<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p>The <i>Ghost</i> has attained the southernmost point of the
arc she is describing across the Pacific, and is already
beginning to edge away to the west and north toward some lone
island, it is rumoured, where she will fill her water-casks
before proceeding to the season’s hunt along the coast of
Japan. The hunters have experimented and practised with
their rifles and shotguns till they are satisfied, and the
boat-pullers and steerers have made their spritsails, bound the
oars and rowlocks in leather and sennit so that they will make no
noise when creeping on the seals, and put their boats in
apple-pie order—to use Leach’s homely phrase.</p>
<p>His arm, by the way, has healed nicely, though the scar will
remain all his life. Thomas Mugridge lives in mortal fear
of him, and is afraid to venture on deck after dark. There
are two or three standing quarrels in the forecastle. Louis
tells me that the gossip of the sailors finds its way aft, and
that two of the telltales have been badly beaten by their
mates. He shakes his head dubiously over the outlook for
the man Johnson, who is boat-puller in the same boat with
him. Johnson has been guilty of speaking his mind too
freely, and has collided two or three times with Wolf Larsen over
the pronunciation of his name. Johansen he thrashed on the
amidships deck the other night, since which time the mate has
called him by his proper name. But of course it is out of
the question that Johnson should thrash Wolf Larsen.</p>
<p>Louis has also given me additional information about Death
Larsen, which tallies with the captain’s brief
description. We may expect to meet Death Larsen on the
Japan coast. “And look out for squalls,” is
Louis’s prophecy, “for they hate one another like the
wolf whelps they are.” Death Larsen is in command of
the only sealing steamer in the fleet, the <i>Macedonia</i>,
which carries fourteen boats, whereas the rest of the schooners
carry only six. There is wild talk of cannon aboard, and of
strange raids and expeditions she may make, ranging from opium
smuggling into the States and arms smuggling into China, to
blackbirding and open piracy. Yet I cannot but believe for
I have never yet caught him in a lie, while he has a
cyclopædic knowledge of sealing and the men of the sealing
fleets.</p>
<p>As it is forward and in the galley, so it is in the steerage
and aft, on this veritable hell-ship. Men fight and
struggle ferociously for one another’s lives. The
hunters are looking for a shooting scrape at any moment between
Smoke and Henderson, whose old quarrel has not healed, while Wolf
Larsen says positively that he will kill the survivor of the
affair, if such affair comes off. He frankly states that
the position he takes is based on no moral grounds, that all the
hunters could kill and eat one another so far as he is concerned,
were it not that he needs them alive for the hunting. If
they will only hold their hands until the season is over, he
promises them a royal carnival, when all grudges can he settled
and the survivors may toss the non-survivors overboard and
arrange a story as to how the missing men were lost at sea.
I think even the hunters are appalled at his
cold-bloodedness. Wicked men though they be, they are
certainly very much afraid of him.</p>
<p>Thomas Mugridge is cur-like in his subjection to me, while I
go about in secret dread of him. His is the courage of
fear,—a strange thing I know well of myself,—and at
any moment it may master the fear and impel him to the taking of
my life. My knee is much better, though it often aches for
long periods, and the stiffness is gradually leaving the arm
which Wolf Larsen squeezed. Otherwise I am in splendid
condition, feel that I am in splendid condition. My muscles
are growing harder and increasing in size. My hands,
however, are a spectacle for grief. They have a parboiled
appearance, are afflicted with hang-nails, while the nails are
broken and discoloured, and the edges of the quick seem to be
assuming a fungoid sort of growth. Also, I am suffering
from boils, due to the diet, most likely, for I was never
afflicted in this manner before.</p>
<p>I was amused, a couple of evenings back, by seeing Wolf Larsen
reading the Bible, a copy of which, after the futile search for
one at the beginning of the voyage, had been found in the dead
mate’s sea-chest. I wondered what Wolf Larsen could
get from it, and he read aloud to me from Ecclesiastes. I
could imagine he was speaking the thoughts of his own mind as he
read to me, and his voice, reverberating deeply and mournfully in
the confined cabin, charmed and held me. He may be
uneducated, but he certainly knows how to express the
significance of the written word. I can hear him now, as I
shall always hear him, the primal melancholy vibrant in his voice
as he read:</p>
<blockquote><p>“I gathered me also silver and gold, and the
peculiar treasure of kings and of the provinces; I gat me men
singers and women singers, and the delights of the sons of men,
as musical instruments, and that of all sorts.</p>
<p>“So I was great, and increased more than all that were
before me in Jerusalem; also my wisdom returned with me.</p>
<p>“Then I looked on all the works that my hands had
wrought and on the labour that I had laboured to do; and behold,
all was vanity and vexation of spirit, and there was no profit
under the sun.</p>
<p>“All things come alike to all; there is one event to the
righteous and to the wicked; to the good and to the clean, and to
the unclean; to him that sacrificeth, and to him that sacrificeth
not; as is the good, so is the sinner; and he that sweareth, as
he that feareth an oath.</p>
<p>“This is an evil among all things that are done under
the sun, that there is one event unto all; yea, also the heart of
the sons of men is full of evil, and madness is in their heart
while they live, and after that they go to the dead.</p>
<p>“For to him that is joined to all the living there is
hope; for a living dog is better than a dead lion.</p>
<p>“For the living know that they shall die; but the dead
know not anything, neither have they any more a reward; for the
memory of them is forgotten.</p>
<p>“Also their love, and their hatred, and their envy, is
now perished; neither have they any more a portion for ever in
anything that is done under the sun.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“There you have it, Hump,” he said, closing the
book upon his finger and looking up at me. “The
Preacher who was king over Israel in Jerusalem thought as I
think. You call me a pessimist. Is not this pessimism
of the blackest?—‘All is vanity and vexation of
spirit,’ ‘There is no profit under the sun,’
‘There is one event unto all,’ to the fool and the
wise, the clean and the unclean, the sinner and the saint, and
that event is death, and an evil thing, he says. For the
Preacher loved life, and did not want to die, saying, ‘For
a living dog is better than a dead lion.’ He
preferred the vanity and vexation to the silence and
unmovableness of the grave. And so I. To crawl is
piggish; but to not crawl, to be as the clod and rock, is
loathsome to contemplate. It is loathsome to the life that
is in me, the very essence of which is movement, the power of
movement, and the consciousness of the power of movement.
Life itself is unsatisfaction, but to look ahead to death is
greater unsatisfaction.”</p>
<p>“You are worse off than Omar,” I said.
“He, at least, after the customary agonizing of youth,
found content and made of his materialism a joyous
thing.”</p>
<p>“Who was Omar?” Wolf Larsen asked, and I did no
more work that day, nor the next, nor the next.</p>
<p>In his random reading he had never chanced upon the
Rubáiyát, and it was to him like a great find of
treasure. Much I remembered, possibly two-thirds of the
quatrains, and I managed to piece out the remainder without
difficulty. We talked for hours over single stanzas, and I
found him reading into them a wail of regret and a rebellion
which, for the life of me, I could not discover myself.
Possibly I recited with a certain joyous lilt which was my own,
for—his memory was good, and at a second rendering, very
often the first, he made a quatrain his own—he recited the
same lines and invested them with an unrest and passionate revolt
that was well-nigh convincing.</p>
<p>I was interested as to which quatrain he would like best, and
was not surprised when he hit upon the one born of an
instant’s irritability, and quite at variance with the
Persian’s complacent philosophy and genial code of
life:</p>
<p class="poetry">“What, without asking, hither hurried
<i>Whence</i>?<br/>
And, without asking, <i>Whither</i> hurried hence!<br/>
Oh, many a Cup of this forbidden Wine<br/>
Must drown the memory of that insolence!”</p>
<p>“Great!” Wolf Larsen cried.
“Great! That’s the keynote.
Insolence! He could not have used a better word.”</p>
<p>In vain I objected and denied. He deluged me,
overwhelmed me with argument.</p>
<p>“It’s not the nature of life to be
otherwise. Life, when it knows that it must cease living,
will always rebel. It cannot help itself. The
Preacher found life and the works of life all a vanity and
vexation, an evil thing; but death, the ceasing to be able to be
vain and vexed, he found an eviler thing. Through chapter
after chapter he is worried by the one event that cometh to all
alike. So Omar, so I, so you, even you, for you rebelled
against dying when Cooky sharpened a knife for you. You
were afraid to die; the life that was in you, that composes you,
that is greater than you, did not want to die. You have
talked of the instinct of immortality. I talk of the
instinct of life, which is to live, and which, when death looms
near and large, masters the instinct, so called, of
immortality. It mastered it in you (you cannot deny it),
because a crazy Cockney cook sharpened a knife.</p>
<p>“You are afraid of him now. You are afraid of
me. You cannot deny it. If I should catch you by the
throat, thus,”—his hand was about my throat and my
breath was shut off,—“and began to press the life out
of you thus, and thus, your instinct of immortality will go
glimmering, and your instinct of life, which is longing for life,
will flutter up, and you will struggle to save yourself.
Eh? I see the fear of death in your eyes. You beat
the air with your arms. You exert all your puny strength to
struggle to live. Your hand is clutching my arm, lightly it
feels as a butterfly resting there. Your chest is heaving,
your tongue protruding, your skin turning dark, your eyes
swimming. ‘To live! To live! To
live!’ you are crying; and you are crying to live here and
now, not hereafter. You doubt your immortality, eh?
Ha! ha! You are not sure of it. You won’t
chance it. This life only you are certain is real.
Ah, it is growing dark and darker. It is the darkness of
death, the ceasing to be, the ceasing to feel, the ceasing to
move, that is gathering about you, descending upon you, rising
around you. Your eyes are becoming set. They are
glazing. My voice sounds faint and far. You cannot
see my face. And still you struggle in my grip. You
kick with your legs. Your body draws itself up in knots
like a snake’s. Your chest heaves and strains.
To live! To live! To live—”</p>
<p>I heard no more. Consciousness was blotted out by the
darkness he had so graphically described, and when I came to
myself I was lying on the floor and he was smoking a cigar and
regarding me thoughtfully with that old familiar light of
curiosity in his eyes.</p>
<p>“Well, have I convinced you?” he demanded.
“Here take a drink of this. I want to ask you some
questions.”</p>
<p>I rolled my head negatively on the floor. “Your
arguments are too—er—forcible,” I managed to
articulate, at cost of great pain to my aching throat.</p>
<p>“You’ll be all right in half-an-hour,” he
assured me. “And I promise I won’t use any more
physical demonstrations. Get up now. You can sit on a
chair.”</p>
<p>And, toy that I was of this monster, the discussion of Omar
and the Preacher was resumed. And half the night we sat up
over it.</p>
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