<h2><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN>X<br/> THE SHAMROCK AND THE PALM</h2>
<p>One night when there was no breeze, and Coralio seemed closer than ever to the
gratings of Avernus, five men were grouped about the door of the photograph
establishment of Keogh and Clancy. Thus, in all the scorched and exotic places
of the earth, Caucasians meet when the day’s work is done to preserve the
fulness of their heritage by the aspersion of alien things.</p>
<p>Johnny Atwood lay stretched upon the grass in the undress uniform of a Carib,
and prated feebly of cool water to be had in the cucumber-wood pumps of
Dalesburg. Dr. Gregg, through the prestige of his whiskers and as a bribe
against the relation of his imminent professional tales, was conceded the
hammock that was swung between the door jamb and a calabash-tree. Keogh had
moved out upon the grass a little table that held the instrument for burnishing
completed photographs. He was the only busy one of the group. Industriously
from between the cylinders of the burnisher rolled the finished depictments of
Coralio’s citizens. Blanchard, the French mining engineer, in his cool
linen viewed the smoke of his cigarette through his calm glasses, impervious to
the heat. Clancy sat on the steps, smoking his short pipe. His mood was the
gossip’s; the others were reduced, by the humidity, to the state of
disability desirable in an audience.</p>
<p>Clancy was an American with an Irish diathesis and cosmopolitan proclivities.
Many businesses had claimed him, but not for long. The roadster’s blood
was in his veins. The voice of the tintype was but one of the many callings
that had wooed him upon so many roads. Sometimes he could be persuaded to oral
construction of his voyages into the informal and egregious. To-night there
were symptoms of divulgement in him.</p>
<p>“’Tis elegant weather for filibusterin’,” he
volunteered. “It reminds me of the time I struggled to liberate a nation
from the poisonous breath of a tyrant’s clutch. ’Twas hard work.
’Tis strainin’ to the back and makes corns on the hands.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t know you had ever lent your sword to an oppressed
people,” murmured Atwood, from the grass.</p>
<p>“I did,” said Clancy; “and they turned it into a
ploughshare.”</p>
<p>“What country was so fortunate as to secure your aid?” airily
inquired Blanchard.</p>
<p>“Where’s Kamchatka?” asked Clancy, with seeming irrelevance.</p>
<p>“Why, off Siberia somewhere in the Arctic regions,” somebody
answered, doubtfully.</p>
<p>“I thought that was the cold one,” said Clancy, with a satisfied
nod. “I’m always gettin’ the two names mixed. ’Twas
Guatemala, then—the hot one—I’ve been filibusterin’
with. Ye’ll find that country on the map. ’Tis in the district
known as the tropics. By the foresight of Providence, it lies on the coast so
the geography man could run the names of the towns off into the water.
They’re an inch long, small type, composed of Spanish dialects, and,
’tis my opinion, of the same system of syntax that blew up the
<i>Maine</i>. Yes, ’twas that country I sailed against, single-handed,
and endeavoured to liberate it from a tyrannical government with a
single-barreled pickaxe, unloaded at that. Ye don’t understand, of
course. ’Tis a statement demandin’ elucidation and apologies.</p>
<p>“’Twas in New Orleans one morning about the first of June; I was
standin’ down on the wharf, lookin’ about at the ships in the
river. There was a little steamer moored right opposite me that seemed about
ready to sail. The funnels of it were throwin’ out smoke, and a gang of
roustabouts were carryin’ aboard a pile of boxes that was stacked up on
the wharf. The boxes were about two feet square, and somethin’ like four
feet long, and they seemed to be pretty heavy.</p>
<p>“I walked over, careless, to the stack of boxes. I saw one of them had
been broken in handlin’. ’Twas curiosity made me pull up the loose
top and look inside. The box was packed full of Winchester rifles. ‘So,
so,’ says I to myself; ‘somebody’s gettin’ a twist on
the neutrality laws. Somebody’s aidin’ with munitions of war. I
wonder where the popguns are goin’?’</p>
<p>“I heard somebody cough, and I turned around. There stood a little,
round, fat man with a brown face and white clothes, a first-class-looking
little man, with a four-karat diamond on his finger and his eye full of
interrogations and respects. I judged he was a kind of foreigner—may be
from Russia or Japan or the archipelagoes.</p>
<p>“‘Hist!’ says the round man, full of concealments and
confidences. ‘Will the señor respect the discoveryments he has made, that
the mans on the ship shall not be acquaint? The señor will be a gentleman that
shall not expose one thing that by accident occur.’</p>
<p>“‘Monseer,’ says I—for I judged him to be a kind of
Frenchman—‘receive my most exasperated assurances that your secret
is safe with James Clancy. Furthermore, I will go so far as to remark, Veev la
Liberty—veev it good and strong. Whenever you hear of a Clancy
obstructin’ the abolishment of existin’ governments you may notify
me by return mail.’</p>
<p>“‘The señor is good,’ says the dark, fat man, smilin’
under his black mustache. ‘Wish you to come aboard my ship and drink of
wine a glass.’</p>
<p>“Bein’ a Clancy, in two minutes me and the foreigner man were
seated at a table in the cabin of the steamer, with a bottle between us. I
could hear the heavy boxes bein’ dumped into the hold. I judged that
cargo must consist of at least 2,000 Winchesters. Me and the brown man drank
the bottle of stuff, and he called the steward to bring another. When you
amalgamate a Clancy with the contents of a bottle you practically instigate
secession. I had heard a good deal about these revolutions in them tropical
localities, and I begun to want a hand in it.</p>
<p>“‘You goin’ to stir things up in your country, ain’t
you, monseer?’ says I, with a wink to let him know I was on.</p>
<p>“‘Yes, yes,’ said the little man, pounding his fist on the
table. ‘A change of the greatest will occur. Too long have the people
been oppressed with the promises and the never-to-happen things to become. The
great work it shall be carry on. Yes. Our forces shall in the capital city
strike of the soonest. <i>Carrambos!</i>’</p>
<p>“‘<i>Carrambos</i> is the word,’ says I, beginning to invest
myself with enthusiasm and more wine, ‘likewise veeva, as I said before.
May the shamrock of old—I mean the banana-vine or the pie-plant, or
whatever the imperial emblem may be of your down-trodden country, wave
forever.’</p>
<p>“‘A thousand thank-yous,’ says the round man, ‘for your
emission of amicable utterances. What our cause needs of the very most is mans
who will the work do, to lift it along. Oh, for one thousands strong, good mans
to aid the General De Vega that he shall to his country bring those success and
glory! It is hard—oh, so hard to find good mans to help in the
work.’</p>
<p>“‘Monseer,’ says I, leanin’ over the table and
graspin’ his hand, ‘I don’t know where your country is, but
me heart bleeds for it. The heart of a Clancy was never deaf to the sight of an
oppressed people. The family is filibusterers by birth, and foreigners by
trade. If you can use James Clancy’s arms and his blood in denudin’
your shores of the tyrant’s yoke they’re yours to command.’</p>
<p>“General De Vega was overcome with joy to confiscate my condolence of his
conspiracies and predicaments. He tried to embrace me across the table, but his
fatness, and the wine that had been in the bottles, prevented. Thus was I
welcomed into the ranks of filibustery. Then the general man told me his
country had the name of Guatemala, and was the greatest nation laved by any
ocean whatever anywhere. He looked at me with tears in his eyes, and from time
to time he would emit the remark, ‘Ah! big, strong, brave mans! That is
what my country need.’</p>
<p>“General De Vega, as was the name by which he denounced himself, brought
out a document for me to sign, which I did, makin’ a fine flourish and
curlycue with the tail of the ‘y.’</p>
<p>“‘Your passage-money,’ says the general, business-like,
‘shall from your pay be deduct.’</p>
<p>“’Twill not,’ says I, haughty. ‘I’ll pay my own
passage.’ A hundred and eighty dollars I had in my inside pocket, and
’twas no common filibuster I was goin’ to be, filibusterin’
for me board and clothes.</p>
<p>“The steamer was to sail in two hours, and I went ashore to get some
things together I’d need. When I came aboard I showed the general with
pride the outfit. ’Twas a fine Chinchilla overcoat, Arctic overshoes, fur
cap and earmuffs, with elegant fleece-lined gloves and woolen muffler.</p>
<p>“‘<i>Carrambos!</i>’ says the little general. ‘What
clothes are these that shall go to the tropic?’ And then the little
spalpeen laughs, and he calls the captain, and the captain calls the purser,
and they pipe up the chief engineer, and the whole gang leans against the cabin
and laughs at Clancy’s wardrobe for Guatemala.</p>
<p>“I reflects a bit, serious, and asks the general again to denominate the
terms by which his country is called. He tells me, and I see then that
’twas the t’other one, Kamchatka, I had in mind. Since then
I’ve had difficulty in separatin’ the two nations in name, climate
and geographic disposition.</p>
<p>“I paid my passage—twenty-four dollars, first cabin—and ate
at table with the officer crowd. Down on the lower deck was a gang of
second-class passengers, about forty of them, seemin’ to be Dagoes and
the like. I wondered what so many of them were goin’ along for.</p>
<p>“Well, then, in three days we sailed alongside that Guatemala.
’Twas a blue country, and not yellow as ’tis miscolored on the map.
We landed at a town on the coast, where a train of cars was waitin’ for
us on a dinky little railroad. The boxes on the steamer were brought ashore and
loaded on the cars. The gang of Dagoes got aboard, too, the general and me in
the front car. Yes, me and General De Vega headed the revolution, as it pulled
out of the seaport town. That train travelled about as fast as a policeman
goin’ to a riot. It penetrated the most conspicuous lot of fuzzy scenery
ever seen outside a geography. We run some forty miles in seven hours, and the
train stopped. There was no more railroad. ’Twas a sort of camp in a damp
gorge full of wildness and melancholies. They was gradin’ and
choppin’ out the forests ahead to continue the road. ‘Here,’
says I to myself, ‘is the romantic haunt of the revolutionists. Here will
Clancy, by the virtue that is in a superior race and the inculcation of Fenian
tactics, strike a tremendous blow for liberty.’</p>
<p>“They unloaded the boxes from the train and begun to knock the tops off.
From the first one that was open I saw General De Vega take the Winchester
rifles and pass them around to a squad of morbid soldiery. The other boxes was
opened next, and, believe me or not, divil another gun was to be seen. Every
other box in the load was full of pickaxes and spades.</p>
<p>“And then—sorrow be upon them tropics—the proud Clancy and
the dishonoured Dagoes, each one of them, had to shoulder a pick or a spade,
and march away to work on that dirty little railroad. Yes; ’twas that the
Dagoes shipped for, and ’twas that the filibusterin’ Clancy signed
for, though unbeknownst to himself at the time. In after days I found out about
it. It seems ’twas hard to get hands to work on that road. The
intelligent natives of the country was too lazy to work. Indeed, the saints
know, ’twas unnecessary. By stretchin’ out one hand, they could
seize the most delicate and costly fruits of the earth, and, by
stretchin’ out the other, they could sleep for days at a time without
hearin’ a seven-o’clock whistle or the footsteps of the rent man
upon the stairs. So, regular, the steamers travelled to the United States to
seduce labour. Usually the imported spade-slingers died in two or three months
from eatin’ the over-ripe water and breathin’ the violent tropical
scenery. Wherefore they made them sign contracts for a year, when they hired
them, and put an armed guard over the poor divils to keep them from
runnin’ away.</p>
<p>“’Twas thus I was double-crossed by the tropics through a family
failin’ of goin’ out of the way to hunt disturbances.</p>
<p>“They gave me a pick, and I took it, meditatin’ an insurrection on
the spot; but there was the guards handlin’ the Winchesters careless, and
I come to the conclusion that discretion was the best part of
filibusterin’. There was about a hundred of us in the gang startin’
out to work, and the word was given to move. I steps out of the ranks and goes
up to that General De Vega man, who was smokin’ a cigar and gazin’
upon the scene with satisfactions and glory. He smiles at me polite and
devilish. ‘Plenty work,’ says he, ‘for big, strong mans in
Guatemala. Yes. T’irty dollars in the month. Good pay. Ah, yes. You
strong, brave man. Bimeby we push those railroad in the capital very quick.
They want you go work now. <i>Adios</i>, strong mans.’</p>
<p>“‘Monseer,’ says I, lingerin’, ‘will you tell a
poor little Irishman this: When I set foot on your cockroachy steamer, and
breathed liberal and revolutionary sentiments into your sour wine, did you
think I was conspirin’ to sling a pick on your contemptuous little
railroad? And when you answered me with patriotic recitations, humping up the
star-spangled cause of liberty, did you have meditations of reducin’ me
to the ranks of the stump-grubbin’ Dagoes in the chain-gangs of your vile
and grovelin’ country?’</p>
<p>“The general man expanded his rotundity and laughed considerable. Yes, he
laughed very long and loud, and I, Clancy, stood and waited.</p>
<p>“‘Comical mans!’ he shouts, at last. ‘So you will kill
me from the laughing. Yes; it is hard to find the brave, strong mans to aid my
country. Revolutions? Did I speak of r-r-revolutions? Not one word. I say, big,
strong mans is need in Guatemala. So. The mistake is of you. You have looked in
those one box containing those gun for the guard. You think all boxes is
contain gun? No.</p>
<p>“‘There is not war in Guatemala. But work? Yes. Good. T’irty
dollar in the month. You shall shoulder one pickaxe, señor, and dig for the
liberty and prosperity of Guatemala. Off to your work. The guard waits for
you.’</p>
<p>“‘Little, fat, poodle dog of a brown man,’ says I, quiet, but
full of indignations and discomforts, ‘things shall happen to you. Maybe
not right away, but as soon as J. Clancy can formulate somethin’ in the
way of repartee.’</p>
<p>“The boss of the gang orders us to work. I tramps off with the Dagoes,
and I hears the distinguished patriot and kidnapper laughin’ hearty as we
go.</p>
<p>“’Tis a sorrowful fact, for eight weeks I built railroads for that
misbehavin’ country. I filibustered twelve hours a day with a heavy pick
and a spade, choppin’ away the luxurious landscape that grew upon the
right of way. We worked in swamps that smelled like there was a leak in the gas
mains, trampin’ down a fine assortment of the most expensive hothouse
plants and vegetables. The scene was tropical beyond the wildest imagination of
the geography man. The trees was all sky-scrapers; the underbrush was full of
needles and pins; there was monkeys jumpin’ around and crocodiles and
pink-tailed mockin’-birds, and ye stood knee-deep in the rotten water and
grabbled roots for the liberation of Guatemala. Of nights we would build
smudges in camp to discourage the mosquitoes, and sit in the smoke, with the
guards pacin’ all around us. There was two hundred men workin’ on
the road—mostly Dagoes, nigger-men, Spanish-men and Swedes. Three or four
were Irish.</p>
<p>“One old man named Halloran—a man of Hibernian entitlements and
discretions, explained it to me. He had been workin’ on the road a year.
Most of them died in less than six months. He was dried up to gristle and bone,
and shook with chills every third night.</p>
<p>“‘When you first come,’ says he, ‘ye think ye’ll
leave right away. But they hold out your first month’s pay for your
passage over, and by that time the tropics has its grip on ye. Ye’re
surrounded by a ragin’ forest full of disreputable beasts—lions and
baboons and anacondas—waitin’ to devour ye. The sun strikes ye
hard, and melts the marrow in your bones. Ye get similar to the lettuce-eaters
the poetry-book speaks about. Ye forget the elevated sintiments of life, such
as patriotism, revenge, disturbances of the peace and the dacint love of a
clane shirt. Ye do your work, and ye swallow the kerosene ile and rubber
pipestems dished up to ye by the Dago cook for food. Ye light your pipeful, and
say to yoursilf, “Nixt week I’ll break away,” and ye go to
sleep and call yersilf a liar, for ye know ye’ll never do it.’</p>
<p>“‘Who is this general man,’ asks I, ‘that calls himself
De Vega?’</p>
<p>“‘’Tis the man,’ says Halloran, ‘who is
tryin’ to complete the finishin’ of the railroad. ’Twas the
project of a private corporation, but it busted, and then the government took
it up. De Vegy is a big politician, and wants to be prisident. The people want
the railroad completed, as they’re taxed mighty on account of it. The De
Vegy man is pushin’ it along as a campaign move.’</p>
<p>“‘’Tis not my way,’ says I, ‘to make threats
against any man, but there’s an account to be settled between the
railroad man and James O’Dowd Clancy.’</p>
<p>“‘’Twas that way I thought, mesilf, at first,’ Halloran
says, with a big sigh, ‘until I got to be a lettuce-eater. The
fault’s wid these tropics. They rejuices a man’s system. ’Tis
a land, as the poet says, “Where it always seems to be after
dinner.” I does me work and smokes me pipe and sleeps. There’s
little else in life, anyway. Ye’ll get that way yersilf, mighty soon.
Don’t be harbourin’ any sintiments at all, Clancy.’</p>
<p>“‘I can’t help it,’ says I; ‘I’m full of
’em. I enlisted in the revolutionary army of this dark country in good
faith to fight for its liberty, honours and silver candlesticks; instead of
which I am set to amputatin’ its scenery and grubbin’ its roots.
’Tis the general man will have to pay for it.’</p>
<p>“Two months I worked on that railroad before I found a chance to get
away. One day a gang of us was sent back to the end of the completed line to
fetch some picks that had been sent down to Port Barrios to be sharpened. They
were brought on a hand-car, and I noticed, when I started away, that the car
was left there on the track.</p>
<p>“That night, about twelve, I woke up Halloran and told him my scheme.</p>
<p>“‘Run away?’ says Halloran. ‘Good Lord, Clancy, do ye
mean it? Why, I ain’t got the nerve. It’s too chilly, and I
ain’t slept enough. Run away? I told you, Clancy, I’ve eat the
lettuce. I’ve lost my grip. ’Tis the tropics that’s done it.
’Tis like the poet says: “Forgotten are our friends that we have
left behind; in the hollow lettuce-land we will live and lay reclined.”
You better go on, Clancy. I’ll stay, I guess. It’s too early and
cold, and I’m sleepy.’</p>
<p>“So I had to leave Halloran. I dressed quiet, and slipped out of the tent
we were in. When the guard came along I knocked him over, like a ninepin, with
a green cocoanut I had, and made for the railroad. I got on that hand-car and
made it fly. ’Twas yet a while before daybreak when I saw the lights of
Port Barrios about a mile away. I stopped the hand-car there and walked to the
town. I stepped inside the corporations of that town with care and hesitations.
I was not afraid of the army of Guatemala, but me soul quaked at the prospect
of a hand-to-hand struggle with its employment bureau. ’Tis a country
that hires its help easy and keeps ’em long. Sure I can fancy Missis
America and Missis Guatemala passin’ a bit of gossip some fine, still
night across the mountains. ‘Oh, dear,’ says Missis America,
‘and it’s a lot of trouble I’m havin’ ag’in with
the help, señora, ma’am.’ ‘Laws, now!’ says Missis
Guatemala, ‘you don’t say so, ma’am! Now, mine never think of
leavin’ me—te-he! ma’am,’ snickers Missis Guatemala.</p>
<p>“I was wonderin’ how I was goin’ to move away from them
tropics without bein’ hired again. Dark as it was, I could see a steamer
ridin’ in the harbour, with smoke emergin’ from her stacks. I
turned down a little grass street that run down to the water. On the beach I
found a little brown nigger-man just about to shove off in a skiff.</p>
<p>“‘Hold on, Sambo,’ says I, ‘savve English?’</p>
<p>“‘Heap plenty, yes,’ says he, with a pleasant grin.</p>
<p>“‘What steamer is that?’ I asks him, ‘and where is it
going? And what’s the news, and the good word and the time of day?’</p>
<p>“‘That steamer the <i>Conchita</i>,’ said the brown man,
affable and easy, rollin’ a cigarette. ‘Him come from New Orleans
for load banana. Him got load last night. I think him sail in one, two hour.
Verree nice day we shall be goin’ have. You hear some talkee ’bout
big battle, maybe so? You think catchee General De Vega, señor? Yes? No?’</p>
<p>“‘How’s that, Sambo?’ says I. ‘Big battle? What
battle? Who wants catchee General De Vega? I’ve been up at my old gold
mines in the interior for a couple of months, and haven’t heard any
news.’</p>
<p>“‘Oh,’ says the nigger-man, proud to speak the English,
‘verree great revolution in Guatemala one week ago. General De Vega, him
try be president. Him raise armee—one—five—ten thousand mans
for fight at the government. Those one government send
five—forty—hundred thousand soldier to suppress revolution. They
fight big battle yesterday at Lomagrande—that about nineteen or fifty
mile in the mountain. That government soldier wheep General De Vega—oh,
most bad. Five hundred—nine hundred—two thousand of his mans is
kill. That revolution is smash suppress—bust—very quick. General De
Vega, him r-r-run away fast on one big mule. Yes, <i>carrambos!</i> The
general, him r-r-run away, and his armee is kill. That government soldier, they
try find General De Vega verree much. They want catchee him for shoot. You
think they catchee that general, señor?’</p>
<p>“‘Saints grant it!’ says I. ‘’Twould be the
judgment of Providence for settin’ the warlike talent of a Clancy to
gradin’ the tropics with a pick and shovel. But ’tis not so much a
question of insurrections now, me little man, as ’tis of the hired-man
problem. ’Tis anxious I am to resign a situation of responsibility and
trust with the white wings department of your great and degraded country. Row
me in your little boat out to that steamer, and I’ll give ye five
dollars—sinker pacers—sinker pacers,’ says I, reducin’
the offer to the language and denomination of the tropic dialects.</p>
<p>“‘<i>Cinco pesos</i>,’ repeats the little man. ‘Five
dollee, you give?’</p>
<p>“’Twas not such a bad little man. He had hesitations at first,
sayin’ that passengers leavin’ the country had to have papers and
passports, but at last he took me out alongside the steamer.</p>
<p>“Day was just breakin’ as we struck her, and there wasn’t a
soul to be seen on board. The water was very still, and the nigger-man gave me
a lift from the boat, and I climbed onto the steamer where her side was sliced
to the deck for loadin’ fruit. The hatches was open, and I looked down
and saw the cargo of bananas that filled the hold to within six feet of the
top. I thinks to myself, ‘Clancy, you better go as a stowaway. It’s
safer. The steamer men might hand you back to the employment bureau. The
tropic’ll get you, Clancy, if you don’t watch out.’</p>
<p>“So I jumps down easy among the bananas, and digs out a hole to hide in
among the bunches. In an hour or so I could hear the engines goin’, and
feel the steamer rockin’, and I knew we were off to sea. They left the
hatches open for ventilation, and pretty soon it was light enough in the hold
to see fairly well. I got to feelin’ a bit hungry, and thought I’d
have a light fruit lunch, by way of refreshment. I creeped out of the hole
I’d made and stood up straight. Just then I saw another man crawl up
about ten feet away and reach out and skin a banana and stuff it into his
mouth. ’Twas a dirty man, black-faced and ragged and disgraceful of
aspect. Yes, the man was a ringer for the pictures of the fat Weary Willie in
the funny papers. I looked again, and saw it was my general man—De Vega,
the great revolutionist, mule-rider and pickaxe importer. When he saw me the
general hesitated with his mouth filled with banana and his eyes the size of
cocoanuts.</p>
<p>“‘Hist!’ I says. ‘Not a word, or they’ll put us
off and make us walk. “Veev la Liberty!”’ I adds,
copperin’ the sentiment by shovin’ a banana into the source of it.
I was certain the general wouldn’t recognize me. The nefarious work of
the tropics had left me lookin’ different. There was half an inch of roan
whiskers coverin’ me face, and me costume was a pair of blue overalls and
a red shirt.</p>
<p>“‘How you come in the ship, señor?’ asked the general as soon
as he could speak.</p>
<p>“‘By the back door—whist!’ says I. ‘’Twas a
glorious blow for liberty we struck,’ I continues; ‘but we was
overpowered by numbers. Let us accept our defeat like brave men and eat another
banana.’</p>
<p>“‘Were you in the cause of liberty fightin’, señor?’
says the general, sheddin’ tears on the cargo.</p>
<p>“‘To the last,’ says I. ‘’Twas I led the last
desperate charge against the minions of the tyrant. But it made them mad, and
we was forced to retreat. ’Twas I, general, procured the mule upon which
you escaped. Could you give that ripe bunch a little boost this way, general?
It’s a bit out of my reach. Thanks.’</p>
<p>“‘Say you so, brave patriot?’ said the general, again
weepin’. ‘Ah, <i>Dios!</i> And I have not the means to reward your
devotion. Barely did I my life bring away. <i>Carrambos!</i> what a
devil’s animal was that mule, señor! Like ships in one storm was I dashed
about. The skin on myself was ripped away with the thorns and vines. Upon the
bark of a hundred trees did that beast of the infernal bump, and cause outrage
to the legs of mine. In the night to Port Barrios I came. I dispossess myself
of that mountain of mule and hasten along the water shore. I find a little boat
to be tied. I launch myself and row to the steamer. I cannot see any mans on
board, so I climbed one rope which hang at the side. I then myself hide in the
bananas. Surely, I say, if the ship captains view me, they shall throw me again
to those Guatemala. Those things are not good. Guatemala will shoot General De
Vega. Therefore, I am hide and remain silent. Life itself is glorious. Liberty,
it is pretty good; but so good as life I do not think.’</p>
<p>“Three days, as I said, was the trip to New Orleans. The general man and
me got to be cronies of the deepest dye. Bananas we ate until they were
distasteful to the sight and an eyesore to the palate, but to bananas alone was
the bill of fare reduced. At night I crawls out, careful, on the lower deck,
and gets a bucket of fresh water.</p>
<p>“That General De Vega was a man inhabited by an engorgement of words and
sentences. He added to the monotony of the voyage by divestin’ himself of
conversation. He believed I was a revolutionist of his own party, there
bein’, as he told me, a good many Americans and other foreigners in its
ranks. ’Twas a braggart and a conceited little gabbler it was, though he
considered himself a hero. ’Twas on himself he wasted all his regrets at
the failin’ of his plot. Not a word did the little balloon have to say
about the other misbehavin’ idiots that had been shot, or run themselves
to death in his revolution.</p>
<p>“The second day out he was feelin’ pretty braggy and uppish for a
stowed-away conspirator that owed his existence to a mule and stolen bananas.
He was tellin’ me about the great railroad he had been buildin’,
and he relates what he calls a comic incident about a fool Irishman he
inveigled from New Orleans to sling a pick on his little morgue of a
narrow-gauge line. ’Twas sorrowful to hear the little, dirty general tell
the opprobrious story of how he put salt upon the tail of that reckless and
silly bird, Clancy. Laugh, he did, hearty and long. He shook with
laughin’, the black-faced rebel and outcast, standin’ neck-deep in
bananas, without friends or country.</p>
<p>“‘Ah, señor,’ he snickers, ‘to the death you would have
laughed at that drollest Irish. I say to him: “Strong, big mans is need
very much in Guatemala.” “I will blows strike for your down-pressed
country,” he say. “That shall you do,” I tell him. Ah! it was
an Irish so comic. He sees one box break upon the wharf that contain for the
guard a few gun. He think there is gun in all the box. But that is all pickaxe.
Yes. Ah! señor, could you the face of that Irish have seen when they set him to
the work!’</p>
<p>“’Twas thus the ex-boss of the employment bureau contributed to the
tedium of the trip with merry jests and anecdote. But now and then he would
weep upon the bananas and make oration about the lost cause of liberty and the
mule.</p>
<p>“’Twas a pleasant sound when the steamer bumped against the pier in
New Orleans. Pretty soon we heard the pat-a-pat of hundreds of bare feet, and
the Dago gang that unloads the fruit jumped on the deck and down into the hold.
Me and the general worked a while at passin’ up the bunches, and they
thought we were part of the gang. After about an hour we managed to slip off
the steamer onto the wharf.</p>
<p>“’Twas a great honour on the hands of an obscure Clancy,
havin’ the entertainment of the representative of a great foreign
filibusterin’ power. I first bought for the general and myself many long
drinks and things to eat that were not bananas. The general man trotted along
at my side, leavin’ all the arrangements to me. I led him up to Lafayette
Square and set him on a bench in the little park. Cigarettes I had bought for
him, and he humped himself down on the seat like a little, fat, contented hobo.
I look him over as he sets there, and what I see pleases me. Brown by nature
and instinct, he is now brindled with dirt and dust. Praise to the mule, his
clothes is mostly strings and flaps. Yes, the looks of the general man is
agreeable to Clancy.</p>
<p>“I ask him, delicate, if, by any chance, he brought away anybody’s
money with him from Guatemala. He sighs and bumps his shoulders against the
bench. Not a cent. All right. Maybe, he tells me, some of his friends in the
tropic outfit will send him funds later. The general was as clear a case of no
visible means as I ever saw.</p>
<p>“I told him not to move from the bench, and then I went up to the corner
of Poydras and Carondelet. Along there is O’Hara’s beat. In five
minutes along comes O’Hara, a big, fine man, red-faced, with
shinin’ buttons, swingin’ his club. ’Twould be a fine thing
for Guatemala to move into O’Hara’s precinct. ’Twould be a
fine bit of recreation for Danny to suppress revolutions and uprisin’s
once or twice a week with his club.</p>
<p>“‘Is 5046 workin’ yet, Danny?’ says I, walkin’ up
to him.</p>
<p>“‘Overtime,’ says O’Hara, lookin’ over me
suspicious. ‘Want some of it?’</p>
<p>“Fifty-forty-six is the celebrated city ordinance authorizin’
arrest, conviction and imprisonment of persons that succeed in concealin’
their crimes from the police.</p>
<p>“‘Don’t ye know Jimmy Clancy?’ says I. ‘Ye
pink-gilled monster.’ So, when O’Hara recognized me beneath the
scandalous exterior bestowed upon me by the tropics, I backed him into a
doorway and told him what I wanted, and why I wanted it. ‘All right,
Jimmy,’ says O’Hara. ‘Go back and hold the bench. I’ll
be along in ten minutes.’</p>
<p>“In that time O’Hara strolled through Lafayette Square and spied
two Weary Willies disgracin’ one of the benches. In ten minutes more J.
Clancy and General De Vega, late candidate for the presidency of Guatemala, was
in the station house. The general is badly frightened, and calls upon me to
proclaim his distinguishments and rank.</p>
<p>“‘The man,’ says I to the police, ‘used to be a
railroad man. He’s on the bum now. ’Tis a little bughouse he is, on
account of losin’ his job.’</p>
<p>“‘<i>Carrambos!</i>’ says the general, fizzin’ like a
little soda-water fountain, ‘you fought, señor, with my forces in my
native country. Why do you say the lies? You shall say I am the General De
Vega, one soldier, one <i>caballero</i>—’</p>
<p>“‘Railroader,’ says I again. ‘On the hog. No good. Been
livin’ for three days on stolen bananas. Look at him. Ain’t that
enough?’</p>
<p>“Twenty-five dollars or sixty days, was what the recorder gave the
general. He didn’t have a cent, so he took the time. They let me go, as I
knew they would, for I had money to show, and O’Hara spoke for me. Yes;
sixty days he got. ’Twas just so long that I slung a pick for the great
country of Kam—Guatemala.”</p>
<p>Clancy paused. The bright starlight showed a reminiscent look of happy content
on his seasoned features. Keogh leaned in his chair and gave his partner a slap
on his thinly-clad back that sounded like the crack of the surf on the sands.</p>
<p>“Tell ’em, ye divil,” he chuckled, “how you got even
with the tropical general in the way of agricultural manÅ“uvrings.”</p>
<p>“Havin’ no money,” concluded Clancy, with unction,
“they set him to work his fine out with a gang from the parish prison
clearing Ursulines Street. Around the corner was a saloon decorated genially
with electric fans and cool merchandise. I made that me headquarters, and every
fifteen minutes I’d walk around and take a look at the little man
filibusterin’ with a rake and shovel. ’Twas just such a hot broth
of a day as this has been. And I’d call at him ‘Hey,
monseer!’ and he’d look at me black, with the damp showin’
through his shirt in places.</p>
<p>“‘Fat, strong mans,’ says I to General De Vega, ‘is
needed in New Orleans. Yes. To carry on the good work. Carrambos! Erin go
bragh!’”</p>
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