so on and so on." "And he knows all this by night as well as by day?" "Of course. Why shouldn't he?" "No reason in the world. Only it's pitchy black just now, and I'd like to see where this alley is going to end." "Round the corner beyond that dead wall. There's a lamp there. Then you'll be able to see." A shadow flits out of a gulley and disappears. "Who's that?" "Sergeant of Police just to see where we're going in case of accidents." Another shadow staggers into the CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 231 darkness. "Who's that?" "Soldier from the Fort or a sailor from the ships. I couldn't quite see." The Police open a shut door in a high wall, and stumble unceremoniously among a gang of women cooking their food. The floor is of beaten earth, the steps that lead into the upper stories are unspeakably grimy, and the heat is the heat of April. The women rise hastily, and the light of the bull's eye for the Police have now lighted a lantern in regular London fashion shows six bleared faces one a half-native half- Chinese one, and the others Bengali. "There are no men here!" they cry. "The house is empty." Then they grin and jabber and chew pan and spit, and hurry up the steps into the darkness. A range of three big rooms has been knocked into one here, and there is some sort of arrangement of mats. But an average coun- try-bred is more sumptuously accommodated in an Englishman's stable. A horse would snort at the accommodation. " Nice sort of place, isn't it? " say the Police, genially. "This is where the sailors get robbed and drunk." "They must be blind drunk before they come." "Na na! Na sailor men ee yah!" chorus the women, catching at the one word they understand. " Arl gone ! " The Police take no notice, but tramp down the big room with the mat loose-boxes. A woman is shivering in one of these. "What's the matter?" "Fever. Seek. Vary, vary seek." She huddles herself into a heap on the charpoy and groans. A tiny, pitch-black closet opens out of the long room, and into this the Police plunge. " Hullo ! What's here? " Down flashes the lantern, and a white hand with black 232 FKOM SEA TO SEA nails comes out of the gloom. Somebody is asleep or drank in the cot. The ring of lantern light travels slowly up and down the body. "A sailor from the ships. He'll be robbed before the morning most likely." The man is sleeping like a little child, both arms thrown over his head, and he is not unhandsome. He is shoeless, and there are huge holes in his stock- ings. He is a pure-blooded white, and carries the flush of innocent sleep on his cheeks. The light is turned off, and the Police depart; while the woman in the loose-box shivers, and moans that she is "seek; vary, vary seek." CHAPTER VII DEEPER AND DEEPER STILL. " I built myself a lordly pleasure-house, Wherein at ease for aye to dwell ; I said : ' O Soul, make merry and carouse. Dear Soul for all is well. ' ' ' The Palace of Art. "AND where next? I don't like Colootollah." The Police and their charge are standing in the interminable waste of houses under the starlight. "To the lowest sink of all, but you wouldn't know if you were told." They lead till they come to the last circle of the Inferno a long, quiet, winding road. "There you are; you can see for yourself." But there is nothing to be seen. On one side are houses gaunt and dark, naked and devoid of furniture ; on the other, low, mean stalls, lighted, and with shame- lessly open doors, where women stand and mutter and whisper one to another. There is a hush here, or at least the busy silence of an officer of counting- house in working hours. One look down the street is sufficient. Lead on, gentlemen of the Calcutta Police. We do not love the lines of open doors, the flaring lamps within, the glimpses of the tawdry toilet-tables adorned with little plaster dogs, glass balls from Christ- mas-trees, and for religion must not be despised though 233 234 FROM SEA TO SEA women be fallen pictures of the saints and statuettes of the Virgin. The street is a long one, and other streets, full of the same pitiful wares, branch off from it. "Why are they so quiet? "Why don't they make a row and sing and shout, and so on?" "Why should they, poor devils?" say the Police, and fall to telling tales of horror, of women decoyed and shot into this trap. Then other tales that shatter one's belief in all things and folk of good repute. "How can you Police have faith in humanity?" " That's because you're seeing it all in a lump for the first time, and it's not nice that way. Makes a man jump rather, doesn't it? But, recollect, you've asked for the worst places, and you can't complain." "Who's complaining? Bring on your atrocities. Isn't that a European woman at that door?" "Yes. Mrs. D , widow of a soldier, mother of seven children." "Nine, if you please, and good evening to you," shrills Mrs. D , leaning against the door-post, her arms folded on her bosom. She is a rather pretty, slightly made Eurasian, and whatever shame she may have owned she has long since cast behind her. A shapeless Burmo- native trot, with high cheek-bones and mouth like a shark, calls Mrs. D "Mem-Sahib." The word jars unspeakably. Her life is a matter between herself and her Maker, but in that she the widow of a soldier of the Queen has stooped to this common foulness in the face of the city, she has offended against the White race. " You're from up-country, and of course you don't under- stand. There are any amount of that lot in the city, say the Police." Then the secret of the insolence 235 of Calcutta is made plain. Small wonder the natives fail to respect the Sahib, seeing what they see and knowing what they know. In the good old days, the Honourable the Directors deported him or her who mis- behaved grossly, and the white man preserved his face. He may have been a ruffian, but he was a ruffian on a large scale. He did not sink in the presence of the people. The natives are quite right to take the wall of the Sahib who has been at great pains to prove that he is of the same flesh and blood. All this time Mrs. D stands on the threshold of her room and looks upon the men with unabashed eyes. Mrs. D is a lady with a story. She is not averse to telling it. " What was ahem the case in which you were er hmn concerned, Mrs. D ?" "They said I'd poisoned my husband by putting something into his drinking water." This is interesting. "And ah did you? " " 'Twasn't proved," says Mrs. D with a laugh, a pleasant, lady-like laugh that does infinite credit to her education and upbringing. Worthy Mrs. D ! It would pay a novelist a French one let us say to pick you out of the stews and make you talk. The Police move forward, into a region of Mrs. D 's. Everywhere are the empty houses, and the babbling women in print gowns. The clocks in the city are close upon midnight, but the Police show no signs of stopping. They plunge hither and thither, like wreckers into the surf; and each plunge brings up a sample of misery, filth, and woe. A woman Eurasian rises to a sitting position on a cot and blinks sleepily at the Police. Then she throws herself down with a grunt. "What's the matter with 236 FROM SEA TO SEA you?" "I live in Markiss Lane and" this with intense gravity "I'm so drunk." She has a rather striking gipsy-like face, but her language might be improved. "Come along," say the Police, "we'll head back to Bentinck Street, and put you on the road to the Great Eastern." They walk long and steadily, and the talk falls on gambling hells. " You ought to see our men rush one of 'em. When we've marked a hell down, we post men at the entrances and carry it. Sometimes the Chinese bite, but as a rule they fight fair. It's a pity we hadn't a hell to show you. Let's go in here there may be something forward." "Here " appears to be in the heart of a Chinese quarter, for the pigtails do they ever go to bed? are scuttling about the streets. "Never go into a Chinese place alone," say the Police, and swing open a postern gate in a strong, green door. Two Chinamen appear. "What are we going to see? " "Japanese gir No, we aren't, by Jove ! Catch that Chinaman, quick." The pigtail is trying to double back across a courtyard into an inner chamber; but a large hand on his shoulder spins him round and puts him in rear of the line of advancing Englishmen, who are, be it observed, making a fair amount of noise with their boots. A second door is thrown open, and the visitors advance into a large, square room blazing with gas. Here thirteen pigtails, deaf and blind to the outer world, are bending over a table. The captured Chinaman dodges uneasily in the rear of the procession. Five ten fifteen seconds pass, the Englishmen standing in the full light less than three paces from the absorbed gang who see nothing. CITY OF DEEADFUL NIGHT 237 Then the burly Superintendent brings his hand down on his thigh with a crack like a pistol-shot and shouts: "How do, John?" Follows a frantic rush of scared Celestials, almost tumbling over each other in their anxiety to get clear. One pigtail scoops up a pile of copper money, another a chinaware soup-bowl, and only a little mound of accusing cowries remains on the white matting that covers the table. In less than half a minute two facts are forcibly brought home to the visitor. First, that a pigtail is largely composed of silk, and rasps the palm of the hand as it slides through; and secondly, that the forearm of a Chinaman is surpris- ingly muscular and well-developed. "What's going to be done?" "Nothing. There are only three of us, and all the ringleaders would get away. We've got 'em safe any time we want to catch 'em, if this little visit doesn't make 'em shift their quarters. Hi! John. No pidgin to-night. Show how you makee play. That fat youngster there is our informer." Half the pigtails have fled into the darkness, but the remainder assured and trebly assured that the Police really mean "no pidgin," return to the table and stand round while the croupier manipulates the cowries, the little curved slip of bamboo, and the soup-bowl. They never gamble, these innocents. They only come to look on, and smoke opium in the next room. Yet as the game progresses their eyes light up, and one by one put their money on odd or even the number of the cowries that are covered and left uncovered by the little soup- bowl. Mytlian is the name of the amusement, and, whatever may be its demerits, it is clean. The Police look on while their charge plays and loots a parchment- 238 FKOM SEA TO SEA skinned horror one of Swift's Struldburgs, strayed from Laputa of the enormpus sum of two annas. The return of this wealth, doubled, sets the loser beating his forehead against the table from sheer gratitude. "Most immoral game this. A man might drop five whole rupees, if he began playing at sun-down and kept it up all night. Don't you ever play whist occasion- ally?" " Now, we didn't bring you round to make fun of this department. A man can lose as much as ever he likes and he can fight as well, and if he loses all his money he steals to get more. A Chinaman is insane about gambling, and half his crime comes from it. It must be kept down. Here we are in Bentinck Street and you can be driven to the Great Eastern in a few minutes. Joss houses? Oh, yes. If you want more horrors, Superintendent Lamb will take you round with him to- morrow afternoon at five. Good night." The Police depart, and in a few minutes the silent respectability of Old Council House Street, with the grim Free Kirk at the end of it, is reached. All good Calcutta has gone to bed, the last tram has passed, and the peace of the night is upon the world. Would it be wise and rational to climb the spire of that kirk, and shout: "0 true believers! Decency is a fraud and a sham. There is nothing clean or pure or wholesome under the stars, and we are all going to perdition together. Amen ! " On second thoughts it would not ; for the spire is slippery, the night is hot, and the Police have been specially careful to warn their charge that he must not be carried away by the sight of horrors that cannot be written or hinted at. CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 239 "Good morning," says the Policeman tramping the pavement in front of the Great Eastern, and he nods his head pleasantly to show that he is the representative of Law and Peace and that the city of Calcutta is safe from itself for the present. CHAPTER VIII CONCERNING LUCIA. TIME must be filled in somehow till five this afternoon, when Superintendent Lamb will reveal more horrors. Why not, the trams aiding, go to the Old Park Street Cemetery ? "You want go Park Street? No trams going Park Street. You get out here." Calcutta tram conductors are not polite. The car shuffles unsympathetically down the street, and the evicted is stranded in Dhurrum- tollah, which may be the Hammersmith Highway of Calcutta. Providence arranged this mistake, and paved the way to a Great Discovery now published for the first time. Dhurrumtollah is full of the People of India, walking in family parties and groups and con- fidential couples. And the people of India are neither Hindu nor Mussulman Jew, Ethiop, Gueber, or ex- patriated British. They are the Eurasians, and there are hundreds and hundreds of them in Dhurrumtollah now. There is Papa with a shining black hat fit for a counsellor of the Queen, and Mamma, whose silken dress is tight upon her portly figure, and The Brood made up of straw-hatted, olive-cheeked, sharp-eyed little boys, and leggy maidens wearing white, open-work stock- ings calculated to show dust. There are the young men 240 CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 241 who smoke bad cigars and carry themselves lordily such as have incomes. There are also the young women with the beautiful eyes and the wonderful dresses which always fit so badly across the shoulders. And they carry prayer-books or baskets, because they are either going to mass or the market. Without doubt, these are the People of India. They were born in it, bred in it, and will die in it. The Englishman only comes to the country, and the natives of course were there from the first, but these people have been made here, and no one has done anything for them except talk and write about them. Yet they belong, some of them, to old and honourable families, hold houses in Sealdah, and are rich, a few of them. They all look prosperous and contented, and they chatter eternally in that curious dialect that no one has yet reduced to print. Beyond what little they please to reveal now and again in the newspapers, we know nothing about their life which touches so intimately the White on the one hand and the Black on the other. It must be interesting more interesting than the colourless Anglo-Indian arti- cle; but who has treated of it? There was one novel once in which the second heroine was an Eurasienne. She was a strictly subordinate character, and came to a sad end. The poet of the race, Henry Derozio, he of whom Mr. Thomas Edwards wrote a history, was bitten with Keats and Scott and Shelley, and over- looked in his search for material things that lay nearest to him. All this mass of humanity in Dhurrumtollah is unexploited and almost unknown. Wanted, therefore, a writer from among the Eurasians, who shall write so that men shall be pleased to read a story of Eurasian VOL. II B 242 FROM SEA TO SEA life; then outsiders will be interested in the People of India, and will admit that the race has possibilities. A futile attempt to get to Park Street from Dhurrum- tollah ends in the market the Hogg Market men call it. Perhaps a knight of that name built it. It is not one-half as pretty as the Crawford Market, in Bombay, but ... it appears to be the trysting place of Young Calcutta. The natural inclination of youth is to lie abed late, and to let the seniors do all the hard work. Why, therefore, should Pyramus, who has to be ruling account forms at ten, and Thisbe, who cannot be inter- ested in the price of second-quality beef, wander, in studiously correct raiment, round and about the stalls before the sun is well clear of the earth? Pyramus car- ries a walking stick with imitation silver straps upon it, and there are cloth tops to his boots ; but his collar has been two days worn. Thisbe crowns her dark head with a blue velvet Tam-o'-Shanter; but one of her boots lacks a button, and there is a tear in the left-hand glove. Mamma, who despises gloves, is rapidly filling a shallow basket, that the coolie-boy carries, with vegetables, pota- toes, purple brinjals, and Oh, Pyramus ! Do you ever kiss Thisbe when Mamma is not by? garlic yea, lusson of the bazaar. Mamma is generous in her views on garlic. Pyramus comes round the corner of the stall looking for nobody in particular not he and is elaborately polite to Mamma. Somehow, he and Thisbe drift off together, and Mamma, very portly and very voluble, is left to chaffer and sort and select alone. In the name of the Sacred Unities do not, young people, retire to the meat-stalls to exchange confidences ! Come up to this end, where the roses are arriving in great flat CITY OF DKEADFUL NIGHT 243 baskets, where the air is heavy with the fragrance ot flowers, and the young buds and greenery are littering all the floor. They won't they prefer talking by the dead, unromantic muttons, where there are riot so many buyers. There must have been a quarrel to make up. Thisbe shakes the blue velvet Tain-o'-Shanter and says, "Oah yess!" scornfully. Pyramus answers: "No-a, no-a. Do-ant say thatt." Mamma's basket is full and she picks up Thisbe hastily. Pyramus departs. He never came here to do any marketing. He came to meet Thisbe, who in ten years will own a figure very much like Mamma's. May their ways be smooth before them, and after honest service of the Government, may Pyramus retire on 250 rupees per mensem, into a nice little house somewhere in Monghyr or Chunar! From love by natural sequence to death. Where is the Park Street Cemetery? A hundred hack-drivers leap from their boxes and invade the market, and after a short struggle one of them uncarts his capture in a burial-ground a ghastly new place, close to a tram- way. This is not what is wanted. The living dead are here the people whose names are not yet altogether perished and whose tombstones are tended. "Where are the old dead?" "Nobody goes there," says the driver. "It is up that road." He points up a long and utterly deserted thoroughfare, running between high walls. This is the place, and the entrance to it, with its gardener waiting with one brown, battered rose for the visitor, its grilled door and its professional notices, bears a hideous likeness to the entrance of Simla churchyard. But, once inside, the sightseer stands in the heart of utter desola- tion all the more forlorn for being swept up. Lower 244 FROM SEA TO SEA Park Street cats a great graveyard in two. The guide- books will tell you when the place was opened and when it was closed. The eye is ready to swear that it is as old as Herculaneum and Pompeii. The tombs are small houses. It is as though we walked down the streets of a town, so tall are they and so closely do they stand a town shrivelled by fire, and scarred by frost and siege. Men must have been afraid of their friends rising up before the due time that they weighted them with such cruel mounds of masonry. Strong man, weak woman, or somebody's "infant son aged fifteen months," for each the squat obelisk, the defaced classic temple, the cel- laret of chunam, or the candlestick of brickwork the heavy slab, the rust-eaten railings, the whopper-jawed cherubs, and the apoplectic angels. Men were rich in those days and could afford to put a hundred cubic feet of masonry into the grave of even so humble a person as "Jno. Clements, Captain of the Country Service, 1820." When the "dearly beloved" had held rank answering to that of Commissioner, the efforts are still more sumptuous and the verse. . . . Well, the follow- ing speaks for itself : " Soft on thy tomb shall fond Remembrance shed The warm yet unavailing tear, And purple flowers that deck the honoured dead Shall strew the loved and honoured bier." Failure to comply with the contract does not, let us hope, entail forfeiture of the earnest-money; or the honoured dead might be grieved. The slab is out of his tomb, and leans foolishly against it; the railings are rotted, and there are no more lasting ornaments than CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 245 blisters and stains, which are the work of the weather, and not the result of the "warm yet unavailing tear." Let us go about and moralise cheaply on the tomb- stones, trailing the robe of pious reflection up and down the pathways of the grave. Here is a big and stately tomb sacred to " Lucia," who died in 1776 A.D., aged 23. Here also be lichened verses which an irreverent thumb can bring to light. Thus they wrote, when their hearts were heavy in them, one hundred and sixteen years ago: " What needs the emblem, what the plaintive strain, What all the arts that sculpture e'er expressed, To tell the treasure that these walls contain ? Let those declare it most who knew her best. " The tender pity she would oft display Shall be with interest at her shrine returned, Connubial love, connubial tears repay, And Lucia loved shall still be Lucia mourned. "Though closed the lips, though stopped the tuneful breath, The silent, clay-cold monitress shall teach In all the alarming eloquence of death With double pathos to the heart shall preach. " Shall teach the virtuous maid, the faithful wife, If young and fair, that young and fair was she, Then close the useful lesson of her h'fe, And tell them what she is, they soon must be." That goes well, even after all these years, does it not? and seems to bring Lucia very near, in spite of what the later generation is pleased to call the stiltedness of the old-time verse. Who will declare the merits of Lucia dead in her spring before there was even a Hickey's Gazette to chron- 246 FKOM SEA TO SEA icle the amusements of Calcutta, and publish, with scurri- lous asterisks, the liaisons of heads of departments ? What pot-bellied East Indiaman brought the "virtuous maid" up the river, and did Lucia " make her bargain " as the cant of those times went, on the first, second, or third day after her arrival? Or did she, with the others of the batch, give a spinsters' ball as a last trial following the custom of the country? No. She was a fair Kent- ish maiden, sent out, at a cost of five hundred pounds, English money, under the captain's charge, to wed the man of her choice, and he knew Clive well, had had dealings with Omichand, and talked to men who had lived through the terrible night in the Black Hole. He was a rich man, Lucia's battered tomb proves it, and he gave Lucia all that her heart could wish: a green- painted boat to take the air in on the river of evenings. Coffree slave-boys who could play on the French horn, and even a very elegant, neat coach with a genteel rutlan roof ornamented with flowers very highly finished, ten best polished plate glasses, ornamented with a few ele- gant medallions enriched with rnother-o'-pearl, that she might take her drive on the course as befitted a factor's wife. All these things he gave her. And when the convoys came up the river, and the guns thundered, and the servants of the Honourable the East India Company drank to the king's health, be sure that Lucia before all the other ladies in the Fort had her choice of the new stuffs from England and was cordially hated in conse- quence. Tilly Kettle painted her picture a little before she died, and the hot-blooded young writers did duel with small swords in the fort ditch for the honour of piloting her through a minuet at the Calcutta theatre or CITY OF DREADFUL NIGHT 247 the Punch House. But Warren Hastings danced with her instead, and the writers were confounded every man of them. She was a toast far up the river. And she walked in the evening on the bastions of Fort- William, and said, "La! I protest! " It was there that she exchanged congratulations with all her friends on the 20th of October, when those who were alive gathered together to felicitate themselves on having come through another hot season ; and the men even the sober factor saw no wrong here got most royally and Britishly drunk on Madeira that had twice rounded the Cape. But Lucia fell sick, and the doctor he who went home after seven years with five lakhs and a half, and a corner of this vast graveyard to his account said that it was a pukka or putrid fever, and the system required strengthening. So they fed Lucia on hot curries, and mulled wine worked up with spirits and fortified with spices, for nearly a week ; at the end of which time she closed her eyes on the weary river and the Fort for ever, and a gallant, with a turn for belles-lettres, wept openly as men did then and had no shame of it, and composed the verses above set, and thought himself a neat hand at the pen stap his vitals ! But the factor was so grieved that he could write nothing at all could only spend his money and he counted his wealth by lakhs on a sumptuous grave. A little later on he took comfort, and when the next batch carne out But this has nothing whatever to do with the story of Lucia, the virtuous maid, the faithful wife. Her ghost went to a big Calcutta powder ball that very night, and looked very beautiful. I met her. AMONG THE RAILWAY FOLK CHAPTER I A RAILWAY SETTLEMENT. JAMALPUB is the headquarters of the East India Bail- way. This in itself is not a startling statement. The wonder begins with the exploration of Jamalpur, which is a station entirely made by, and devoted to, the use of those untiring servants of the public, the railway folk. They have towns of their own at Toondla and Assen- sole; a sun-dried sanitarium at Bandikui; and Howrah, Ajmir, Allahabad, Lahore, and Pindi know their colo- nies. But Jamalpur is unadulteratedly " Railway," and he who has nothing to do with the E. I. Railway in some shape or another feels a stranger and an inter- loper. Running always east and southerly, the train carries him from the torments of the northwest into the wet, woolly warmth of Bengal, where may be found the hothouse heat that has ruined the temper of the good people of Calcutta. The land is fat and greasy with good living, and the wealth of the bodies of innumer- able dead things; and here just above Mokameh may be seen fields stretching, without stick, stone, or bush to break the view, from the railway line to the horizon. Up-country innocents must look at the map to learn that Jamalpur is near the top left-hand corner of the big 249 250 FKOM SEA TO SEA loop that the E. I. R. throws out round Bhagalpur and part of the Bara-Banki districts. Northward of Jamal- pur, as near as may be, lies the Ganges and Tirhoot, and eastward an offshoot of the volcanic Kajmehal range blocks the view. A station which has neither Judge, Commissioner, Deputy, or 'Stunt, which is devoid of law courts, ticca- gharies, District Superintendents of Police, and t any other evidences of an over-cultured civilisation, is a curiosity. " We administer ourselves," says Jamalpur, proudly, " or we did till we had local self-government in and now the racket-marker administers us." This is a solemn fact. The station, which had its beginnings thirty odd years ago, used, till comparatively recent times, to control its own roads, sewage, conservancy, and the like. But, with the introduction of local self- government, it was ordained that the " inestimable boon " should be extended to a place made by, and main- tained for, Europeans, and a brand-new municipality was created and nominated according to the many rules of the game. In the skirmish that ensued, the Club racket-marker fought his way to the front, secured a place on a board largely composed of Babus, and since that day Jamalpur's views on government have not been fit for publication. To understand the magnitude of the insult, one must study the city for station, in the strict sense of the word, it is not. Crotons, palms, mangoes, mellingtonias, teak, and bamboos adorn it, and the poinsettia and bougainvittea, the railway creeper and the bignonia venusta, make it gay with many colours. It is laid out with military precision to each house its just share of garden, its red brick path, its growth of trees, AMONG THE BAILWAY FOLK 251 and its neat little wicket gate. Its general aspect, in spite of the Dutch formality, is that of an English village, such a thing as enterprising stage-managers put on the theatres at home. The hills have thrown a pro- tecting arm round nearly three sides of it ; and on the fourth it is bounded by what are locally known as the " sheds " ; in other words, the station, offices, and work- shops of the company. The E. I. E. only exists for out- siders. Its servants speak of it reverently, angrily, despitefully, or enthusiastically as " The Company " ; and they never omit the big, big C. Men must have treated the Honourable the East India Company in something the same fashion ages ago. "The Company" in Jamalpur is Lord Dufferin, all the Members of Coun- cil, the Body-Guard, Sir Frederick Roberts, Mr. West- land, whose name is at the bottom of the currency notes, the Oriental Life Assurance Company, and the Bengal Government all rolled into one. At first, when a stranger enters this life, he is inclined to scoff and ask, in his ignorance, " What is this Company that you talk so much about ? " Later on, he ceases to scoff ; for the Company is a " big " thing almost big enough to satisfy an American. Ere beginning to describe its doings, let it be written, and repeated several times hereafter, that the E. I. E. passenger carriages, and especially the second-class, are just now horrid being filthy and unwashen, dirty to look at, and dirty to live in. Having cast this small stone, we will examine Jamalpur. When it was laid out, in or before the Mutiny year, its designers allowed room for growth, and made the houses of one general design some of brick, some of stone, some three, four, 252 FROM SEA TO SEA and six roomed, some single men's barracks and some two-storied all for the use of the employes. King's Road, Prince's Road, Queen's Road, and Victoria Road Jamalpur is loyal cut the breadth of the station; and Albert Road, Church Street, and Steam Road the length of it. Neither on these roads or on any of the cool-shaded smaller ones is anything unclean or un- sightly to be found. There is a dreary village in the neighbourhood which is said to make the most of any cholera that may be going, but Jamalpur itself is speck- lessly and spotlessly neat. From St. Mary's Church to the railway station, and from the buildings where they print daily about half a lakh of tickets, to the ringing, roaring, rattling workshops, everything has the air of having been cleaned up at ten that very morning and put under a glass case. There is a holy calm about the roads totally unlike anything in an English manufac- turing town. Wheeled conveyances are few, because every man's bungalow is close to his work, and when the day has begun and the offices of the "Loco." and "Traffic" have soaked up their thousands of natives and hundreds of Europeans, you shall pass under the dappled shadows of the trees, hearing nothing louder than the croon of some bearer playing with a child in the verandah or the faint tinkle of a piano. This is pleasant, and produces an impression of Watteau-like refinement tempered with Arcadian simplicity. The dry, anguished howl of the "buzzer," the big steam- whistle, breaks the hush, and all Jamalpur is alive with the tramping of tiffin-seeking feet. The Company gives one hour for meals between eleven and twelve. On the stroke of noon there is another rush back to the AMONG THE EAILWAY FOLK 253 works or the offices, and Jamalpur sleeps through the afternoon till four or half-past, and then rouses for tennis at the institute. In the hot weather it splashes in the swimming bath, or reads, for it has a library of several thousand books. One of the most flourishing lodges in the Bengal juris- diction " St. George in the East " lives at Jamalpur, and meets twice a month. Its members point out with justifiable pride that all the fittings Avere made by their own hands ; and the lodge in its accoutrements and the energy of the craftsmen can compare with any in India. But the institute is the central gathering place, and its half-dozen tennis-courts and neatly-laid-out grounds seem to be always full. Here, if a stranger could judge, the greater part of the flirtation of Jamalpur is carried out, and here the dashing apprentice the apprentices are the liveliest of all learns that there are prob- lems harder than any he studies at the night school, and that the heart of a maiden is more inscrutable than the mechanism of a locomotive. On Tuesdays and Fridays, the volunteers parade. A and B Companies, 150 strong in all, of the E. I. E. Volunteers, are stationed here with the band. Their uniform, grey with red facings, is not lovely, but they know how to shoot and drill. They have to. The " Company " makes it a condition of service that a man must be a volunteer ; and volunteer in something more than name he must be, or some one will ask the reason why. Seeing that there are no regulars between Howrah and Dinapore, the "Company" does well in exacting this toll. Some of the old soldiers are wearied of drill, some of the youngsters don't like it, but the way they entrain 254 FBOM SEA TO SEA and detrain is worth seeing. They are as mobile a corps as can be desired, and perhaps ten or twelve years hence the Government may possibly be led to take a real interest in them and spend a few thousand rupees in providing them with real soldiers' kits not uniform and rifle merely. Their ranks include all sorts and conditions of men heads of the "Loco." and " Traffic," the " Company " is no respecter of rank clerks in the "audit," boys from mercantile firms at home, fighting with the intricacies of time, fare, and freight tables; guards who have grown grey in the service of the Company ; mail and passenger drivers with nerves of cast-iron, who can shoot through a long afternoon without losing temper or flurrying ; light-blue East Indians ; Tyne-side men, slow of speech and un- commonly strong in the arm; lathy apprentices who have not yet " filled out " ; fitters, turners, foremen, full, assistant, and sub-assistant station-masters, and a host of others. In the hands of the younger men the regulation Martini-Henri naturally goes off the line occasionally on hunting expeditions. There is a twelve-hundred yards' range running down one side of the station, and the ' condition of the grass by the firing butts tells its own tale. Scattered in the ranks of the volunteers are a fair number of old soldiers, for the Company has a weakness for recruiting from the Army for its guards who may, in time, become station- masters. A good man from the Army, with his papers all correct and certificates from his commanding officer, can, after depositing twenty pounds to pay his home passage, in the event of his services being dispensed with, enter the Company's service on something less AMONG THE RAILWAY FOLK 255 than one hundred rupees a month and rise in time to four hundred as a station-master. A railway bungalow and they are as substantially built as the engines will cost him more than one-ninth of the pay of his grade, and the Provident Fund provides for his latter end. Think for a moment of the number of men that a line running from Howrah to Delhi must use, and you will realise what an enormous amount of patronage the Company holds in its hands. Naturally a father who has worked for the line expects the line to do something for the son ; and the line is not backward in meeting his wishes where possible. The sons of old servants may be taken on at fifteen years of age, or thereabouts, as apprentices in the "shops," receiving twenty rupees in the first and fifty in the last year of their indentures. Then they come on the books as full " men " on perhaps Rs. 65 a month, and the road is open to them in many ways. They may become foremen of departments on Rs. 500 a month, or drivers earning with overtime Rs. 370; or if they have been brought into the audit or the traffic, they may control innumerable Babus and draw several hundreds of rupees monthly; or, at eighteen or nineteen, they may be ticket-collectors, working up to the grade of guard, etc. Every rank of the huge, human hive has a desire to see its sons placed properly, and the native workmen, about three thousand, in the locomotive department only, are, said one man, "making a family affair of it altogether. You see all those men turning brass and looking after the machin- ery ? They've all got relatives, and a lot of 'em own land out Monghyr-way close to us. They bring on their 256 FROM SEA TO SEA sons as soon as they are old enough to do anything, and the Company rather encourages it. You see the father is in a way responsible for his son, and he'll teach him all he knows, and in that way the Company has a hold on them all. You've no notion how sharp a native is when he's working on his own hook. All the district round here, right up to Monghyr, is more or less de- pendent on the railway." The Babus in the traffic department, in the stores, issue department, in all the departments where men sit through the long, long Indian day among ledgers, and check and pencil and deal in figures and items and rupees, may be counted by hundreds. Imagine the struggle among them to locate their sons in comfortable cane-bottomed chairs, in front of a big pewter inkstand and stacks of paper! The Babus make beautiful ac- countants, and if we could only see it, a merciful Providence has made the Babu for figures and detail. Without him, the dividends of any company would be eaten up by the expenses of English or city-bred clerks. The Babu is a great man, and, to respect him, you must see five score or so of him in a room a hundred yards long, bending over ledgers, ledgers, and yet more ledgers silent as the Sphinx and busy as a bee. He is the lubricant of the great machinery of the Company whose ways and works cannot be dealt with in a single scrawl. CHAPTER II THE SHOPS. THE railway folk, like the army and civilian castes, have their own language and life, which an outsider cannot hope to understand. For instance, when Jamal- pur refers to itself as being "on the long siding," a lengthy explanation is necessary before the visitor grasps the fact that the whole of the two hundred and thirty odd miles of the loop from Luckeeserai to Kami- Junction via Bhagalpur is thus contemptuously treated. Jamalpur insists that it is out of the world, and makes this an excuse for being proud of itself and all its institutions. But in one thing it is badly, dis- gracefully provided. At a moderate estimate there must be about two hundred Europeans with their families in this place. They can, and do, get their small supplies from Calcutta, but they are dependent on the tender mercies of the bazaar for their meat, which seems to be hawked from door to door. There is a Raja who owns or has an interest in the land on which the sta- tion stands, and he is averse to cow-killing. For these reasons, Jamalpur is not too well supplied with good meat, and what it wants is a decent meat-market with cleanly controlled slaughtering arrangements. The " Company," who gives grants to the schools and builds the institute and throws the shadow of its protection all over the place, might help this scheme forward. VOL. ii s 257 25S FROM SEA TO SEA The heart of Jamalpur is the " shops," and here a visitor will see more things in an hour than he can understand in a year. Steam Street very appropriately leads to the forty or fifty acres that the " shops " cover, and to the busy silence of the loco, superintendent's office, where a man must put down his name and his business on a slip of paper before he can penetrate into the Temple of Vulcan. About three thousand five hun- dred men are in the " shops," and, ten minutes after the day's work has begun, the assistant superintendent knows exactly how many are "in." The heads of de- partments silent, heavy-handed men, captains of five hundred or more have their names fairly printed on a board which is exactly like a pool-marker. They " star a life" when they come in, and their few names alone represent salaries to the extent of six thousand a month. They are men worth hearing deferentially. They hail from Manchester and the Clyde, and the great iron- works of the North : pleasant as cold water in a thirsty land is it to hear again the full Northumbrian burr or the long-drawn Yorkshire "aye." Under their great gravity of demeanour a man who is in charge of a few lakhs' worth of plant cannot afford to be riotously mirthful lurks melody and humour. They can sing like north-countrymen, and in their hours of ease go back to the speech of the iron countries they have left behind, when " Ab o' th' yate " and all " Ben Briarly's " shrewd wit shakes the warm air of Bengal with deep- chested laughter. Hear " Euglan' Toon," with a chorus as true as the fall of trip-hammers, and fancy that you are back again in the smoky, rattling, ringing North ! But this is the " unofficial " side. Go forward AMONG THE RAILWAY FOLK 259 through the gates under the mango trees, and set foot at once in sheds which have as little to do with mangoes as a locomotive with Lakshmi. The " buzzer " howls, for it is nearly tiffin time. There is a rush from every quarter of the shops, a cloud of flying natives, and a procession of more sedately pacing Englishmen, and in three short minutes you are left absolutely alone among arrested wheels and belts, pulleys, cranks, and cranes in a silence only broken by the soft sigh of a far-away steam-valve or the cooing of pigeons. You are, by favour freely granted, at liberty to wander anywhere you please through the deserted works. Walk into a huge, brick- built, tin-roofed stable, capable of holding twenty-four locomotives under treatment, and see what must be done to the Iron Horse once in every three years if he is to do his work well. On reflection, Iron Horse is wrong. An engine is a she as distinctly feminine as a ship or a mine. Here stands the Echo, her wheels off, resting on blocks, her underside machinery taken out, and her side scrawled with mysterious hieroglyphics in chalk. An enormous green-painted iron harness-rack bears her pis- ton and eccentric rods, and a neatly painted board shows that such and such Englishmen are the fitter, assistant, and apprentice engaged in editing that Echo. An engine seen from the platform and an engine viewed from underneath are two very different things. The one is as unimpressive as a cart; the other as imposing as a man-of-war in the yard. In this manner is an engine treated for navicular, laminitis, back-sinew, or whatever it is that engines most suffer from. No. 607, we will say, goes wrong at Dina- pore, Assensole, Buxar, or wherever it may be, after 260 FKOM SEA TO SEA three years' work. The place she came from is sten- cilled on the boiler, and the foreman examines her. Then he fills in a hospital sheet, which bears one hun- dred and eighty printed heads under which an engine can come into the shops. No. 607 needs repair in only one hundred and eighteen particulars, ranging from mud-hole-flanges and blower-cocks to lead-plugs, and platform brackets which have shaken loose. This cer- tificate the foreman signs, and it is framed near the en- gine for the benefit of the three Europeans and the eight or nine natives who have to mend No. 607. To the ignorant the superhuman wisdom of the examiner seems only equalled by the audacity of the two men and the boy who are to undertake what is frivolously called the " job." No. 607 is in a sorely mangled condition, but 403 is much worse. She is reduced to a shell is a very elle-woman of an engine, bearing only her funnel, the iron frame and the saddle that supports the boiler. Four-and-twenty engines in every stage of decomposi- tion stand in one huge shop. A travelling crane runs overhead, and the men have hauled up one end of a bright vermilion loco. The effect is the silence of a, scornful stare just such a look as a colonel's portly wife gives through her pince-nez at the audacious sub- altern. Engines are the " livest " things that man ever made. They glare through their spectacle-plates, they tilt their noses contemptuously, and when their insides are gone they adorn themselves with red' lead, and leer like decayed beauties; and in the Jamalpur works there is no escape from them. The shops can hold fifty without pressure, and on occasion as many again. Everywhere there are engines, and everywhere AMONG THE EAILWAY FOLK 261 brass domes lie about on the ground like huge helmets in a pantomime. The silence is the weirdest touch of all. Some sprightly soul an apprentice be sure has daubed in red lead on the end of an iron tool-box a cari- cature of some friend who is evidently a riveter. The picture has all the interest of an Egyptian cartouche, for it shows that men have been here, and that the engines do not have it all their own way. And so, out in the open, away from the three great sheds, between and under more engines, till we strike a wilderness of lines all converging to one turn-table. Here be elephant-stalls ranged round a half-circle, and in each stall stands one engine, and each engine stares at the turn-table. A stolid and disconcerting company is this ring-of-eyes monsters; 324, 432, and 8 are shin- ing like toys. They are ready for their turn of duty, and are as spruce as hansoms. Lacquered chocolate, picked out with black, red, and white, is their dress, and delicate lemon graces the ceilings of the cabs. The driver should be a gentleman in evening dress with white kid gloves, and there should be gold-headed cham- pagne bottles in the spick and span tenders. Huckle- berry Finn says of a timber raft, "It amounted to something being captain of that raft." Thrice enviable is the man who, drawing Rs. 220 a month, is allowed to make Rs. 150 overtime out of locos. Nos. 324, 432, or 8. Fifty yards beyond this gorgeous trinity are ten to twelve engines who have put in to Jamalpur to bait. They are alive, their fires are lighted, and they are swearing and purring and growling one at another as they stand alone. Here is evidently one of the newest type No. 25, a giant who has just brought the mail in 262 FROM SEA TO SEA and waits to be cleaned up preparatory to going out afresh. The tiffin hour has ended. The buzzer blows, and with a roar, a rattle, and a clang the shops take up their toil. The hubbub that followed on the Prince's kiss to the sleeping beauty was not so loud or sudden. Experience, with a foot-rule in his pocket, authority in his port, and a merry twinkle in his eye, comes up and catches Ignorance walking gingerly round No. 25. " That's one of the best we have," says Experience, " a four-wheeled coupled bogie they call her. She's by Dobbs. She's done her hundred and fifty miles to-day ; and she'll run in to Rampore Haut this afternoon ; then she'll rest a day and be cleaned up. Roughly, she does her three hundred miles in the four-and-twenty hours. She's a beauty. She's out from home, but we can build our own engines all except the wheels. We're build- ing ten locos, now, and we've got a dozen boilers ready if you care to look at them. How long does a loco. last ? That's just as may be. She will do as much as her driver lets her. Some men play the mischief with a loco, and some handle 'em properly. Our drivers prefer Hawthorne's old four-wheeled coupled engines because they give the least bother. There is one in that shed, and it's a good 'un to travel. But eighty thou- sand miles generally sees the gloss off an engine, and she goes into the shops to be overhauled and refitted and replaned, and a lot of things that you wouldn't understand if I told you about them. No. 1, the first loco, on the line, is running still, but very little of the original engine must be left by this time. That one there, came out in the Mutiny year. She's AMONG THE EAILWAY FOLK 263 by Slaughter and Grunning, and she's built for speed in front of a light load. French-looking sort of thing, isn't she ? That's because her cylinders are on a tilt. We used her for the mail once, but the mail has grown heavier and heavier, and now we use six-wheeled coupled eighteen-inch, inside cylinder, 45-ton locos, to shift thousand-ton trains. No I All locos, aren't alike. It isn't merely pulling a lever. The Company likes its drivers to know their locos., and a man will keep his Hawthorne for two or three years. The more mileage he gets out of her before she has to be overhauled the better man he is. It pays to let a man have his fancy engine. A man must take an interest in his loco., and that means she must belong to him. Some locos, won't do anything, even if you coax and humour them. I don't think there are any unlucky ones now, but some years ago No. 31 wasn't popular. The driv- ers went sick or took leave when they were told off for her. She killed her driver on the Jubbulpore line, she left the rails at Kajra, she did something or other at Rampur Haut, and Lord knows what she didn't do or try to do in other places! All the drivers fought shy of her, and in the end she disappeared. They said she was condemned, but I shouldn't wonder if the Company changed her number quietly, and changed the luck at the same time. You see, the Government Inspector comes and looks at our stock now and again, and when an engine's condemned he puts his dhobi- mark on her, and she's broken up. Well, No. 31 was condemned, but there was a whisper that they only shifted her number, and ran her out again. When the drivers didn't know, there were no accidents. I don't 264 FROM SEA TO SEA think we've got an unlucky one running now. Some are different from others, but there are no man-eaters. Yes, a driver of the mail is somebody. He can make Rs. 370 a month if he's a covenanted man. We get a lot of our drivers in the country, and we don't import from England as much as we did. 'Stands to reason that, now there's more competition both among lines and in the labour market, the Company can't afford to be as generous as it used to be. It doesn't cheat a man though. It's this way with the drivers. A native driver gets about Us. 20 a month, and in his way he's supposed to be good enough for branch work and shunting and such. Well, an English driver'll get from Rs. 80 to Rs. 220, and overtime. The English driver knows what the native gets, and in time they tell the driver that the native'll improve. The driver has that to think of. You see ? That's competition ! " Experience returns to the engine-sheds, now full of clamour, and enlarges on the beauties of sick locomotives. The fitters and the assistants and the apprentices are hammering and punching and gauging, and otherwise technically disporting themselves round their enormous patients, and their language, as caught in snatches, is beautifully unintelligible. But one flying sentence goes straight to the heart. It is the cry of Humanity over the task of Life, done into unrefined English. An apprentice, grimed to his eye- brows, his cloth cap well on the back of his curly head and his hands deep in his pockets, is sitting on the edge of a tool-box ruefully regarding the very much disorgan- ised engine whose slave is he. A handsome boy, this apprentice, and well made. He whistles softly between AMONG THE RAILWAY FOLK 265 his teeth, and his brow puckers. Then he addresses the engine, half in expostulation and half in despair, "Oh. you condemned old female dog!" He puts^the sentence more crisply much more crisply and Ignorance chuckles sympathetically. Ignorance also is puzzled over these engines. CHAPTEE III VULCAN'S FORGE. IN the wilderness of the railway shops and ma- chinery that planes and shaves, and bevels and stamps, and punches and hoists and nips the first idea that occurs to an outsider, when he has seen the men who people the place, is that it must be the birthplace of inventions a pasture-ground of fat patents. If a writ- ing-man, who plays with shadows and dresses dolls that others may laugh at their antics, draws help and comfort and new methods of working old ideas from the stored shelves of a library, how, in the name of Commonsense, his god, can a doing-man, whose mind is set upon things that snatch a few moments from flying Time or put power into weak hands, refrain from going forward and adding new inventions to the hundreds among which he daily moves ? Appealed to on this subject, Experience, who had served the E. I. R. loyally for many years, held his peace. " We don't go in much for patents ; but," he added, with a praiseworthy attempt to turn the conver- sation, "we can build you any mortal thing you like. We've got the Bradford Leslie steamer for the Sahib- gunge ferry. Come and see the brass-work for her bows. It's in the casting-shed." It would have been cruel to have pressed Experience 266 AMONG THE RAILWAY FOLK 267 further, and Ignorance, to foredate matters a little, went about to discover why Experience shied off this question, and why the men of Jamalpur had not each and all invented and patented something. He won his informa- tion in the end, but did not come from Jamalpur. That must be clearly understood. It was found anywhere you please between Howrah and Hoti Mardan ; and here it is that all the world may admire a prudent and far- sighted Board of Directors. Once upon a time, as every one in the profession knows, two men invented the D. and 0. sleeper cast iron, of five pieces, very service- able. The men were in the Company's employ, and their masters said : " Your brains are ours. Hand us over those sleepers." Being of pay and position, D. and 0. made some sort of resistance and got a royalty or a bonus. At any rate, the Company had to pay for its sleepers. But thereafter, and the condition exists to this day, they caused it to be written in each servant's covenant, that if by chance he invented aught, his invention was to belong to the Company. Providence has mercifully arranged that no man or syndicate of men can buy the " holy spirit of man " outright without suffering in some way or another just as much as the purchase. America fully, and Germany in part, recog- nises this law. The E. I. Railway's breach of it is thoroughly English. They say, or it is said of them that they say, " We are afraid of our men, who belong to us, wasting their time on trying to invent." Is it wholly impossible, then, for men of mechanical experience and large sympathies to check the mere patent-hunter and bring forward the man with an idea ? Is there no supervision in the " shops," or have the men 268 FROM SEA TO SEA who play tennis and billiards at the institute not a minute which they can rightly call their very own? Would it ruin the richest Company in India to lend their model-shop and their lathes to half a dozen, or, for the matter of that, half a hundred, abortive experi- ments ? A Massachusetts organ factory, a Racine buggy shop, an Oregon lumber-yard, would laugh at the notion. An American toy-maker might swindle an employe after the invention, but he would in his own interests help the man to " see what comes of the thing." Surely a wealthy, a powerful and, as all Jamalpur bears witness, a considerate Company might cut that clause out of the covenant and await the issue. There would be quite enough jealousy between man and man, grade and grade, to keep down all but the keenest souls ; and, with due respect to the steam-hammer and the rolling-mill, we have not yet made machinery perfect. The "shops" are not likely to spawn unmanageable Stephensons or grasping Brunels ; but in the minor turns of mechan- ical thought that find concrete expressions in links, axle- boxes, joint packings, valves, and spring-stirrups some- thing might something would be done were the practical prohibition removed. Will a North coun- tryman give you anything but warm hospitality for nothing? Or if you claim from him overtime service as a right, will he work zealously? "Ony thing but t' brass," is his motto, and his ideas are his " brass." Gentlemen in authority, if this should meet your au- gust eyes, spare it a minute's thought, and, clearing away the floridity, get to the heart of the mistake and see if it cannot be rationally put right. Above all, re- member that Jamalpur supplied no information. It was AMONG THE RAILWAY FOLK 269 as mute as an oyster. There is no one within your jurisdiction to ahem " drop upon." Let us, after this excursion into the offices, return to the shops and only ask Experience such questions as he can without disloyalty answer. " We used once," says he, leading to the foundry, " to sell our old rails and import new ones. Even when we used 'em for roof beams and so on, we had more than we knew what to do with. Now we have got rolling- mills, and we use the rails to make tie-bars for the D. and 0. sleepers and all sorts of things. We turn out five hundred D. and 0. sleepers a day. Altogether, we use about seventy-five tons of our own iron a month here. Iron in Calcutta costs about five-eight a hundred- weight; ours costs between three-four and three-eight, and on that item alone we save three thousand a month. Don't ask me how many miles of rails we own. There are fifteen hundred miles of line, and you can make your own calculation. All those things like babies' graves, down in that shed, are the moulds for the D. and 0. sleepers. We test them by dropping three hundred- weight and three hundred quarters of iron on top of them from a height of seven feet, or eleven sometimes. They don't often smash. We have a notion here that our iron is as good as the Home stuff." A sleek, white, and brindled pariah thrusts himself into the conversation. His house appears to be on the warm ashes of the bolt-maker. This is a horrible ma- chine, which chews red-hot iron bars and spits them out perfect bolts. Its manners are disgusting, and it gobbles over its food. " Hi, Jack ! " says Experience, stroking the interloper, 270 FKOM SEA TO SEA "you've been trying to break your leg again. That's the dog of the works. At least he makes believe that the works belong to him. He'll follow any one of us about the shops as far as the gate, but never a step further. You can see he's in first-class condition. The boys give him his ticket, and, one of these days, he'll try to get on to the Company's books as a regular worker. He's too clever to live." Jack heads the pro- cession as far as the walls of the rolling-shed and then returns to his machinery room. He waddles with fat- ness and despises strangers. " How would you like to be hot-potted there ? " says Experience, who has read and who is enthusiastic over She, as he points to the great furnaces whence the slag is being dragged out by hooks. " Here is the old ma- terial going into the furnace in that big iron bucket. Look at the scraps of iron. There's an old D. and 0. sleeper, there's a lot of clips from a cylinder, there's a lot of snipped-up rails, there's a driving-wheel block, there's an old hook, and a sprinkling of boiler-plates and rivets." The bucket is tipped into the furnace with a thunder- ous roar and the slag below pours forth more quickly. "An engine," says Experience, reflectively, "can run over herself so to say. After she's broken up she is made into sleepers for the line. You'll see how she's broken up later." A few paes further on, semi-nude demons are capering over strips of glowing hot iron which are put into a mill as rails and emerge as thin, shapely tie-bars. The natives wear rough sandals and some pretence of aprons, but the greater part of them is " all face." " As I said before," says Experience, " a AMONG THE RAILWAY FOLK 271 native's cuteness when he's working on ticket is some- thing startling. Beyond occasionally hanging on to a red-hot bar too long and so letting their pincers be drawn through the mills, these men take precious good care not to go wrong. Our machinery is fenced and guard-railed as much as possible, and these men don't get caught up by the belting. In the first place, they're careful the father warns the son and so on and in the second, there's nothing about 'em for the belting to catch on unless the man shoves his hand in. Oh, a na- tive's no fool ! He knows that it doesn't do to be fool- ish when he's dealing with a crane or a driving-wheel. You're looking at all those chopped rails? We make our iron as they blend baccy. We mix up all sorts to get the required quality. Those rails have just been chopped by this tobacco-cutter thing." Experience bends down and sets a vicious-looking, parrot-headed beam to work. There is a quiver a snap and a dull smash and a heavy rail is nipped in two like a stick of barley-sugar. Elsewhere, a bull-nosed hydraulic cutter is rail-cut- ting as if it enjoyed the fun. In another shed stand the steam-hammers; the unemployed ones murmuring and muttering to themselves, as is the uncanny custom of all steam-souled machinery. Experience, with his hand on a long lever, makes one of the monsters perform : and though Ignorance knows that a man designed and men do continually build steam-hammers, the effect is as though Experience were maddening a chained beast. The massive block slides down the guides, only to pause hungrily an inch above the anvil, or restlessly throb through a foot and a half of space, each motion being 272 FKOM SEA TO SEA controlled by an almost imperceptible handling of the levers. " When these things are newly overhauled, you can regulate your blow to within an eighth of an inch," says Experience. "We had a foreman here once who could work 'em beautifully. He had the touch. One day a visitor, no end of a swell in a tall, white hat, came round the works, and our foreman borrowed the hat and brought the hammer down just enough to press the nap and no more. ' How wonderful ! ' said the visitor, put- ting his hand carelessly upon this lever rod here." Ex- perience suits the action to the word and the hammer thunders on the anvil. " Well, you can guess for your- self. Next minute there wasn't enough left of that tall, white hat to make a postage-stamp of. Steam-hammers aren't things to play with. Now we'll go over to the stores . . ." Whatever apparent disorder there might have been in the works, the store department is as clean as a new pin, and stupefying in its naval order. Copper plates, bar, angle, and rod iron, duplicate cranks and slide bars, the piston rods of the Bradford Leslie steamer, engine grease, files, and hammer-heads every conceivable arti- cle, from leather laces of beltings to head-lamps, neces- sary for the due and proper working of a long line, is stocked, stacked, piled, and put away in appropriate compartments. In the midst of it all, neck deep in ledgers and indent forms, stands the many-handed Babu, the steam of the engine whose power extends from Howrah to Ghaziabad. The Company does everything, and knows everything. The gallant apprentice may be a wild youth with an earnest desire to go occasionally " upon the bend." But AMONG THE RAILWAY FOLK 273 three times a week, between 7 and 8 P.M., lie must at- tend the night-school and sit at the feet of M. Bonnaud, who teaches him mechanics and statics so thoroughly that even the awful Government Inspector is pleased. And when there is no night-school the Company will by no means wash its hands of its men out of working- hours. No man can be violently restrained from going to the bad if he insists upon it, but in the service of the Company a man has every warning; his escapades are known, and a judiciously arranged transfer some- times keeps a good fellow clear of the down-grade. No one can flatter himself that in the multitude he is over- looked, or believe that between 4 P.M. and 9 A.M. he is at liberty to misdemean himself. Sooner or later, but generally sooner, his goings-on are known, and he is reminded that " Britons never shall be slaves " to things that destroy good work as well as souls. Maybe the Company acts only in its own interest, but the result is good. Best and prettiest of the many good and pretty things in Jamalpur is the institute of a Saturday when the Volunteer Band is playing and the tennis courts are full and the babydom of Jamalpur fat, sturdy chil- dren frolic round the band-stand. The people dance but big as the institute is, it is getting too small for their dances they act, they play billiards, they study their newspapers, they play cards and everything else, and they flirt in a sumptuous building, and in the hot weather the gallant apprentice ducks his friend in the big swimming-bath. Decidedly the railway folk make their lives pleasant. Let us go down southward to the big Giridih collieries VOL. II T 274 FROM SEA TO SEA and see the coal that feeds the furnace that smelts the iron that makes the sleeper that bears the loco, that pulls the carriage that holds the freight that comes from the country that is made richer by the Great Company Badahur, the East Indian Railway. THE GIRIDIH COAL-FIELDS CHAPTER I ON THE SURFACE. SOUTHWARD, always southward and easterly, runs the Calcutta Mail from Luckeeserai, till she reaches Madapur in the Sonthal Parganas. From Madapur a train, largely made up of coal-trucks, heads westward into the Hazari- bagh district and toward Giridih. A week would not have exhausted " Jamalpur and its environs," as the guide-books say. But since time drives and man must e'en be driven, the weird, echoing bund in the hills above Jamalpur, where the owls hoot at night and hyenas come down to laugh over the grave of " Quilem Roberts, who died from the effects of an encounter with a tiger near this place, A.D. 1864," goes undescribed. Nor is it possi- ble to deal with Monghyr, the headquarters of the dis- trict, where one sees for the first time the age of Old Bengal in the sleepy, creepy station, built in a time-eaten fort, which runs out into the Ganges, and is full of quaint houses, with fat-legged balustrades on the roofs. Pensioners certainly, and probably a score of ghosts, live in Monghyr. All the country seems haunted. Is there not at Pir Bahar a lonely house on a bluff, the grave of a young lady, who, thirty years ago, rode her horse down the cliff and perished? Has not Monghyr a haunted house in which tradition says sceptics have seen much 275 276 FKOM SEA TO SEA more than they could account for ? And is it not notori- ous throughout the countryside that the seven miles of road between Jamalpur and Monghyr are nightly paraded by tramping battalions of spectres, phantoms of an old- time army massacred, who knows how long ago? The common voice attests all these things, and an eerie ceme- tery packed with blackened, lichened, candle-extinguisher tomb-stones persuades the listener to believe all that he hears. Bengal is second or third is it ? in order of seniority among the Provinces, and like an old nurse, she tells many witch-tales. But ghosts have nothing to do with collieries, and that ever-present " Company," the E. I. E., has more or less made Giridih principally more. " Before the E. I. R. came," say the people, " we had one meal a day. Now we have two." Stomachs do not tell fibs, whatever mouths may say. That "Company," in the course of business, throws about five lakhs a year into the Hazari- bagh district in the form of wages alone, and Giridih Bazaar has to supply the wants of twelve thousand men, women, and children. But we have now the authority of a number of high-souled and intelligent native prints that the Sahib of all grades spends his time in " sucking the blood out of the country," and " flying to England to spend his ill-gotten gains." Giridih is perfectly mad quite insane ! Geologi- cally, " the country is in the metamorphic higher grounds that rise out of the alluvial flats of Lower Bengal between the Osri and the Barakar rivers." Translated, this sentence means that you can twist your ankle on pieces of pure white, pinky, and yel- lowish granite, slip over weather-worn sandstone, griev THE GIRIDIH COAL-FIELDS 277 ously cut your boots over flakes of trap, and throw hornblende pebbles at the dogs. Never was such a place for stone-throwing as Giridih. The general as- pect of the country is falsely park-like, because it swells and sinks in a score of grass-covered undulations, and is adorned with plantation-like jungle. There are low hills on every side, and twelve miles away bearing south the blue bulk of the holy hill of Parasnath, greatest of the Jain Tirthankars, overlooks the world. In Bengal they consider four thousand five hundred feet good enough for a Dagshai or Kasauli, and once upon a time they tried to put troops on Parasnath. There was a scarcity of water, and Thomas of those days found the silence and seclusion prey upon his spirits. Since twenty years, therefore, Parasnath has been abandoned by Her Majesty's Army. As to Giridih itself, the last few miles of train bring up the reek of the " Black Country." Memory depends on smell. A noseless man is devoid of sentiment, just as a noseless woman, in this country, must be devoid of honour. That first breath of the coal should be the breath of the murky, clouded tract between Yeadon and Dale or Barnsley, rough and hospitable Barnsley or Dewsbury and Batley and the Derby Canal on a Sunday afternoon when the wheels are still and the young men and maidens walk stolidly in pairs. Unfortunately, it is nothing more than Giridih seven thousand miles away from Home and blessed with a warm and genial sunshine, soon to turn into something very much worse. The insanity of the place is visible at the station door. A G. B. T. cart once married a bathing-machine, and they called the child turn-turn. You who in flannel and 278 FROM SEA TO SEA Cawnpore harness drive bamboo-carts about up-country roads, remember that a Giridih turn-turn is painfully pushed by four men, and must be entered crawling on all-fours, head first. So strange are the ways of Bengal ! They drive mad horses in Giridih animals that be- come hysterical as soon as the dusk falls and the country- side blazes with the fires of the great coke ovens. If you expostulate tearfully, they produce another horse, a raw, red fiend whose ear has to be screwed round and round, and round and round, before she will by any manner of means consent to start. The roads carry neat little eighteen-inch trenches at their sides, admir- ably adapted to hold the flying wheel. Skirling about this savage land in the dark, the white population be- guile the time by rapturously recounting past accidents, insisting throughout on the super-equine "steadiness" of their cattle. Deep and broad and wide is their jovial hospitality; but somebody the Tirhoot planters for choice ought to start a mission to teach the men of Giridih what to drive. They know how, or they would be severally and separately and many times dead, but they do not, they do not indeed, know that animals who stand on one hind leg and beckon with all the rest, or try to pigstick in harness, are not trap-horses worthy of endearing names, but things to be pole-axed. Their feelings are hurt when you say this. "Sit tight," say the men of Giridih ; " we're insured ! We can't be hurt." And now with grey hairs, dry mouth, and chattering teeth to the collieries. The E. I. R. estate, bought or leased in perpetuity from the Serampore Raja, may be about four miles long and between one and two miles THE GIRIDIH COAL-FIELDS 279 across. It is in two pieces, the Serampore field being separated from the Karharbari (or Kurhurballi or Kabar- bari) field by the property of the Bengal Coal Company. The Raneegunge Coal Association lies to the east of all other workings. So we have three companies at work on about eleven square miles of land. There is no such thing as getting a full view of the whole place. A short walk over a grassy down gives on to an outcrop of very dirty sandstone, which in the excessive innocence of his heart the visitor naturally takes to be the coal lying neatly on the surface. Up to this sandstone the path seems to be made of crushed sugar, so white and shiny is the quartz. Over the brow of the down comes in sight the old familiar pit-head wheel, spinning for the dear life, and the eye loses itself in a maze of pumping sheds, red-tiled, mud-walled miners' huts, dotted all over the landscape, and railway lines that run on every kind of gradient. There are lines that dip into valleys and disappear round the shoulders of slopes, and lines that career on the tops of rises and disappear over the brow of the slopes. Along these lines whistle and pant metre-gauge engines, some with trucks at their tail, and others rattling back to the pit-lDank with the absurd air of a boy late for school that an unemployed engine always assumes. There are six engines in all, and as it is easiest to walk along the lines one sees a good deal of them. They bear not altogether unfamiliar names. Here, for instance, passes the " Cockburn " whistling down a grade with thirty tons of coal at her heels; while the "Whitly" and the " Olpherts " are waiting for their complement of trucks. Now a Mr. T. F. Cockburn was superintendent 280 FROM SEA TO SEA of these mines nearly thirty years ago, in the days before the chord-lines from Kanu to Luckeeserai were built, and all the coal was carted to the latter place; and surely Mr. Olpherts was an engineer who helped to think out a new sleeper. What may these things mean? " Apotheosis of the Manager," is the reply. " Christen the engines after the managers. You'll find Cockburn, Dunn, Whitly, Abbott, Olpherts, and Saise, knocking about the place. Sounds funny, doesn't it? Doesn't sound so funny, when one of these idiots does his best to derail Saise, though, by putting a line down anyhow. Look at that line ! Laid out in knots by Jove ! " To the unprofessional eye the rails seem all correct; but there must be something wrong, because "one of those idiots" is asked why in the name of all he considers sacred he does not ram the ballast properly. " What would happen if you threw an engine off the line ? " " Can't say that I know exactly. You see, our business is to keep them on, and we do that. Here's rather a curiosity. You see liiat pointsman! They say he's an old mutineer, and when he relaxes he boasts of the Sahibs he has killed. He's glad enough to eat the Company's salt now." Such a withered old face was the face of the pointsman at No. 11 point! The information suggested a host of questions, and the answers were these : " You won't be able to understand till you've been down into a mine. We work our men in two ways: some by direct payment under our own hand, and some by contractors. The contractor under- takes to deliver us the coal, supplying his own men, tools, and props. He's responsible for the safety of his THE GIRIDIH COAL-FIELDS 281 men, and of course the Company knows and sees his work. Just fancy, among these five thousand people, what sort of effect the news of an accident would pro- duce ! It would go all through the Sonthal Parganas. We have any amount of Sonthals besides Mahometans and Hindus of every possible caste, down to those Musahers who eat pig. They don't require much ad- ministering in the civilian sense of the word. On Sundays, as a rule, if any man has had his daughter eloped with, or anything of that kind, he generally comes up to the manager's bungalow to get the matter put straight. If a man is disabled through accident he knows that as long as he's in the hospital he gets full wages, and the Company pays for the food of any of his women-folk who come to look after him. One, of course; not the whole clan. That makes our service popular with the people. Don't you believe that a native is a fool. You can train him to everything ex- cept responsibility. There's a rule in the workings that if there is any dangerous work we haven't choke- damp; I will show you when we get down no gang must work without an Englishman to look after them. A native wouldn't be wise enough to understand what the danger was, or where it came in. Even if he did, he'd shirk the responsibility. We can't afford to risk a single life. All our output is just as much as the Com- pany want about a thousand tons per working day. Three hundred thousand in the year. We could turn out more? Yes a little. Well, yes, twice as much. I won't go on, because you wouldn't believe me. There's the coal under us, and we work it at any depth from following up an outcrop down to six hundred feet. That 282 FROM SEA TO SEA is our deepest shaft. We have no necessity to go deeper. At home the mines are sometimes fifteen hundred feet down. Well, the thickness of this coal here varies from anything you please to anything you please. There's enough of it to last your time and one or two hundred years longer. Perhaps even longer than that. Look at that stuff. That's big coal from the pit." It was aristocratic-looking coal, just like the picked lumps that are stacked in baskets of coal agencies at home with the printed legend atop " only 23s a ton." But there was no picking in this case. The great piled banks were all "equal to sample," and beyond them lay piles of small, broken, " smithy " coal. " The Company doesn't sell to the public. This small, broken coal is an exception. That is sold, but the big stuff is for the engines and the shops. It doesn't cost much to get out, as you say ; but our men can earn as much as twelve rupees a month. Very often when they've earned enough to go on with they retire from the con- cern till they've spent their money and then come on again. It's piece-work and they are improvident. If some of them only lived like other natives they would have enough to buy land and cows with. When there's a press of work they make a good deal by overtime, but they don't seem to keep it. You should see Giridih Bazaar on a Sunday if you want to know where the money goes. About ten thousand rupees change hands once a week there. If you want to get at the number of people who are indirectly dependent or profit by the E. I. K. you'll have to conduct a census of your own. After Sunday is over the men generally lie off on Mon- day and take it easy on Tuesday. Then they work hard THE GIRIDIH COAL-FIELDS 283 for the next four days and make it up. Of course there's nothing in the wide world to prevent a man from resigning and going away to wherever he came from behind those hills if he's a Sonthal. He loses his employment, that's all. But they have their own point of honour. A man hates to be told by his friends that he has been guilty of shirking. And now we'll go to breakfast. You shall be ' pitted ' to-morrow to any depth you like." CHAPTER II IN THE DEPTHS. "PITTED to any extent you please." The only diffi- culty was for Joseph to choose his pit. Giridih was full of them. There was an arch in the side of a little hill, a blackened brick arch leading into thick night. A stationary engine was hauling a procession of coal- laden trucks "tubs" is the technical word out of its depths. The tubs were neither pretty nor clean. "We are going down in those when they are emptied. Put on your helmet and keep it on, and keep your head down." There is nothing mirth-provoking in going down a coal-mine even though it be only a shallow incline running to one hundred and forty feet vertical below the earth. " Get into the tub and lie down. Hang it, no ! This is not a railway carriage : you can't see the country out of the windows. Lie down in the dust and don't lift your head. Let her go ! " The tubs strain on the wire rope and slide down four- teen hundred feet of incline, at first through a chastened gloom, and then through darkness. An absurd sentence from a trial report rings in the head : " About this time prisoner expressed a desire for the consolations of religion." A hand with a reeking flare-lamp hangs over the edge of the tub, and there is a glimpse of a black- 284 THE GIRIDIH COAL-FIELDS 285 ened hat near it, for those accustomed to the pits have a merry trick of going down sitting or crouching on the coupling of the rear tub. The noise is deafening, and the roof is very close indeed. The tubs bump, and the occupant crouches lovingly in the coal dust. What would happen if the train went off the line ? The desire for the " consolations of religion " grows keener and keener as the air grows closer and closer. The tubs stop in darkness spangled by the light of the flare-lamps which many black devils carry. Under- neath and on both sides is the greasy blackness of the coal, and, above, a roof of grey sandstone, smooth as the flow of a river at evening. " Now, remember that if you don't keep your hat on, you'll get your head broken, because you will forget to stoop. If you hear any tubs coming up behind you step off .to one side. There's a tramway under your feet : be careful not to trip over it." The miner has a gait as peculiarly his own as Tommy's measured pace or the bluejacket's roll. Big men who slouch in the light of day become almost things of beauty underground. Their foot is on their native heather ; and the slouch is a very necessary act of homage to the great earth, which if a man observe not, he shall without doubt have his hat bless the man who invented pith hats ! grievously cut. The road turns and winds and the roof becomes lower, but those accursed tubs still rattle by on the tramways. The roof throws back their noises, and when all the place is full of a grumbling and a growling, how under earth is one to know whence danger will turn up next ? The air brings to the unacclimatised a singing in the 286 FROM SEA TO SEA ears, a hotness of the eyeballs, and a jumping of the heart. "That's because the pressure here is different from the pressure up above. It'll wear off in a minute. We don't notice it. Wait till you get down a four-hun- dred-foot pit. Then your ears will begin to sing, if you like." Most people know the One Night of each hot weather that still, clouded night just before the Rains break, when there seems to be no more breathable air under the bowl of the pitiless skies, and all the weight of the silent, dark house lies on the chest of the sleep-hunter. This is the feeling in a coal-mine only more so much more so, for the darkness is the " gross darkness of the inner sepulchre." It is hard to see which is the black coal and which the passage driven through it. From far away, down the side galleries, comes the regular beat of the pick thick and muffled as the beat of the labouring heart. "Six men to a gang, and they aren't allowed to work alone. They make six-foot drives through the coal two and sometimes three men work- ing together. The rest clear away the stuff and load it into the tubs. We have no props in this gallery because we have a roof as good as a ceiling. The coal lies under the sandstone here. It's beautiful sandstone." It was beautiful sandstone as hard as a billiard table and devoid of any nasty little bumps and jags. There was a roaring down one road the roaring of infernal fires. This is not a pleasant thing to hear in the dark. It is too suggestive. " That's our ventilating shaft. Can't you feel the air getting brisker ? Come and look." Imagine a great iron-bound crate of burning coal, THE GIKIDIH COAL-FIELDS 287 hanging over a gulf of darkness faintly showing the brickwork of the base of a chimney. " We're at the bottom of the shaft. That fire makes a draught that sucks up the foul air from the bottom of the pit. There's another down-draw shaft in another part of the mine where the clean air comes in. We aren't going to set the mines on fire. There's an earth and brick floor at the bottom of the pit; the crate hangs over. It isn't so deep as you think." Then a devil a naked devil came in with a pitchfork and fed the spouting flames. This was perfectly in keeping with the landscape. More trucks, more muffled noises, more darkness made visible, and more devils male and female coming out of darkness and vanishing. Then a picture to be remembered. A great Hall of Eblis, twenty feet from inky-black floor to grey roof, upheld by huge pillars of shining coal, and filled with flitting and passing devils. On a shattered pillar near the roof stood a naked man, his flesh olive-coloured in the light of the lamps, hewing down a mass of coal that still clove to the roof. Behind him was the wall of darkness, and when the lamps shifted he disappeared like a ghost. The devils were shouting directions, and the man howled in reply, rest- ing on his pick and wiping the sweat from his brow. When he smote the coal crushed and slid and rumbled from the darkness into the darkness, and the devils cried Shabash I The man stood erect like a bronze statue, he twisted and bent himself like a Japanese grotesque, and anon threw himself on his side after the manner of the dying gladiator. Then spoke the still small voice of fact : " A first-class workman if he would 288 FKOM SEA TO SEA only stick to it. But as soon as lie makes a little money he lies off and spends it. That's the last of a pillar that we've knocked out. See here. These pillars of coal are square, about thirty feet each way. As you can see, we make the pillar first by cutting out all the coal between. Then we drive two square tunnels, about seven feet wide, through and across the pillar, propping it with balks. There's one fresh cut." Two tunnels crossing at right angles had been driven through a pillar which in its under-cut condition seemed like the rough draft of a statue for an elephant. " When the pillar stands only on four legs we chip away one leg at a time from a square to an hour-glass shape, and then either the whole of the pillar crashes down from the roof or else a quarter or a half. If the coal lies against the sandstones it carries away clear, but in some places it brings down stone and rubbish with it. The chipped- away legs of the pillars are called stooks." " Who has to make the last cut that breaks a leg through ? " " Oh ! Englishmen of sorts. We can't trust natives for the job unless it's very easy. The natives take kindly to the pillar-work though. They are paid just as much for their coal as though they had hewed it out of the solid. Of course we take very good care to see that the roof doesn't come in on us. You would never understand how and why we prop our roofs with those piles of sleepers. Anyway, you can see that we cannot take out a whole line of pillars. We work 'em en echelon, and those big beams you see running from floor to roof are our indicators. They show when the roof is going to give. Oh! dear no, there's no dramatic effect about it. THE GIKIDIH COAL-FIELDS 289 No splash, you know. Our roofs give plenty of warning by cracking and then collapse slowly. The parts of the work that we have cleared out and allowed to fall in are called goafs. You're on the edge of a goaf now. All that darkness there marks the limit of the mine. We have worked that out piece-meal, and the props are gone and the place is down. The roof of any pillar- working is tested every morning by tapping pretty hard tapping." "Hi yi! yi!" shout all the devils in chorus, and the Hall of Eblis is full of rolling sound. The olive man has brought down an avalanche of coal. " It is a sight to see the whole of one of the pillars come away. They make an awful noise. It would startle you out of your wits. But there's not an atom of risk." ("Not an atom of risk." Oh, genial and courteous host, when you turned up next day blacker than any sweep that ever swept, with a neat, half-inch gash on your forehead won by cutting a " stook " and getting caught by a bounding coal-knob how long and ear- nestly did you endeavour to show that " stook-cutting " was an employment as harmless and unexciting as wool-samplering !) "Our ways are rather primitive, but they're cheap, and safe as houses. Doms and Bauris, Kols and Beldars, don't understand refinements in mining. They'd startle an English pit where there was fire-damp. Do you know it's a solemn fact that if you drop a Davy lamp or snatch it quickly you can blow a whole English pit inside out with all the miners ? Good for us that we don't know what fire-damp is here. We can use flare-lamps." After the first feeling of awe and wonder is worn VOL. zi u 290 FROM SEA TO SEA out, a mine becomes monotonous. There is only the humming, palpitating darkness, the rumble of the tubs, and the endless procession of galleries to arrest the attention. And one pit to the uninitiated is as like to another as two peas. Tell a miner this and he laughs slowly and softly. To him the pits have each distinct personalities, and each must be dealt with differently. CHAPTER III THE PERILS OF THE PITS. AN engineer, who has built a bridge, can strike you nearly dead with professional facts ; the captain of a seventy-horse-power Ganges river-steamer can, in one hour, tell legends of the Sandheads and the James and Mary shoal sufficient to fill half a Pioneer, but a couple of days spent on, above, and in a coal-mine yields more mixed information than two engineers and three captains. It is hopeless to pretend to understand it all. When your host says, "Ah, such an one is a thunder- ing good fault-reader ! " you smile hazily, and by way of keeping up the conversation, adventure on the statement that fault-reading and palmistry are very popular amuse- ments. Then men explain. Every one knows that coal-strata, in common with women, horses, and official superiors, have " faults " caused by some colic of the earth in the days when things were settling into their places. A coal-seam is suddenly sliced off as a pencil is cut through with one slanting blow of the penknife, and one-half is either pushed up or pushed down any number of feet. The miners work the seam till they come to this break-off, and then call for an expert to " read the fault." It is sometimes very hard to discover whether the sliced-off 291 292 FBOM SEA TO SEA beam has gone up or down. Theoretically, the end of the broken piece should show the direction. Practi- cally its indications are not always clear. Then a good "fault-reader," who must more than know geology, is a useful man, and is much prized ; for the Giridih fields are full of faults and "dykes." Tongues of what was once molten lava thrust themselves sheer into the coal, and the disgusted miner finds that for about twenty feet on each side of the tongue all coal has been burnt away. The head of the mine is supposed to foresee these things and more. He can tell you, without looking at the map, what is the geological formation of any thou- sand square miles of India; he knows as much about brickwork and the building of houses, arches, and shafts as an average P. W. D. man ; he has not only to know the intestines of a pumping or winding engine, but must be able to take them to pieces with his own hands, indi- cate on the spot such parts as need repair, and make drawings of anything that requires renewal; he knows how to lay out and build railways with a grade of one in twenty-seven ; he has to carry in his head all the signals and points between and over which his loco- motive engines work ; he must be an electrician capable of controlling the apparatus that fires the dynamite charges in the -pits, and must thoroughly understand boring operations with thousand-foot drills. He must know by name, at least, one thousand of the men on the works, and must fluently speak the vernaculars of the low castes. If he has Sonthali, which is more elab- orate than Greek, so much the better for him. He must know how to handle men of all grades, and, while hold- THE GIKIDIH COAL-FIELDS 293 ing himself aloof, must possess sufficient grip of the men's private lives to be able to see at once the merits of a charge of attempted abduction preferred by a clucking, croaking Kol against a fluent English-speaking Brahmin. For he is literally the Light of Justice, and to him the injured husband and the wrathful father look for redress. He must be on the spot and take all responsibility when any specially risky job is under way in the pit, and he can claim no single hour of the day or the night for his own. From eight in the morning till one in the afternoon he is coated with coal-dust and oil. From one till eight in the evening he has office work. After eight o'clock he is free to attend to anything that he may be wanted for. This is a soberly drawn picture of a life that Sahibs on the mines actually enjoy. They are spared all pri- vate socio-official worry, for the Company, in its mixture of State and private interest, is as perfectly cold-blooded and devoid of bias as any great Department of the Em- pire. If certain things be done, well and good. If certain things be not done the defaulter goes, and his place is filled by another. The conditions of service are graven on stone. There may be generosity; there un- doubtedly is justice, but above all, there is freedom within broad limits. No irrepressible shareholder crip- ples the executive arm with suggestions and restric- tions, and no private piques turn men's blood to gall within them. They work like horses and are happy. When he can snatch a free hour, the grimy, sweat- ing, cardigan-jacketed, ammunition-booted, pick-bearing ruffian turns into a well-kept English gentleman, who plays a good game of billiards, and has a batch of new 294 FKOM SEA TO SEA books from England every week. The change is sud- den, but in Giridih nothing is startling. It is right and natural that a man should be alternately Valentine and Orson, specially Orson. It is right and natural to drive always behind a mad horse away and away towards the lonely hills till the flaming coke ovens become glow-worms on the dark horizon, and in the wil- derness to find a lovely English maiden teaching squat, filthy Sonthal girls how to become Christians. Nothing is strange in Giridih, and the stories of the pits, the raffle of conversation that a man picks up as he passes, are quite in keeping with the place. Thanks to the law, which enacts that an Englishman must look after the native miners, and if any one be killed must explain satisfactorily that the accident was not due to prevent- able causes, the death-roll is kept astoundingly low. In one "bad" half-year, six men out of the five thousand were killed, in another four, and in another none at all. As has been said before, a big accident would scare off the workers, for, in spite of the age of the mines nearly thirty years the hereditary pitman has not yet been evolved. But to small accidents the men are orientally apathetic. Eead of a death among the five thousand : A gang has been ordered to cut clay for the luting of the coke furnaces. The clay is piled in a huge bank in the open sunlight. A coolie hacks and hacks till he has hewn out a small cave with twenty foot of clay above him. Why should he trouble to climb up the bank and bring down the eave of the cave ? It is easier to cut in. The Sirdar of the gang is watching round the shoulder of the bank. The coolie cuts lazily as he THE GIBIDIH COAL-FIELDS 295 stands. Sunday is very near, and he will get gloriously drunk in Giridih Bazaar with his week's earnings. He digs his own grave stroke by stroke, for he has not sense enough to see that undercut clay is dangerous. He is a Sonthal from the hills. There is a smash and a dull thud, and his grave has shut down upon him in an avalanche of heavy-caked clay. The Sirdar calls to the Babu of the Ovens, and with the promptitude of his race the Babu loses his head. He runs puffily, without giving orders, anywhere, every- where. Finally he runs to the Sahib's house. The Sahib is at the other end of the collieries. He runs back. The Sahib has gone home to wash. Then his indiscretion strikes him. He should have sent run- ners fleet-footed boys from the coal-screening gangs. He sends them and they fly. One catches the Sahib just changed after his bath. "There is a man dead at such a place" he gasps, omitting to say whether it is a surface or a pit accident. On goes the grimy pit-kit, and in three minutes the Sahib's dogcart is flying to the place indicated. They have dug out the Sonthal. His head is smashed in, spine and breastbone are broken, and the gang-Sirdar, bowing double, throws the blame of the accident on the poor, shapeless, battered dead. " I had warned him, but he would not listen ! Tivice I warned him ! These men are witnesses." The Babu is shaking like a jelly. "Oh, sar, I have never seen a man killed before ! Look at that eye, sar ! I should have sent runners. I ran everywhere ! I ran to your house. You were not in. I was running for hours. It was not my fault ! It was the fault of the 296 FROM SEA TO SEA gang-Sirdar." He wrings his hands and gurgles. The best of accountants, but the poorest of coroners is he. No need to ask how the accident happened. No need to listen to the Sirdar and his "witnesses." The Son- thai had been a fool, but it was the Sirdar's business to protect him against his own folly. " Has he any people here ? " " Yes, his rukni, his kept-woman, and his sister's brother-in-law. His home is far-off." The sister's brother-in-law breaks through the crowd howling for vengeance on the Sirdar. He will send for the police, he will have the price of his brother's blood full tale. The windmill arms and the angry eyes fall, for the Sahib is making the report of the death. "Will the Government give me pensin? I am his wife," a woman clamours, stamping her pewter-ankleted feet. "He was killed in your service. Where is his pensin 9 I am his wife." " You lie ! You're his rukni. Keep quiet ! Go ! The pension conies to us" The sister's brother-in-law is not a refined man, but the rukni is his match. They are silenced. The Sahib takes the report, and the body is borne away. Before to-morrow's sun rises the gang-Sirdar may find himself a simple " surface-coolie," earning nine pice a day ; and in a week some Sonthal woman behind the hills may discover that she is entitled to draw monthly great wealth from the coffers of the Sirkar. But this will not happen if the sister's brother-in-law can prevent it. He goes off swearing at the rukni. In the meantime, what have the rest of the dead man's gang been doing ? They have, if you please, abat- THE GIRIDIH COAL-EIELDS 297 ing not one stroke, dug out all the clay, and would have it verified. They have seen their comrade die. He is dead. Bus! Will the Sirdar take the tale of clay? And yet, were twenty men to be crushed by their own carelessness in the pit, these same impassive workers would scatter like panic-stricken horses. Turning from this sketch, let us set in order a few stories of the pits. In some of the mines the coal is blasted out by the dynamite which is fired by electricity from a battery on the surface. Two men place the charges, and then signal to be drawn up in the cage which hangs in the pit-eye. Once two natives were intrusted with the job. They performed their parts beautifully till the end, when the vaster idiot of the two scrambled into the cage, gave signal, and was hauled up before his friend could follow. Thirty or forty yards up the shaft all possible danger for those in the cage was over, and the charge was ac- cordingly exploded. Then it occurred to the man in the cage that his friend stood a very good chance of being, by this time, riven to pieces and choked. But the friend was wise in his generation. He had missed the cage, but found a coal-tub one of the little iron trucks and turning this upside down, crawled into it. When the charge went off, his shelter was battered in so much, that men had to hack him out, for the tub had made, as it were, a tinned sardine of its occupant. He was absolutely unhurt, but for his feel- ings. On reaching the pit-bank his first words were, "I do not desire to go down to the pit with that man any more." His wish had been already gratified, for "that man" had fled. Later on, the story goes, when 298 FEOM SEA TO SEA "that man" found that the guilt of murder was not at his door, he returned, and was made a mere surface-coolie, and his brothers jeered at him as they passed to their better-paid occupation. Occasionally there are mild cyclones in the pits. An old working, perhaps a mile away, will collapse : a whole gallery sinking bodily. Then the displaced air rushes through the inhabited mine, and, to quote their own expression, blows the pitmen about "like dry leaves." Few things are more amusing than the spectacle of a burly Tyneside foreman who, failing to dodge round a corner in time, is " put down " by the wind, sitting- fashion, on a knobby lump of coal. But most impressive of all is a tale they tell of a fire in a pit many years ago. The coal caught light. They had to send earth and bricks down the shaft and build great dams across the galleries to choke the fire. Imagine the scene, a few hundred feet underground, with the air growing hotter and hotter each moment, and the carbonic acid gas trickling through the dams. After a time the rough dams gaped, and the gas poured in afresh, and the Englishmen went down and leeped the cracks between roof and dam-sill with anything they could get. Coolies fainted, and had to be taken away, but no one died, and behind the first dams they built great masonry ones, and bested that fire; though for a long time afterwards, whenever they pumped water into it, the steam, would puff out from crevices in the ground above. It is a queer life that they lead, these men of the coal- fields, and a "big" life to boot. To describe one-half of their labours would need a week at the least, and THE GIEIDIH COAL-FIELDS 299 would be incomplete then. "If you want to see any- thing," they say, " you should go over to the Baragunda copper-mines ; you should look at the Barakar ironworks ; you should see our boring operations five miles away ; you should see how we sink pits ; you should, above all, see Giridih Bazaar on a Sunday. Why, you haven't seen anything. There's no end of a South al Mission here- abouts. All the little dev dears have gone on a picnic. Wait till they come back, and see 'em learning to read." Alas! one cannot wait. At the most one can but thrust an impertinent pen skin-deep into matters only properly understood by specialists. ON the banks of the Ganges, forty miles below Benares as the crow flies, stands the Ghazipur Factory, an opium mint as it were, whence issue the precious cakes that are to replenish the coffers of the Indian Government. The busy season is setting in, for with April the opium comes in from the districts after having run the gaunt- let of the district officers of the Opium Department, who will pass it as fit for use. Then the really serious work begins, under a roasting sun. The opium arrives by chattans, regiments of one hundred jars, each holding one maund, and each packed in a basket and sealed atop. The district officer submits forms never was such a place for forms as the Ghazipur Factory showing the quality and weight of each pot, and with the jars comes a person responsible for the safe carriage of the string, their delivery, and their virginity. If any pots are broken or tampered with, an unfortunate individual called the import-officer, and appointed to work like a horse from dawn till dewy eve, must examine the man in charge of the challan and reduce his statement to writing. Fancy getting any native to explain how a jar has been smashed ! But the Perfect Flower is about as valuable as silver. Then all the pots have to be weighed, and the weight of each pot is recorded on the pot, in a book, 301 302 FROM SEA TO SEA and goodness knows where else, and every one has to sign certificates that the weighing is correct. The pots have been weighed once in the district and once in the factory. None the less a certain number of them are taken at random and weighed afresh before they are opened. This is only the beginning of the long series of checks. Then the testing begins. Every single pot has to be tested for quality. A native, called the purkhea, drives his fist into the opium, rubs and smells it, and calls out the class for the benefit of the opium ex- aminer. A sample picked between finger and thumb is thrown into a jar, and if the opium examiner thinks the purkhea has said sooth, the class of that jar is marked in chalk, and everything is entered in a book. Every ten samples are put in a locked box with dupli- cate keys, and sent over to the laboratory for assay. With the tenth boxful and this marks the end of the challan of a hundred jars the Englishman in charge of the testing signs the test-paper, and enters the name of the native tester and sends it over to the labora- tory. For convenience' sake, it may be as well to say that, unless distinctly stated to the contrary, every single thing in Ghazipur is locked, and every opera- tion is conducted under more than police supervision. In the laboratory each set of ten samples is thoroughly mixed by hand ; a quarter-ounce lump is then tested for starch adulteration by iodine, which turns the decoction blue, and, if necessary, for gum adulteration by alcohol, which makes the decoction filmy. If adulteration be shown, all the ten pots of that set are tested separately till the sinful pot is discovered. Over and above this test, three samples of one hundred grains each are IN AN OPIUM FACTOKY 303 taken from the mixed set of ten samples, dried on a steam table, and then weighed for consistence. The result is written down in a ten-columned form in the assay register, and by the mean result are those ten pots paid for. This, after everything has been clone in duplicate and countersigned, completes the test and assay. If a district officer has classed the opium in a glaringly wrong way, he is thus caught and reminded of his error. No one trusts any one in Ghazipur. They are always weighing, testing, and assaying. Before the opium can be used it must be "alligated" in big vats. The pots are emptied into these, and special care is taken that none of the drug sticks to the hands of the coolies. Opium has a knack of doing this, and therefore coolies are searched at most inopportune moments. There are a good many Mahometans in Ghazipur, and they would all like a little opium. The pots after emptying are smashed up and scraped, and heaved down the steep river-bank of the factory, where they help to keep the Ganges in its place, so many are they and the little earthen bowls in which the opium cakes are made. People are forbidden to wander about the river-front of the factory in search of remnants of opium on the shards. There are no remnants, but people will not credit this. After vatting, the big vats, holding from one to three thousand maunds, are probed with test-rods, and the samples are treated just like the samples of the challans, everybody writing everything in duplicate and signing it. Having secured the mean con- sistence of each vat, the requisite quantity of each blend is weighed out, thrown into an alligating vat, of 250 maunds, and worked up by the feet of coolies. 304 FEOM SEA TO SEA This completes the working of the opium. It is now ready to be made into cakes after a final assay. Man has done nothing to improve it since it streaked the capsule of the poppy this mysterious drug. April, May, and June are the months for receiving and manu- facturing opium, and in the winter months comes the packing and the despatch. At the beginning of the cold weather Ghazipur holds, locked up, a trifle, say, of three and a half million ster- ling in opium. Now, there may be only a paltry three- quarters of a million on hand, and that is going out at the rate per diem of one Viceroy's salary for two and a half years. There are ranges and ranges of gigantic godowns, huge barns that can hold over half a million pounds' worth of opium. There are acres of bricked floor, regiments on regiments of chests; and yet more godowns and more godowns. The heart of the whole is the laboratory, which is full of the sick faint smell of an opium-joint where they sell chandu. This makes Ghazipur indig- nant. "That's the smell of pure opium. We don't need chandu here. You don't know what real opium smells like. Chandu-khana indeed! That's refined opium under treatment for morphia, and cocaine, and perhaps narcotine." "Very well, let's see some of the real opium made for the China market." "We shan't be making any for another six weeks at earliest; but we can show you one cake made, and you must imag- ine two hundred and fifty men making 'em as hard as they can one every four minutes." A Sirdar of cake-makers is called, and appears with a miniature wash-board, on which he sets a little square IN AN OPIUM FACTORY 305 box of dark wood, a tin cup, an earthen bowl, and a mass of poppy-petal cakes. A larger earthen bowl holds what looks like bad Cape tobacco. "What's that?" "Trash dried poppy-leaves, not petals, broken up and used for packing the cakes in. You'll see pres- ently." The cake-maker sits down and receives a lump of opium, weighed out, of one seer seven chittacks and a half, neither more nor less. "That's pure opium of seventy consistence." Every allowance is weighed. "What are they weighing that brown water for? " " That's lewa thin opium at fifty consistence. It's the paste. He gets four chittacks and a half of it." "And do they weigh the petal-cakes?" "Of course." The Sirdar takes a brass hemispherical cup and wets it with a rag. Then he tears a petal-cake, which re- sembles a pancake, across so that it fits into the cup without a wrinkle, and pastes it with the thin opium, the lewa. After this his actions become incomprehen- sible, but there is evidently a deep method in them. Pancake after pancake is torn across, dressed with lewa, and pressed down into the cup ; the fringes hanging over the edge of the bowl. He takes half -pancakes and fixes them skilfully, picking now first-class and now second- class ones, for there are three kinds of them. Every- thing is gummed into everything else with the lewa, and he presses all down by twisting his wrists inside the bowl till the bowl is lined half an inch deep with them, and they all glisten with the greasy lewa. He now takes up an ungummed pancake and fits in carefully all round. The opium is dropped tenderly upon this, and a curious washing motion of the hand follows. The VOL. II X 306 FROM SEA TO SEA mass of opium is drawn up into a cone as one by one the Sirdar picks up the overlapping portions of the cakes that hung outside the bowl and plasters them against the drug for an outside coat. He tucks in the top of the cone with his thumbs, brings the fringe of cake over to close the opening, and pastes fresh leaves upon all. The cone has now taken a spherical shape, and he gives it the finishing touch by gumming a large chupatti, one of the "moon" kind, set aside from the first, on the top, so deftly that no wrinkle is visible. The cake is now complete, and all the Celestials of the Middle Kingdom shall not be able to disprove that it weighs two seers one and three-quarter chittacks, with a play of half a chittack for the personal equation. The Sirdar takes it up and rubs it in the branlike poppy trash of the big bowl, so that two-thirds of it are powdered with the trash and one-third is fair and shiny poppy-petal. " That is the difference between a Ghazipur and a Patna cake. Our cakes have always an unpow- dered head. The Patna ones are rolled in trash all over. You can tell them anywhere by that mark. Now we'll cut this one open and you can see how a section looks." One-half of an inch, as nearly as may be, is the thickness of the shell all round the cake, and even in this short time so firmly has the lewa set that any attempt at sundering the skin is followed by the rending of the poppy-petals that compose the chupatti. "!N"ow you've seen in detail what a cake is made of that is to say, pure opium 70 consistence, poppy-petal pancakes, lewa of 52.50 consistence, and a powdering of poppy trash." "But why are you so particular about the shell?" "Because of the China market. The Chinaman likes IN AN OPIUM FACTOEY 307 every inch of the stuff we send him^ and uses it. He boils the shell and gets out every grain of the lewa used to gum it together. He smokes that after he has dried it. Eoughly speaking, the value of the cake we've just cut open is two pound ten. All the time it is in our hands we have to look after it and check it, and treat it as though it were gold. It mustn't have too much moisture in it, or it will swell and crack, and if it is too dry John Chinaman won't have it. He values his opium for quali- ties just the opposite of those in Smyrna opium. Smyrna opium gives as much as ten per cent of morphia, and if nearly solid 90 consistence. Our opium does not give more than three or three and a half per cent of morphia on the average, and, as you know, it is only 70, or in Patna 75, consistence. That is the drug the Chinaman likes. He can get the maximum of extract out of it by soaking it in hot water, and he likes the flavour. He knows it is absolutely pure too, and it comes to him in good condition." " But has nobody found out any patent way of making these cakes and putting skins on them by machinery?" "Not yet. Poppy to poppy. There's nothing better. Here are a couple of cakes made in 1849, when they tried experiments in wrapping them in paper and cloth. You can see that they are beautifully wrapped and sewn like cricket balls, but it would take about half an hour to make one cake, and we could not be sure of keeping the aroma in them. There is nothing like poppy plant for poppy drug." And this is the way the drug, which yields such a splendid income to the Indian Government, is prepared. THE SMITH ADMINISTKATION THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION THE COW-HOUSE JIRGA How does a King feel when he has kept peace in his borders, by skilfully playing off people against people, sect against sect, and kin against kin? Does he go out into the back verandah, take off his terai-crown, and rub his hands softly, chuckling the while as I do now? Does he pat himself on the back and hum merry little tunes as he walks up and down his garden? A man who takes no delight in ruling men dozens of them is no man. Behold! India has been squabbling over the Great Cow Question any time these four hun- dred years, to the certain knowledge of history and suc- cessive governments. I, Smith, have settled it. That is all! The trouble began, in the ancient and well-established fashion, with a love-affair across the Border, that is to say, in the next compound. Peroo, the cow-boy, went a-courting, and the innocent had not sense enough to keep to his own creed. He must needs make love to Baktawri, Corkler's coacliwan's (coachman) little girl, and she being betrothed to Ahmed Buksh's son, cetat nine, very properly threw a cow-dung cake at his head. 1 The following are newspaper articles written between 1887 and 1888 for my paper. R. K. 311 312 FROM SEA TO SEA Peroo scrambled back, hot and dishevelled, over the garden wall, and the vendetta began. Peroo is in no sense chivalrous. He saved Chukki, the ayah's (maid) little daughter, from a big pariah dog once; but he made Chukki give him half a chapatti for his services, and Chukki cried horribly. Peroo threw bricks at Bak- tawri when next he saw her, and said shameful things about her birth and parentage. " If she be not fair to me, I will heave a rock at she," was Peroo's rule of life after the cow-dung incident. Baktawri naturally ob- jected to bricks, and she told her father. Without, in the least, wishing to hurt Corkler's feel- ings, I must put on record my opinion that his coach- wan is a cftamar-Mahometan, not too long converted. The lines on which he fought the quarrel lead me to this belief, for he made a Creed-question of the brick -throwing, instead of waiting for Peroo and smack- ing that young cateran when he caught him. Once be- yond my borders, my people carry their lives in their own hand the Government is not responsible for their safety. Corkler's coachtuan did not complain to me. He sent out an Army Imam Din, his son with general instructions to do Peroo a mischief in the eyes of his employer. This brought the fight officially under my cognizance ; and was a direct breach of the neutral- ity existing between myself and Corkier, who has " Pun- jab head," and declares that his servants are the best in the Province. I know better. They are the tail- ings of my compound " casters " for dishonesty and riotousness. As an Army, Imam Din was distinctly in- experienced. As a General, he was beneath contempt. He came in the night with a hoe, and chipped a piece THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 313 out of the dun heifer, Peroo's charge, fondly imagin- ing that Peroo would have to bear the blame. Peroo was discovered next morning weeping salt tears into the wound, and the mass of my Hindu population were at once up and in arms. Had I headed them, they would have descended upon Corkler's compound and swept it off the face of the earth. But I calmed them with fail- words and set a watch for the cow-hoer. Next night, Imam Din came again with a bamboo and began to hit the heifer over her legs. Peroo caught him caught him by the leg and held on for the dear vengeance, till Imam Din was locked up in the gram-godown, and Peroo told him that he would be led out to death in the morn- ing. But with the dawn, the Clan Corkier came over, and there was pulling of turbans across the wall, till the Supreme Government was dressed and said, " Be silent ! " Now Corkler's coachtuan's brother was my coachman, and a man much dreaded by Peroo. He was not unaccus- tomed to speak the truth at intervals, and, by virtue of that rare failing, I, the Supreme Government, appointed him head of the jirga (committee) to try the case of Peroo's unauthorised love-making. The other members were my bearer (Hindu), Corkler's bearer (Mahometan), with the ticca-dharzi (hired tailor), Mahometan, for Standing Counsel. Baktawri and Baktawri's father were witnesses, but Baktawri's mother came all un- asked and seriously interfered with the gravity of the debate by abuse. But the dharzi upheld the dignity of the Law, and led Peroo away by the ear to a se- cluded spot near the well. Imam Din's case was an offence against the Govern- ment, raiding in British territory and maiming of cattle, 314 FKOM SEA TO SEA complicated with trespass by night all heinous crimes for which he might have been sent to jail. The evidence was deadly conclusive, and the case was tried summarily in the presence of the heifer. Imam Din's counsel was Corkler's sais, who, with great acumen, pointed out that the boy had only acted under his father's instructions. Pressed by the Supreme Government, he admitted that the letters of marque did not specify cows as an object of revenge, but merely Peroo. The hoeing of a heifer was a piece of spite on Imam Din's part. This was admitted. The penalties of failure are dire. A chowkidar (watch- man) was deputed to do justice on the person of Imam Din, but sentence was deferred pending the decision of the jirga on Peroo. The dharzi announced to the Su- preme Government that Peroo had been found guilty of assaulting Baktawri, across the Border in Corkler's compound, with bricks, thereby injuring the honour and dignity of Corkler's coachwan. For this offence, the jirga submitted, a sentence of a dozen stripes was neces- sary, to be followed by two hours of ear-holding. The Corkier choivkidar was deputed to do sentence on the person of Peroo, and the Smith chowkidar on that of Imam Din. They laid on together with justice and discrimination, and seldom have two small boys been better trounced. Followed next a dreary interval of "ear-holding" side by side. This is a peculiarly Ori- ental punishment, and should be seen to be appreciated. The Supreme Government then called for Corkler's coachwan and pointed out the bleeding heifer, with such language as seemed suitable to the situation. Local knowledge in a case like this is invaluable. Corkler's coachwan was notoriously a wealthy man, THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 315 and so far a bad Mussulman in that he lent money at interest. As a financier he had few friends among his co-servants. On the other hand, in the Smith quarters, the Mahometan element largely predominated; because the Supreme Government considered the minds of Ma- hometans more get-at-able than those of Hindus. The sin of inciting an illiterate and fanatic family to go forth and do a mischief was duly dwelt upon by the Supreme Government, together with the dangers attending the vicarious jehad (religious war). Corkler's coachwan offered no defence beyond the general statement that the Supreme Government was his father and his mother. This carried no weight. The Supreme Government touched lightly on the inexpediency of reviving an old creed-quarrel, and pointed out a venture, that the birth and education of a chamar (low-caste Hindu), three months converted, did not justify such extreme sectarianism. Here the populace shouted like the men of Ephesus, and sentence was passed amid tumultu- ous applause. Corkler's coachwan was ordered to give a dinner, not only to the Hindus whom he had insulted, but also to the Mahometans of the Smith compound, and also to his own fellow-servants. His brother, the Smith coachwan, unconverted chamar, was to see that he did it. Kefusal to comply with these words entailed a reference to Corkier and the " Inspector Sahib, " who would send in his constables, and, with the connivance of the Su- preme Government, would harry and vex all the Corkier compound. Corkler's coachwan protested, but was over- borne by Hindus and Mahometans alike, and his brother, who hated him with a cordial hatred, began to discuss the arrangements for the dinner. Peroo, by the way, 316 FKOM SEA TO SEA was not to share in the feast, nor was Imam Din. The proceedings then terminated, and the Supreme Govern- ment went in to breakfast. Ten days later the dinner came off and was continued far into the night. It marked a new era in my political relations with the outlying states, and was graced for a few minutes by the presence of the Supreme Government. Corkier 's coachwan hates me bitterly, but he can find no one to back him up in any scheme of annoyance that he may mature ; for have I not won for my Empire a free dinner, with oceans of sweetmeats? And in this, gentlemen all, lies the secret of Oriental administra- tion. My throne is set where it should be on the stomachs of many people. A BAZAAR DHULIP I AND the Government are roughly in the same con- dition; but modesty forces me to say that the Smith Administration is a few points better than the Imperial. Corkler's coachwan, you may remember, was fined a caste-dinner by me for sending his son, Imam Din, to mangle my dun heifer. In my last published adminis- tration report, I stated that Corkler's coachwan bore me a grudge for the fine imposed upon him, but among my servants and Corkler's, at least, could find no one to support him in schemes of vengeance. I was quite right right as an administration with prestige to sup- port should always be. But I own that I had never contemplated the possi- bility of Corkler's coachwan going off to take service with Mr. Jehan Concepcion Fernandez de Lisboa Paul THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 317 a gentleman semi-orientalised, possessed of several dwelling-houses and an infamous temper. Corkier was an Englishman, and any attempt on his coachwan's part to annoy me would have been summarily stopped. Mr. J. C. F. de L. Paul, on the other hand . . . but no matter. The business is now settled, and there is no necessity for importing a race-question into the story. Once established in Mr. Paul's compound, Corkler's coachwan sent me an insolent message demanding a re- fund, with interest, of all the money spent on the caste- dinner. The Government, in a temperately framed reply, refused point-blank, and pointed out that a Mahometan by his religion could not ask for interest. As I have stated in my last report, Corkler's coachwan was a renegade chamar, converted to Islam for his wife's sake. The impassive attitude of the Govern- ment had the effect of monstrously irritating Corkler's coachwan, who sat on the wall of Mr. Paul's compound and flung highly flavoured vernacular at the servants of the State as they passed. He said that it was his intention to make life a burden to the Government profanely called Eschmitt Sahib. The Government went to office as usual and made no sign. Then Corkler's coachwan formulated an indictment to the effect that Eschmitt Sahib had, on the occasion of the caste-dinner, pulled him vehemently by the ears, and robbed him of one rupee nine annas four pie. The charge was shouted from the top of Mr. Paul's com- pound wall to the four winds of Heaven. It was disre- garded by the Government, and the refugee took more daring measures. He came by night, and wrote upon 318 FKOM SEA TO SEA the white-washed walls with charcoal disgraceful sen- tences which made the Smith servants grin. Now it is bad for any Government that its servants should grin at it. Rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft; and irreverence is the parent of rebellion. Not content with writing, Corkler's madman began to miscall the State always from the top of Mr. Paul's wall. He informed intending mussalchis (scullions) that Eschmitt Sahib invariably administered his pantry with a polo- stock; possible saises (grooms) were told that wages in the Smith establishment were paid yearly; while khit- matgars (butlers) learnt that their family honour was not safe within the gate-posts of the house of "Eschmitt." No real harm was done, for the character of my rule is known among all first-class servants. Still, the vituperation and all its circumstantial details made men laugh ; and I choose that no one shall laugh. My relations with Mr. Paul had always for reasons connected with the incursions of hens been strained. In pursuance of a carefully matured plan of campaign I demanded of Mr. Paul the body of Corkler's coachwan, to be dealt with after my own ideas. Mr. Paul said that the man was a good coachwan and should not be given up. I then temperately always temperately gave him a sketch of the ruffian's conduct. Mr. Paul an- nounced his entire freedom from any responsibility in this matter, and requested that the correspondence might cease. It was vitally necessary to the well-being of my administration that Corkler's coachwan should come into my possession. He was daily growing a greater nui- sance, and had drawn unto him a disaffected dog-boy, lately in my employ. THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 319 Mr. Paul was deaf to my verbal, and blind to my written entreaties. For these reasons I was reluctantly compelled to take the law into my own hands and break it. A khitmatgar was sent down the length of Mr. Paul's wall to " draw the fire " of Corkler's coachiuan, and while the latter cursed him by his gods for ever entering Eschmitt Sahib's service, Eschmitt Sahib crept subtilely behind the wall and thrust the evil-speaker into the moon-lit road, where he was pinioned, in strict silence, by the ambushed population of the Smith com- pound. Once collared, I regret to say, Corkler's coach- wan was seized with an unmanly panic; for the memory of the lewd sentences on the wall, the insults shouted from the top of Mr. Paul's wall, and the warnings to wayfaring table-servants, came back to his mind. He wept salt tears and demanded the protection of the law and of Mr. Paul. He received neither. He was paraded by the State through the quarters, that all men and women and little children might look at him. He was then formally appointed last and lowest of the car- riage-grooms nauker-ke-nauker (servant of servants) in perpetuity, on a salary which would never be increased. The entire Smith people Hindu and Mus- sulman alike were made responsible for his safe- keeping under pain of having all the thatch additions to their houses torn down, and the Light of the Favour of the State the Great Hazur-ki-Mehrbani darkened for ever. Legally the State was wrongfully detaining Corkler's coachwan. Practically, it was avenging itself for a pro- tracted series of insults to its dignity. Days rolled on, and Corkler's coachwan became car- 320 FROM SEA TO SEA riage-scws. Instead of driving two horses, it was his duty to let down the steps for the State to tread upon. When the other servants received cold-weather coats, he was compelled to buy one, and all extra lean-to huts round his house were strictly forbidden. That he did not run away, I ascribe solely to the exertions of the domestic police that is to say, every man, woman, and child of the Smith Kingdom. He was delivered into their hands, for a prey and a laughing-stock ; and in their hands, unless I am much mistaken, they intend that he shall remain. I learn that my khansamah (head- butler) has informed Mr. Paul that his late servant is in gaol for robbing the Roman Catholic Chapel, of which Mr. Paul is a distinguished member; consequently that gentleman has relaxed his attempts to unearth what he called his "so good coachwan." That coachwan is now a living example and most lively presentment of the un- relaxing wrath of the State. However well he may work, however earnestly strive to win my favour, there is no human chance of his ever rising from his present position so long as Eschmitt Sahib and he are above the earth together. For reasons which I have hinted at above, he remains cleaning carriage-wheels, and will so remain to the end of the chapter ; while the story of his fall and fate spreads through the bazaars, and fills the ranks of servantdom with an intense respect for Eschmitt Sahib. A broad-minded Oriental administration would have allowed me to nail up the head of Corkler's coachwan over the hall door; a narrow-souled public may consider my present lenient treatment of him harsh and illegal. To this I can only reply that I know how to deal with THE SMITH ADMINISTKATION 321 my own people. I will never, never part with Corkler's coachwan. THE HANDS OF JUSTICE BE pleased to listen to a story of domestic trouble con- nected with the Private Services Commission in the back verandah, which did good work, though I, the Commis- sion, say so, but it could not guard against the Unfore- seen Contingency. There was peace in all my borders till Peroo, the cow-keeper's son, came yesterday and paralysed the Government. He said his father had told him to gather sticks dry sticks for the evening fire. I would not check parental authority in any way, but I did not see why Peroo should mangle my sirris- trees. Peroo wept copiously, and, promising never to despoil my garden again, fled from my presence. To-day I have caught him in the act of theft, and in the third fork of the white Doon sirris, twenty feet above ground. I have taken a chair and established myself at the foot of the tree, preparatory to making up my mind. The situation is a serious one, for if Peroo be led to think that he can break down my trees unharmed, the garden" will be a wilderness in a week. Furthermore, Peroo has insulted the Majesty of the Government. Which is Me. Also he has insulted my sirris in saying that it is dry. He deserves a double punishment. On the other hand, Peroo is very young, very small, and very, very naked. At present he is penitent, for he is howling in a dry and husky fashion, and the squirrels are frightened. The question is how shall I capture Peroo? There 322 FROM SEA TO SEA are three courses open to me. I can shin up the tree and fight him on his own ground. I can shell him with clods of earth till he makes submission and comes down; or, and this seems the better plan, I can remain where I am, and cut him off from his supplies until the rifles sticks I mean are returned. Peroo, for all practical purposes, is a marauding tribe from the Hills head-man, fighting-tail and all. I, once more, am the State, cool, collected, and impassive. In half an hour or so Peroo will be forced to descend. He will then be smacked: that is, if I can lay hold of his wriggling body. In the meantime, I will demonstrate. "Bearer, bring me the turn-turn ki chabuq (carriage- whip)." It is brought and laid on the ground, while Peroo howls afresh. I will overawe this child. He has an armful of stolen sticks pressed to his stomach. "Bearer, bring also the chota mota chabuq (the little whip)' the one kept for the punnia kutta (spaniel)." Peroo has stopped howling. He peers through the branches and breathes through his nose very hard. Decidedly, I am impressing him with a show of armed strength. The idea of that cruel whip-thong curling round Peroo's fat little brown stomach is not a pleasant one. But I must be firm. " Peroo, come down and be hit for stealing the Sahib's wood." Peroo scuttles up to the fourth fork, and waits de- velopments. "Peroo, will you come down?" " No. The Sahib will hit me." Here the goalla appears, and learns that his son is in THE SMITH ADMINISTBATION 323 disgrace. "Beat him well, Sahib," says the goalla. "He is a budmash. I never told him to steal your wood. Peroo, descend and be very much beaten." There is silence for a moment. Then, crisp and clear from the very top of the sirris, floats down the answer of the treed dacoit. " Kubbi, Jcubbi nahin (Never never No !) . " The goalla hides a smile with his hand and departs, saying: "Very well. This night I will beat you dead." There is a rustle in the leaves as Peroo wriggles him- self into a more comfortable seat. "Shall I send a punJcha-coolie after him?" suggests the bearer. This is not good. Peroo might fall and hurt himself. Besides I have no desire to employ native troops. They demand too much batta. The punkha-coolie would expect four annas for capturing Peroo. I will deal with the robber myself. He shall be treated judicially, when the excitement of wrong-doing shall have died away, as befits his tender years, with an old bedroom slip- per, and the bearer shall hold him. Yes, he shall be smacked three times, once gently, once moderately, and once severely. After the punishment shall come the fine. He shall help the malli (gardener) to keep the flower-beds in order for a week, and then " Sahib ! Sahib ! Can I come down? " The rebel treats for terms. "Peroo, you are a nut-cut (a young imp)." " It was my father's order. He told me to get sticks." "From this tree?" "Yes; Protector of the Poor. He said the Sahib 324 FROM SEA TO SEA would not come back from office till I had gathered many sticks." "Your father didn't tell me that." " My father is a liar. Sahib ! Sahib ! Are you going to hit me?" "Come down and I'll think about it." Peroo drops as far as the third fork, sees the whip, and hesitates. "If you will take away the whips I will come down." There is a frankness in this negotiation that I respect. I stoop, pick up the whips, and turn to throw them into the verandah. Follows a rustle, a sound of scraped bark, and a thud. When I turn, Peroo is down, off and over the compound wall. He has not dropped the stolen fire-wood, and I feel distinctly foolish. My prestige, so far as Peroo is concerned, is gone. This Administration will now go indoors for a drink. THE SERAI CABAL UPON the evidence of a scullion, I, the State, rose up and made sudden investigation of the crowded serai. There I found and dismissed, as harmful to public morals, a lady irj a pink saree who was masquerading as somebody's wife. The utter and abject loneliness of the mussalchi, that outcaste of the cookroom, should, Orientally speaking, have led him to make a favourable report to his fellow-servants. That he did not do so I attributed to a certain hardness of character brought out by innumerable kickings and scanty fare. Therefore I acted on his evidence and, in so doing, brought down the THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 325 wrath of the entire serai, not on my head, for they were afraid of me, but on the humble head of Karim Baksh, mussalchi. He had accused the bearer of inac j curacy in money matters, and the Jchansamah of idleness ; besides bringing about the ejectment of fifteen people men, women, and children related by holy and unholy ties to all the servants. Can you wonder that Karim Baksh was a marked boy? Departmentally, he was under the control of the Jchansamah, I myself taking but small interest in the subordinate appointments on my staff. Two days after the evidence had been tendered, I was not surprised to learn that Karim Baksh had been dis- missed by his superior ; reason given, that he was per- sonally unclean. It is a fundamental maxim of my administration that all power delegated is liable to sud- den and unexpected resumption at the hands of the Head. This prevents the right of the Lord-Proprietor from lapsing by time. The Jchansamah'' s decision was reversed without reason given, and the enemies of Karim Baksh sustained their first defeat. They were bold in making their first move so soon. I, Smith, who devote hours that would be better spent on honest money- getting, to the study of my servants, knew they would now try less direct tactics. Karim Baksh slept soundly, over against the drain that carries off the water of my bath, as the enemy conspired. One night I was walking round the house when the pungent stench of a JwoJcaJi drifted out of the pantry. A hookah, out of place, is to me an abomination. I removed it gingerly, and demanded the name of the owner. Out of the darkness sprang a man, who said, " Karim Baksh ! " It was the bearer. Eunning my hand 326 FROM SEA TO SEA along the stem, I felt the loop of leather which a chamar attaches, or should attach, to his pipe, lest higher castes be defiled unwittingly. The bearer lied, for the burning hookah was a device of the groom friend of the lady in the pink saree to compass the downfall of Karim Baksh. So the second move of the enemy was foiled, and Karim Baksh asleep as dogs sleep, by the drain, took no harm. Came thirdly, after a decent interval to give me time to forget the Private Services Commission, the gumnamah (the anonymous letter) stuck into the frame of the looking-glass. Karim Baksh had proposed an elope- ment with the sweeper's wife, and the morality of the serai was in danger. Also the sweeper threatened mur- der, which could be avoided by the dismissal of Karim Baksh. The blear-eyed orphan heard the charge against him unmoved, and, at the end, turning his face to the sun, said : " Look at me, Sahib ! Am I the man a woman runs away with? " Then pointing to the ayah, " Or she the woman to tempt a Mussulman?" Low as was Karim Baksh, the mussalchi, he could by right of creed look down upon a she-sweeper. The charge under Sec- tion 498, I. P. C., broke down in silence and tears, and thus the third attempt of the enemy came to naught. I, Smith, who have some knowledge of my subjects, knew that the next charge would be a genuine one, based on the weakness of Karim Baksh, which was clumsiness phenomenal ineptitude of hand and foot. Nor was I disappointed. A fortnight passed, and the bearer and the Jchansamah simultaneously preferred charges against Karim Baksh. He had broken two tea-cups and had neglected to report their loss to me; the value of the THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 327 tea-cups was four annas. They must have spent days spying upon Kariin Baksh, for he was a morose and solitary boy who did his cup-cleaning alone. Taxed with the fragments, Karim Baksh attempted no defence. Things were as the witnesses said, and I was his father and his mother. By my rule, a servant who does not confess a fault suffers, when that fault is discovered, severe punishment. But the red Hanuman, who grins by the well in the bazaar, prompted the bearer at that moment to express his extreme solicitude for the honour and dignity of my service. Literally translated, the sentence ran, "The zeal of thy house has eaten me up." Then an immense indignation and disgust took pos- session of me, Smith, who have trodden, as far as an Englishman may tread, the miry gulleys of native thought. I knew nOne better the peculations of the bearer, the vices of the Jchansamah, and the abject, fawning acquiescence with which these two men would meet the basest wish that my mind could conceive. And they talked to me thieves and worse that they were of their desire that I should be well served! Lied to me as though I had been a griff but twenty minutes landed on the Apollo Bunder! In the middle stood Karim Bakshj silent; on either side was an accuser, broken tea-cup in hand; the Jchansamah, mindful of the banished lady in the pink saree; the bearer remembering that, since the date of the Private Services Commission, the whisky and the rupees had been locked up. And they talked of the shortcomings of Karim Baksh the out- caste the boy too ugly to achieve and too stupid to conceive sin a blunderer at the worst. Taking each 328 FROM SEA TO SEA accuser by the nape of his neck, I smote their cunning skulls the one against the other, till they saw stars by the firmamentful. Then I cast them from me, for I was sick of them, knowing how long they had worked in secret to compass the downfall of Karim Baksh. And they laid their hands upon their mouths and were dumb, for they saw that I, Smith, knew to what end they had striven. This Administration may not control a revenue of seventy -two millions, more or less, per annum, but it is wiser than some people. THE STORY OF A KING IF there be any idle people who remember the cam- paign against Peroo, the cow-man's son, or retain any recollection of the great intrigue set afoot by all the servants against the scullion, if, I say, there be any who bear in mind these notable episodes in my adminis- tration, I would pray their attention to what follows. The Gazette of India shows that I have been absent for two months from the station in which is my house. The day before I departed, I called the Empire to- gether, from the bearer to the sais' friends' hanger-on, and it numbered, with wives and babes, thirty-seven souls all well-fed, prosperous, and contented under my rule, which includes free phenyle and quinine. I made a speech along speech to the listening peoples. I announced that the inestimable boon of local self- government was to be theirs for the next eight weeks. They said that it was "good talk." I laid upon the Departments concerned the charge of my garden, my THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 329 harness, my house, my horse, my guns, my furniture, all the screens in front of the doors, both cows, and the little calf that was to come. I charged them by their hope of presents in the future to act cleanly and care- fully by my chattels ; to abstain from fighting, and to keep the serai sweet. That this might be done under the eye of authority, I appointed a Viceroy the very strong man Bahadur Khan, Jchitmatyar to wit and, that he might have a material hold over his subjects, gave him an ounce-phial of cinchona febrifuge, to dis- tribute against the fevers of September. Lastly and of this I have never sufficiently repented I gave all of them their two months' wages in advance. They were desperately poor some of them, how poor only I and the money-lender knew, but I repent still of my act. A rich democracy inevitably rots. Eliminating that one financial error, could any man have done better than I? I know he could not, for I took a plebiscite of the Empire on the matter, and it said with one voice that my scheme was singularly right. On that assurance I left it and went to lighter pleasures. On the fourth day came the gumnameh. In my heart of hearts I had expected one, but not so soon oh, not so soon! It was on a postcard, and preferred serious accusations of neglect and immorality against Bahadur Khan, my Viceroy. I understood then the value of the anonymous letter. However much you despise it, it breeds distrust especially when it arrives with every other mail. To my shame be it said I caused a watch to be set on Bahadur Khan, employing a tender Babu. But it was too late. An urgent private telegram in- 330 FEOM SEA TO SEA formed me: "Bahadur Khan secreted sweeper's daugh- ter. House leaks." The head of my administration, the man with all the cinchona febrifuge, had proved untrustworthy, and the house leaked. The agonies of managing an Empire from the Hills can only be ap- preciated by those who have made the experiment. Before I had been three weeks parted from my country, I was compelled, by force of circumstance, to rule it on paper, through a hireling executive the Babu totally incapable of understanding the wants of my people, and, in the nature of things, purely temporary. He had, at some portion of his career, been in a sub- ordinate branch of the Secretariat. His training there had paralysed him. Instead of taking steps when Bahadur Khan eloped with the sweeper's daughter, whom I could well have spared, and the cinchona febri- fuge, which I knew would be wanted, he wrote me voluminous reports on both thefts. The leakage of the house he dismissed in one paragraph, merely stating that "much furniture had been swamped." I wrote to my landlord, a Hindu of the old school. He replied that he could do nothing so long as my servants piled cut fuel on the top of the house, straining the woodwork of the verandahs. Also, he said that the bhisti (water- carrier) refused to recognise his authority, or to sprinkle water on the road-metal which was then being laid down for the carriage drive. On this announcement came a letter from the Babu, intimating that bad fever had broken out in the serai, and that the servants falsely accused him of having bought the cinchona febrifuge of Bahadur Khan, ex-Viceroy, now political fugitive, for the purpose of vending retail. The fever and not THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 331 the false charge interested me. I suggested this by wire that the Babu should buy quinine. In three days he wrote to know whether he should purchase common or Europe quinine, and whether I would repay him. I sent the quinine down by parcel post, and sighed for Bahadur Khan with all his faults. Had ho only stayed to look after my people, I would have for- given the affair of the sweeper's daughter. He was immoral, but an administrator, and would have done his best with the fever. In course of time my leave came to an end, and I descended on my Empire, expecting the worst. Nor was I disappointed. In the first place, the horses had not been shod for two months; in the second, the garden had not been touched for the same space of time ; in the third, the serai was unspeakably filthy; in the fourth, the house was inches deep in dust, and there were muddy stains on most of the furniture; in the fifth, the house had never been opened; in the sixth, seventeen of my people had gone away and two had died of fever; in the seventh, the little calf was dead. Eighthly and lastly, the remnant of my retainers were fighting furiously among themselves, clique against clique, creed against creed, and woman against woman ; this last was the most overwhelming of all. It was a dreary home-coming. The Empire formed up two deep round the carriage and began to explain its grievances. It wept and recrimi- nated and abused till it was dismissed. Next morning I discovered that its finances were in a most disorganised condition. It had borrowed money for a wedding, and to recoup itself had invented little bills of imaginary expenses contracted during my absence. 332 FKOM SEA TO SEA For three hours I executed judgment, and strove as best I could to repair a wasted, neglected, and desolate realm. By 4 P.M. the ship of state had been cleared of the greater part of the raffle, and its crew to continue the metaphor had beaten to quarters, united and obe- dient once more. Though I knew the fault lay with Bahadur Khan wicked, abandoned, but decisive and capable-of-ruling- men Bahadur Khan I could not rid myself of the thought that I was wrong in leaving my people so long to their own devices. But this was absurd. A man can't spend all his time looking after his servants, can he? THE GREAT CENSUS MOWGI was a mehter (a sweeper), but he was also a Punjabi, and consequently, had a head on his shoulders. Mowgi was my mehter the property of Smith who governs a vast population of servants with unprece- dented success. When he was my subject I did not ap- preciate him properly. I called him lazy and unclean; I protested against the multitude of his family. Mowgi asked for his dismissal, he was the only servant who ever voluntarily left the Shadow of my Protection, and I said : " Mowgi, either you are an irreclaimable ruf- fian or a singularly self-reliant man. In either case you will come to great grief. Where do you intend to go?" "God knows," said Mowgi, cheerfully. "I shall leave my wife and all the children here, and go somewhere else. If you, Sahib, turn them out, they will die ! For you are their only protector." THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 333 So I was dowered with Mowgi's wife wives rather, for he had forgotten the new one from Rawalpindi; and Mowgi went out to the unknown, and never sent a single letter to his family. The wives used to clamour in the verandah and accuse me of having taken the remittances, which they said Mowgi must have sent, to help out my own pay. When I supported them they were quite sure of the theft. For these reasons I was angry with the absent Mowgi. Time passed, and I, the great Smith, went abroad on travels and left my Empire in Commission. The wives were the feudatory Native States, but the Commission could not make them recognise any feudal tie. They both got married, saying that Mowgi was a bad man, but they never left my compound. In the course of my wanderings I came to the great Native State of Ghorahpur, which, as every one knows, is on the borders of the Indian Desert. None the less, it requires almost as many printed forms for its proper administration as a real district. Among its other peculiarities, it was proud of its prisoners Jcaidis they were called. In the old days Ghorahpur was wont to run its dacoits through the stomach or cut them with swords; but now it prides itself on keeping them in leg- irons and employing them on "remunerative labour," that is to say, sitting in the sun by the side of a road and waiting until some road-metal comes and lays itself down. A gang of Jcaidis was hard at work in this fashion when I came by, and the warder was picking his teeth with the end of his bayonet. One of the fettered sinners came forward and salaamed deeply to me. It was Mowgi, 334 FROM SEA TO SEA fat, well fed, and with a twinkle in his eye. "Is the Presence in good health and are all in his house well?" said Mowgi. " What in the world are you doing here? " demanded the Presence. " By your honour's favour I am in prison," said he, shaking one leg delicately to make the ankle-iron jingle on the leg-bar. " I have been in prison nearly a month." " What for dacoity ? " "I have been a Sahib's servant," said Mowgi, of- fended. "Do you think that I should ever become a low dacoit like these men here? I am in prison for making a numbering for the people." "A what?" Mowgi grinned, and told the tale of his misdeeds thus : "When I left your service, Sahib, I went to Delhi, and from Delhi I came to the Sambhur Salt Lake over there ! " He pointed across the sand. " I was a Jemadar of mehters (a headman of sweepers) there, because these Marwarri people are without sense. Then they gave me leave because they said that I had stolen money. It was true, but I was also very glad to go away, for my legs were sore from the salt of the Sambhur Lake. I went away and hired a camel for twenty rupees a month. That was shameful talk, but these thieves of Marwarris would not let me have it for less." " Where did you get the money from? " I asked. "I have said that I had stolen it. I am a poor man. I could not get it by any other way." "But what did you want with a camel?" "The Sahib shall hear. In the house of a certain Sahib at Sambhur was a big book which came from Bombay, and whenever the Sahib wanted anything to THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 335 eat or good tobacco, he looked into the book and wrote a letter to Bombay, and .in a week all the things came as he had ordered soap and sugar and boots. I took that book ; it was a fat one ; and I shaved my moustache in the manner of Mahometans, and I got upon my camel and went away from that bad place of Sambhur." "Where did you go?" "I cannot say. I went for four days over the sand till I was very far from Sambhur. Then I came to a village and said: 'I am Wajib Ali, Bahadur, a servant of the Government, and many men are wanted to go and fight in Cabul. The order is written in this book. How many strong men have you? ' They were afraid because of my big book, and because they were without sense. They gave me food, and all the headmen gave me rupees to spare the men in that village, and I went away from there with nineteen rupees. The name of that village was Kot. And as I had done at Kot, so I did at other villages, Waka, Tung, Malair, Palan, Myokal, and other places, always getting rupees that the names of the strong young men might not be written down. I went from Bikanir to Jeysulmir, till my book in which I always looked wisely so as to frighten the people, was back -broken, and I got one thousand seven hundred and eight rupees twelve annas and six pies." "All from a camel and a Treacher's Price List?" " I do not know the name of the book, but these peo- ple were very frightened of me. But I tried to take my taJckus from a servant of this State, and he made a report, and they sent troopers, who caught me, me, and my little camel, and my big book. Therefore I was sent to prison." 336 FKOM SEA TO SEA "Mowgi," said I, solemnly, "if this be true, you are a great man. When will you be out of prison? " "In one year. I got three months for taking the numbering of the people, and one year for pretending to be a Mahometan. But I may run away before. All these people are very stupid men." "My arms, Mowgi," I said, "will be open to you when the term of your captivity is ended. You shall be my body-servant." "The Presence is my father and my mother," said Mowgi. "I will come." "The wives have married, Mowgi," I said. "No matter," said Mowgi. "I also have a wife at Sambhur and one here. When I return to the service of the Presence, which one shall I bring?" "Which one you please." "The Presence is my protection and a son of the gods," said Mowgi. "Without doubt I will come as soon as I can escape." I am waiting now for the return of Mowgi. I will make him overseer of all my house. THE KILLING OF HATIM TAI Now Hatim Tai was condemned to death by the Gov- ernment, because he had stepped upon his mahout, broken his near-hind leg-chain, and punched poor old pursy Durga Pershad in the ribs till that venerable beast squealed for mercy. Hatim Tai was dangerous to the community, and the mahout's widow said that her hus- band's soul would never rest till Hatim's little, pig- like eye was glazed in the frost of death. Did Hatim THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 337 care? Not he. He trumpeted as he swung at his pickets, and he stole as much of Durga Pershad's food as he could. Then he went to sleep and looked that " all the to-morrows should be as to-day, " and that he should never carry loads again. But the minions of the Law did not sleep. They came by night and scanned the huge bulk of Hatim Tai, and took council together how he might best be slain. "If we borrowed a seven-pounder," began the Subal- tern, "or, better still, if we turned him loose and had the Horse Battery out ! A general inspection would be nothing to it! I wonder whether my Major would see it?" "Skittles," said all the Doctors together. "He's our property." They severally murmured, "arsenic," "strychnine," and "opium," and went their way, while Hatim Tai dreamed of elephant loves, wooed and won long ago in the Doon. The day broke, and savage mahouts led him away to the place of execution ; for he was quiet, being "fey," as are both men and beasts when they approach the brink of the grave unknowing. " Ha,, Salah ! Ha, Budmash I To-day you die ! " shouted the mahouts, "and Mangli's ghost will rode you with an ankus heated in the flames of Put, murderer and tun- bellied thief." "A long journey," thought Hatim Tai. "'Wonder what they'll do at the end of it." He broke off the branch of a tree and tickled himself on his jowl and ears. And so he walked into the place of execution, where men waited with many chains and grievous ropes, and bound him as he had never been bound before. "Foolish people!" said Hatim Tai. "Almost as foolish as Mangli when he called me the pride of all VOL, n z 338 FROM SEA TO SEA the Doon, the brightest jewel in Sanderson Sahib's crown a 'base-born.' I shall break these ropes in a minute or two, and then, between my fore and hind legs, some one is like to be hurt." " How much d'you think he'll want ? " said the first Doctor. "About two ounces," answered the second. "Say three to be on the safe side," said the first; and they did up the three ounces of arsenic in a ball of sugar. "Before a fight it is best to eat," said Hatim Tai, and he put away the gur with a salaam; for he prided himself upon his manners. The men fell back, and Hatim Tai was conscious of grateful warmth in his stomach. " Bless their innocence ! " thought he. "They've given me a mussala. I don't think I want it ; but I'll show that I'm not ungrateful." And he did! The chains and the ropes held firm. "It's beginning to work," said a Doctor. "Nonsense," said the Subaltern. " I know old Hatim' s ways. He's lost his temper. If the ropes break we're done for." Hatim kicked and wriggled and squealed and did his best, so far as his anatomy allowed, to buck-jump; but the ropes stretched not one inch. "I am making a fool of myself," he trumpeted. "I must be calm. At seventy years of age one should behave with dignity. None the less, these ropes are ex- cessively galling." He ceased his struggles, and rocked to and fro sulkily. " He is going to fall ! " whispered a Doctor. "Not a bit of it. Now it's my turn. We'll try the Sorychnine," said the second. Prick a large and healthy tiger with a corking-pin, and you will, in some small measure, realise the diffi- culty of injecting strychnine subcutaneously into an THE SMITH ADMINISTKATION 339 elephant nine feet eleven inches and one-half at the shoulder. Hatim Tai forgot his dignity and stood on his head, while all the world wondered. "I told you that would fetch him ! " shouted the apostle of strych- nine, waving an enormous bottle. "That's the death- rattle! Stand back all !" But it was only Hatim Tai expressing his regret that he had slain Mangli, and so fallen into the hands of the most incompetent mahouts that he had ever made string- stirrups. " I was never jabbed with an ankus all over my body before; and I won't stand it!" blared Hatim Tai. He stood upon his head afresh and kicked. "Final convulsion," said the Doctor, just as Hatim Tai grew weary and settled into peace again. After all, it was not worth behaving like a baby. He would be calm. He was calm for two hours, and the Doctors looked at their watches and yawned. "Now it's my turn," said the third Doctor. " Afim lao." They brought it a knob of Patna opium of the purest, in weight half a seer. Hatim swallowed it whole. Ghazipur excise opium, two cakes of a seer each, followed, helped down with much gur. " This is good," said Hatim Tai. "They are sorry for their rudeness. Give me some more." The hours wore on, and the sun began to sink, but not so Hatim Tai. The three Doctors cast professional rivalry to the winds and united in ravaging their dispensaries in Hatim Tea's behalf. Cyanide of potas- sium amused him. Bisulphide of mercury, chloral (very little of that), sulphate of copper, oxide of zinc, red lead, bismuth, carbonate of baryta, corrosive sublimate, quicklime, stramonium, veratrium, colchicum, muriatic 340 FEOM SEA TO SEA acid, and lunar caustic, all went down, one after another, in the balls of sugar ; and Hatim Tai never blenched. It was not until the Hospital Assistant clamoured: " All these things Government Store and Medical Com- forts," that the Doctors desisted and wiped their heated brows. "'Might as well physic a Cairo sarcophagus," grumbled the first Doctor, and Hatim Tai gurgled gently; meaning that he would like another grwr-ball. " Bless my soul ! " said the Subaltern, who had gone away, done a day's work, and returned with his pet eight-bore. "D'you mean to say that you haven't killed Hatim Tai jet three of you? Most unprofessional, I call it. You could have polished off a battery in that time." "Battery!" shrieked the baffled medicos in chorus. " He's got enough poison in his system to set- tle the whole blessed British Army ! " "Let me try," said the Subaltern, unstrapping the gun-case in his dog-cart. He. threw a handkerchief upon the ground, and passed quickly in front of the elephant. Hatim Tai lowered his head slightly to look, and even as he did so the spherical shell smote him on the " Saucer of Life " the little spot no bigger than a man's hand which is six inches above a line drawn from eye to eye. "This is the end," said Hatim Tai. " I die as Niwaz Jung died ! " He strove to keep his feet, stag- gered, recovered, and reeled afresh. Then, with one wild trumpet that rang far through the twilight, Hatim Tai fell dead among his pickets. "Might ha' saved half your dispensaries if you'd called me in to treat him at first," said the Subaltern, wiping out the eight-bore. THE SMITH ADMINISTBATION 341 A SELF-MADE MAN SURJUN came back from Kimberley, whicli is Tom Tiddler's Ground, where he had been picking up gold and silver. He was no longer a Purbeah. A real dia- mond ring sparkled on his hand, and his tweed suit hud cost him forty-two shillings and sixpence. He paid two hundred pounds into the Bank; and it was there that I caught him and treated him as befitted a rich man. " Surjun, come to my house and tell me your story." Nothing loath, Surjun came diamond ring and all. His speech was composite. When he wished to be im- pressive, he spoke English checkered with the Low Dutch slang of the Diamond Fields. When he would be expressive, he returned to his vernacular, and was as native as a gentleman with sixteen and sixpenny boots could be. "I will tell you my tale," said Surjun, displaying the diamond ring. "There was a friend of mine, and he went to Kimberley, and was a firm there selling things to the digger-men. In thirteen years he made seven thousand pounds. He came to me I was from Chye- bassa in those days and said, 'Come into my firm.' I went with him. Oh no! I was not an emigrant. I took my own ship, and we became the firm of Surjun and Jagesser. Here is the card of my firm. You can read it: 'Surjun and Jagesser Dube, De Beer's Terrace, De Beer's Fields, Kimberley.' We made an iron house, all the houses are iron there, and we sold, to the diggers and the Kaffirs and all sorts of men, clothes, flour, mealies, that is Indian corn, sardines and milk, 342 FROM SEA TO SEA and salmon in tins, and boots, and blankets, and clothes just as good as the clothes as I wear now. . "Kimberley is a good place. There are no pennies there what you call pice except to buy stamps with. Threepence is the smallest piece of money, and even threepence will not buy a drink. A drink is one shil- ling, one shilling and threepence, or one shilling and ninepence. And even the water there, it is one shilling and threepence for a hundred gallons in Kirnberley. All things you get you pay money for. Yes, this dia- mond ring cost much money. Here is the bill, and there is the receipt stamp upon the bill 'Behrendt of Dutoitspan Road. ' It is written upon the bill, and the price was thirteen pounds four shillings. It is a good diamond Cape diamond. That is why the colour is a little, little soft yellow. All Cape diamonds are so. "How did I get rny money? 'Fore Gott, I cannot tell, Sahib. You sell one day, you sell the other day, and all the other days give the thing and take the money the money comes. If we know man very well, we give credit one week, and if very, very well, so much as one month. You buy boots for eleven shillings and sixpence; sell for sixteen shillings. What you buy at one pound, you sell for thirty shillings at Kimberley. That is the custom. No good selling bad things. All the digger-men know and the Kaffirs too. "The Kaffir is a strange man. He comes into the shops and say, taking a blanket, 'How much?' in the Kaffir talk So!" Surjun here delivered the most wonderful series of clicks that I had ever heard from a human throat. "That is how the Kaffir asks 'How much?'" said THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 343 Surjun, calmly, enjoying the sensation that he had pro- duced. "Then you say, * No, you say,' and you say it so." (More clicks and a sound like a hurricane of kisses.) "Then the Kaffir he say: 'No, no, that blanket your blanket, not my blanket. You say." "And how long does this business last? " " Till the Kaffir he tired, and says," answered Surjun. "And then do you begin the real bargaining?" "Yes," said Surjun, "same as in bazaar here. The Kaffir he says, 'I can't pay!' Then you fold up blanket, and Kaffir goes away. Then he comes back and says e gobu,' that is Kaffir for blanket. And so you sell him all he wants." "Poor Kaffir! And what is Kimberley like to look at?" " A beautiful clean place all so clean, and there is a very good law there. This law. A man he come into your compound after nine o'clock, and you say vootsac same as nic/clejao and he doesn't vootsac; suppose you shoot that man and he dies, and he calls you before magistrate, he can't do nothing." "Very few dead men can. Are you allowed to shoot before saying 'vootsac '?" "Oh Hell, yes! Shoot if you see him in the com- pound after nine o'clock. That is the law. Perhaps he have come to steal diamonds. Many men steal diamonds, and buy and sell without license. That is called Aidibi." "What?" "Aidibi." -"Oh! 'I. D. B.' I see. Well, what happens to them?" "They go to gaol for years and years. Very many 344 FROM SEA TO SEA men in gaol for I. D. B. Very many men your people, very few mine. Heaps of Kaffirs. Kaffir he swallows diamond, and takes medicine to find him again. You get not less than ten years for I. D. B. But I and my friend, we stay in our iron house and mind shop. That too is the way to make money." " Aren't your people glad to see you when you come back?" " My people is all dead. Father dead, mother dead ; and only brother living with some children across the river. I have been there, but that is not my place. I belong to nowhere now. They are all dead. After a few weeks I take my steamer to Kimberley, and then my friend he come here and put his money in the Bank." "Why don't you bank in Kimberley?" " I wanted to see my brother, and I have given him one thousand rupees. No, one hundred pounds; that is more, more. Here is the Bank bill. All the others he is dead. There are some people of this country at Kim- berley, Rajputs, Brahmins, Ahirs, Parsees, Chamars, Bunnias, Telis, all kinds go there. But my people are dead. I shall take my brother's son back with me to Kimberley, and when he can talk the Kaffir talk, he will be useful, and he shall come into the firm. My brother does not mind. He sees that I am rich. And now I must go to the village, Sahib. Good day, sir." Surjun rose, made as if to depart, but returned. The Native had come to the top. "Sahib! Is this talk for publish in paper?" "Yes." "Then put in about this diamond ring." He went away, twirling the ring lovingly on his finger. THE SMITH ADMINISTBATION 345 Know, therefore, Public, by these presents, that Surjun, son of Surjun, one time resident in the village of Jlmsi, in the District of Allahabad, in the North- west Provinces, at present partner in the firm of Surjun and Jagesser Dube, De Beer's Terrace, De Beer's Fields, Kimberley, who has tempted his fortune beyond the seas, owns legally and rightfully a Cape stone, valued at thirteen pounds four shillings sterling, sold to him by Behrendt of Dutoitspan Eoad, Kimberley. And it looks uncommonly well. THE VENGEANCE OF LAL BEG THIS is the true story of the terrible disgrace that came to Jullundri mehter, through Jamuna, his wife. Those who say that a mehter has no caste, speak in igno- rance. Those who say that there is a caste in the Em- pire so mean and so abject that there are no castes below it, speak in greater ignorance. The arain says that the chamar has no caste ; the cliamar knows that the mehter has none; and the mehter swears by Lai Beg, his god, that the od, whose god is Bhagirat, is without caste. Below the od lies the kaparia-bawaria, in spite of all that the low-caste Brahmins say or do. A Teji mehter or a Sundoo mehter is as much above a kaparia-bawaria as an Englishman is above a mehter. Lai Beg is the Mehter-god., and his image is the Glorified Broom made of peacocks' feathers, red cloth, scraps of tinsel, and the cast-off finery of English toilette tables. Jamuna was a Malka-sansi of Gujrat, an eater of lizards and dogs, one " married under the basket," a worshipper of Malang Shah. When her first husband 346 FROM SEA TO SEA was cast into the Lahore Central Gaol for lifting a pony on the banks of the Eavee, Jamuna cut herself adrift from her section of the tribe and let it pass on to Delhi. She believed that the government would keep her man for two or three days only ; but it kept him for two years, long enough for a sansi to forget everything in this world except the customs of her tribe. Those are never forgotten. As she waited for the return of her man, she scraped acquaintance with a mehtranee ayah in the employ of a Eurasian, and assisted her in the grosser portions of her work. She also earned money, sufficient money to buy her a cloth and food. "The sansi," as one of their proverbs says, "will thrive in a desert." "What are you ? " said the mehtranee to Jamuna. " A Boorat mehtranee" said Jamuna, for the sansi, as one of their proverbs says, are quick-witted as snakes. "A Boorat mehtranee from the south," said Jamuna ; and her state- ment was not questioned, for she wore good clothes, and her black hair was combed and neatly parted. Clinging to the skirts of the Eurasian's ayah, Jamuna climbed to service under an Englishman a railway em- ploye's wife. Jamuna had ambitions. It was pleasant to be a mehtranee of good standing. It will be better still, thought Jamuna, to turn Mussulman and be mar- ried to a real table-servant, openly, by the mullah. Such things had been ; and Jamuna was fair. But Jullundri, mehter, was a man to win the heart of woman, and he stole away Jamuna's in the dusk, when she took the English babies for their walks. " You have brought me a stranger-wife. Why did you not marry among your own clan ? " said his grey-haired THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 347 mother to Jullundri. " A stranger-wife is a curse and a fire." Jullundri laughed; for he was a jemadar of mehters, drawing seven rupees a month, and Jamuna loved him. " A curse and a fire and a shame," muttered the old woriian, and she slunk into her hut and cursed Jamuna. But Lai Beg, the very powerful God of the mehters, was not deceived, and he put a stumbling-block in the path of Jamuna that brought her to open shame. "A sansi is as quick-witted as a snake ; " but the snake longs for the cactus hedge, and a sansi for the desolate free- dom of the wild ass. Jamuna knew the chant of Lai Beg, the prayer to the Glorified Broom, and had sung it many times in rear of the staggering, tottering pole as it was borne down the Mall. Lai Beg was insulted. His great festival in the month of Har brought him revenge on Jamuna and Jullundri. Husband and wife followed the Glorified Broom, through the station and beyond, to the desolate grey flats by the river, near the Forest Reserve and the Bridge-of-Boats. Two hundred mehters shouted and sang till their voices failed them, and they halted in the sand, still warm with the day's sun. On a spit near the burning ghdt, a band of sansis had encamped, and one of their number had brought in a ragged bag full of lizards caught on the Meean Meer road. The gang were singing over their captures, sing- ing that quaint song of the "Passing of the Sansis," which fires the blood of all true thieves. Over the sand the notes struck clearly on Jamuna's ear as the Lai Beg procession re-formed and moved City- wards. But louder than the cry of worshippers of Lai Beg rose the song of Jamuna, the sober Boorat meh- 348 FROM SEA TO SEA tranee, and mother of Jullundri's children. Shrill as the noise of the night-wind among rocks went back to the sansi camp the answer of the "Passing of the Sansis" and the mehters drew back in horror. Bnt Jamuna heard only the call from the ragged huts by the river, and the call of the song "The horses, the horses, the fat horses, and the sticks, the little sticks of the tents. Aho I Aho f Feet that leave no mark on the sand, and fingers that leave no trace on the door. Aho I Aho ! By the name of Malang Shah ; in darkness, by the reed and the rope. . . ." So far Jamuna sang, but the head man of the proces- sion of Lai Beg struck her heavily across the mouth, saying, " By this I know that thou art a sansi." HUNTING A MIRACLE MARCHING-ORDERS as vague as the following naturally ended in confusion: "There's a priest somewhere, in Amritsar or outside it, or somewhere else, who cut off his tongue some days ago, and says it's grown again. Go and look." Amritsar is a city with a population of one hundred and fifty thousand, more or less, and so huge that a tramway runs round the walls. To lay hands on one particular man of all the crowd was not easy ; for the tongue having grown again, he would in no way differ from his fellows. Now, had he remained tongue- less, an inspection of the mouths of the passers-by would have been some sort of guide. However, dumb or tongued, all Amritsar knew about him. The small Parsee boy, who appears to run the refreshment-room THE SMITH ADMINISTRATION 349 alone, volunteered the startling information that the "Priest without the tongue could be found all any- where, in the city or elsewhere," and waved his little hands in circles to show the vastness of his knowledge. A booking-clerk could it be possible that he was of the Arya-Samaj ? had also heard of the Sadhu, and, pen in hand, denounced him as an impostor, a "bad person," and a "fraudulent mendicant." He grew so excited, and jabbed his pen so viciously into the air that his questioner fled to a ticca-ghari, where he was prompted by some Imp of Perversity to simulate extreme ignorance of the language to deceive the driver. So he said twice with emphasis, " Sadhu ? " " Jehan," said the driver, " f ush-class, Durbar Sahib ! " Then the fare thrust out his tongue, and the scales fell from the driver's eyes. "Bahut accha" said the driver, and with- out further parley headed into the trackless desert that encircles Fort Govindghar. The Sahib's word conveyed no meaning to him, but he understood the gesture ; and, after a while, turned the carriage from a road to a plain. Close to the Lahore Veterinary School lies a cool, brick-built, tree-shaded monastery, studded with the tombs of the pious founders, adorned with steps, ter- races, and winding paths, which is known as Chajju Bhagat's Chubara. This place is possessed with the spirit of peace, and is filled by priests in salmon-coloured loin-cloths and a great odour of sanctity. The Amritsar driver had halted in the very double of the Lahore chubara assuring his fare that here and nowhere else would be found the Sadhu with the miraculous tongue. Indeed the surroundings were such as delight the 350 FKOM SEA TO SEA holy men of the East. There was a sleepy breeze through the pipals overhead, and a square court crammed with pigeon-holes where one might sleep ; there were fair walls and mounds and little mud-plat- forms against or on which fires for cooking could be built, and there were wells by the dozen. There were priests by the score who sprang out of the dust, and slid off balconies or rose from cots as inquiries were made for the Sadhu. They were nice priests, sleek, full-fed, thick-jowled beasts, undefiled by wood-ash or turmeric, and mostly good-looking. The older men sang songs to the squirrels and the dust-puffs that the light wind was raising on the plain. They were idle very idle. The younger priests stated that the Sadhu with the tongue had betaken himself to another chubara some miles away, and was even then being worshipped by hordes of admirers. They did not specify the exact spot, but pointed vaguely in the direction of Jandiala. However, the driver said he knew and made haste to depart. The priests pointed out courteously that the weather was warm, and that it would be better to rest awhile before starting. So a rest was called, and while he sat in the shadow of the gate of the courtyard, the Englishman realised for a few minutes why it is that, now and then, men of his race, suddenly going mad, turn to the people of this land and become their priests ; as did on the Bombay side, and later , who lived for a time with the fakir on the top of Jakko. The miraculous idleness the monumental sloth of the place ; the silence as the priests settled down to sleep one by one; the drowsy drone of one of the younger men who had thrown him- self stomach-down in the warm dust and was singing THE SMITH ADMINISTBATION 351 under his breath ; the warm airs from across the plain and the faint smell of burnt ghi and incense, laid hold of the mind and limbs till, for at least fifteen seconds, it seemed that life would be a good thing if one could . doze, and bask, and smoke from the rising of the sun till the twilight a fat hog among fat hogs. The chase was resumed, and the ghari drove to Jan- diala more or less. It abandoned the main roads completely, although it was a " fush-class," and com- ported itself like an ekka, till Amritsar sunk on the horizon, or thereabouts, and it pulled up at a second chubara, more peaceful and secluded than the first, and fenced with a thicker belt of trees. There was an erup- tion under the horses' feet and a scattering of dust, which presently settled down and showed a beautiful young man with a head such as artists put on the shoulders of Belial. It was the head of an unlicked devil, marvellously handsome, and it made the horses shy. Belial knew nothing of the Sadhu who had cut out the tongue. He scowled at the driver, scowled at the fare, and then settled down in the dust, laughing wildly, and pointing to the earth and the sky. Now for a native to laugh aloud, without reason, publicly and at high noon, is a grewsome thing and calculated to chill the blood. Even the sight of silver coinage had no effect on Belial. He dilated his nostrils, pursed his lips, and gave himself up to renewed mirth. As there seemed to be no one else in the chubara, the carriage drove away, pursued by the laughter of the Beau- tiful Young Man in the Dust. A priest was caught wandering on the road, but for long, he denied all knowledge of the Sadhu. In vain the Englishman pro- 352 FKOM SEA TO SEA tested that lie came as a humble believer in cold tongue ; that he carried an offering of rupees for the Sadhu; that he regarded the Sadhu as one of the leading men of the century, and would render him immortal for at least twelve hours. The priest was dumb. He was next bribed extortionately bribed and said that the Sadhu was at the Durbar Sahib preaching. To the Golden Temple accordingly the carriage went and found the regular array of ministers and the eternal passage of Sikh women round and round the Grunth ; which things have been more than once described in this paper. But there was no Sadhu. An old Niliang, grey-haired and sceptical for he had lived some thirty years in a church as it were was sitting on the steps of the tank, dabbling his feet in the water. "0 Sahib," said he, blandly, " what concern have you with a miraculous Sadhu? You are not a Poliswala. And, Sahib, what concern has the Sadhu with you?" The Englishman explained with heat for fruitless drives in the middle of an October day are trying to the temper his adven- tures at the various chubaras, not omitting the incident of the Beautiful Young Man in the Dust. The Niliang smiled shrewdly: "Without doubt, Sahib, these men have told you lies. They do not want you to see the Sadhu; and the Sadhu does not desire to see you. This affair is an affair for the common people and not for Sahibs. The honour of the Gods is increased ; but you do not worship the Gods." So saying he gravely began to undress and waddled into the water. Then the Englishman perceived that he had been basely betrayed by the