Chapter XXVII: I Meet My Brother George at the Statues, on the Top of the Pass Into Erewhon
This book has already become longer than I intended, but I will ask
the reader to have patience while I tell him briefly of my own
visit to the threshold of that strange country of which I fear that
he may be already beginning to tire.
The winding-up of my father's estate was a very simple matter, and
by the beginning of September 1891 I should have been free to
start; but about that time I became engaged, and naturally enough I
did not want to be longer away than was necessary. I should not
have gone at all if I could have helped it. I left, however, a
fortnight later than my father had done.
Before starting I bought a handsome gold repeater for the Mayor,
and a brooch for Yram, of pearls and diamonds set in gold, for
which I paid 200 pounds. For Yram's three daughters and for Mrs.
Humdrum's grand-daughter I took four brooches each of which cost
about 15 pounds, 15s., and for the boys I got three ten-guinea
silver watches. For George I only took a strong English knife of
the best make, and the two thousand pounds worth of uncoined gold,
which for convenience' sake I had had made into small bars. I also
had a knapsack made that would hold these and nothing else--each
bar being strongly sewn into its place, so that none of them could
shift. Whenever I went on board ship, or went on shore, I put this
on my back, so that no one handled it except myself--and I can
assure the reader that I did not find it a light weight to handle.
I ought to have taken something for old Mrs. Humdrum, but I am
ashamed to say that I forgot her.
I went as directly as I could to the port of which my father had
told me, and reached it on November 27, one day later than he had
done in the preceding year.
On the following day, which was a Saturday, I went to the livery
stables from which my father had bought his horse, and found to my
great delight that Doctor could be at my disposal, for, as it
seemed to me, the very reasonable price of fifteen shillings a day.
I shewed the owner of the stables my father's order, and all the
articles he had left were immediately delivered to me. I was still
wearing crape round one arm, and the horse-dealer, whose name was
Baker, said he was afraid the other gentleman might be dead.
"Indeed, he is so," said I, "and a great grief it is to me; he was
my father."
"Dear, dear," answered Mr. Baker, "that is a very serious thing for
the poor gentleman. He seemed quite unfit to travel alone, and I
feared he was not long for this world, but he was bent on going."
I had nothing now to do but to buy a blanket, pannikin, and billy,
with some tea, tobacco, two bottles of brandy, some ship's
biscuits, and whatever other few items were down on the list of
requisites which my father had dictated to me. Mr. Baker, seeing
that I was what he called a new chum, shewed me how to pack my
horse, but I kept my knapsack full of gold on my back, and though I
could see that it puzzled him, he asked no questions. There was no
reason why I should not set out at once for the principal town of
the colony, which was some ten miles inland; I, therefore, arranged
at my hotel that the greater part of my luggage should await my
return, and set out to climb the high hills that back the port.
From the top of these I had a magnificent view of the plains that I
should have to cross, and of the long range of distant mountains
which bounded them north and south as far as the eye could reach.
On some of the mountains I could still see streaks of snow, but my
father had explained to me that the ranges I should here see, were
not those dividing the English colony from Erewhon. I also saw,
some nine miles or so out upon the plains, the more prominent
buildings of a large town which seemed to be embosomed in trees,
and this I reached in about an hour and a half; for I had to
descend at a foot's pace, and Doctor's many virtues did not
comprise a willingness to go beyond an amble.
At the town above referred to I spent the night, and began to
strike across the plains on the following morning. I might have
crossed these in three days at twenty-five miles a day, but I had
too much time on my hands, and my load of gold was so uncomfortable
that I was glad to stay at one accommodation house after another,
averaging about eighteen miles a day. I have no doubt that if I
had taken advice, I could have stowed my load more conveniently,
but I could not unpack it, and made the best of it as it was.
On the evening of Wednesday, December 2, I reached the river which
I should have to follow up; it was here nearing the gorge through
which it had to pass before the country opened out again at the
back of the front range. I came upon it quite suddenly on reaching
the brink of a great terrace, the bank of which sloped almost
precipitously down towards it, but was covered with grass. The
terrace was some three hundred feet above the river, and faced
another similar one, which was from a mile and a half to two miles
distant. At the bottom of this huge yawning chasm, rolled the
mighty river, and I shuddered at the thought of having to cross and
recross it. For it was angry, muddy, evidently in heavy fresh, and
filled bank and bank for nearly a mile with a flood of seething
waters.
I followed along the northern edge of the terrace, till I reached
the last accommodation house that could be said to be on the
plains--which, by the way, were here some eight or nine hundred
feet above sea level. When I reached this house, I was glad to
learn that the river was not likely to remain high for more than a
day or two, and that if what was called a Southerly Burster came
up, as it might be expected to do at any moment, it would be quite
low again before three days were over.
At this house I stayed the night, and in the course of the evening
a stray dog--a retriever, hardly full grown, and evidently very
much down on his luck--took up with me; when I inquired about him,
and asked if I might take him with me, the landlord said he wished
I would, for he knew nothing about him and was trying to drive him
from the house. Knowing what a boon the companionship of this poor
beast would be to me when I was camping out alone, I encouraged
him, and next morning he followed me as a matter of course.
In the night the Southerly Burster which my host anticipated had
come up, cold and blustering, but invigorating after the hot, dry,
wind that had been blowing hard during the daytime as I had crossed
the plains. A mile or two higher up I passed a large sheep-
station, but did not stay there. One or two men looked at me with
surprise, and asked me where I was going, whereon I said I was in
search of rare plants and birds for the Museum of the town at which
I had slept the night after my arrival. This satisfied their
curiosity, and I ambled on accompanied by the dog. In passing I
may say that I found Doctor not to excel at any pace except an
amble, but for a long journey, especially for one who is carrying a
heavy, awkward load, there is no pace so comfortable; and he ambled
fairly fast.
I followed the horse track which had been cut through the gorge,
and in many places I disliked it extremely, for the river, still in
fresh, was raging furiously; twice, for some few yards, where the
gorge was wider and the stream less rapid, it covered the track,
and I had no confidence that it might not have washed it away; on
these occasions Doctor pricked his ears towards the water, and was
evidently thinking exactly what his rider was. He decided,
however, that all would be sound, and took to the water without any
urging on my part. Seeing his opinion, I remembered my father's
advice, and let him do what he liked, but in one place for three or
four yards the water came nearly up to his belly, and I was in
great fear for the watches that were in my saddlebags. As for the
dog, I feared I had lost him, but after a time he rejoined me,
though how he contrived to do so I cannot say.
Nothing could be grander than the sight of this great river pent
into a narrow compass, and occasionally becoming more like an
immense waterfall than a river, but I was in continual fear of
coming to more places where the water would be over the track, and
perhaps of finding myself unable to get any farther. I therefore
failed to enjoy what was really far the most impressive sight in
its way that I had ever seen. "Give me," I said to myself, "the
Thames at Richmond," and right thankful was I, when at about two
o'clock I found that I was through the gorge and in a wide valley,
the greater part of which, however, was still covered by the river.
It was here that I heard for the first time the curious sound of
boulders knocking against each other underneath the great body of
water that kept rolling them round and round.
I now halted, and lit a fire, for there was much dead scrub
standing that had remained after the ground had been burned for the
first time some years previously. I made myself some tea, and
turned Doctor out for a couple of hours to feed. I did not hobble
him, for my father had told me that he would always come for bread.
When I had dined, and smoked, and slept for a couple of hours or
so, I reloaded Doctor and resumed my journey towards the shepherd's
hut, which I caught sight of about a mile before I reached it.
When nearly half a mile off it, I dismounted, and made a written
note of the exact spot at which I did so. I then turned for a
couple of hundred yards to my right, at right angles to the track,
where some huge rocks were lying--fallen ages since from the
mountain that flanked this side of the valley. Here I deposited my
knapsack in a hollow underneath some of the rocks, and put a good
sized stone in front of it, for I meant spending a couple of days
with the shepherd to let the river go down. Moreover, as it was
now only December 3, I had too much time on my hands, but I had not
dared to cut things finer.
I reached the hut at about six o'clock, and introduced myself to
the shepherd, who was a nice, kind old man, commonly called Harris,
but his real name he told me was Horace--Horace Taylor. I had the
conversation with him of which I have already told the reader,
adding that my father had been unable to give a coherent account of
what he had seen, and that I had been sent to get the information
he had failed to furnish.
The old man said that I must certainly wait a couple of days before
I went higher up the river. He had made himself a nice garden, in
which he took the greatest pride, and which supplied him with
plenty of vegetables. He was very glad to have company, and to
receive the newspapers which I had taken care to bring him. He had
a real genius for simple cookery, and fed me excellently. My
father's 5 pounds, and the ration of brandy which I nightly gave
him, made me a welcome guest, and though I was longing to be at any
rate as far as the foot of the pass into Erewhon, I amused myself
very well in an abundance of ways with which I need not trouble the
reader.
One of the first things that Harris said to me was, "I wish I knew
what your father did with the nice red blanket he had with him when
he went up the river. He had none when he came down again; I have
no horse here, but I borrowed one from a man who came up one day
from down below, and rode to a place where I found what I am sure
were the ashes of the last fire he made, but I could find neither
the blanket nor the billy and pannikin he took away with him. He
said he supposed he must have left the things there, but he could
remember nothing about it."
"At any rate," continued the shepherd, "I did not have my ride for
nothing, for as I was coming back I found this rug half covered
with sand on the river-bed."
As he spoke he pointed to an excellent warm rug, on the spare bunk
in his hut. "It is none of our make," said he; "I suppose some
foreign digger has come over from the next river down south and got
drowned, for it had not been very long where I found it, at least I
think not, for it was not much fly-blown, and no one had passed
here to go up the river since your father."
I knew what it was, but I held my tongue beyond saying that the rug
was a very good one.
The next day, December 4, was lovely, after a night that had been
clear and cold, with frost towards early morning. When the
shepherd had gone for some three hours in the forenoon to see his
sheep (that were now lambing), I walked down to the place where I
had left my knapsack, and carried it a good mile above the hut,
where I again hid it. I could see the great range from one place,
and the thick new fallen snow assured me that the river would be
quite normal shortly. Indeed, by evening it was hardly at all
discoloured, but I waited another day, and set out on the morning
of Sunday, December 6. The river was now almost as low as in
winter, and Harris assured me that if I used my eyes I could not
miss finding a ford over one stream or another every half mile or
so. I had the greatest difficulty in preventing him from
accompanying me on foot for some little distance, but I got rid of
him in the end; he came with me beyond the place where I had hidden
my knapsack, but when he had left me long enough, I rode back and
got it.
I see I am dwelling too long upon my own small adventures. Suffice
it that, accompanied by my dog, I followed the north bank of the
river till I found I must cross one stream before I could get any
farther. This place would not do, and I had to ride half a mile
back before I found one that seemed as if it might be safe. I
fancy my father must have done just the same thing, for Doctor
seemed to know the ground, and took to the water the moment I
brought him to it. It never reached his belly, but I confess I did
not like it. By and by I had to recross, and so on, off and on,
till at noon I camped for dinner. Here the dog found me a nest of
young ducks, nearly fledged, from which the parent birds tried with
great success to decoy me. I fully thought I was going to catch
them, but the dog knew better and made straight for the nest, from
which he returned immediately with a fine young duck in his mouth,
which he laid at my feet, wagging his tail and barking. I took
another from the nest and left two for the old birds.
The afternoon was much as the morning and towards seven I reached a
place which suggested itself as a good camping ground. I had
hardly fixed on it and halted, before I saw a few pieces of charred
wood, and felt sure that my father must have camped at this very
place before me. I hobbled Doctor, unloaded, plucked and singed a
duck, and gave the dog some of the meat with which Harris had
furnished me; I made tea, laid my duck on the embers till it was
cooked, smoked, gave myself a nightcap of brandy and water, and by
and by rolled myself round in my blanket, with the dog curled up
beside me. I will not dwell upon the strangeness of my feelings--
nor the extreme beauty of the night. But for the dog, and Doctor,
I should have been frightened, but I knew that there were no savage
creatures or venomous snakes in the country, and both the dog and
Doctor were such good companionable creatures, that I did not feel
so much oppressed by the solitude as I had feared I should be. But
the night was cold, and my blanket was not enough to keep me
comfortably warm.
The following day was delightfully warm as soon as the sun got to
the bottom of the valley, and the fresh fallen snow disappeared so
fast from the snowy range that I was afraid it would raise the
river--which, indeed, rose in the afternoon and became slightly
discoloured, but it cannot have been more than three or four inches
deeper, for it never reached the bottom of my saddle-bags. I
believe Doctor knew exactly where I was going, for he wanted no
guidance. I halted again at midday, got two more ducks, crossed
and recrossed the river, or some of its streams, several times, and
at about six, caught sight, after a bend in the valley, of the
glacier descending on to the river-bed. This I knew to be close to
the point at which I was to camp for the night, and from which I
was to ascend the mountain. After another hour's slow progress
over the increasing roughness of the river-bed, I saw the
triangular delta of which my father had told me, and the stream
that had formed it, bounding down the mountain side. Doctor went
right up to the place where my father's fire had been, and I again
found many pieces of charred wood and ashes.
As soon as I had unloaded Doctor and hobbled him, I went to a tree
hard by, on which I could see the mark of a blaze, and towards
which I thought I could see a line of wood ashes running. There I
found a hole in which some bird had evidently been wont to build,
and surmised correctly that it must be the one in which my father
had hidden his box of sovereigns. There was no box in the hole
now, and I began to feel that I was at last within measureable
distance of Erewhon and the Erewhonians.
I camped for the night here, and again found my single blanket
insufficient. The next day, i.e. Tuesday, December 8, I had to
pass as I best could, and it occurred to me that as I should find
the gold a great weight, I had better take it some three hours up
the mountain side and leave it there, so as to make the following
day less fatiguing, and this I did, returning to my camp for
dinner; but I was panic-stricken all the rest of the day lest I
should not have hidden it safely, or lest I should be unable to
find it next day--conjuring up a hundred absurd fancies as to what
might befall it. And after all, heavy though it was, I could have
carried it all the way. In the afternoon I saddled Doctor and rode
him up to the glaciers, which were indeed magnificent, and then I
made the few notes of my journey from which this chapter has been
taken. I made excuses for turning in early, and at daybreak
rekindled my fire and got my breakfast. All the time the
companionship of the dog was an unspeakable comfort to me.
It was now the day my father had fixed for my meeting with George,
and my excitement (with which I have not yet troubled the reader,
though it had been consuming me ever since I had left Harris's hut)
was beyond all bounds, so much so that I almost feared I was in a
fever which would prevent my completing the little that remained of
my task; in fact, I was in as great a panic as I had been about the
gold that I had left. My hands trembled as I took the watches, and
the brooches for Yram and her daughters from my saddle-bags, which
I then hung, probably on the very bough on which my father had hung
them. Needless to say, I also hung my saddle and bridle along with
the saddle-bags.
It was nearly seven before I started, and about ten before I
reached the hiding-place of my knapsack. I found it, of course,
quite easily, shouldered it, and toiled on towards the statues. At
a quarter before twelve I reached them, and almost beside myself as
I was, could not refrain from some disappointment at finding them a
good deal smaller than I expected. My father, correcting the
measurement he had given in his book, said he thought that they
were about four or five times the size of life; but really I do not
think they were more than twenty feet high, any one of them. In
other respects my father's description of them is quite accurate.
There was no wind, and as a matter of course, therefore, they were
not chanting. I wiled away the quarter of an hour before the time
when George became due, with wondering at them, and in a way
admiring them, hideous though they were; but all the time I kept
looking towards the part from which George should come.
At last my watch pointed to noon, but there was no George. A
quarter past twelve, but no George. Half-past, still no George.
One o'clock, and all the quarters till three o'clock, but still no
George. I tried to eat some of the ship's biscuits I had brought
with me, but I could not. My disappointment was now as great as my
excitement had been all the forenoon; at three o'clock I fairly
cried, and for half an hour could only fling myself on the ground
and give way to all the unreasonable spleen that extreme vexation
could suggest. True, I kept telling myself that for aught I knew
George might be dead, or down with a fever; but this would not do;
for in this last case he should have sent one of his brothers to
meet me, and it was not likely that he was dead. I am afraid I
thought it most probable that he had been casual--of which unworthy
suspicion I have long since been heartily ashamed.
I put the brooches inside my knapsack, and hid it in a place where
I was sure no one would find it; then, with a heavy heart, I
trudged down again to my camp--broken in spirit, and hopeless for
the morrow.
I camped again, but it was some hours before I got a wink of sleep;
and when sleep came it was accompanied by a strange dream. I
dreamed that I was by my father's bedside, watching his last
flicker of intelligence, and vainly trying to catch the words that
he was not less vainly trying to utter. All of a sudden the bed
seemed to be at my camping ground, and the largest of the statues
appeared, quite small, high up the mountain side, but striding down
like a giant in seven league boots till it stood over me and my
father, and shouted out "Leap, John, leap." In the horror of this
vision I woke with a loud cry that woke my dog also, and made him
shew such evident signs of fear, that it seemed to me as though he
too must have shared my dream.
Shivering with cold I started up in a frenzy, but there was
nothing, save a night of such singular beauty that I did not even
try to go to sleep again. Naturally enough, on trying to keep
awake I dropped asleep before many minutes were over.
In the morning I again climbed up to the statues, without, to my
surprise, being depressed with the idea that George would again
fail to meet me. On the contrary, without rhyme or reason, I had a
strong presentiment that he would come. And sure enough, as soon
as I caught sight of the statues, which I did about a quarter to
twelve, I saw a youth coming towards me, with a quick step, and a
beaming face that had only to be seen to be fallen in love with.
"You are my brother," said he to me. "Is my father with you?"
I pointed to the crape on my arm, and to the ground, but said
nothing.
He understood me, and bared his head. Then he flung his arms about
me and kissed my forehead according to Erewhonian custom. I was a
little surprised at his saying nothing to me about the way in which
he had disappointed me on the preceding day; I resolved, however,
to wait for the explanation that I felt sure he would give me
presently.