home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1996-07-21 | 181.2 KB | 3,287 lines |
- 1856
-
- BENITO CERENO
-
- by Herman Melville
-
-
- IN THE year 1799, Captain Amasa Delano, of Duxbury, in Massachusetts,
- commanding a large sealer and general trader, lay at anchor, with a
- valuable cargo, in the harbour of St. Maria- a small, desert,
- uninhabited island towards the southern extremity of the long coast of
- Chili. There he had touched for water.
-
- On the second day, not long after dawn, while lying in his berth, his
- mate came below, informing him that a strange sail was coming into the
- bay. Ships were then not so plenty in those waters as now. He rose,
- dressed, and went on deck.
-
- The morning was one peculiar to that coast. Everything was mute and
- calm; everything grey. The sea, though undulated into long roods of
- swells, seemed fixed, and was sleeked at the surface like waved lead
- that has cooled and set in the smelter's mould. The sky seemed a grey
- mantle. Flights of troubled grey fowl, kith and kin with flights of
- troubled grey vapours among which they were mixed, skimmed low and
- fitfully over the waters, as swallows over meadows before storms.
- Shadows present, foreshadowing deeper shadows to come.
-
- To Captain Delano's surprise, the stranger, viewed through the glass,
- showed no colours; though to do so upon entering a haven, however
- uninhabited in its shores, where but a single other ship might be lying,
- was the custom among peaceful seamen of all nations. Considering the
- lawlessness and loneliness of the spot, and the sort of stories, at that
- day, associated with those seas, Captain Delano's surprise might have
- deepened into some uneasiness had he not been a person of a singularly
- undistrustful good nature, not liable, except on extraordinary and
- repeated excitement, and hardly then, to indulge in personal alarms, any
- way involving the imputation of malign evil in man. Whether, in view of
- what humanity is capable, such a trait implies, along with a benevolent
- heart, more than ordinary quickness and accuracy of intellectual
- perception, may be left to the wise to determine.
-
- But whatever misgivings might have obtruded on first seeing the stranger
- would almost, in any seaman's mind, have been dissipated by observing
- that the ship, in navigating into the harbour, was drawing too near the
- land, for her own safety's sake, owing to a sunken reef making out off
- her bow. This seemed to prove her a stranger, indeed, not only to the
- sealer, but the island; consequently, she could be no wonted freebooter
- on that ocean. With no small interest, Captain Delano continued to watch
- her- a proceeding not much facilitated by the vapours partly mantling
- the hull, through which the far matin light from her cabin streamed
- equivocally enough; much like the sun- by this time crescented on the
- rim of the horizon, and apparently, in company with the strange ship,
- entering the harbour- which, wimpled by the same low, creeping clouds,
- showed not unlike a Lima intriguante's one sinister eye peering across
- the Plaza from the Indian loop-hole of her dusk saya-y-manta.
-
- It might have been but a deception of the vapours, but, the longer the
- stranger was watched, the more singular appeared her manoeuvres. Ere
- long it seemed hard to decide whether she meant to come in or no- what
- she wanted, or what she was about. The wind, which had breezed up a
- little during the night, was now extremely light and baffling, which the
- more increased the apparent uncertainty of her movements.
-
- Surmising, at last, that it might be a ship in distress, Captain Delano
- ordered his whale-boat to be dropped, and, much to the wary opposition
- of his mate, prepared to board her, and, at the least, pilot her in. On
- the night previous, a fishing-party of the seamen had gone a long
- distance to some detached rocks out of sight from the sealer, and, an
- hour or two before day-break, had returned, having met with no small
- success. Presuming that the stranger might have been long off soundings,
- the good captain put several baskets of the fish, for presents, into his
- boat, and so pulled away. From her continuing too near the sunken reef,
- deeming her in danger, calling to his men, he made all haste to apprise
- those on board of their situation. But, some time ere the boat came up,
- the wind, light though it was, having shifted, had headed the vessel
- off, as well as partly broken the vapours from about her.
-
- Upon gaining a less remote view, the ship, when made signally visible on
- the verge of the leaden-hued swells, with the shreds of fog here and
- there raggedly furring her, appeared like a whitewashed monastery after
- a thunder-storm, seen perched upon some dun cliff among the Pyrenees.
- But it was no purely fanciful resemblance which now, for a moment,
- almost led Captain Delano to think that nothing less than a ship-load of
- monks was before him. Peering over the bulwarks were what really seemed,
- in the hazy distance, throngs of dark cowls; while, fitfully revealed
- through the open port-holes, other dark moving figures were dimly
- descried, as of Black Friars pacing the cloisters.
-
- Upon a still nigher approach, this appearance was modified, and the true
- character of the vessel was plain- a Spanish merchantman of the first
- class; carrying Negro slaves, amongst other valuable freight, from one
- colonial port to another. A very large, and, in its time, a very fine
- vessel, such as in those days were at intervals encountered along that
- main; sometimes superseded Acapulco treasure-ships, or retired frigates
- of the Spanish king's navy, which, like superannuated Italian palaces,
- still, under a decline of masters, preserved signs of former state.
-
- As the whale-boat drew more and more nigh, the cause of the peculiar
- pipe-clayed aspect of the stranger was seen in the slovenly neglect
- pervading her. The spars, ropes, and great part of the bulwarks looked
- woolly, from long unacquaintance with the scraper, tar, and the brush.
- Her keel seemed laid, her ribs put together, and she launched, from
- Ezekiel's Valley of Dry Bones.
-
- In the present business in which she was engaged, the ship's general
- model and rig appeared to have undergone no material change from their
- original warlike and Froissart pattern. However, no guns were seen.
-
- The tops were large, and were railed about with what had once been
- octagonal net-work, all now in sad disrepair. These tops hung overhead
- like three ruinous aviaries, in one of which was seen perched, on a
- ratlin, a white noddy, a strange fowl, so called from its lethargic
- somnambulistic character, being frequently caught by hand at sea.
- Battered and mouldy, the castellated forecastle seemed some ancient
- turret, long ago taken by assault, and then left to decay. Towards the
- stern, two high-raised quarter galleries- the balustrades here and there
- covered with dry, tindery sea-moss- opening out from the unoccupied
- state-cabin, whose dead lights, for all the mild weather, were
- hermetically closed and caulked- these tenantless balconies hung over
- the sea as if it were the grand Venetian canal. But the principal relic
- of faded grandeur was the ample oval of the shield-like stern-piece,
- intricately carved with the arms of Castile and Leon, medallioned about
- by groups of mythological or symbolical devices; uppermost and central
- of which was a dark satyr in a mask, holding his foot on the prostrate
- neck of a writhing figure, likewise masked.
-
- Whether the ship had a figure-head, or only a plain beak, was not quite
- certain, owing to canvas wrapped about that part, either to protect it
- while undergoing a refurbishing, or else decently to hide its decay.
- Rudely painted or chalked, as in a sailor freak, along the forward side
- of a sort of pedestal below the canvas, was the sentence, "Seguid
- vuestro jefe" (follow your leader); while upon the tarnished
- head-boards, near by, appeared, in stately capitals, once gilt, the
- ship's name, "SAN DOMINICK," each letter streakingly corroded with
- tricklings of copper-spike rust; while, like mourning weeds, dark
- festoons of sea-grass slimily swept to and fro over the name, with every
- hearse-like roll of the hull.
-
- As at last the boat was hooked from the bow along toward the gangway
- amidship, its keel, while yet some inches separated from the hull,
- harshly grated as on a sunken coral reef. It proved a huge bunch of
- conglobated barnacles adhering below the water to the side like a wen; a
- token of baffling airs and long calms passed somewhere in those seas.
-
- Climbing the side, the visitor was at once surrounded by a clamorous
- throng of whites and blacks, but the latter outnumbering the former more
- than could have been expected, Negro transportation-ship as the stranger
- in port was. But, in one language, and as with one voice, all poured out
- a common tale of suffering; in which the Negresses, of whom there were
- not a few, exceeded the others in their dolorous vehemence. The scurvy,
- together with a fever, had swept off a great part of their number, more
- especially the Spaniards. Off Cape Horn, they had narrowly escaped
- shipwreck; then, for days together, they had lain tranced without wind;
- their provisions were low; their water next to none; their lips that
- moment were baked.
-
- While Captain Delano was thus made the mark of all eager tongues, his
- one eager glance took in all the faces, with every other object about
- him.
-
- Always upon first boarding a large and populous ship at sea, especially
- a foreign one, with a nondescript crew such as Lascars or Manilla men,
- the impression varies in a peculiar way from that produced by first
- entering a strange house with strange inmates in a strange land. Both
- house and ship, the one by its walls and blinds, the other by its high
- bulwarks like ramparts, hoard from view their interiors till the last
- moment; but in the case of the ship there is this addition: that the
- living spectacle it contains, upon its sudden and complete disclosure,
- has, in contrast with the blank ocean which zones it, something of the
- effect of enchantment. The ship seems unreal; these strange costumes,
- gestures, and faces, but a shadowy tableau just emerged from the deep,
- which directly must receive back what it gave.
-
- Perhaps it was some such influence as above is attempted to be described
- which, in Captain Delano's mind, heightened whatever, upon a staid
- scrutiny, might have seemed unusual; especially the conspicuous figures
- of four elderly grizzled Negroes, their heads like black, doddered
- willow tops, who, in venerable contrast to the tumult below them, were
- couched sphynx-like, one on the starboard cat-head, another on the
- larboard, and the remaining pair face to face on the opposite bulwarks
- above the main-chains. They each had bits of unstranded old junk in
- their hands, and, with a sort of stoical self-content, were picking the
- junk into oakum, a small heap of which lay by their sides. They
- accompanied the task with a continuous, low, monotonous chant; droning
- and drooling away like so many grey-headed bag-pipers playing a funeral
- march.
-
- The quarter-deck rose into an ample elevated poop, upon the forward
- verge of which, lifted, like the oakum-pickers, some eight feet above
- the general throng, sat along in a row, separated by regular spaces, the
- cross-legged figures of six other blacks; each with a rusty hatchet in
- his hand, which, with a bit of brick and a rag, he was engaged like a
- scullion in scouring; while between each two was a small stack of
- hatchets, their rusted edges turned forward awaiting a like operation.
- Though occasionally the four oakum-pickers would briefly address some
- person or persons in the crowd below, yet the six hatchet-polishers
- neither spoke to others, nor breathed a whisper among themselves, but
- sat intent upon their task, except at intervals, when, with the peculiar
- love in Negroes of uniting industry with pastime, two-and-two they
- sideways clashed their hatchets together, like cymbals, with a barbarous
- din. All six, unlike the generality, had the raw aspect of
- unsophisticated Africans.
-
- But the first comprehensive glance which took in those ten figures, with
- scores less conspicuous, rested but an instant upon them, as, impatient
- of the hubbub of voices, the visitor turned in quest of whomsoever it
- might be that commanded the ship.
-
- But as if not unwilling to let nature make known her own case among his
- suffering charge, or else in despair of restraining it for the time, the
- Spanish captain, a gentlemanly, reserved-looking, and rather young man
- to a stranger's eye, dressed with singular richness, but bearing plain
- traces of recent sleepless cares and disquietudes, stood passively by,
- leaning against the main-mast, at one moment casting a dreary,
- spiritless look upon his excited people, at the next an unhappy glance
- toward his visitor. By his side stood a black of small stature, in whose
- rude face, as occasionally, like a shepherd's dog, he mutely turned it
- up into the Spaniard's, sorrow and affection were equally blended.
-
- Struggling through the throng, the American advanced to the Spaniard,
- assuring him of his sympathies, and offering to render whatever
- assistance might be in his power. To which the Spaniard returned, for
- the present, but grave and ceremonious acknowledgments, his national
- formality dusked by the saturnine mood of ill health.
-
- But losing no time in mere compliments, Captain Delano returning to the
- gangway, had his baskets of fish brought up; and as the wind still
- continued light, so that some hours at least must elapse ere the ship
- could be brought to the anchorage, he bade his men return to the sealer,
- and fetch back as much water as the whaleboat could carry, with whatever
- soft bread the steward might have, all the remaining pumpkins on board,
- with a box of sugar, and a dozen of his private bottles of cider.
-
- Not many minutes after the boat's pushing off, to the vexation of all,
- the wind entirely died away, and the tide turning, began drifting back
- the ship helplessly seaward. But trusting this would not last, Captain
- Delano sought with good hopes to cheer up the strangers, feeling no
- small satisfaction that, with persons in their condition he could-
- thanks to his frequent voyages along the Spanish main- converse with
- some freedom in their native tongue.
-
- While left alone with them, he was not long in observing some things
- tending to heighten his first impressions; but surprise was lost in
- pity, both for the Spaniards and blacks, alike evidently reduced from
- scarcity of water and provisions; while long-continued suffering seemed
- to have brought out the less good-natured qualities of the Negroes,
- besides, at the same time, impairing the Spaniard's authority over them.
- But, under the circumstances, precisely this condition of things was to
- have been anticipated. In armies, navies, cities, or families- in nature
- herself- nothing more relaxes good order than misery. Still, Captain
- Delano was not without the idea, that had Benito Cereno been a man of
- greater energy, misrule would hardly have come to the present pass. But
- the debility, constitutional or induced by the hardships, bodily and
- mental, of the Spanish captain, was too obvious to be overlooked. A prey
- to settled dejection, as if long mocked with hope he would not now
- indulge it, even when it had ceased to be a mock, the prospect of that
- day or evening at furthest, lying at anchor, with plenty of water for
- his people, and a brother captain to counsel and befriend, seemed in no
- perceptible degree to encourage him. His mind appeared unstrung, if not
- still more seriously affected. Shut up in these oaken walls, chained to
- one dull round of command, whose unconditionality cloyed him, like some
- hypochondriac abbot he moved slowly about, at times suddenly pausing,
- starting, or staring, biting his lip, biting his finger-nail, flushing,
- paling, twitching his beard, with other symptoms of an absent or moody
- mind. This distempered spirit was lodged, as before hinted, in as
- distempered a frame. He was rather tall, but seemed never to have been
- robust, and now with nervous suffering was almost worn to a skeleton. A
- tendency to some pulmonary complaint appeared to have been lately
- confirmed. His voice was like that of one with lungs half gone, hoarsely
- suppressed, a husky whisper. No wonder that, as in this state he
- tottered about, his private servant apprehensively followed him.
- Sometimes the Negro gave his master his arm, or took his handkerchief
- out of his pocket for him; performing these and similar offices with
- that affectionate zeal which transmutes into something filial or
- fraternal acts in themselves but menial; and which has gained for the
- Negro the repute of making the most pleasing body-servant in the world;
- one, too, whom a master need be on no stiffly superior terms with, but
- may treat with familiar trust; less a servant than a devoted companion.
-
- Marking the noisy indocility of the blacks in general, as well as what
- seemed the sullen inefficiency of the whites, it was not without humane
- satisfaction that Captain Delano witnessed the steady good conduct of
- Babo.
-
- But the good conduct of Babo, hardly more than the ill-behaviour of
- others, seemed to withdraw the half-lunatic Don Benito from his cloudy
- languor. Not that such precisely was the impression made by the Spaniard
- on the mind of his visitor. The Spaniard's individual unrest was, for
- the present, but noted as a conspicuous feature in the ship's general
- affliction. Still, Captain Delano was not a little concerned at what he
- could not help taking for the time to be Don Benito's unfriendly
- indifference toward himself. The Spaniard's manner, too, conveyed a sort
- of sour and gloomy disdain, which he seemed at no pains to disguise. But
- this the American in charity ascribed to the harassing effects of
- sickness, since, in former instances, he had noted that there are
- peculiar natures on whom prolonged physical suffering seems to cancel
- every social instinct of kindness; as if forced to black bread
- themselves, they deemed it but equity that each person coming nigh them
- should, indirectly, by some slight or affront, be made to partake of
- their fare.
-
- But ere long Captain Delano bethought him that, indulgent as he was at
- the first, in judging the Spaniard, he might not, after all, have
- exercised charity enough. At bottom it was Don Benito's reserve which
- displeased him; but the same reserve was shown toward all but his
- personal attendant. Even the formal reports which, according to
- sea-usage, were at stated times made to him by some petty underling
- (either a white, mulatto or black), he hardly had patience enough to
- listen to, without betraying contemptuous aversion. His manner upon such
- occasions was, in its degree, not unlike that which might be supposed to
- have been his imperial countryman's, Charles V., just previous to the
- anchoritish retirement of that monarch from the throne.
-
- This splenetic disrelish of his place was evinced in almost every
- function pertaining to it. Proud as he was moody, he condescended to no
- personal mandate. Whatever special orders were necessary, their delivery
- was delegated to his body-servant, who in turn transferred them to their
- ultimate destination, through runners, alert Spanish boys or slave boys,
- like pages or pilot-fish within easy call continually hovering round Don
- Benito. So that to have beheld this undemonstrative invalid gliding
- about, apathetic and mute, no landsman could have dreamed that in him
- was lodged a dictatorship beyond which, while at sea, there was no
- earthly appeal.
-
- Thus, the Spaniard, regarded in his reserve, seemed as the involuntary
- victim of mental disorder. But, in fact, his reserve might, in some
- degree, have proceeded from design. If so, then in Don Benito was
- evinced the unhealthy climax of that icy though conscientious policy,
- more or less adopted by all commanders of large ships, which, except in
- signal emergencies, obliterates alike the manifestation of sway with
- every trace of sociality; transforming the man into a block, or rather
- into a loaded cannon, which, until there is call for thunder, has
- nothing to say.
-
- Viewing him in this light, it seemed but a natural token of the perverse
- habit induced by a long course of such hard self-restraint, that,
- notwithstanding the present condition of his ship, the Spaniard should
- still persist in a demeanour, which, however harmless- or it may be,
- appropriate- in a well-appointed vessel, such as the San Dominick might
- have been at the outset of the voyage, was anything but judicious now.
- But the Spaniard perhaps thought that it was with captains as with gods:
- reserve, under all events, must still be their cue. But more probably
- this appearance of slumbering dominion might have been but an attempted
- disguise to conscious imbecility- not deep policy, but shallow device.
- But be all this as it might, whether Don Benito's manner was designed or
- not, the more Captain Delano noted its pervading reserve, the less he
- felt uneasiness at any particular manifestation of that reserve toward
- himself.
-
- Neither were his thoughts taken up by the captain alone. Wonted to the
- quiet orderliness of the sealer's comfortable family of a crew, the
- noisy confusion of the San Dominick's suffering host repeatedly
- challenged his eye. Some prominent breaches not only of discipline but
- of decency were observed. These Captain Delano could not but ascribe, in
- the main, to the absence of those subordinate deck-officers to whom,
- along with higher duties, is entrusted what may be styled the police
- department of a populous ship. True, the old oakum-pickers appeared at
- times to act the part of monitorial constables to their countrymen, the
- blacks; but though occasionally succeeding in allaying trifling
- outbreaks now and then between man and man, they could do little or
- nothing toward establishing general quiet. The San Dominick was in the
- condition of a transatlantic emigrant ship, among whose multitude of
- living freight are some individuals, doubtless, as little troublesome as
- crates and bales; but the friendly remonstrances of such with their
- ruder companions are of not so much avail as the unfriendly arm of the
- mate. What the San Dominick wanted was, what the emigrant ship has,
- stern superior officers. But on these decks not so much as a fourth mate
- was to be seen.
-
- The visitor's curiosity was roused to learn the particulars of those
- mishaps which had brought about such absenteeism, with its consequences;
- because, though deriving some inkling of the voyage from the wails which
- at the first moment had greeted him, yet of the details no clear
- understanding had been had. The best account would, doubtless, be given
- by the captain. Yet at first the visitor was loth to ask it, unwilling
- to provoke some distant rebuff. But plucking up courage, he at last
- accosted Don Benito, renewing the expression of his benevolent interest,
- adding, that did he (Captain Delano) but know the particulars of the
- ship's misfortunes, he would, perhaps, be better able in the end to
- relieve them. Would Don Benito favour him with the whole story?
-
- Don Benito faltered; then, like some somnambulist suddenly interfered
- with, vacantly stared at his visitor, and ended by looking down on the
- deck. He maintained this posture so long, that Captain Delano, almost
- equally disconcerted, and involuntarily almost as rude, turned suddenly
- from him, walking forward to accost one of the Spanish seamen for the
- desired information. But he had hardly gone five paces, when with a sort
- of eagerness Don Benito invited him back, regretting his momentary
- absence of mind, and professing readiness to gratify him.
-
- While most part of the story was being given, the two captains stood on
- the after part of the main-deck, a privileged spot, no one being near
- but the servant.
-
- "It is now a hundred and ninety days," began the Spaniard, in his husky
- whisper, "that this ship, well officered and well manned, with several
- cabin passengers- some fifty Spaniards in all- sailed from Buenos Ayres
- bound to Lima, with a general cargo, Paraguay tea and the like- and,"
- pointing forward, "that parcel of Negroes, now not more than a hundred
- and fifty, as you see, but then numbering over three hundred souls. Off
- Cape Horn we had heavy gales. In one moment, by night, three of my best
- officers, with fifteen sailors, were lost, with the main-yard; the spar
- snapping under them in the slings, as they sought, with heavers, to beat
- down the icy sail. To lighten the hull, the heavier sacks of mata were
- thrown into the sea, with most of the water-pipes lashed on deck at the
- time. And this last necessity it was, combined with the prolonged
- detentions afterwards experienced, which eventually brought about our
- chief causes of suffering. When-"
-
- Here there was a sudden fainting attack of his cough, brought on, no
- doubt, by his mental distress. His servant sustained him, and drawing a
- cordial from his pocket placed it to his lips. He a little revived. But
- unwilling to leave him unsupported while yet imperfectly restored, the
- black with one arm still encircled his master, at the same time keeping
- his eye fixed on his face, as if to watch for the first sign of complete
- restoration, or relapse, as the event might prove.
-
- The Spaniard proceeded, but brokenly and obscurely, as one in a dream.
-
- -"Oh, my God! rather than pass through what I have, with joy I would
- have hailed the most terrible gales; but-"
-
- His cough returned and with increased violence; this subsiding, with
- reddened lips and closed eyes he fell heavily against his supporter.
-
- "His mind wanders. He was thinking of the plague that followed the
- gales," plaintively sighed the servant; "my poor, poor master!" wringing
- one hand, and with the other wiping the mouth. "But be patient, Senor,"
- again turning to Captain Delano, "these fits do not last long; master
- will soon be himself."
-
- Don Benito reviving, went on; but as this portion of the story was very
- brokenly delivered, the substance only will here be set down.
-
- It appeared that after the ship had been many days tossed in storms off
- the Cape, the scurvy broke out, carrying off numbers of the whites and
- blacks. When at last they had worked round into the Pacific, their spars
- and sails were so damaged, and so inadequately handled by the surviving
- mariners, most of whom were become invalids, that, unable to lay her
- northerly course by the wind, which was powerful, the unmanageable ship
- for successive days and nights was blown northwestward, where the breeze
- suddenly deserted her, in unknown waters, to sultry calms. The absence
- of the water-pipes now proved as fatal to life as before their presence
- had menaced it. Induced, or at least aggravated, by the more than scanty
- allowance of water, a malignant fever followed the scurvy; with the
- excessive heat of the lengthened calm, making such short work of it as
- to sweep away, as by billows, whole families of the Africans, and a yet
- larger number, proportionally, of the Spaniards, including, by a
- luckless fatality, every officer on board. Consequently, in the smart
- west winds eventually following the calm, the already rent sails having
- to be simply dropped, not furled, at need, had been gradually reduced to
- the beggar's rags they were now. To procure substitutes for his lost
- sailors, as well as supplies of water and sails, the captain at the
- earliest opportunity had made for Baldivia, the southermost civilized
- port of Chili and South America; but upon nearing the coast the thick
- weather had prevented him from so much as sighting that harbour. Since
- which period, almost without a crew, and almost without canvas and
- almost without water, and at intervals giving its added dead to the sea,
- the San Dominick had been battle-dored about by contrary winds,
- inveigled by currents, or grown weedy in calms. Like a man lost in
- woods, more than once she had doubled upon her own track.
-
- "But throughout these calamities," huskily continued Don Benito,
- painfully turning in the half embrace of his servant, "I have to thank
- those Negroes you see, who, though to your inexperienced eyes appearing
- unruly, have, indeed, conducted themselves with less of restlessness
- than even their owner could have thought possible under such
- circumstances."
-
- Here he again fell faintly back. Again his mind wandered: but he
- rallied, and less obscurely proceeded.
-
- "Yes, their owner was quite right in assuring me that no fetters would
- be needed with his blacks; so that while, as is wont in this
- transportation, those Negroes have always remained upon deck- not thrust
- below, as in the Guineamen- they have, also, from the beginning, been
- freely permitted to range within given bounds at their pleasure."
-
- Once more the faintness returned- his mind roved- but, recovering, he
- resumed:
-
- "But it is Babo here to whom, under God, I owe not only my own
- preservation, but likewise to him, chiefly, the merit is due, of
- pacifying his more ignorant brethren, when at intervals tempted to
- murmurings."
-
- "Ah, master," sighed the black, bowing his face, "don't speak of me;
- Babo is nothing; what Babo has done was but duty."
-
- "Faithful fellow!" cried Captain Delano. "Don Benito, I envy you such a
- friend; slave I cannot call him."
-
- As master and man stood before him, the black upholding the white,
- Captain Delano could not but bethink him of the beauty of that
- relationship which could present such a spectacle of fidelity on the one
- hand and confidence on the other. The scene was heightened by the
- contrast in dress, denoting their relative positions. The Spaniard wore
- a loose Chili jacket of dark velvet; white small clothes and stockings,
- with silver buckles at the knee and instep; a high-crowned sombrero, of
- fine grass; a slender sword, silver mounted, hung from a knot in his
- sash; the last being an almost invariable adjunct, more for utility than
- ornament, of a South American gentleman's dress to this hour. Excepting
- when his occasional nervous contortions brought about disarray, there
- was a certain precision in his attire, curiously at variance with the
- unsightly disorder around; especially in the belittered Ghetto, forward
- of the main-mast, wholly occupied by the blacks.
-
- The servant wore nothing but wide trousers, apparently, from their
- coarseness and patches, made out of some old top-sail; they were clean,
- and confined at the waist by a bit of unstranded rope, which, with his
- composed, deprecatory air at times, made him look something like a
- begging friar of St. Francis.
-
- However unsuitable for the time and place, at least in the blunt
- thinking American's eyes, and however strangely surviving in the midst
- of all his afflictions, the toilette of Don Benito might not, in fashion
- at least, have gone beyond the style of the day among South Americans of
- his class. Though on the present voyage sailing from Buenos Ayres, he
- had avowed himself a native and resident of Chili, whose inhabitants had
- not so generally adopted the plain coat and once plebeian pantaloons;
- but, with a becoming modification, adhered to their provincial costume,
- picturesque as any in the world. Still, relatively to the pale history
- of the voyage, and his own pale face, there seemed something so
- incongruous in the Spaniard's apparel, as almost to suggest the image of
- an invalid courtier tottering about London streets in the time of the
- plague.
-
- The portion of the narrative which, perhaps, most excited interest, as
- well as some surprise, considering the latitudes in question, was the
- long calms spoken of, and more particularly the ship's so long drifting
- about. Without communicating the opinion, of course, the American could
- not but impute at least part of the detentions both to clumsy seamanship
- and faulty navigation. Eyeing Don Benito's small, yellow hands, he
- easily inferred that the young captain had not got into command at the
- hawse-hole but the cabin-window, and if so, why wonder at incompetence,
- in youth, sickness, and aristocracy united? Such was his democratic
- conclusion.
-
- But drowning criticism in compassion, after a fresh repetition of his
- sympathies, Captain Delano having heard out his story, not only engaged,
- as in the first place, to see Don Benito and his people supplied in
- their immediate bodily needs, but, also, now further promised to assist
- him in procuring a large permanent supply of water, as well as some
- sails and rigging; and, though it would involve no small embarrassment
- to himself, yet he would spare three of his best seamen for temporary
- deck officers; so that without delay the ship might proceed to
- Concepcion, there fully to refit for Lima, her destined port.
-
- Such generosity was not without its effect, even upon the invalid. His
- face lighted up; eager and hectic, he met the honest glance of his
- visitor. With gratitude he seemed overcome.
-
- "This excitement is bad for master," whispered the servant, taking his
- arm, and with soothing words gently drawing him aside.
-
- When Don Benito returned, the American was pained to observe that his
- hopefulness, like the sudden kindling in his cheek, was but febrile and
- transient.
-
- Ere long, with a joyless mien, looking up toward the poop, the host
- invited his guest to accompany him there, for the benefit of what little
- breath of wind might be stirring.
-
- As during the telling of the story, Captain Delano had once or twice
- started at the occasional cymballing of the hatchet-polishers, wondering
- why such an interruption should be allowed, especially in that part of
- the ship, and in the ears of an invalid; and, moreover, as the hatchets
- had anything but an attractive look, and the handlers of them still less
- so, it was, therefore, to tell the truth, not without some lurking
- reluctance, or even shrinking, it may be, that Captain Delano, with
- apparent complaisance, acquiesced in his host's invitation. The more so,
- since with an untimely caprice of punctilio, rendered distressing by his
- cadaverous aspect, Don Benito, with Castilian bows, solemnly insisted
- upon his guest's preceding him up the ladder leading to the elevation;
- where, one on each side of the last step, sat four armorial supporters
- and sentries, two of the ominous file. Gingerly enough stepped good
- Captain Delano between them, and in the instant of leaving them behind,
- like one running the gauntlet, he felt an apprehensive twitch in the
- calves of his legs.
-
- But when, facing about, he saw the whole file, like so many
- organ-grinders, still stupidly intent on their work, unmindful of
- everything beside, he could not but smile at his late fidgeting panic.
-
- Presently, while standing with Don Benito, looking forward upon the
- decks below, he was struck by one of those instances of insubordination
- previously alluded to. Three black boys, with two Spanish boys, were
- sitting together on the hatches, scraping a rude wooden platter, in
- which some scanty mess had recently been cooked. Suddenly, one of the
- black boys, enraged at a word dropped by one of his white companions,
- seized a knife, and though called to forbear by one of the
- oakum-pickers, struck the lad over the head, inflicting a gash from
- which blood flowed.
-
- In amazement, Captain Delano inquired what this meant. To which the pale
- Benito dully muttered, that it was merely the sport of the lad.
-
- "Pretty serious sport, truly," rejoined Captain Delano. "Had such a
- thing happened on board the Bachelor's Delight, instant punishment would
- have followed."
-
- At these words the Spaniard turned upon the American one of his sudden,
- staring, half-lunatic looks; then, relapsing into his torpor, answered,
- "Doubtless, doubtless, Senor."
-
- Is it, thought Captain Delano, that this helpless man is one of those
- paper captains I've known, who by policy wink at what by power they
- cannot put down? I know no sadder sight than a commander who has little
- of command but the name.
-
- "I should think, Don Benito," he now said, glancing toward the
- oakum-picker who had sought to interfere with the boys, "that you would
- find it advantageous to keep all your blacks employed, especially the
- younger ones, no matter at what useless task, and no matter what happens
- to the ship. Why, even with my little band, I find such a course
- indispensable. I once kept a crew on my quarterdeck thrumming mats for
- my cabin, when, for three days, I had given up my ship- mats, men, and
- all- for a speedy loss, owing to the violence of a gale in which we
- could do nothing but helplessly drive before it."
-
- "Doubtless, doubtless," muttered Don Benito.
-
- "But," continued Captain Delano, again glancing upon the oakum-pickers
- and then at the hatchet-polishers, near by, "I see you keep some at
- least of your host employed."
-
- "Yes," was again the vacant response.
-
- "Those old men there, shaking their pows from their pulpits," continued
- Captain Delano, pointing to the oakum-pickers, "seem to act the part of
- old dominies to the rest, little heeded as their admonitions are at
- times. Is this voluntary on their part, Don Benito, or have you
- appointed them shepherds to your flock of black sheep?"
-
- "What posts they fill, I appointed them," rejoined the Spaniard in an
- acrid tone, as if resenting some supposed satiric reflection.
-
- "And these others, these Ashantee conjurors here," continued Captain
- Delano, rather uneasily eyeing the brandished steel of the
- hatchet-polishers, where in spots it had been brought to a shine, "this
- seems a curious business they are at, Don Benito?"
-
- "In the gales we met," answered the Spaniard, "what of our general cargo
- was not thrown overboard was much damaged by the brine. Since coming
- into calm weather, I have had several cases of knives and hatchets daily
- brought up for overhauling and cleaning."
-
- "A prudent idea, Don Benito. You are part owner of ship and cargo, I
- presume; but not of the slaves, perhaps?"
-
- "I am owner of all you see," impatiently returned Don Benito, "except
- the main company of blacks, who belonged to my late friend, Alexandro
- Aranda."
-
- As he mentioned this name, his air was heart-broken, his knees shook;
- his servant supported him.
-
- Thinking he divined the cause of such unusual emotion, to confirm his
- surmise, Captain Delano, after a pause, said, "And may I ask, Don
- Benito, whether- since awhile ago you spoke of some cabin passengers-
- the friend, whose loss so afflicts you, at the outset of the voyage
- accompanied his blacks?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "But died of the fever?"
-
- "Died of the fever.- Oh, could I but-"
-
- Again quivering, the Spaniard paused.
-
- "Pardon me," said Captain Delano slowly, "but I think that, by a
- sympathetic experience, I conjecture, Don Benito, what it is that gives
- the keener edge to your grief. It was once my hard fortune to lose at
- sea a dear friend, my own brother, then supercargo. Assured of the
- welfare of his spirit, its departure I could have borne like a man; but
- that honest eye, that honest hand- both of which had so often met mine-
- and that warm heart; all, all- like scraps to the dogs- to throw all to
- the sharks! It was then I vowed never to have for fellow-voyager a man I
- loved, unless, unbeknown to him, I had provided every requisite, in case
- of a fatality, for embalming his mortal part for interment on shore.
- Were your friend's remains now on board this ship, Don Benito, not thus
- strangely would the mention of his name affect you."
-
- "On board this ship?" echoed the Spaniard. Then, with horrified
- gestures, as directed against some spectre, he unconsciously fell into
- the ready arms of his attendant, who, with a silent appeal toward
- Captain Delano, seemed beseeching him not again to broach a theme so
- unspeakably distressing to his master.
-
- This poor fellow now, thought the pained American, is the victim of that
- sad superstition which associates goblins with the deserted body of man,
- as ghosts with an abandoned house. How unlike are we made! What to me,
- in like case, would have been a solemn satisfaction, the bare
- suggestion, even, terrifies the Spaniard into this trance. Poor
- Alexandro Aranda! what would you say could you see your friend- who, on
- former voyages, when you for months were left behind, has, I dare say,
- often longed, and longed, for one peep at you- now transported with
- terror at the least thought of having you anyway nigh him.
-
- At this moment, with a dreary graveyard toll, betokening a flaw, the
- ship's forecastle bell, smote by one of the grizzled oakum-pickers,
- proclaimed ten o'clock through the leaden calm; when Captain Delano's
- attention was caught by the moving figure of a gigantic black, emerging
- from the general crowd below, and slowly advancing toward the elevated
- poop. An iron collar was about his neck, from which depended a chain,
- thrice wound round his body; the terminating links padlocked together at
- a broad band of iron, his girdle.
-
- "How like a mute Atufal moves," murmured the servant.
-
- The black mounted the steps of the poop, and, like a brave prisoner,
- brought up to receive sentence, stood in unquailing muteness before Don
- Benito, now recovered from his attack.
-
- At the first glimpse of his approach, Don Benito had started, a
- resentful shadow swept over his face; and, as with the sudden memory of
- bootless rage, his white lips glued together.
-
- This is some mulish mutineer, thought Captain Delano, surveying, not
- without a mixture of admiration, the colossal form of the Negro.
-
- "See, he waits your question, master," said the servant.
-
- Thus reminded, Don Benito, nervously averting his glance, as if
- shunning, by anticipation, some rebellious response, in a disconcerted
- voice, thus spoke:
-
- "Atufal, will you ask my pardon now?"
-
- The black was silent.
-
- "Again, master," murmured the servant, with bitter upbraiding eyeing his
- countryman. "Again, master; he will bend to master yet."
-
- "Answer," said Don Benito, still averting his glance, "say but the one
- word pardon, and your chains shall be off."
-
- Upon this, the black, slowly raising both arms, let them lifelessly
- fall, his links clanking, his head bowed; as much as to say, "No, I am
- content."
-
- "Go," said Don Benito, with inkept and unknown emotion.
-
- Deliberately as he had come, the black obeyed.
-
- "Excuse me, Don Benito," said Captain Delano, "but this scene surprises
- me; what means it, pray?"
-
- "It means that that Negro alone, of all the band, has given me peculiar
- cause of offence. I have put him in chains; I-"
-
- Here he paused; his hand to his head, as if there were a swimming there,
- or a sudden bewilderment of memory had come over him; but meeting his
- servant's kindly glance seemed reassured, and proceeded:
-
- "I could not scourge such a form. But I told him he must ask my pardon.
- As yet he has not. At my command, every two hours he stands before me."
-
- "And how long has this been?"
-
- "Some sixty days."
-
- "And obedient in all else? And respectful?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Upon my conscience, then," exclaimed Captain Delano, impulsively, "he
- has a royal spirit in him, this fellow."
-
- "He may have some right to it," bitterly returned Don Benito; "he says
- he was king in his own land."
-
- "Yes," said the servant, entering a word, "those slits in Atufal's ears
- once held wedges of gold; but poor Babo here, in his own land, was only
- a poor slave; a black man's slave was Babo, who now is the white's."
-
- Somewhat annoyed by these conversational familiarities, Captain Delano
- turned curiously upon the attendant, then glanced inquiringly at his
- master; but, as if long wonted to these little informalities, neither
- master nor man seemed to understand him.
-
- "What, pray, was Atufal's offence, Don Benito?" asked Captain Delano;
- "if it was not something very serious, take a fool's advice, and, in
- view of his general docility, as well as in some natural respect for his
- spirit, remit his penalty."
-
- "No, no, master never will do that," here murmured the servant to
- himself, "proud Atufal must first ask master's pardon. The slave there
- carries the padlock, but master here carries the key."
-
- His attention thus directed, Captain Delano now noticed for the first
- time that, suspended by a slender silken cord, from Don Benito's neck
- hung a key. At once, from the servant's muttered syllables divining the
- key's purpose, he smiled and said: "So, Don Benito- padlock and key-
- significant symbols, truly."
-
- Biting his lip, Don Benito faltered.
-
- Though the remark of Captain Delano, a man of such native simplicity as
- to be incapable of satire or irony, had been dropped in playful allusion
- to the Spaniard's singularly evidenced lordship over the black; yet the
- hypochondriac seemed in some way to have taken it as a malicious
- reflection upon his confessed inability thus far to break down, at
- least, on a verbal summons, the entrenched will of the slave. Deploring
- this supposed misconception, yet despairing of correcting it, Captain
- Delano shifted the subject; but finding his companion more than ever
- withdrawn, as if still slowly digesting the lees of the presumed affront
- above-mentioned, by-and-by Captain Delano likewise became less
- talkative, oppressed, against his own will, by what seemed the secret
- vindictiveness of the morbidly sensitive Spaniard. But the good sailor
- himself, of a quite contrary disposition, refrained, on his part, alike
- from the appearance as from the feeling of resentment, and if silent,
- was only so from contagion.
-
- Presently the Spaniard, assisted by his servant, somewhat discourteously
- crossed over from Captain Delano; a procedure which, sensibly enough,
- might have been allowed to pass for idle caprice of ill-humour, had not
- master and man, lingering round the corner of the elevated skylight,
- begun whispering together in low voices. This was unpleasing. And more:
- the moody air of the Spaniard, which at times had not been without a
- sort of valetudinarian stateliness, now seemed anything but dignified;
- while the menial familiarity of the servant lost its original charm of
- simple-hearted attachment.
-
- In his embarrassment, the visitor turned his face to the other side of
- the ship. By so doing, his glance accidentally fell on a young Spanish
- sailor, a coil of rope in his hand, just stepped from the deck to the
- first round of the mizzen-rigging. Perhaps the man would not have been
- particularly noticed, were it not that, during his ascent to one of the
- yards, he, with a sort of covert intentness, kept his eye fixed on
- Captain Delano, from whom, presently, it passed, as if by a natural
- sequence, to the two whisperers.
-
- His own attention thus redirected to that quarter, Captain Delano gave a
- slight start. From something in Don Benito's manner just then, it seemed
- as if the visitor had, at least partly, been the subject of the
- withdrawn consultation going on- a conjecture as little agreeable to the
- guest as it was little flattering to the host.
-
- The singular alternations of courtesy and ill-breeding in the Spanish
- captain were unaccountable, except on one of two suppositions- innocent
- lunacy, or wicked imposture.
-
- But the first idea, though it might naturally have occurred to an
- indifferent observer, and, in some respects, had not hitherto been
- wholly a stranger to Captain Delano's mind, yet, now that, in an
- incipient way, he began to regard the stranger's conduct something in
- the light of an intentional affront, of course the idea of lunacy was
- virtually vacated. But if not a lunatic, what then? Under the
- circumstances, would a gentleman, nay, any honest boor, act the part now
- acted by his host? The man was an impostor. Some lowborn adventurer,
- masquerading as an oceanic grandee; yet so ignorant of the first
- requisites of mere gentlemanhood as to be betrayed into the present
- remarkable indecorum. That strange ceremoniousness, too, at other times
- evinced, seemed not uncharacteristic of one playing a part above his
- real level. Benito Cereno- Don Benito Cereno- a sounding name. One, too,
- at that period, not unknown, in the surname, to supercargoes and sea
- captains trading along the Spanish Main, as belonging to one of the most
- enterprising and extensive mercantile families in all those provinces;
- several members of it having titles; a sort of Castilian Rothschild,
- with a noble brother, or cousin, in every great trading town of South
- America. The alleged Don Benito was in early manhood, about twenty-nine
- or thirty. To assume a sort of roving cadetship in the maritime affairs
- of such a house, what more likely scheme for a young knave of talent and
- spirit? But the Spaniard was a pale invalid. Never mind. For even to the
- degree of simulating mortal disease, the craft of some tricksters had
- been known to attain. To think that, under the aspect of infantile
- weakness, the most savage energies might be couched- those velvets of
- the Spaniard but the velvet paw to his fangs.
-
- From no train of thought did these fancies come; not from within, but
- from without; suddenly, too, and in one throng, like hoar frost; yet as
- soon to vanish as the mild sun of Captain Delano's good-nature regained
- its meridian.
-
- Glancing over once again toward Don Benito- whose side-face, revealed
- above the skylight, was now turned toward him- Captain Delano was struck
- by the profile, whose clearness of cut was refined by the thinness
- incident to ill-health, as well as ennobled about the chin by the beard.
- Away with suspicion. He was a true off-shoot of a true hidalgo Cereno.
-
- Relieved by these and other better thoughts, the visitor, lightly
- humming a tune, now began indifferently pacing the poop, so as not to
- betray to Don Benito that be had at all mistrusted incivility, much less
- duplicity; for such mistrust would yet be proved illusory, and by the
- event; though, for the present, the circumstance which had provoked that
- distrust remained unexplained. But when that little mystery should have
- been cleared up, Captain Delano thought he might extremely regret it,
- did he allow Don Benito to become aware that he had indulged in
- ungenerous surmises. In short, to the Spaniard's black-letter text, it
- was best, for a while, to leave open margin.
-
- Presently, his pale face twitching and overcast, the Spaniard, still
- supported by his attendant, moved over toward his guest, when, with even
- more than usual embarrassment, and a strange sort of intriguing
- intonation in his husky whisper, the following conversation began:
-
- "Senor, may I ask how long you have lain at this isle?"
-
- "Oh, but a day or two, Don Benito."
-
- "And from what port are you last?"
-
- "Canton."
-
- "And there, Senor, you exchanged your seal-skins for teas and silks, I
- think you said?"
-
- "Yes. Silks, mostly."
-
- "And the balance you took in specie, perhaps?"
-
- Captain Delano, fidgeting a little, answered-
-
- "Yes; some silver; not a very great deal, though."
-
- "Ah- well. May I ask how many men have you on board, Senor?"
-
- Captain Delano slightly started, but answered:
-
- "About five-and-twenty, all told."
-
- "And at present, Senor, all on board, I suppose?"
-
- "All on board, Don Benito," replied the captain now with satisfaction.
-
- "And will be to-night, Senor?"
-
- At this last question, following so many pertinacious ones, for the soul
- of him Captain Delano could not but look very earnestly at the
- questioner, who, instead of meeting the glance, with every token of
- craven discomposure dropped his eyes to the deck; presenting an unworthy
- contrast to his servant, who, just then, was kneeling at his feet
- adjusting a loose shoe-buckle; his disengaged face meantime, with humble
- curiosity, turned openly up into his master's downcast one.
-
- The Spaniard, still with a guilty shuffle, repeated his question:
-
- "And- and will be to-night, Senor?"
-
- "Yes, for aught I know," returned Captain Delano,- "but nay," rallying
- himself into fearless truth, "some of them talked of going off on
- another fishing party about midnight."
-
- "Your ships generally go- go more or less armed, I believe, Senor?"
-
- "Oh, a six-pounder or two, in case of emergency," was the intrepidly
- indifferent reply, "with a small stock of muskets, sealing-spears, and
- cutlasses, you know."
-
- As he thus responded, Captain Delano again glanced at Don Benito, but
- the latter's eyes were averted; while abruptly and awkwardly shifting
- the subject, he made some peevish allusion to the calm, and then,
- without apology, once more, with his attendant, withdrew to the opposite
- bulwarks, where the whispering was resumed.
-
- At this moment, and ere Captain Delano could cast a cool thought upon
- what had just passed, the young Spanish sailor before mentioned was seen
- descending from the rigging. In act of stooping over to spring inboard
- to the deck, his voluminous, unconfined frock, or shirt, of coarse
- woollen, much spotted with tar, opened out far down the chest, revealing
- a soiled under-garment of what seemed the finest linen, edged, about the
- neck, with a narrow blue ribbon, sadly faded and worn. At this moment
- the young sailor's eye was again fixed on the whisperers, and Captain
- Delano thought he observed a lurking significance in it, as if silent
- signs of some freemason sort had that instant been interchanged.
-
- This once more impelled his own glance in the direction of Don Benito,
- and, as before, he could not but infer that himself formed the subject
- of the conference. He paused. The sound of the hatchet-polishing fell on
- his ears. He cast another swift side-look at the two. They had the air
- of conspirators. In connection with the late questionings, and the
- incident of the young sailor, these things now begat such return of
- involuntary suspicion, that the singular guilelessness of the American
- could not endure it. Plucking up a gay and humorous expression, he
- crossed over to the two rapidly, saying: "Ha, Don Benito, your black
- here seems high in your trust; a sort of privy-counsellor, in fact."
-
- Upon this, the servant looked up with a good-natured grin, but the
- master started as from a venomous bite. It was a moment or two before
- the Spaniard sufficiently recovered himself to reply; which he did, at
- last, with cold constraint: "Yes, Senor, I have trust in Babo."
-
- Here Babo, changing his previous grin of mere animal humour into an
- intelligent smile, not ungratefully eyed his master.
-
- Finding that the Spaniard now stood silent and reserved, as if
- involuntarily, or purposely giving hint that his guest's proximity was
- inconvenient just then, Captain Delano, unwilling to appear uncivil even
- to incivility itself, made some trivial remark and moved off; again and
- again turning over in his mind the mysterious demeanour of Don Benito
- Cereno.
-
- He had descended from the poop, and, wrapped in thought, was passing
- near a dark hatchway, leading down into the steerage, when, perceiving
- motion there, he looked to see what moved. The same instant there was a
- sparkle in the shadowy hatchway, and he saw one of the Spanish sailors,
- prowling there, hurriedly placing his hand in the bosom of his frock, as
- if hiding something. Before the man could have been certain who it was
- that was passing, he slunk below out of sight. But enough was seen of
- him to make it sure that he was the same young sailor before noticed in
- the rigging.
-
- What was that which so sparkled? thought Captain Delano. It was no lamp-
- no match- no live coal. Could it have been a jewel? But how come sailors
- with jewels?- or with silk-trimmed undershirts either? Has he been
- robbing the trunks of the dead cabin passengers? But if so, he would
- hardly wear one of the stolen articles on board ship here. Ah, ah- if
- now that was, indeed, a secret sign I saw passing between this
- suspicious fellow and his captain awhile since; if I could only be
- certain that in my uneasiness my senses did not deceive me, then-
-
- Here, passing from one suspicious thing to another, his mind revolved
- the point of the strange questions put to him concerning his ship.
-
- By a curious coincidence, as each point was recalled, the black wizards
- of Ashantee would strike up with their hatchets, as in ominous comment
- on the white stranger's thoughts. Pressed by such enigmas and portents,
- it would have been almost against nature, had not, even into the least
- distrustful heart, some ugly misgivings obtruded.
-
- Observing the ship now helplessly fallen into a current, with enchanted
- sails, drifting with increased rapidity seaward; and noting that, from a
- lately intercepted projection of the land, the sealer was hidden, the
- stout mariner began to quake at thoughts which he barely durst confess
- to himself. Above all, he began to feel a ghostly dread of Don Benito.
- And yet when he roused himself, dilated his chest, felt himself strong
- on his legs, and coolly considered it- what did all these phantoms
- amount to?
-
- Had the Spaniard any sinister scheme, it must have reference not so much
- to him (Captain Delano) as to his ship (the Bachelor's Delight). Hence
- the present drifting away of the one ship from the other, instead of
- favouring any such possible scheme, was, for the time at least, opposed
- to it. Clearly any suspicion, combining such contradictions, must need
- be delusive. Beside, was it not absurd to think of a vessel in distress-
- a vessel by sickness almost dismanned of her crew- a vessel whose
- inmates were parched for water- was it not a thousand times absurd that
- such a craft should, at present, be of a piratical character; or her
- commander, either for himself or those under him, cherish any desire but
- for speedy relief and refreshment? But then, might not general distress,
- and thirst in particular, be affected? And might not that same
- undiminished Spanish crew, alleged to have perished off to a remnant, be
- at that very moment lurking in the hold? On heart-broken pretence of
- entreating a cup of cold water, fiends in human form had got into lonely
- dwellings, nor retired until a dark deed had been done. And among the
- Malay pirates, it was no unusual thing to lure ships after them into
- their treacherous harbours, or entice boarders from a declared enemy at
- sea, by the spectacle of thinly manned or vacant decks, beneath which
- prowled a hundred spears with yellow arms ready to upthrust them through
- the mats. Not that Captain Delano had entirely credited such things. He
- had heard of them- and now, as stories, they recurred. The present
- destination of the ship was the anchorage. There she would be near his
- own vessel. Upon gaining that vicinity, might not the San Dominick, like
- a slumbering volcano, suddenly let loose energies now hid?
-
- He recalled the Spaniard's manner while telling his story. There was a
- gloomy hesitancy and subterfuge about it. It was just the manner of one
- making up his tale for evil purposes, as he goes. But if that story was
- not true, what was the truth? That the ship had unlawfully come into the
- Spaniard's possession? But in many of its details, especially in
- reference to the more calamitous parts, such as the fatalities among the
- seamen, the consequent prolonged beating about, the past sufferings from
- obstinate calms, and still continued suffering from thirst; in all these
- points, as well as others, Don Benito's story had been corroborated not
- only by the wailing ejaculations of the indiscriminate multitude, white
- and black, but likewise- what seemed impossible to be counterfeit- by
- the very expression and play of every human feature, which Captain
- Delano saw. If Don Benito's story was throughout an invention, then
- every soul on board, down to the youngest Negress, was his carefully
- drilled recruit in the plot: an incredible inference. And yet, if there
- was ground for mistrusting the Spanish captain's veracity, that
- inference was a legitimate one.
-
- In short, scarce an uneasiness entered the honest sailor's mind but, by
- a subsequent spontaneous act of good sense, it was ejected. At last he
- began to laugh at these forebodings; and laugh at the strange ship for,
- in its aspect someway siding with them, as it were; and laugh, too, at
- the odd-looking blacks, particularly those old scissors-grinders, the
- Ashantees; and those bed-ridden old knitting-women, the oakum-pickers;
- and, in a human way, he almost began to laugh at the dark Spaniard
- himself, the central hobgoblin of all.
-
- For the rest, whatever in a serious way seemed enigmatical, was now
- good-naturedly explained away by the thought that, for the most part,
- the poor invalid scarcely knew what he was about; either sulking in
- black vapours, or putting random questions without sense or object.
- Evidently, for the present, the man was not fit to be entrusted with the
- ship. On some benevolent plea withdrawing the command from him, Captain
- Delano would yet have to send her to Concepcion in charge of his second
- mate, a worthy person and good navigator- a plan which would prove no
- wiser for the San Dominick than for Don Benito; for- relieved from all
- anxiety, keeping wholly to his cabin- the sick man, under the good
- nursing of his servant, would probably, by the end of the passage, be in
- a measure restored to health and with that he should also be restored to
- authority.
-
- Such were the American's thoughts. They were tranquillizing. There was a
- difference between the idea of Don Benito's darkly preordaining Captain
- Delano's fate, and Captain Delano's lightly arranging Don Benito's.
- Nevertheless, it was not without something of relief that the good
- seaman presently perceived his whale-boat in the distance. Its absence
- had been prolonged by unexpected detention at the sealer's side, as well
- as its returning trip lengthened by the continual recession of the goal.
-
- The advancing speck was observed by the blacks. Their shouts attracted
- the attention of Don Benito, who, with a return of courtesy, approaching
- Captain Delano, expressed satisfaction at the coming of some supplies,
- slight and temporary as they must necessarily prove.
-
- Captain Delano responded; but while doing so, his attention was drawn to
- something passing on the deck below: among the crowd climbing the
- landward bulwarks, anxiously watching the coming boat, two blacks, to
- all appearances accidentally incommoded by one of the sailors, flew out
- against him with horrible curses, which the sailor someway resenting,
- the two blacks dashed him to the deck and jumped upon him, despite the
- earnest cries of the oakum-pickers.
-
- "Don Benito," said Captain Delano quickly, "do you see what is going on
- there? Look!"
-
- But, seized by his cough, the Spaniard staggered, with both hands to his
- face, on the point of falling. Captain Delano would have supported him,
- but the servant was more alert, who, with one hand sustaining his
- master, with the other applied the cordial. Don Benito, restored, the
- black withdrew his support, slipping aside a little, but dutifully
- remaining within call of a whisper. Such discretion was here evinced as
- quite wiped away, in the visitor's eyes, any blemish of impropriety
- which might have attached to the attendant, from the indecorous
- conferences before mentioned; showing, too, that if the servant were to
- blame, it might be more the master's fault than his own, since when left
- to himself he could conduct thus well.
-
- His glance thus called away from the spectacle of disorder to the more
- pleasing one before him, Captain Delano could not avoid again
- congratulating Don Benito upon possessing such a servant, who, though
- perhaps a little too forward now and then, must upon the whole be
- invaluable to one in the invalid's situation.
-
- "Tell me, Don Benito," he added, with a smile- "I should like to have
- your man here myself- what will you take for him? Would fifty doubloons
- be any object?"
-
- "Master wouldn't part with Babo for a thousand doubloons," murmured the
- black, overhearing the offer, and taking it in earnest, and, with the
- strange vanity of a faithful slave appreciated by his master, scorning
- to hear so paltry a valuation put upon him by a stranger. But Don
- Benito, apparently hardly yet completely restored, and again interrupted
- by his cough, made but some broken reply.
-
- Soon his physical distress became so great, affecting his mind, tool
- apparently, that, as if to screen the sad spectacle, the servant gently
- conducted his master below.
-
- Left to himself, the American, to while away the time till his boat
- should arrive, would have pleasantly accosted some one of the few
- Spanish seamen he saw; but recalling something that Don Benito had said
- touching their ill conduct, he refrained, as a shipmaster indisposed to
- countenance cowardice or unfaithfulness in seamen.
-
- While, with these thoughts, standing with eye directed forward toward
- that handful of sailors- suddenly he thought that some of them returned
- the glance and with a sort of meaning. He rubbed his eyes, and looked
- again; but again seemed to see the same thing. Under a new form, but
- more obscure than any previous one, the old suspicions recurred, but, in
- the absence of Don Benito, with less of panic than before. Despite the
- bad account given of the sailors, Captain Delano resolved forthwith to
- accost one of them. Descending the poop, he made his way through the
- blacks, his movement drawing a queer cry from the oakum-pickers,
- prompted by whom the Negroes, twitching each other aside, divided before
- him; but, as if curious to see what was the object of this deliberate
- visit to their Ghetto, closing in behind, in tolerable order, followed
- the white stranger up. His progress thus proclaimed as by mounted
- kings-at-arms, and escorted as by a Caffre guard of honour, Captain
- Delano, assuming a good-humoured, off-hand air, continued to advance;
- now and then saying a blithe word to the Negroes, and his eye curiously
- surveying the white faces, here and there sparsely mixed in with the
- blacks, like stray white pawns venturously involved in the ranks of the
- chessmen opposed.
-
- While thinking which of them to select for his purpose, he chanced to
- observe a sailor seated on the deck engaged in tarring the strap of a
- large block, with a circle of blacks squatted round him inquisitively
- eyeing the process.
-
- The mean employment of the man was in contrast with something superior
- in his figure. His hand, black with continually thrusting it into the
- tar-pot held for him by a Negro, seemed not naturally allied to his
- face, a face which would have been a very fine one but for its
- haggardness. Whether this haggardness had aught to do with criminality
- could not be determined; since, as intense heat and cold, though unlike,
- produce like sensations, so innocence and guilt, when, through casual
- association with mental pain, stamping any visible impress, use one
- seal- a hacked one.
-
- Not again that this reflection occurred to Captain Delano at the time,
- charitable man as he was. Rather another idea. Because observing so
- singular a haggardness to be combined with a dark eye, averted as in
- trouble and shame, and then, however illogically, uniting in his mind
- his own private suspicions of the crew with the confessed ill-opinion on
- the part of their captain, he was insensibly operated upon by certain
- general notions, which, while disconnecting pain and abashment from
- virtue, as invariably link them with vice.
-
- If, indeed, there be any wickedness on board this ship, thought Captain
- Delano, be sure that man there has fouled his hand in it, even as now he
- fouls it in the pitch. I don't like to accost him. I will speak to this
- other, this old Jack here on the windlass.
-
- He advanced to an old Barcelona tar, in ragged red breeches and dirty
- night-cap, cheeks trenched and bronzed, whiskers dense as thorn hedges.
- Seated between two sleepy-looking Africans, this mariner, like his
- younger shipmate, was employed upon some rigging- splicing a cable- the
- sleepy-looking blacks performing the inferior function of holding the
- outer parts of the ropes for him.
-
- Upon Captain Delano's approach, the man at once hung his head below its
- previous level; the one necessary for business. It appeared as if he
- desired to be thought absorbed, with more than common fidelity, in his
- task. Being addressed, he glanced up, but with what seemed a furtive,
- diffident air, which sat strangely enough on his weather-beaten visage,
- much as if a grizzly bear, instead of growling and biting, should simper
- and cast sheep's eyes. He was asked several questions concerning the
- voyage- questions purposely referring to several particulars in Don
- Benito's narrative- not previously corroborated by those impulsive cries
- greeting the visitor on first coming on board. The questions were
- briefly answered, confirming all that remained to be confirmed of the
- story. The Negroes about the windlass joined in with the old sailor,
- but, as they became talkative, he by degrees became mute, and at length
- quite glum, seemed morosely unwilling to answer more questions, and yet,
- all the while, this ursine air was somehow mixed with his sheepish one.
-
- Despairing of getting into unembarrassed talk with such a centaur,
- Captain Delano, after glancing round for a more promising countenance,
- but seeing none, spoke pleasantly to the blacks to make way for him; and
- so, amid various grins and grimaces, returned to the poop, feeling a
- little strange at first, he could hardly tell why, but upon the whole
- with regained confidence in Benito Cereno.
-
- How plainly, thought he, did that old whiskerando yonder betray a
- consciousness of ill-desert. No doubt, when he saw me coming, he dreaded
- lest I, apprised by his captain of the crew's general misbehaviour, came
- with sharp words for him, and so down with his head. And yet- and yet,
- now that I think of it, that very old fellow, if I err not, was one of
- those who seemed so earnestly eyeing me here awhile since. Ah, these
- currents spin one's head round almost as much as they do the ship. Ha,
- there now's a pleasant sort of sunny sight; quite sociable, too.
-
- His attention had been drawn to a slumbering Negress, partly disclosed
- through the lace-work of some rigging, lying, with youthful limbs
- carelessly disposed, under the lee of the bulwarks, like a doe in the
- shade of a woodland rock. Sprawling at her lapped breasts was her
- wide-awake fawn, stark naked, its black little body half lifted from the
- deck, crosswise with its dam's; its hands, like two paws, clambering
- upon her; its mouth and nose ineffectually rooting to get at the mark;
- and meantime giving a vexatious half-grunt, blending with the composed
- snore of the Negress.
-
- The uncommon vigour of the child at length roused the mother. She
- started up, at distance facing Captain Delano. But, as if not at all
- concerned at the attitude in which she had been caught, delightedly she
- caught the child up, with maternal transports, covering it with kisses.
-
- There's naked nature, now; pure tenderness and love, thought Captain
- Delano, well pleased.
-
- This incident prompted him to remark the other Negresses more
- particularly than before. He was gratified with their manners; like most
- uncivilized women, they seemed at once tender of heart and tough of
- constitution; equally ready to die for their infants or fight for them.
- Unsophisticated as leopardesses; loving as doves. Ah! thought Captain
- Delano, these perhaps are some of the very women whom Mungo Park saw in
- Africa, and gave such a noble account of.
-
- These natural sights somehow insensibly deepened his confidence and
- ease. At last he looked to see how his boat was getting on; but it was
- still pretty remote. He turned to see if Don Benito had returned; but he
- had not.
-
- To change the scene, as well as to please himself with a leisurely
- observation of the coming boat, stepping over into the mizzen-chains he
- clambered his way into the starboard quarter-galley; one of those
- abandoned Venetian-looking water-balconies previously mentioned;
- retreats cut off from the deck. As his foot pressed the half-damp,
- half-dry sea-mosses matting the place, and a chance phantom cat's-paw-
- an islet of breeze, unheralded, unfollowed- as this ghostly cat's-paw
- came fanning his cheek, his glance fell upon the row of small, round
- dead-lights, all closed like coppered eyes of the coffined, and the
- state-cabin door, once connecting with the gallery, even as the
- dead-lights had once looked out upon it, but now caulked fast like a
- sarcophagus lid, to a purple-black, tarred-over panel, threshold, and
- post; and he bethought him of the time, when that state-cabin and this
- state-balcony had heard the voices of the Spanish king's officers, and
- the forms of the Lima viceroy's daughters had perhaps leaned where he
- stood- as these and other images flitted through his mind, as the
- cat's-paw through the calm, gradually he felt rising a dreamy
- inquietude, like that of one who alone on the prairie feels unrest from
- the repose of the noon.
-
- He leaned against the carved balustrade, again looking off toward his
- boat; but found his eye falling upon the ribboned grass, trailing along
- the ship's water-line, straight as a border of green box; and parterres
- of sea-weed, broad ovals and crescents, floating nigh and far, with what
- seemed long formal alleys between, crossing the terraces of swells, and
- sweeping round as if leading to the grottoes below. And overhanging all
- was the balustrade by his arm, which, partly stained with pitch and
- partly embossed with moss, seemed the charred ruin of some summer-house
- in a grand garden long running to waste.
-
- Trying to break one charm, he was but becharmed anew. Though upon the
- wide sea, he seemed in some far inland country; prisoner in some
- deserted chateau, left to stare at empty grounds, and peer out at vague
- roads, where never wagon or wayfarer passed.
-
- But these enchantments were a little disenchanted as his eye fell on the
- corroded main-chains. Of an ancient style, massy and rusty in link,
- shackle and bolt, they seemed even more fit for the ship's present
- business than the one for which probably she had been built.
-
- Presently he thought something moved nigh the chains. He rubbed his
- eyes, and looked hard. Groves of rigging were about the chains; and
- there, peering from behind a great stay, like an Indian from behind a
- hemlock, a Spanish sailor, a marlingspike in his hand, was seen, who
- made what seemed an imperfect gesture toward the balcony- but
- immediately, as if alarmed by some advancing step along the deck within,
- vanished into the recesses of the hempen forest, like a poacher.
-
- What meant this? Something the man had sought to communicate, unbeknown
- to any one, even to his captain? Did the secret involve aught
- unfavourable to his captain? Were those previous misgivings of Captain
- Delano's about to be verified? Or, in his haunted mood at the moment,
- had some random, unintentional motion of the man, while busy with the
- stay, as if repairing it, been mistaken for a significant beckoning?
-
- Not unbewildered, again he gazed off for his boat. But it was
- temporarily hidden by a rocky spur of the isle. As with some eagerness
- he bent forward, watching for the first shooting view of its beak, the
- balustrade gave way before him like charcoal. Had he not clutched an
- outreaching rope he would have fallen into the sea. The crash, though
- feeble, and the fall, though hollow, of the rotten fragments, must have
- been overheard. He glanced up. With sober curiosity peering down upon
- him was one of the old oakum-pickers, slipped from his perch to an
- outside boom; while below the old Negro- and, invisible to him,
- reconnoitring from a port-hole like a fox from the mouth of its den-
- crouched the Spanish sailor again. From something suddenly suggested by
- the man's air, the mad idea now darted into Captain Delano's mind: that
- Don Benito's plea of indisposition, in withdrawing below, was but a
- pretence: that he was engaged there maturing some plot, of which the
- sailor, by some means gaining an inkling, had a mind to warn the
- stranger against; incited, it may be, by gratitude for a kind word on
- first boarding the ship. Was it from foreseeing some possible
- interference like this, that Don Benito had, beforehand, given such a
- bad character of his sailors, while praising the Negroes; though,
- indeed, the former seemed as docile as the latter the contrary? The
- whites, too, by nature, were the shrewder race. A man with some evil
- design, would not he be likely to speak well of that stupidity which was
- blind to his depravity, and malign that intelligence from which it might
- not be hidden? Not unlikely, perhaps. But if the whites had dark secrets
- concerning Don Benito, could then Don Benito be any way in complicity
- with the blacks? But they were too stupid. Besides, who ever heard of a
- white so far a renegade as to apostatize from his very species almost,
- by leaguing in against it with Negroes? These difficulties recalled
- former ones. Lost in their mazes, Captain Delano, who had now regained
- the deck, was uneasily advancing along it, when he observed a new face:
- an aged sailor seated cross-legged near the main hatchway. His skin was
- shrunk up with wrinkles like a pelican's empty pouch; his hair frosted;
- his countenance grave and composed. His hands were full of ropes, which
- he was working into a large knot. Some blacks were about him obligingly
- dipping the strands for him, here and there, as the exigencies of the
- operation demanded.
-
- Captain Delano crossed over to him, and stood in silence surveying the
- knot; his mind, by a not uncongenial transition, passing from its own
- entanglements to those of the hemp. For intricacy such a knot he had
- never seen in an American ship, or indeed any other. The old man looked
- like an Egyptian priest, making Gordian knots for the temple of Ammon.
- The knot seemed a combination of double-bowline-knot, treble-crown-knot,
- back-handed-well-knot, knot-in-and-out-knot, and jamming-knot.
-
- At last, puzzled to comprehend the meaning of such a knot, Captain
- Delano, addressed the knotter:-
-
- "What are you knotting there, my man?"
-
- "The knot," was the brief reply, without looking up.
-
- "So it seems; but what is it for?"
-
- "For some one else to undo," muttered back the old man, plying his
- fingers harder than ever, the knot being now nearly completed.
-
- While Captain Delano stood watching him, suddenly the old man threw the
- knot toward him, and said in broken English,- the first heard in the
- ship,- something to this effect- "Undo it, cut it, quick." It was said
- lowly, but with such condensation of rapidity, that the long, slow words
- in Spanish, which had preceded and followed, almost operated as covers
- to the brief English between.
-
- For a moment, knot in hand, and knot in head, Captain Delano stood mute;
- while, without further heeding him, the old man was now intent upon
- other ropes. Presently there was a slight stir behind Captain Delano.
- Turning, he saw the chained Negro, Atufal, standing quietly there. The
- next moment the old sailor rose, muttering, and, followed by his
- subordinate Negroes, removed to the forward part of the ship, where in
- the crowd he disappeared.
-
- An elderly Negro, in a clout like an infant's, and with a pepper and
- salt head, and a kind of attorney air, now approached Captain Delano. In
- tolerable Spanish, and with a good-natured, knowing wink, he informed
- him that the old knotter was simple-witted, but harmless; often playing
- his old tricks. The Negro concluded by begging the knot, for of course
- the stranger would not care to be troubled with it. Unconsciously, it
- was handed to him. With a sort of conge, the Negro received it, and
- turning his back ferreted into it like a detective Custom House officer
- after smuggled laces. Soon, with some African word, equivalent to pshaw,
- he tossed the knot overboard.
-
- All this is very queer now, thought Captain Delano, with a qualmish sort
- of emotion; but as one feeling incipient seasickness, he strove, by
- ignoring the symptoms, to get rid of the malady. Once more he looked off
- for his boat. To his delight, it was now again in view, leaving the
- rocky spur astern.
-
- The sensation here experienced, after at first relieving his uneasiness,
- with unforeseen efficiency, soon began to remove it. The less distant
- sight of that well-known boat- showing it, not as before, half blended
- with the haze, but with outline defined, so that its individuality, like
- a man's, was manifest; that boat, Rover by name, which, though now in
- strange seas, had often pressed the beach of Captain Delano's home, and,
- brought to its threshold for repairs, had familiarly lain there, as a
- Newfoundland dog; the sight of that household boat evoked a thousand
- trustful associations, which, contrasted with previous suspicions,
- filled Him not only with lightsome confidence, but somehow with half
- humorous self-reproaches at his former lack of it.
-
- "What, I, Amasa Delano- Jack of the Beach, as they called me when a lad-
- I, Amasa; the same that, duck-satchel in hand, used to paddle along the
- waterside to the schoolhouse made from the old hulk;- I, little Jack of
- the Beach, that used to go berrying with cousin Nat and the rest; I to
- be murdered here at the ends of the earth, on board a haunted
- pirate-ship by a horrible Spaniard?- Too nonsensical to think of! Who
- would murder Amasa Delano? His conscience is clean. There is some one
- above. Fie, fie, Jack of the Beach! you are a child indeed; a child of
- the second childhood, old boy; you are beginning to dote and drool, I'm
- afraid."
-
- Light of heart and foot, he stepped aft, and there was met by Don
- Benito's servant, who, with a pleasing expression, responsive to his own
- present feelings, informed him that his master had recovered from the
- effects of his coughing fit, and had just ordered him to go present his
- compliments to his good guest, Don Amasa, and say that he (Don Benito)
- would soon have the happiness to rejoin him.
-
- There now, do you mark that? again thought Captain Delano, walking the
- poop. What a donkey I was. This kind gentleman who here sends me his
- kind compliments, he, but ten minutes ago, dark-lantern in hand, was
- dodging round some old grind-stone in the hold, sharpening a hatchet for
- me, I thought. Well, well; these long calms have a morbid effect on the
- mind, I've often heard, though I never believed it before. Ha! glancing
- toward the boat; there's Rover; a good dog; a white bone in her mouth. A
- pretty big bone though, seems to me.- What? Yes, she has fallen afoul of
- the bubbling tide-rip there. It sets her the other way, too, for the
- time. Patience.
-
- It was now about noon, though, from the greyness of everything, it
- seemed to be getting toward dusk.
-
- The calm was confirmed. In the far distance, away from the influence of
- land, the leaden ocean seemed laid out and leaded up, its course
- finished, soul gone, defunct. But the current from landward, where the
- ship was, increased; silently sweeping her further and further toward
- the tranced waters beyond.
-
- Still, from his knowledge of those latitudes, cherishing hopes of a
- breeze, and a fair and fresh one, at any moment, Captain Delano, despite
- present prospects, buoyantly counted upon bringing the San Dominick
- safely to anchor ere night. The distance swept over was nothing; since,
- with a good wind, ten minutes' sailing would retrace more than sixty
- minutes' drifting. Meantime, one moment turning to mark Rover fighting
- the tide-rip, and the next to see Don Benito approaching, he continued
- walking the poop.
-
- Gradually he felt a vexation arising from the delay of his boat; this
- soon merged into uneasiness; and at last, his eye falling continually,
- as from a stage-box into the pit, upon the strange crowd before and
- below him, and by-and-by recognizing there the face- now composed to
- indifference- of the Spanish sailor who had seemed to beckon from the
- main-chains, something of his old trepidations returned.
-
- Ah, thought he- gravely enough- this is like the ague: because it went
- off, it follows not that it won't come back.
-
- Though ashamed of the relapse, he could not altogether subdue it; and
- so, exerting his good nature to the utmost, insensibly he came to a
- compromise.
-
- Yes, this is a strange craft; a strange history, too, and strange folks
- on board. But- nothing more.
-
- By way of keeping his mind out of mischief till the boat should arrive,
- he tried to occupy it with turning over and over, in a purely
- speculative sort of way, some lesser peculiarities of the captain and
- crew. Among others, four curious points recurred.
-
- First, the affair of the Spanish lad assailed with a knife by the slave
- boy; an act winked at by Don Benito. Second, the tyranny in Don Benito's
- treatment of Atufal, the black; as if a child should lead a bull of the
- Nile by the ring in his nose. Third, the trampling of the sailor by the
- two Negroes; a piece of insolence passed over without so much as a
- reprimand. Fourth, the cringing submission to their master of all the
- ship's underlings, mostly blacks; as if by the least inadvertence they
- feared to draw down his despotic displeasure.
-
- Coupling these points, they seemed somewhat contradictory. But what
- then, thought Captain Delano, glancing toward his now nearing boat,-
- what then? Why, this Don Benito is a very capricious commander. But he
- is not the first of the sort I have seen; though it's true he rather
- exceeds any other. But as a nation- continued he in his reveries- these
- Spaniards are all an odd set; the very word Spaniard has a curious,
- conspirator, Guy-Fawkish twang to it. And yet, I dare say, Spaniards in
- the main are as good folks as any in Duxbury, Massachusetts. Ah, good!
- At last Rover has come.
-
- As, with its welcome freight, the boat touched the side, the
- oakum-pickers, with venerable gestures, sought to restrain the blacks,
- who, at the sight of three gurried water-casks in its bottom, and a pile
- of wilted pumpkins in its bow, hung over the bulwarks in disorderly
- raptures.
-
- Don Benito with his servant now appeared; his coming, perhaps, hastened
- by hearing the noise. Of him Captain Delano sought permission to serve
- out the water, so that all might share alike, and none injure themselves
- by unfair excess. But sensible, and, on Don Benito's account, kind as
- this offer was, it was received with what seemed impatience; as if aware
- that he lacked energy as a commander, Don Benito, with the true jealousy
- of weakness, resented as an affront any interference. So, at least,
- Captain Delano inferred.
-
- In another moment the casks were being hoisted in, when some of the
- eager Negroes accidentally jostled Captain Delano, where he stood by the
- gangway; so that, unmindful of Don Benito, yielding to the impulse of
- the moment, with good-natured authority he bade the blacks stand back;
- to enforce his words making use of a half-mirthful, half-menacing
- gesture. Instantly the blacks paused, just where they were, each Negro
- and Negress suspended in his or her posture, exactly as the word had
- found them- for a few seconds continuing so- while, as between the
- responsive posts of a telegraph, an unknown syllable ran from man to man
- among the perched oakum-pickers. While Captain Delano's attention was
- fixed by this scene, suddenly the hatchet-polishers half rose, and a
- rapid cry came from Don Benito.
-
- Thinking that at the signal of the Spaniard he was about to be
- massacred, Captain Delano would have sprung for his boat, but paused, as
- the oakum-pickers, dropping down into the crowd with earnest
- exclamations, forced every white and every Negro back, at the same
- moment, with gestures friendly and familiar, almost jocose, bidding him,
- in substance, not be a fool. Simultaneously the hatchet-polishers
- resumed their seats, quietly as so many tailors, and at once, as if
- nothing had happened, the work of hoisting in the casks was resumed,
- whites and blacks singing at the tackle.
-
- Captain Delano glanced toward Don Benito. As he saw his meagre form in
- the act of recovering itself from reclining in the servant's arms, into
- which the agitated invalid had fallen, he could not but marvel at the
- panic by which himself had been surprised on the darting supposition
- that such a commander, who upon a legitimate occasion, so trivial, too,
- as it now appeared, could lose all self-command, was, with energetic
- iniquity, going to bring about his murder.
-
- The casks being on deck, Captain Delano was handed a number of jars and
- cups by one of the steward's aides, who, in the name of Don Benito,
- entreated him to do as he had proposed: dole out the water. He complied,
- with republican impartiality as to this republican element, which always
- seeks one level, serving the oldest white no better than the youngest
- black; excepting, indeed, poor Don Benito, whose condition, if not rank,
- demanded an extra allowance. To him, in the first place, Captain Delano
- presented a fair pitcher of the fluid; but, thirsting as he was for
- fresh water, Don Benito quaffed not a drop until after several grave
- bows and salutes: a reciprocation of courtesies which the sight-loving
- Africans hailed with clapping of hands.
-
- Two of the less wilted pumpkins being reserved for the cabin table, the
- residue were minced up on the spot for the general regalement. But the
- soft bread, sugar, and bottled cider, Captain Delano would have given
- the Spaniards alone, and in chief Don Benito; but the latter objected;
- which disinterestedness, on his part, not a little pleased the American;
- and so mouthfuls all around were given alike to whites and blacks;
- excepting one bottle of cider, which Babo insisted upon setting aside
- for his master.
-
- Here it may be observed that as, on the first visit of the boat, the
- American had not permitted his men to board the ship, neither did he
- now; being unwilling to add to the confusion of the decks.
-
- Not uninfluenced by the peculiar good humour at present prevailing, and
- for the time oblivious of any but benevolent thoughts, Captain Delano,
- who from recent indications counted upon a breeze within an hour or two
- at furthest, despatched the boat back to the sealer with orders for all
- the hands that could be spared immediately to set about rafting casks to
- the watering-place and filling them. Likewise he bade word be carried to
- his chief officer, that if against present expectation the ship was not
- brought to anchor by sunset, he need be under no concern, for as there
- was to be a full moon that night, he (Captain Delano) would remain on
- board ready to play the pilot, should the wind come soon or late.
-
- As the two captains stood together, observing the departing boat- the
- servant as it happened having just spied a spot on his master's velvet
- sleeve, and silently engaged rubbing it out- the American expressed his
- regrets that the San Dominick had no boats; none, at least, but the
- unseaworthy old hulk of the long-boat, which, warped as a camel's
- skeleton in the desert, and almost as bleached, lay pot-wise inverted
- amidships, one side a little tipped, furnishing a subterraneous sort of
- den for family groups of the blacks, mostly women and small children;
- who, squatting on old mats below, or perched above in the dark dome, on
- the elevated seats, were descried, some distance within, like a social
- circle of bats, sheltering in some friendly cave; at intervals, ebon
- flights of naked boys and girls, three or four years old, darting in and
- out of the den's mouth.
-
- "Had you three or four boats now, Don Benito," said Captain Delano, "I
- think that, by tugging at the oars, your Negroes here might help along
- matters some.- Did you sail from port without boats, Don Benito?"
-
- "They were stove in the gales, Senor."
-
- "That was bad. Many men, too, you lost then. Boats and men.- Those must
- have been hard gales, Don Benito."
-
- "Past all speech," cringed the Spaniard.
-
- "Tell me, Don Benito," continued his companion with increased interest,
- "tell me, were these gales immediately off the pitch of Cape Horn?"
-
- "Cape Horn?- who spoke of Cape Horn?"
-
- "Yourself did, when giving me an account of your voyage," answered
- Captain Delano with almost equal astonishment at this eating of his own
- words, even as he ever seemed eating his own heart, on the part of the
- Spaniard. "You yourself, Don Benito, spoke of Cape Horn," he
- emphatically repeated.
-
- The Spaniard turned, in a sort of stooping posture, pausing an instant,
- as one about to make a plunging exchange of elements, as from air to
- water.
-
- At this moment a messenger-boy, a white, hurried by, in the regular
- performance of his function carrying the last expired half-hour forward
- to the forecastle, from the cabin time-piece, to have it struck at the
- ship's large bell.
-
- "Master," said the servant, discontinuing his work on the coat sleeve,
- and addressing the rapt Spaniard with a sort of timid apprehensiveness,
- as one charged with a duty, the discharge of which, it was foreseen,
- would prove irksome to the very person who had imposed it, and for whose
- benefit it was intended, "master told me never mind where he was, or how
- engaged, always to remind him, to a minute, when shaving-time comes.
- Miguel has gone to strike the half-hour after noon. It is now, master.
- Will master go into the cuddy?"
-
- "Ah- yes," answered the Spaniard, starting, somewhat as from dreams into
- realities; then turning upon Captain Delano, he said that ere long he
- would resume the conversation.
-
- "Then if master means to talk more to Don Amasa," said the servant, "why
- not let Don Amasa sit by master in the cuddy, and master can talk, and
- Don Amasa can listen, while Babo here lathers and strops."
-
- "Yes," said Captain Delano, not unpleased with this sociable plan, "yes,
- Don Benito, unless you had rather not, I will go with you."
-
- "Be it so, Senor."
-
- As the three passed aft, the American could not but think it another
- strange instance of his host's capriciousness, this being shaved with
- such uncommon punctuality in the middle of the day. But he deemed it
- more than likely that the servant's anxious fidelity had something to do
- with the matter; inasmuch as the timely interruption served to rally his
- master from the mood which had evidently been coming upon him.
-
- The place called the cuddy was a light deck-cabin formed by the poop, a
- sort of attic to the large cabin below. Part of it had formerly been the
- quarters of the officers; but since their death all the partitionings
- had been thrown down, and the whole interior converted into one spacious
- and airy marine hall; for absence of fine furniture and picturesque
- disarray, of odd appurtenances, somewhat answering to the wide,
- cluttered hall of some eccentric bachelor squire in the country, who
- hangs his shooting-jacket and tobacco-pouch on deer antlers, and keeps
- his fishing-rod, tongs, and walking-stick in the same corner.
-
- The similitude was heightened, if not originally suggested, by glimpses
- of the surrounding sea; since, in one aspect, the country and the ocean
- seem cousins-german.
-
- The floor of the cuddy was matted. Overhead, four or five old muskets
- were stuck into horizontal holes along the beams. On one side was a
- claw-footed old table lashed to the deck; a thumbed missal on it, and
- over it a small, meagre crucifix attached to the bulkhead. Under the
- table lay a dented cutlass or two, with a hacked harpoon, among some
- melancholy old rigging, like a heap of poor friar's girdles. There were
- also two long, sharp-ribbed settees of malacca cane, black with age, and
- uncomfortable to look at as inquisitors' racks, with a large, misshapen
- arm-chair, which, furnished with a rude barber's crutch at the back,
- working with a screw, seemed some grotesque Middle Age engine of
- torment. A flag locker was in one corner, exposing various coloured
- bunting, some rolled up, others half unrolled, still others tumbled.
- Opposite was a cumbrous washstand, of black mahogany, all of one block,
- with a pedestal, like a font, and over it a railed shelf, containing
- combs, brushes, and other implements of the toilet. A tom hammock of
- stained grass swung near; the sheets tossed, and the pillow wrinkled up
- like a brow, as if whoever slept here slept but illy, with alternate
- visitations of sad thoughts and bad dreams.
-
- The further extremity of the cuddy, overhanging the ship's stern, was
- pierced with three openings, windows or port-holes, according as men or
- cannon might peer, socially or unsocially, out of them. At present
- neither men nor cannon were seen, though huge ring-bolts and other rusty
- iron fixtures of the wood-work hinted of twenty-four-pounders.
-
- Glancing toward the hammock as he entered, Captain Delano said, "You
- sleep here, Don Benito?"
-
- "Yes, Senor, since we got into mild weather."
-
- "This seems a sort of dormitory, sitting-room, sail-loft, chapel,
- armoury, and private closet together, Don Benito," added Captain Delano,
- looking around.
-
- "Yes, Senor; events have not been favourable to much order in my
- arrangements."
-
- Here the servant, napkin on arm, made a motion as if waiting his
- master's good pleasure. Don Benito signified his readiness, when,
- seating him in the malacca arm-chair, and for the guest's convenience
- drawing opposite it one of the settees, the servant commenced operations
- by throwing back his master's collar and loosening his cravat.
-
- There is something in the Negro which, in a peculiar way, fits him for
- avocations about one's person. Most Negroes are natural valets and
- hair-dressers; taking to the comb and brush congenially as to the
- castanets, and flourishing them apparently with almost equal
- satisfaction. There is, too, a smooth tact about them in this
- employment, with a marvellous, noiseless, gliding briskness, not
- ungraceful in its way, singularly pleasing to behold, and still more so
- to be the manipulated subject of. And above all is the great gift of
- good humour. Not the mere grin or laugh is here meant. Those were
- unsuitable. But a certain easy cheerfulness, harmonious in every glance
- and gesture; as though God had set the whole Negro to some pleasant
- tune.
-
- When to all this is added the docility arising from the unaspiring
- contentment of a limited mind, and that susceptibility of blind
- attachment sometimes inhering in indisputable inferiors, one readily
- perceives why those hypochondriacs, Johnson and Byron- it may be
- something like the hypochondriac, Benito Cereno- took to their hearts,
- almost to the exclusion of the entire white race, their serving men, the
- Negroes, Barber and Fletcher. But if there be that in the Negro which
- exempts him from the inflicted sourness of the morbid or cynical mind,
- how, in his most prepossessing aspects, must he appear to a benevolent
- one? When at ease with respect to exterior things, Captain Delano's
- nature was not only benign, but familiarly and humorously so. At home,
- he had often taken rare satisfaction in sitting in his door, watching
- some free man of colour at his work or play. If on a voyage he chanced
- to have a black sailor, invariably he was on chatty, and half-gamesome
- terms with him. In fact, like most men of a good, blithe heart, Captain
- Delano took to Negroes, not philanthropically, but genially, just as
- other men to Newfoundland dogs.
-
- Hitherto the circumstances in which he found the San Dominick had
- repressed the tendency. But in the cuddy, relieved from his former
- uneasiness, and, for various reasons, more sociably inclined than at any
- previous period of the day, and seeing the coloured servant, napkin on
- arm, so debonair about his master, in a business so familiar as that of
- shaving, too, all his old weakness for Negroes returned.
-
- Among other things, he was amused with an odd instance of the African
- love of bright colours and fine shows, in the black's informally taking
- from the flag-locker a great piece of bunting of all hues, and lavishly
- tucking it under his master's chin for an apron.
-
- The mode of shaving among the Spaniards is a little different from what
- it is with other nations. They have a basin, specially called a barber's
- basin, which on one side is scooped out, so as accurately to receive the
- chin, against which it is closely held in lathering; which is done, not
- with a brush, but with soap dipped in the water of the basin and rubbed
- on the face.
-
- In the present instance salt-water was used for lack of better; and the
- parts lathered were only the upper lip, and low down under the throat,
- all the rest being cultivated beard.
-
- These preliminaries being somewhat novel to Captain Delano he sat
- curiously eyeing them, so that no conversation took place, nor for the
- present did Don Benito appear disposed to renew any.
-
- Setting down his basin, the Negro searched among the razors, as for the
- sharpest, and having found it, gave it an additional edge by expertly
- stropping it on the firm, smooth, oily skin of his open palm; he then
- made a gesture as if to begin, but midway stood suspended for an
- instant, one hand elevating the razor, the other professionally dabbling
- among the bubbling suds on the Spaniard's lank neck. Not unaffected by
- the close sight of the gleaming steel, Don Benito nervously shuddered,
- his usual ghastliness was heightened by the lather, which lather, again,
- was intensified in its hue by the sootiness of the Negro's body.
- Altogether the scene was somewhat peculiar, at least to Captain Delano,
- nor, as he saw the two thus postured, could he resist the vagary, that
- in the black he saw a headsman, and in the white, a man at the block.
- But this was one of those antic conceits, appearing and vanishing in a
- breath, from which, perhaps, the best regulated mind is not free.
-
- Meantime the agitation of the Spaniard had a little loosened the bunting
- from around him, so that one broad fold swept curtain-like over the
- chair-arm to the floor, revealing, amid a profusion of armorial bars and
- ground-colours- black, blue and yellow- a closed castle in a blood-red
- field diagonal with a lion rampant in a white.
-
- "The castle and the lion," exclaimed Captain Delano- "why, Don Benito,
- this is the flag of Spain you use here. It's well it's only I, and not
- the King, that sees this," he added with a smile, "but"- turning toward
- the black,- "it's all one, I suppose, so the colours be gay," which
- playful remark did not fail somewhat to tickle the Negro.
-
- "Now, master," he said, readjusting the flag, and pressing the head
- gently further back into the crotch of the chair; "now master," and the
- steel glanced nigh the throat.
-
- Again Don Benito faintly shuddered.
-
- "You must not shake so, master.- See, Don Amasa, master always shakes
- when I shave him. And yet master knows I never yet have drawn blood,
- though it's true, if master will shake so, I may some of these times.
- Now, master," he continued. "And now, Don Amasa, please go on with your
- talk about the gale, and all that, master can hear, and between times
- master can answer."
-
- "Ah yes, these gales," said Captain Delano; "but the more I think of
- your voyage, Don Benito, the more I wonder, not at the gales, terrible
- as they must have been, but at the disastrous interval following them.
- For here, by your account, have you been these two months and more
- getting from Cape Horn to St. Maria, a distance which I myself, with a
- good wind, have sailed in a few days. True, you had calms, and long
- ones, but to be becalmed for two months, that is, at least, unusual.
- Why, Don Benito, had almost any other gentleman told me such a story, I
- should have been half disposed to a little incredulity."
-
- Here an involuntary expression came over the Spaniard, similar to that
- just before on the deck, and whether it was the start he gave, or a
- sudden gawky roll of the hull in the calm, or a momentary unsteadiness
- of the servant's hand; however it was, just then the razor drew blood,
- spots of which stained the creamy lather under the throat; immediately
- the black barber drew back his steel, and remaining in his professional
- attitude, back to Captain Delano, and face to Don Benito, held up the
- trickling razor, saying, with a sort of half humorous sorrow, "See,
- master,- you shook so- here's Babo's first blood."
-
- No sword drawn before James the First of England, no assassination in
- that timid King's presence, could have produced a more terrified aspect
- than was now presented by Don Benito.
-
- Poor fellow, thought Captain Delano, so nervous he can't even bear the
- sight of barber's blood; and this unstrung, sick man, is it credible
- that I should have imagined he meant to spill all my blood, who can't
- endure the sight of one little drop of his own? Surely, Amasa Delano,
- you have been beside yourself this day. Tell it not when you get home,
- sappy Amasa. Well, well, he looks like a murderer, doesn't he? More like
- as if himself were to be done for. Well, well, this day's experience
- shall be a good lesson.
-
- Meantime, while these things were running through the honest seaman's
- mind, the servant had taken the napkin from his arm, and to Don Benito
- had said: "But answer Don Amasa, please, master, while I wipe this ugly
- stuff off the razor, and strop it again."
-
- As he said the words, his face was turned half round, so as to be alike
- visible to the Spaniard and the American, and seemed by its expression
- to hint, that he was desirous, by getting his master to go on with the
- conversation, considerately to withdraw his attention from the recent
- annoying accident. As if glad to snatch the offered relief, Don Benito
- resumed, rehearsing to Captain Delano, that not only were the calms of
- unusual duration, but the ship had fallen in with obstinate currents and
- other things he added, some of which were but repetitions of former
- statements, to explain how it came to pass that the passage from Cape
- Horn to St. Maria had been so exceedingly long, now and then mingling
- with his words, incidental praises, less qualified than before, to the
- blacks, for their general good conduct.
-
- These particulars were not given consecutively, the servant now and then
- using his razor, and so, between the intervals of shaving, the story and
- panegyric went on with more than usual huskiness.
-
- To Captain Delano's imagination, now again not wholly at rest, there was
- something so hollow in the Spaniard's manner, with apparently some
- reciprocal hollowness in the servant's dusky comment of silence, that
- the idea flashed across him, that possibly master and man, for some
- unknown purpose, were acting out, both in word and deed, nay, to the
- very tremor of Don Benito's limbs, some juggling play before him.
- Neither did the suspicion of collusion lack apparent support, from the
- fact of those whispered conferences before mentioned. But then, what
- could be the object of enacting this play of the barber before him? At
- last, regarding the notion as a whimsy, insensibly suggested, perhaps,
- by the theatrical aspect of Don Benito in his harlequin ensign, Captain
- Delano speedily banished it.
-
- The shaving over, the servant bestirred himself with a small bottle of
- scented waters, pouring a few drops on the head, and then diligently
- rubbing; the vehemence of the exercise causing the muscles of his face
- to twitch rather strangely.
-
- His next operation was with comb, scissors and brush; going round and
- round, smoothing a curl here, clipping an unruly whisker-hair there,
- giving a graceful sweep to the temple-lock, with other impromptu touches
- evincing the hand of a master; while, like any resigned gentleman in
- barber's hands, Don Benito bore all, much less uneasily, at least, than
- he had done the razoring; indeed, he sat so pale and rigid now, that the
- Negro seemed a Nubian sculptor finishing off a white statue-head.
-
- All being over at last, the standard of Spain removed, tumbled up, and
- tossed back into the flag-locker, the Negro's warm breath blowing away
- any stray hair which might have lodged down his master's neck; collar
- and cravat readjusted; a speck of lint whisked off the velvet lapel; all
- this being done; backing off a little space, and pausing with an
- expression of subdued self-complacency, the servant for a moment
- surveyed his master, as, in toilet at least, the creature of his own
- tasteful hands.
-
- Captain Delano playfully complimented him upon his achievement; at the
- same time congratulating Don Benito.
-
- But neither sweet waters, nor shampooing, nor fidelity, nor sociality,
- delighted the Spaniard. Seeing him relapsing into forbidding gloom, and
- still remaining seated, Captain Delano, thinking that his presence was
- undesired just then, withdrew, on pretence of seeing whether, as he had
- prophesied, any signs of a breeze were visible.
-
- Walking forward to the mainmast, he stood awhile thinking over the
- scene, and not without some undefined misgivings, when he heard a noise
- near the cuddy, and turning, saw the Negro, his hand to his cheek.
- Advancing, Captain Delano perceived that the cheek was bleeding. He was
- about to ask the cause, when the Negro's wailing soliloquy enlightened
- him.
-
- "Ah, when will master get better from his sickness; only the sour heart
- that sour sickness breeds made him serve Babo so; cutting Babo with the
- razor, because, only by accident, Babo had given master one little
- scratch; and for the first time in so many a day, too. Ah, ah, ah,"
- holding his hand to his face.
-
- Is it possible, thought Captain Delano; was it to wreak in private his
- Spanish spite against this poor friend of his, that Don Benito, by his
- sullen manner, impelled me to withdraw? Ah, this slavery breeds ugly
- passions in man! Poor fellow!
-
- He was about to speak in sympathy to the Negro, but with a timid
- reluctance he now re-entered the cuddy.
-
- Presently master and man came forth; Don Benito leaning on his servant
- as if nothing had happened.
-
- But a sort of love-quarrel, after all, thought Captain Delano.
-
- He accosted Don Benito, and they slowly walked together. They had gone
- but a few paces, when the steward-a tall, rajah-looking mulatto,
- orientally set off with a pagoda turban formed by three or four Madras
- handkerchiefs wound about his head, tier on tier- approaching with a
- salaam, announced lunch in the cabin.
-
- On their way thither, the two captains were preceded by the mulatto,
- who, turning round as he advanced, with continual smiles and bows,
- ushered them in, a display of elegance which quite completed the
- insignificance of the small bare-headed Babo, who, as if not unconscious
- of inferiority, eyed askance the graceful steward. But in part, Captain
- Delano imputed his jealous watchfulness to that peculiar feeling which
- the full-blooded African entertains for the adulterated one. As for the
- steward, his manner, if not bespeaking much dignity of self-respect, yet
- evidenced his extreme desire to please; which is doubly meritorious, as
- at once Christian and Chesterfieldian.
-
- Captain Delano observed with interest that while the complexion of the
- mulatto was hybrid, his physiognomy was European; classically so.
-
- "Don Benito," whispered he, "I am glad to see this
- usher-of-the-golden-rod of yours; the sight refutes an ugly remark once
- made to me by a Barbados planter that when a mulatto has a regular
- European face, look out for him; he is a devil. But see, your steward
- here has features more regular than King George's of England; and yet
- there he nods, and bows, and smiles; a king, indeed- the king of kind
- hearts and polite fellows. What a pleasant voice he has, too?"
-
- "He has, Senor."
-
- "But, tell me, has he not, so far as you have known him, always proved a
- good, worthy fellow?" said Captain Delano, pausing, while with a final
- genuflexion the steward disappeared into the cabin; "come, for the
- reason just mentioned, I am curious to know."
-
- "Francesco is a good man," rather sluggishly responded Don Benito, like
- a phlegmatic appreciator, who would neither find fault nor flatter.
-
- "Ah, I thought so. For it were strange indeed, and not very creditable
- to us white-skins, if a little of our blood mixed with the African's,
- should, far from improving the latter's quality, have the sad effect of
- pouring vitriolic acid into black broth; improving the hue, perhaps, but
- not the wholesomeness."
-
- "Doubtless, doubtless, Senor, but"- glancing at Babo- "not to speak of
- Negroes, your planter's remark I have heard applied to the Spanish and
- Indian intermixtures in our provinces. But I know nothing about the
- matter," he listlessly added.
-
- And here they entered the cabin.
-
- The lunch was a frugal one. Some of Captain Delano's fresh fish and
- pumpkins, biscuit and salt beef, the reserved bottle of cider, and the
- San Dominick's last bottle of Canary.
-
- As they entered, Francesco, with two or three coloured aides, was
- hovering over the table giving the last adjustments. Upon perceiving
- their master they withdrew, Francesco making a smiling conge, and the
- Spaniard, without condescending to notice it, fastidiously remarking to
- his companion that he relished not superfluous attendance.
-
- Without companions, host and guest sat down, like a childless married
- couple, at opposite ends of the table, Don Benito waving Captain Delano
- to his place, and, weak as he was, insisting upon that gentleman being
- seated before himself.
-
- The Negro placed a rug under Don Benito's feet, and a cushion behind his
- back, and then stood behind, not his master's chair, but Captain
- Delano's. At first, this a little surprised the latter. But it was soon
- evident that, in taking his position, the black was still true to his
- master; since by facing him he could the more readily anticipate his
- slightest want.
-
- "This is an uncommonly intelligent fellow of yours, Don Benito,"
- whispered Captain Delano across the table.
-
- "You say true, Senor."
-
- During the repast, the guest again reverted to parts of Don Benito's
- story, begging further particulars here and there. He inquired how it
- was that the scurvy and fever should have committed such wholesale havoc
- upon the whites, while destroying less than half of the blacks. As if
- this question reproduced the whole scene of plague before the Spaniard's
- eyes, miserably reminding him of his solitude in a cabin where before he
- had had so many friends and officers round him, his hand shook, his face
- became hueless, broken words escaped; but directly the sane memory of
- the past seemed replaced by insane terrors of the present. With starting
- eyes he stared before him at vacancy. For nothing was to be seen but the
- hand of his servant pushing the Canary over towards him. At length a few
- sips served partially to restore him. He made random reference to the
- different constitutions of races, enabling one to offer more resistance
- to certain maladies than another. The thought was new to his companion.
-
- Presently Captain Delano, intending to say something to his host
- concerning the pecuniary part of the business he had undertaken for him,
- especially- since he was strictly accountable to his owners- with
- reference to the new suit of sails, and other things of that sort; and
- naturally preferring to conduct such affairs in private, was desirous
- that the servant should withdraw; imagining that Don Benito for a few
- minutes could dispense with his attendance. He, however, waited awhile;
- thinking that, as the conversation proceeded, Don Benito, without being
- prompted, would perceive the propriety of the step.
-
- But it was otherwise. At last catching his host's eye, Captain Delano,
- with a slight backward gesture of his thumb, whispered, "Don Benito,
- pardon me, but there is an interference with the full expression of what
- I have to say to you."
-
- Upon this the Spaniard changed countenance; which was imputed to his
- resenting the hint, as in some way a reflection upon his servant. After
- a moment's pause, he assured his guest that the black's remaining with
- them could be of no disservice; because since losing his officers he had
- made Babo (whose original office, it now appeared, had been captain of
- the slaves) not only his constant attendant and companion, but in all
- things his confidant.
-
- After this, nothing more could be said; though, indeed, Captain Delano
- could hardly avoid some little tinge of irritation upon being left
- ungratified in so inconsiderable a wish, by one, too, for whom he
- intended such solid services. But it is only his querulousness, thought
- he; and so filling his glass he proceeded to business.
-
- The price of the sails and other matters was fixed upon. But while this
- was being done, the American observed that, though his original offer of
- assistance had been hailed with hectic animation, yet now when it was
- reduced to a business transaction, indifference and apathy were
- betrayed. Don Benito, in fact, appeared to submit to hearing the details
- more out of regard to common propriety, than from any impression that
- weighty benefit to himself and his voyage was involved.
-
- Soon, his manner became still more reserved. The effort was vain to seek
- to draw him into social talk. Gnawed by his splenetic mood, he sat
- twitching his beard, while to little purpose the hand of his servant,
- mute as that on the wall, slowly pushed over the Canary.
-
- Lunch being over, they sat down on the cushioned transom; the servant
- placing a pillow behind his master. The long continuance of the calm had
- now affected the atmosphere. Don Benito sighed heavily, as if for
- breath.
-
- "Why not adjourn to the cuddy," said Captain Delano; "there is more air
- there." But the host sat silent and motionless.
-
- Meantime his servant knelt before him, with a large fan of feathers. And
- Francesco, coming in on tiptoes, handed the Negro a little cup of
- aromatic waters, with which at intervals he chafed his master's brow,
- smoothing the hair along the temples as a nurse does a child's. He spoke
- no word. He only rested his eye on his master's, as if, amid all Don
- Benito's distress, a little to refresh his spirit by the silent sight of
- fidelity.
-
- Presently the ship's bell sounded two o'clock; and through the
- cabin-windows a slight rippling of the sea was discerned; and from the
- desired direction.
-
- "There," exclaimed Captain Delano, "I told you so, Don Benito, look!"
-
- He had risen to his feet, speaking in a very animated tone, with a view
- the more to rouse his companion. But though the crimson curtain of the
- stern-window near him that moment fluttered against his pale cheek, Don
- Benito seemed to have even less welcome for the breeze than the calm.
-
- Poor fellow, thought Captain Delano, bitter experience has taught him
- that one ripple does not make a wind, any more than one swallow a
- summer. But he is mistaken for once. I will get his ship in for him, and
- prove it.
-
- Briefly alluding to his weak condition, he urged his host to remain
- quietly where he was, since he (Captain Delano) would with pleasure take
- upon himself the responsibility of making the best use of the wind.
-
- Upon gaining the deck, Captain Delano started at the unexpected figure
- of Atufal, monumentally fixed at the threshold, like one of those
- sculptured porters of black marble guarding the porches of Egyptian
- tombs.
-
- But this time the start was, perhaps, purely physical. Atufal's
- presence, singularly attesting docility even in sullenness, was
- contrasted with that of the hatchet-polishers, who in patience evinced
- their industry; while both spectacles showed, that lax as Don Benito's
- general authority might be, still, whenever he chose to exert it, no man
- so savage or colossal but must, more or less, bow.
-
- Snatching a trumpet which hung from the bulwarks, with a free step
- Captain Delano advanced to the forward edge of the poop, issuing his
- orders in his best Spanish. The few sailors and many Negroes, all
- equally pleased, obediently set about heading the ship toward the
- harbour.
-
- While giving some directions about setting a lower stu'n'-sail, suddenly
- Captain Delano heard a voice faithfully repeating his orders. Turning,
- he saw Babo, now for the time acting, under the pilot, his original part
- of captain of the slaves. This assistance proved valuable. Tattered
- sails and warped yards were soon brought into some trim. And no brace or
- halyard was pulled but to the blithe songs of the inspirited Negroes.
-
- Good fellows, thought Captain Delano, a little training would make fine
- sailors of them. Why see, the very women pull and sing, too. These must
- be some of those Ashantee Negresses that make such capital soldiers,
- I've heard. But who's at the helm? I must have a good hand there.
-
- He went to see.
-
- The San Dominick steered with a cumbrous tiller, with large horizontal
- pulleys attached. At each pulley-end stood a subordinate black, and
- between them, at the tiller-head, the responsible post, a Spanish
- seaman, whose countenance evinced his due share in the general
- hopefulness and confidence at the coming of the breeze.
-
- He proved the same man who had behaved with so shamefaced an air on the
- windlass.
-
- "Ah,- it is you, my man," exclaimed Captain Delano- "well, no more
- sheep's-eyes now;- look straight forward and keep the ship so. Good
- hand, I trust? And want to get into the harbour, don't you?"
-
- "Si Senor," assented the man with an inward chuckle, grasping the
- tiller-head firmly. Upon this, unperceived by the American, the two
- blacks eyed the sailor askance.
-
- Finding all right at the helm, the pilot went forward to the forecastle,
- to see how matters stood there.
-
- The ship now had way enough to breast the current. With the approach of
- evening, the breeze would be sure to freshen.
-
- Having done all that was needed for the present, Captain Delano, giving
- his last orders to the sailors, turned aft to report affairs to Don
- Benito in the cabin; perhaps additionally incited to rejoin him by the
- hope of snatching a moment's private chat while his servant was engaged
- upon deck.
-
- From opposite sides, there were, beneath the poop, two approaches to the
- cabin; one further forward than the other, and consequently
- communicating with a longer passage. Marking the servant still above,
- Captain Delano, taking the nighest entrance- the one last named, and at
- whose porch Atufal still stood- hurried on his way, till, arrived at the
- cabin threshold, he paused an instant, a little to recover from his
- eagerness. Then, with the words of his intended business upon his lips,
- he entered. As he advanced toward the Spaniard, on the transom, he heard
- another footstep, keeping time with his. From the opposite door, a
- salver in hand, the servant was likewise advancing.
-
- "Confound the faithful fellow," thought Captain Delano; "what a
- vexatious coincidence."
-
- Possibly, the vexation might have been something different, were it not
- for the buoyant confidence inspired by the breeze. But even as it was,
- he felt a slight twinge, from a sudden involuntary association in his
- mind of Babo with Atufal.
-
- "Don Benito," said he, "I give you joy; the breeze will hold, and will
- increase. By the way, your tall man and time-piece, Atufal, stands
- without. By your order, of course?"
-
- Don Benito recoiled, as if at some bland satirical touch, delivered with
- such adroit garnish of apparent good-breeding as to present no handle
- for retort.
-
- He is like one flayed alive, thought Captain Delano; where may one touch
- him without causing a shrink?
-
- The servant moved before his master, adjusting a cushion; recalled to
- civility, the Spaniard stiffly replied: "You are right. The slave
- appears where you saw him, according to my command; which is, that if at
- the given hour I am below, he must take his stand and abide my coming."
-
- "Ah now, pardon me, but that is treating the poor fellow like an ex-king
- denied. Ah, Don Benito," smiling, "for all the license you permit in
- some things, I fear lest, at bottom, you are a bitter hard master."
-
- Again Don Benito shrank; and this time, as the good sailor thought, from
- a genuine twinge of his conscience.
-
- Conversation now became constrained. In vain Captain Delano called
- attention to the now perceptible motion of the keel gently cleaving the
- sea; with lack-lustre eye, Don Benito returned words few and reserved.
-
- By-and-by, the wind having steadily risen, and still blowing right into
- the harbour, bore the San Dominick swiftly on. Rounding a point of land,
- the sealer at distance came into open view.
-
- Meantime Captain Delano had again repaired to the deck, remaining there
- some time. Having at last altered the ship's course, so as to give the
- reef a wide berth, he returned for a few moments below.
-
- I will cheer up my poor friend, this time, thought he.
-
- "Better and better, Don Benito," he cried as he blithely re-entered;
- "there will soon be an end to your cares, at least for awhile. For when,
- after a long, sad voyage, you know, the anchor drops into the haven, all
- its vast weight seems lifted from the captain's heart. We are getting on
- famously, Don Benito. My ship is in sight. Look through this side-light
- here; there she is; all a-taunt-o! The Bachelor's Delight, my good
- friend. Ah, how this wind braces one up. Come, you must take a cup of
- coffee with me this evening. My old steward will give you as fine a cup
- as ever any sultan tasted. What say you, Don Benito, will you?"
-
- At first, the Spaniard glanced feverishly up, casting a longing look
- toward the sealer, while with mute concern his servant gazed into his
- face. Suddenly the old ague of coldness returned, and dropping back to
- his cushions he was silent.
-
- "You do not answer. Come, all day you have been my host; would you have
- hospitality all on one side?"
-
- "I cannot go," was the response.
-
- "What? it will not fatigue you. The ships will lie together as near as
- they can, without swinging foul. It will be little more than stepping
- from deck to deck; which is but as from room to room. Come, come, you
- must not refuse me."
-
- "I cannot go," decisively and repulsively repeated Don Benito.
-
- Renouncing all but the last appearance of courtesy, with a sort of
- cadaverous sullenness, and biting his thin nails to the quick, he
- glanced, almost glared, at his guest; as if impatient that a stranger's
- presence should interfere with the full indulgence of his morbid hour.
- Meantime the sound of the parted waters came more and more gurglingly
- and merrily in at the windows; as reproaching him for his dark spleen;
- as telling him that, sulk as he might, and go mad with it, nature cared
- not a jot; since, whose fault was it, pray? But the foul mood was now at
- its depth, as the fair wind at its height.
-
- There was something in the man so far beyond any mere unsociality or
- sourness previously evinced, that even the forbearing good-nature of his
- guest could no longer endure it. Wholly at a loss to account for such
- demeanour, and deeming sickness with eccentricity, however extreme, no
- adequate excuse, well satisfied, too, that nothing in his own conduct
- could justify it, Captain Delano's pride began to be roused. Himself
- became reserved. But all seemed one to the Spaniard. Quitting him,
- therefore, Captain Delano once more went to the deck.
-
- The ship was now within less than two miles of the sealer. The
- whale-boat was seen darting over the interval.
-
- To be brief, the two vessels, thanks to the pilot's skill, ere long in
- neighbourly style lay anchored together.
-
- Before returning to his own vessel, Captain Delano had intended
- communicating to Don Benito the practical details of the proposed
- services to be rendered. But, as it was, unwilling anew to subject
- himself to rebuffs, he resolved, now that he had seen the San Dominick
- safely moored, immediately to quit her, without further allusion to
- hospitality or business. Indefinitely postponing his ulterior plans, he
- would regulate his future actions according to future circumstances. His
- boat was ready to receive him; but his host still tarried below. Well,
- thought Captain Delano, if he has little breeding, the more need to show
- mine. He descended to the cabin to bid a ceremonious, and, it may be,
- tacitly rebukeful adieu. But to his great satisfaction, Don Benito, as
- if he began to feel the weight of that treatment with which his slighted
- guest had, not indecorously, retaliated upon him, now supported by his
- servant, rose to his feet, and grasping Captain Delano's hand, stood
- tremulous; too much agitated to speak. But the good augury hence drawn
- was suddenly dashed, by his resuming all his previous reserve, with
- augmented gloom, as, with half-averted eyes, he silently reseated
- himself on his cushions. With a corresponding return of his own chilled
- feelings, Captain Delano bowed and withdrew.
-
- He was hardly midway in the narrow corridor, dim as a tunnel, leading
- from the cabin to the stairs, when a sound, as of the tolling for
- execution in some jail-yard, fell on his ears. It was the echo of the
- ship's flawed bell, striking the hour, drearily reverberated in this
- subterranean vault. Instantly, by a fatality not to be withstood, his
- mind, responsive to the portent, swarmed with superstitious suspicions.
- He paused. In images far swifter than these sentences, the minutest
- details of all his former distrusts swept through him.
-
- Hitherto, credulous good-nature had been too ready to furnish excuses
- for reasonable fears. Why was the Spaniard, so superfluously punctilious
- at times, now heedless of common propriety in not accompanying to the
- side his departing guest? Did indisposition forbid? Indisposition had
- not forbidden more irksome exertion that day. His last equivocal
- demeanour recurred. He had risen to his feet, grasped his guest's hand,
- motioned toward his hat; then, in an instant, all was eclipsed in
- sinister muteness and gloom. Did this imply one brief, repentant
- relenting at the final moment, from some iniquitous plot, followed by
- remorseless return to it? His last glance seemed to express a
- calamitous, yet acquiescent farewell to Captain Delano for ever. Why
- decline the invitation to visit the sealer that evening? Or was the
- Spaniard less hardened than the Jew, who refrained not from supping at
- the board of him whom the same night he meant to betray? What imported
- all those day-long enigmas and contradictions, except they were intended
- to mystify, preliminary to some stealthy blow? Atufal, the pretended
- rebel, but punctual shadow, that moment lurked by the threshold without.
- He seemed a sentry, and more. Who, by his own confession, had stationed
- him there? Was the Negro now lying in wait?
-
- The Spaniard behind- his creature before: to rush from darkness to light
- was the involuntary choice.
-
- The next moment, with clenched jaw and hand, he passed Atufal, and stood
- unarmed in the light. As he saw his trim ship lying peacefully at her
- anchor, and almost within ordinary call; as he saw his household boat,
- with familiar faces in it, patiently rising and falling on the short
- waves by the San Dominick's side; and then, glancing about the decks
- where he stood, saw the oakum-pickers still gravely plying their
- fingers; and heard the low, buzzing whistle and industrious hum of the
- hatchet-polishers, still bestirring themselves over their endless
- occupation; and more than all, as he saw the benign aspect of Nature,
- taking her innocent repose in the evening; the screened sun in the quiet
- camp of the west shining out like the mild light from Abraham's tent; as
- his charmed eye and ear took in all these, with the chained figure of
- the black, the clenched jaw and hand relaxed. Once again he smiled at
- the phantoms which had mocked him, and felt something like a tinge of
- remorse, that, by indulging them even for a moment, he should, by
- implication, have betrayed an almost atheistic doubt of the
- ever-watchful Providence above.
-
- There was a few minutes' delay, while, in obedience to his orders, the
- boat was being hooked along to the gangway. During this interval, a sort
- of saddened satisfaction stole over Captain Delano, at thinking of the
- kindly offices he had that day discharged for a stranger. Ah, thought
- he, after good actions one's conscience is never ungrateful, however
- much so the benefited party may be.
-
- Presently, his foot, in the first act of descent into the boat, pressed
- the first round of the side-ladder, his face presented inward upon the
- deck. In the same moment, he heard his name courteously sounded; and, to
- his pleased surprise, saw Don Benito advancing- an unwonted energy in
- his air, as if, at the last moment, intent upon making amends for his
- recent discourtesy. With instinctive good feeling, Captain Delano,
- revoking his foot, turned and reciprocally advanced. As he did so, the
- Spaniard's nervous eagerness increased, but his vital energy failed; so
- that, the better to support him, the servant, placing his master's hand
- on his naked shoulder, and gently holding it there, formed himself into
- a sort of crutch.
-
- When the two captains met, the Spaniard again fervently took the hand of
- the American, at the same time casting an earnest glance into his eyes,
- but, as before, too much overcome to speak.
-
- I have done him wrong, self-reproachfully thought Captain Delano; his
- apparent coldness has deceived me; in no instance has he meant to
- offend.
-
- Meantime, as if fearful that the continuance of the scene might too much
- unstring his master, the servant seemed anxious to terminate it. And so,
- still presenting himself as a crutch, and walking between the two
- captains, he advanced with them toward the gangway; while still, as if
- full of kindly contrition, Don Benito would not let go the hand of
- Captain Delano, but retained it in his, across the black's body.
-
- Soon they were standing by the side, looking over into the boat, whose
- crew turned up their curious eyes. Waiting a moment for the Spaniard to
- relinquish his hold, the now embarrassed Captain Delano lifted his foot,
- to overstep the threshold of the open gangway; but still Don Benito
- would not let go his hand. And yet, with an agitated tone, he said, "I
- can go no further; here I must bid you adieu. Adieu, my dear, dear Don
- Amasa. Go- go!" suddenly tearing his hand loose, "go, and God guard you
- better than me, my best friend."
-
- Not unaffected, Captain Delano would now have lingered; but catching the
- meekly admonitory eye of the servant, with a hasty farewell he descended
- into his boat, followed by the continual adieus of Don Benito, standing
- rooted in the gangway.
-
- Seating himself in the stern, Captain Delano, making a last salute,
- ordered the boat shoved off. The crew had their oars on end. The bowsman
- pushed the boat a sufficient distance for the oars to be lengthwise
- dropped. The instant that was done, Don Benito sprang over the bulwarks,
- falling at the feet of Captain Delano; at the same time, calling towards
- his ship, but in tones so frenzied, that none in the boat could
- understand him. But, as if not equally obtuse, three Spanish sailors,
- from three different and distant parts of the ship, splashed into the
- sea, swimming after their captain, as if intent upon his rescue.
-
- The dismayed officer of the boat eagerly asked what this meant. To
- which, Captain Delano, turning a disdainful smile upon the unaccountable
- Benito Cereno, answered that, for his part, he neither knew nor cared;
- but it seemed as if the Spaniard had taken it into his head to produce
- the impression among his people that the boat wanted to kidnap him. "Or
- else- give way for your lives," he wildly added, starting at a
- clattering hubbub in the ship, above which rang the tocsin of the
- hatchet-polishers; and seizing Don Benito by the throat he added, "this
- plotting pirate means murder!" Here, in apparent verification of the
- words, the servant, a dagger in his hand, was seen on the rail overhead,
- poised, in the act of leaping, as if with desperate fidelity to befriend
- his master to the last; while, seemingly to aid the black, the three
- Spanish sailors were trying to clamber into the hampered bow. Meantime,
- the whole host of Negroes, as if inflamed at the sight of their
- jeopardized captain, impended in one sooty avalanche over the bulwarks.
-
- All this, with what preceded, and what followed, occurred with such
- involutions of rapidity, that past, present, and future seemed one.
-
- Seeing the Negro coming, Captain Delano had flung the Spaniard aside,
- almost in the very act of clutching him, and, by the unconscious recoil,
- shifting his place, with arms thrown up, so promptly grappled the
- servant in his descent, that with dagger presented at Captain Delano's
- heart, the black seemed of purpose to have leaped there as to his mark.
- But the weapon was wrenched away, and the assailant dashed down into the
- bottom of the boat, which now, with disentangled oars, began to speed
- through the sea.
-
- At this juncture, the left hand of Captain Delano, on one side, again
- clutched the half-reclined Don Benito, heedless that he was in a
- speechless faint, while his right foot, on the other side, ground the
- prostrate Negro; and his right arm pressed for added speed on the after
- oar, his eye bent forward, encouraging his men to their utmost.
-
- But here, the officer of the boat, who had at last succeeded in beating
- off the towing Spanish sailors, and was now, with face turned aft,
- assisting the bowsman at his oar, suddenly called to Captain Delano, to
- see what the black was about; while a Portuguese oarsman shouted to him
- to give heed to what the Spaniard was saying.
-
- Glancing down at his feet, Captain Delano saw the freed hand of the
- servant aiming with a second dagger- a small one, before concealed in
- his wool- with this he was snakishly writhing up from the boat's bottom,
- at the heart of his master, his countenance lividly vindictive,
- expressing the centred purpose of his soul; while the Spaniard,
- half-choked, was vainly shrinking away, with husky words, incoherent to
- all but the Portuguese.
-
- That moment, across the long benighted mind of Captain Delano, a flash
- of revelation swept, illuminating in unanticipated clearness Benito
- Cereno's whole mysterious demeanour, with every enigmatic event of the
- day, as well as the entire past voyage of the San Dominick. He smote
- Babo's hand down, but his own heart smote him harder. With infinite pity
- he withdrew his hold from Don Benito. Not Captain Delano, but Don
- Benito, the black, in leaping into the boat, had intended to stab.
-
- Both the black's hands were held, as, glancing up toward the San
- Dominick, Captain Delano, now with the scales dropped from his eyes, saw
- the Negroes, not in misrule, not in tumult, not as if frantically
- concerned for Don Benito, but with mask tom away, flourishing hatchets
- and knives, in ferocious piratical revolt. Like delirious black
- dervishes, the six Ashantees danced on the poop. Prevented by their foes
- from springing into the water, the Spanish boys were hurrying up to the
- topmost spars, while such of the few Spanish sailors, not already in the
- sea, less alert, were descried, helplessly mixed in, on deck, with the
- blacks.
-
- Meantime Captain Delano hailed his own vessel, ordering the ports up,
- and the guns run out. But by this time the cable of the San Dominick had
- been cut; and the fag-end, in lashing out, whipped away the canvas
- shroud about the beak, suddenly revealing, as the bleached hull swung
- round toward the open ocean, death for the figurehead, in a human
- skeleton; chalky comment on the chalked words below, "Follow your
- leader."
-
- At the sight, Don Benito, covering his face, wailed out: "'Tis he,
- Aranda! my murdered, unburied friend!"
-
- Upon reaching the sealer, calling for ropes, Captain Delano bound the
- Negro, who made no resistance, and had him hoisted to the deck. He would
- then have assisted the now almost helpless Don Benito up the side; but
- Don Benito, wan as he was, refused to move, or be moved, until the Negro
- should have been first put below out of view. When, presently assured
- that it was done, he no more shrank from the ascent.
-
- The boat was immediately despatched back to pick up the three swimming
- sailors. Meantime, the guns were in readiness, though, owing to the San
- Dominick having glided somewhat astern of the sealer, only the aftermost
- one could be brought to bear. With this, they fired six times; thinking
- to cripple the fugitive ship by bringing down her spars. But only a few
- inconsiderable ropes were shot away. Soon the ship was beyond the guns'
- range, steering broad out of the bay; the blacks thickly clustering
- round the bowsprit, one moment with taunting cries toward the whites,
- the next with up-thrown gestures hailing the now dusky expanse of ocean-
- cawing crows escaped from the hand of the fowler.
-
- The first impulse was to slip the cables and give chase. But, upon
- second thought, to pursue with whale-boat and yawl seemed more
- promising.
-
- Upon inquiring of Don Benito what firearms they had on board the San
- Dominick, Captain Delano was answered that they had none that could be
- used; because, in the earlier stages of the mutiny, a cabin-passenger,
- since dead, had secretly put out of order the locks of what few muskets
- there were. But with all his remaining strength, Don Benito entreated
- the American not to give chase, either with ship or boat; for the
- Negroes had already proved themselves such desperadoes, that, in case of
- a present assault, nothing but a total massacre of the whites could be
- looked for. But, regarding this warning as coming from one whose spirit
- had been crushed by misery, the American did not give up his design.
-
- The boats were got ready and armed. Captain Delano ordered twenty-five
- men into them. He was going himself when Don Benito grasped his arm.
- "What! have you saved my life, Senor, and are you now going to throw
- away your own?"
-
- The officers also, for reasons connected with their interests and those
- of the voyage, and a duty owing to the owners, strongly objected against
- their commander's going. Weighing their remonstrances a moment, Captain
- Delano felt bound to remain; appointing his chief mate- an athletic and
- resolute man, who had been a privateer's man, and, as his enemies
- whispered, a pirate- to head the party. The more to encourage the
- sailors, they were told, that the Spanish captain considered his ship as
- good as lost; that she and her cargo, including some gold and silver,
- were worth upwards of ten thousand doubloons. Take her, and no small
- part should be theirs. The sailors replied with a shout.
-
- The fugitives had now almost gained an offing. It was nearly night; but
- the moon was rising. After hard, prolonged pulling, the boats came up on
- the ship's quarters, at a suitable distance laying upon their oars to
- discharge their muskets. Having no bullets to return, the Negroes sent
- their yells. But, upon the second volley, Indian-like, they hurtled
- their hatchets. One took off a sailor's fingers. Another struck the
- whale-boat's bow, cutting off the rope there, and remaining stuck in the
- gunwale, like a woodman's axe. Snatching it, quivering from its
- lodgment, the mate hurled it back. The returned gauntlet now stuck in
- the ship's broken quarter-gallery, and so remained.
-
- The Negroes giving too hot a reception, the whites kept a more
- respectful distance. Hovering now just out of reach of the hurtling
- hatchets, they, with a view to the close encounter which must soon come,
- sought to decoy the blacks into entirely disarming themselves of their
- most murderous weapons in a hand-to-hand fight, by foolishly flinging
- them, as missiles, short of the mark, into the sea. But ere long
- perceiving the stratagem, the Negroes desisted, though not before many
- of them had to replace their lost hatchets with handspikes; an exchange
- which, as counted upon, proved in the end favourable to the assailants.
-
- Meantime, with a strong wind, the ship still clove the water; the boats
- alternately falling behind, and pulling up, to discharge fresh volleys.
-
- The fire was mostly directed toward the stern, since there, chiefly, the
- Negroes, at present, were clustering. But to kill or maim the Negroes
- was not the object. To take them, with the ship, was the object. To do
- it, the ship must be boarded; which could not be done by boats while she
- was sailing so fast.
-
- A thought now struck the mate. Observing the Spanish boys still aloft,
- high as they could get, he called to them to descend to the yards, and
- cut adrift the sails. It was done. About this time, owing to causes
- hereafter to be shown, two Spaniards, in the dress of sailors and
- conspicuously showing themselves, were killed; not by volleys, but by
- deliberate marksman's shots; while, as it afterwards appeared, during
- one of the general discharges, Atufal, the black, and the Spaniard at
- the helm likewise were killed. What now, with the loss of the sails, and
- loss of leaders, the ship became unmanageable to the Negroes.
-
- With creaking masts she came heavily round to the wind; the prow slowly
- swinging into view of the boats, its skeleton gleaming in the horizontal
- moonlight, and casting a gigantic ribbed shadow upon the water. One
- extended arm of the ghost seemed beckoning the whites to avenge it.
-
- "Follow your leader!" cried the mate; and, one on each bow, the boats
- boarded. Sealing-spears and cutlasses crossed hatchets and handspikes.
- Huddled upon the long-boat amidships, the Negresses raised a wailing
- chant, whose chorus was the clash of the steel.
-
- For a time, the attack wavered; the Negroes wedging themselves to beat
- it back; the half-repelled sailors, as yet unable to gain a footing,
- fighting as troopers in the saddle, one leg sideways flung over the
- bulwarks, and one without, plying their cutlasses like carters' whips.
- But in vain. They were almost overborne, when, rallying themselves into
- a squad as one man, with a huzza, they sprang inboard; where, entangled,
- they involuntarily separated again. For a few breaths' space there was a
- vague, muffled, inner sound as of submerged sword-fish rushing hither
- and thither through shoals of black-fish. Soon, in a reunited band, and
- joined by the Spanish seamen, the whites came to the surface,
- irresistibly driving the Negroes toward the stern. But a barricade of
- casks and sacks, from side to side, had been thrown up by the mainmast.
- Here the Negroes faced about, and though scorning peace or truce, yet
- fain would have had a respite. But, without pause, overleaping the
- barrier, the unflagging sailors again closed. Exhausted, the blacks now
- fought in despair. Their red tongues lolled, wolf-like, from their black
- mouths. But the pale sailors' teeth were set; not a word was spoken;
- and, in five minutes more, the ship was won.
-
- Nearly a score of the Negroes were killed. Exclusive of those by the
- balls, many were mangled; their wounds- mostly inflicted by the
- long-edged sealing-spears- resembling those shaven ones of the English
- at Preston Pans, made by the poled scythes of the Highlanders. On the
- other side, none were killed, though several were wounded; some
- severely, including the mate. The surviving Negroes were temporarily
- secured, and the ship, towed back into the harbour at midnight, once
- more lay anchored.
-
- Omitting the incidents and arrangements ensuing, suffice it that, after
- two days spent in refitting, the two ships sailed in company for
- Concepcion in Chili, and thence for Lima in Peru; where, before the
- vice-regal courts, the whole affair, from the beginning, underwent
- investigation.
-
- Though, midway on the passage, the ill-fated Spaniard, relaxed from
- constraint, showed some signs of regaining health with free-will; yet,
- agreeably to his own foreboding, shortly before arriving at Lima, he
- relapsed, finally becoming so reduced as to be carried ashore in arms.
- Hearing of his story and plight, one of the many religious institutions
- of the City of Kings opened an hospitable refuge to him, where both
- physician and priest were his nurses, and a member of the order
- volunteered to be his one special guardian and consoler, by night and by
- day.
-
- The following extracts, translated from one of the official Spanish
- documents, will, it is hoped, shed light on the preceding narrative, as
- well as, in the first place, reveal the true port of departure and true
- history of the San Dominick's voyage, down to the time of her touching
- at the island of Santa Maria.
-
- But, ere the extracts come, it may be well to preface them with a
- remark.
-
- The document selected, from among many others, for partial translation,
- contains the deposition of Benito Cereno; the first taken in the case.
- Some disclosures therein were, at the time, held dubious for both
- learned and natural reasons. The tribunal inclined to the opinion that
- the deponent, not undisturbed in his mind by recent events, raved of
- some things which could never have happened. But subsequent depositions
- of the surviving sailors, bearing out the revelations of their captain
- in several of the strangest particulars, gave credence to the rest. So
- that the tribunal, in its final decision, rested its capital sentences
- upon statements which, had they lacked confirmation, it would have
- deemed it but duty to reject.
-
-
- I, DON JOSE DE ABOS AND PADILLA, His Majesty's Notary for the Royal
- Revenue, and Register of this Province, and Notary Public of the Holy
- Crusade of this Bishopric, etc.
-
- Do certify and declare, as much as is requisite in law, that, in the
- criminal cause commenced the twenty-fourth of the month of September, in
- the year seventeen hundred and ninety-nine, against the Senegal Negroes
- of the ship San Dominick, the following declaration before me was made.
-
-
- Declaration of the first witness, DON BENITO CERENO.
-
-
- The same day, and month, and year, His Honour, Doctor Juan Martinez de
- Dozas, Councillor of the Royal Audience of this Kingdom, and learned in
- the law of this Intendancy, ordered the captain of the ship San
- Dominick, Don Benito Cereno, to appear; which he did in his litter,
- attended by the monk Infelez; of whom he received, before Don Jose de
- Abos and Padilla, Notary Public of the Holy Crusade, the oath, which he
- took by God, our Lord, and a sign of the Cross; under which he promised
- to tell the truth of whatever he should know and should be asked;- and
- being interrogated agreeably to the tenor of the act commencing the
- process, he said, that on the twentieth of May last, he set sail with
- his ship from the port of Valparaiso, bound to that of Callao; loaded
- with the produce of the country and one hundred and sixty blacks, of
- both sexes, mostly belonging to Don Alexandro Aranda, gentleman, of the
- city of Mendoza; that the crew of the ship consisted of thirty-six men,
- beside the persons who went as passengers; that the Negroes were in part
- as follows:
-
-
- [Here, in the original, follows a list of some fifty names,
- descriptions, and ages, compiled from certain recovered documents of
- Aranda's, and also from recollections of the deponent, from which
- portions only are extracted.]
-
-
- -One, from about eighteen to nineteen years, named Jose, and this was
- the man that waited upon his master, Don Alexandro, and who speaks well
- the Spanish, having served him four or five years;... a mulatto, named
- Francesco, the cabin steward, of a good person and voice, having sung in
- the Valparaiso churches, native of the province of Buenos Ayres, aged
- about thirty-five years.... A smart Negro, named Dago, who had been for
- many years a gravedigger among the Spaniards, aged forty-six years....
- Four old Negroes, born in Africa, from sixty to seventy, but sound,
- caulkers by trade, whose names are as follows:- the first was named
- Muri, and he was killed (as was also his son named Diamelo); the second,
- Nacta; the third, Yola, likewise killed; the fourth, Ghofan; and six
- full-grown Negroes, aged from thirty to forty-five, all raw, and born
- among the Ashantees- Martinqui, Yan, Lecbe, Mapenda, Yambaio, Akim; four
- of whom were killed;... a powerful Negro named Atufal, who, being
- supposed to have been a chief in Africa, his owners set great store by
- him.... And a small Negro of Senegal, but some years among the
- Spaniards, aged about thirty, which Negro's name was Babo;... that he
- does not remember the names of the others, but that still expecting the
- residue of Don Alexandro's papers will be found, will then take due
- account of them all, and remit to the court;... and thirty-nine women
- and children of all ages.
-
-
- [After the catalogue, the deposition goes on as follows:]
-
- ...That all the Negroes slept upon deck, as is customary in this
- navigation, and none wore fetters, because the owner, his friend Aranda,
- told him that they were all tractable;... that on the seventh day after
- leaving port, at three o'clock in the morning, all the Spaniards being
- asleep except the two officers on the watch, who were the boatswain,
- Juan Robles, and the carpenter, Juan Bautista Gayete, and the helmsman
- and his boy, the Negroes revolted suddenly, wounded dangerously the
- boatswain and the carpenter, and successively killed eighteen men of
- those who were sleeping upon deck, some with handspikes and hatchets,
- and others by throwing them alive overboard, after tying them; that of
- the Spaniards upon deck, they left about seven, as he thinks, alive and
- tied, to manoeuvre the ship, and three or four more who hid themselves
- remained also alive. Although in the act of revolt the Negroes made
- themselves masters of the hatchway, six or seven wounded went through it
- to the cockpit, without any hindrance on their part; that in the act of
- revolt, the mate and another person, whose name he does not recollect,
- attempted to come up through the hatchway, but having been wounded at
- the onset, they were obliged to return to the cabin; that the deponent
- resolved at break of day to come up the companionway, where the Negro
- Babo was, being the ringleader, and Atufal, who assisted him, and having
- spoken to them, exhorted them to cease committing such atrocities,
- asking them, at the same time, what they wanted and intended to do,
- offering, himself, to obey their commands; that, notwithstanding this,
- they threw, in his presence, three men, alive and tied, overboard; that
- they told the deponent to come up, and that they would not kill him;
- which having done, the Negro Babo asked him whether there were in those
- seas any Negro countries where they might be carried, and he answered
- them, No, that the Negro Babo afterwards told him to carry them to
- Senegal, or to the neighbouring islands of St. Nicholas; and he
- answered, that this was impossible, on account of the great distance,
- the necessity involved of rounding Cape Horn, the bad condition of the
- vessel, the want of provisions, sails, and water; but that the Negro
- Babo replied to him he must carry them in any way; that they would do
- and conform themselves to everything the deponent should require as to
- eating and drinking; that after a long conference, being absolutely
- compelled to please them, for they threatened him to kill all the whites
- if they were not, at all events, carried to Senegal, he told them that
- what was most wanting for the voyage was water; that they would go near
- the coast to take it, and hence they would proceed on their course; that
- the Negro Babo agreed to it; and the deponent steered toward the
- intermediate ports, hoping to meet some Spanish or foreign vessel that
- would save them; that within ten or eleven days they saw the land, and
- continued their course by it in the vicinity of Nasca; that the deponent
- observed that the Negroes were now restless and mutinous, because he did
- not effect the taking in of water, the Negro Babo having required, with
- threats, that it should be done, without fail, the following day; he
- told him he saw plainly that the coast was steep, and the rivers
- designated in the maps were not be found, with other reasons suitable to
- the circumstances; that the best way would be to go to the island of
- Santa Maria, where they might water and victual easily, it being a
- desert island, as the foreigners did; that the deponent did not go to
- Pisco, that was near, nor make any other port of the coast, because the
- Negro Babo had intimated to him several times, that he would kill all
- the whites the very moment he should perceive any city, town, or
- settlement of any kind on the shores to which they should be carried;
- that having determined to go to the island of Santa Maria, as the
- deponent had planned, for the purpose of trying whether, in the passage
- or in the island itself, they could find any vessel that should favour
- them, or whether he could escape from it in a boat to the neighbouring
- coast of Arruco; to adopt the necessary means he immediately changed his
- course, steering for the island; that the Negroes Babo and Atufal held
- daily conferences, in which they discussed what was necessary for their
- design of returning to Senegal, whether they were to kill all the
- Spaniards, and particularly the deponent; that eight days after parting
- from the coast of Nasca, the deponent being on the watch a little after
- day-break, and soon after the Negroes had their meeting, the Negro Babo
- came to the place where the deponent was, and told him that he had
- determined to kill his master, Don Alexandro Aranda, both because he and
- his companions could not otherwise be sure of their liberty, and that,
- to keep the seamen in subjection, he wanted to prepare a warning of what
- road they should be made to take did they or any of them oppose him; and
- that, by means of the death of Don Alexandro, that warning would best be
- given; but, that what this last meant, the deponent did not at the time
- comprehend, nor could not, further than that the death of Don Alexandro
- was intended; and moreover, the Negro Babo proposed to the deponent to
- call the mate Raneds, who was sleeping in the cabin, before the thing
- was done, for fear, as the deponent understood it, that the mate, who
- was a good navigator, should be killed with Don Alexandro and the rest;
- that the deponent, who was the friend, from youth of Don Alexandro,
- prayed and conjured, but all was useless; for the Negro Babo answered
- him that the thing could not be prevented, and that all the Spaniards
- risked their death if they should attempt to frustrate his will in this
- matter, or any other; that, in this conflict, the deponent called the
- mate, Raneds, who was forced to go apart, and immediately the Negro Babo
- commanded the Ashantee Martinqui and the Ashantee Lecbe to go and commit
- the murder; that those two went down with hatchets to the berth of Don
- Alexandro; that, yet half alive and mangled, they dragged him on deck;
- that they were going to throw him overboard in that state, but the Negro
- Babo stopped them, bidding the murder be completed on the deck before
- him, which was done, when, by his orders, the body was carried below,
- forward; that nothing more was seen of it by the deponent for three
- days;... that Don Alonzo Sidonia, an old man, long resident at
- Valparaiso, and lately appointed to a civil office in Peru, whither he
- had taken passage, was at the time sleeping in the berth opposite Don
- Alexandro's; that, awakening at his cries, surprised by them, and at the
- sight of the Negroes with their bloody hatchets in their hands, he threw
- himself into the sea through a window which was near him, and was
- drowned, without it being in the power of the deponent to assist or take
- him up;... that, a short time after killing Aranda, they brought upon
- deck his german-cousin, of middle-age, Don Francisco Masa, of Mendoza,
- and the young Don Joaquin, Marques de Aramboalaza, then lately from
- Spain, with his Spanish servant Ponce, and the three young clerks of
- Aranda, Jose Mozairi, Lorenzo Bargas, and Hermenegildo Gandix, all of
- Cadiz; that Don Joaquin and Hermenegildo Gandix, the Negro Babo for
- purposes hereafter to appear, preserved alive; but Don Francisco Masa,
- Jose Mozairi, and Lorenzo Bargas, with Ponce, the servant, beside the
- boatswain, Juan Robles, the boatswain's mates, Manuel Viscaya and
- Roderigo Hurta, and, four of the sailors, the Negro Babo ordered to be
- thrown alive into the sea, although they made no resistance, nor begged
- for anything else but mercy; that the boatswain, Juan Robles, who knew
- how to swim, kept the longest above water, making acts of contrition,
- and, in the last words he uttered, charged this deponent to cause mass
- to be said for his soul to our Lady of Succour;... that, during the
- three days which followed, the deponent, uncertain what fate had
- befallen the remains of Don Alexandro, frequently asked the Negro Babo
- where they were, and, if still on board, whether they were to be
- preserved for interment ashore, entreating him so to order it; that the
- Negro Babo answered nothing till the fourth day, when at sunrise, the
- deponent coming on deck, the Negro Babo showed him a skeleton, which had
- been substituted for the ship's proper figure-head, the image of
- Christopher Colon, the discoverer of the New World; that the Negro Babo
- asked him whose skeleton that was, and whether, from its whiteness, he
- should not think it a white's; that, upon his covering his face, the
- Negro Babo, coming close, said words to this effect: "Keep faith with
- the blacks from here to Senegal, or you shall in spirit, as now in body,
- follow your leader," pointing to the prow;... that the same morning the
- Negro Babo took by succession each Spaniard forward, and asked him whose
- skeleton that was, and whether, from its whiteness, he should not think
- it a white's; that each Spaniard covered his face; that then to each the
- Negro Babo repeated the words in the first place said to the
- deponent;... that they (the Spaniards), being then assembled aft, the
- Negro Babo harangued them, saying that he had now done all; that the
- deponent (as navigator for the Negroes) might pursue his course, warning
- him and all of them that they should, soul and body, go the way of Don
- Alexandro if he saw them (the Spaniards) speak or plot anything against
- them (the Negroes)- a threat which was repeated every day; that, before
- the events last mentioned, they had tied the cook to throw him
- overboard, for it is not known what thing they heard him speak, but
- finally the Negro Babo spared his life, at the request of the deponent;
- that a few days after, the deponent, endeavouring not to omit any means
- to preserve the lives of the remaining whites, spoke to the Negroes
- peace and tranquillity, and agreed to draw up a paper, signed by the
- deponent and the sailors who could write, as also by the Negro Babo, for
- himself and all the blacks, in which the deponent obliged himself to
- carry them to Senegal, and they not to kill any more, and he formally to
- make over to them the ship, with the cargo, with which they were for
- that time satisfied and quieted.... But the next day, the more surely to
- guard against the sailors' escape, the Negro Babo commanded all the
- boats to be destroyed but the long-boat, which was unseaworthy, and
- another, a cutter in good condition, which, knowing it would yet be
- wanted for lowering the water casks, he had it lowered down into the
- hold.
-
-
- [Various particulars of the prolonged and perplexed navigation ensuing
- here follow, with incidents of a calamitous calm, from which portion one
- passage is extracted, to wit:]
-
-
- -That on the fifth day of the calm, all on board suffering much from the
- heat, and want of water, and five having died in fits, and mad, the
- Negroes became irritable, and for a chance gesture, which they deemed
- suspicious- though it was harmless- made by the mate, Raneds, to the
- deponent, in the act of handing a quadrant, they killed him; but that
- for this they afterwards were sorry, the mate being the only remaining
- navigator on board, except the deponent.
-
- -That omitting other events, which daily happened, and which can only
- serve uselessly to recall past misfortunes and conflicts, after
- seventy-three days' navigation, reckoned from the time they sailed from
- Nasca, during which they navigated under a scanty allowance of water,
- and were afflicted with the calms before mentioned, they at last arrived
- at the island of Santa Maria, on the seventeenth of the month of August,
- at about six o'clock in the afternoon, at which hour they cast anchor
- very near the American ship, Bachelor's Delight, which lay in the same
- bay, commanded by the generous Captain Amasa Delano; but at six o'clock
- in the morning, they had already descried the port, and the Negroes
- became uneasy, as soon as at distance they saw the ship, not having
- expected to see one there; that the Negro Babo pacified them, assuring
- them that no fear need be had; that straightway he ordered the figure on
- the bow to be covered with canvas, as for repairs, and had the decks a
- little set in order; that for a time the Negro Babo and the Negro Atufal
- conferred; that the Negro Atufal was for sailing away, but the Negro
- Babo would not, and, by himself, cast about what to do; that at last he
- came to the deponent, proposing to him to say and do all that the
- deponent declares to have said and done to the American captain;... that
- the Negro Babo warned him that if he varied in the least, or uttered any
- word, or gave any look that should give the least intimation of the past
- events or present state, he would instantly kill him, with all his
- companions, showing a dagger, which he carried hid, saying something
- which, as he understood it, meant that that dagger would be alert as his
- eye; that the Negro Babo then announced the plan to all his companions,
- which pleased them; that he then, the better to disguise the truth,
- devised many expedients, in some of them uniting deceit and defence;
- that of this sort was the device of the six Ashantees before named, who
- were his bravos; that them he stationed on the break of the poop, as if
- to clean certain hatchets (in cases, which were part of the cargo), but
- in reality to use them, and distribute them at need, and at a given word
- he told them that, among other devices, was the device of presenting
- Atufal, his right-hand man, as chained, though in a moment the chains
- could be dropped; that in every particular he informed the deponent what
- part he was expected to enact in every device, and what story he was to
- tell on every occasion, always threatening him with instant death if he
- varied in the least; that, conscious that many of the Negroes would be
- turbulent, the Negro Babo appointed the four aged Negroes, who were
- caulkers, to keep what domestic order they could on the decks; that
- again and again he harangued the Spaniards and his companions, informing
- them of his intent, and of his devices, and of the invented story that
- this deponent was to tell, charging them lest any of them varied from
- that story; that these arrangements were made and matured during the
- interval of two or three hours, between their first sighting the ship
- and the arrival on board of Captain Amasa Delano; that this happened at
- about half-past seven in the morning, Captain Amasa Delano coming in his
- boat, and all gladly receiving him; that the deponent, as well as he
- could force himself, acting then the part of principal owner, and a free
- captain of the ship, told Captain Amasa Delano, when called upon, that
- he came from Buenos Ayres, bound to Lima, with three hundred Negroes;
- that off Cape Horn, and in a subsequent fever, many Negroes had died;
- that also, by similar casualties, all the sea officers and the greatest
- part of the crew had died.
-
-
- [And so the deposition goes on, circumstantially recounting the
- fictitious story dictated to the deponent by Babo, and through the
- deponent imposed upon Captain Delano; and also recounting the friendly
- offers of Captain Delano, with other things, but all of which is here
- omitted. After the fictitious, strange story, etc., the deposition
- proceeds:]
-
-
- -That the generous Captain Amasa Delano remained on board all the day,
- till he left the ship anchored at six o'clock in the evening, deponent
- speaking to him always of his pretended misfortunes, under the
- fore-mentioned principles, without having had it in his power to tell a
- single word, or give him the least hint, that he might know the truth
- and state of things; because the Negro Babo, performing the office of an
- officious servant with all the appearance of submission of the humble
- slave, did not leave the deponent one moment; that this was in order to
- observe the deponent's actions and words, for the Negro Babo understands
- well the Spanish; and besides, there were thereabout some others who
- were constantly on the watch, and likewise understood the Spanish;...
- that upon one occasion, while deponent was standing on the deck
- conversing with Amasa Delano, by a secret sign the Negro Babo drew him
- (the deponent) aside, the act appearing as if originating with the
- deponent; that then, he being drawn aside, the Negro Babo proposed to
- him to gain from Amasa Delano full particulars about his ship, and crew,
- and arms; that the deponent asked "For what?" that the Negro Babo
- answered he might conceive; that, grieved at the prospect of what might
- overtake the generous Captain Amasa Delano, the deponent at first
- refused to ask the desired questions, and used every argument to induce
- the Negro Babo to give up this new design; that the Negro Babo showed
- the point of his dagger; that, after the information had been obtained,
- the Negro Babo again drew him aside, telling him that that very night he
- (the deponent) would be captain of two ships instead of one, for that,
- great part of the American's ship's crew being to be absent fishing, the
- six Ashantees, without any one else, would easily take it; that at this
- time he said other things to the same purpose; that no entreaties
- availed; that before Amasa Delano's coming on board, no hint had been
- given touching the capture of the American ship; that to prevent this
- project the deponent was powerless;... -that in some things his memory
- is confused, he cannot distinctly recall every event;... -that as soon
- as they had cast anchor at six of the clock in the evening, as has
- before been stated, the American captain took leave to return to his
- vessel; that upon a sudden impulse, which the deponent believes to have
- come from God and his angels, he, after the farewell had been said,
- followed the generous Captain Amasa Delano as far as the gunwale, where
- he stayed, under the pretence of taking leave, until Amasa Delano should
- have been seated in his boat; that on shoving off, the deponent sprang
- from the gunwale, into the boat, and fell into it, he knows not how, God
- guarding him; that-
-
-
- [Here, in the original, follows the account of what further happened at
- the escape, and how the "San Dominick" was retaken, and of the passage
- to the coast; including in the recital many expressions of "eternal
- gratitude" to the "generous Captain Amasa Delano." The deposition then
- proceeds with recapitulatory remarks, and a partial renumeration of the
- Negroes, making record of their individual part in the past events, with
- a view to furnishing, according to command of the court, the data
- whereon to found the criminal sentences to be pronounced. From this
- portion is the following:]
-
-
- -That he believes that all the Negroes, though not in the first place
- knowing to the design of revolt, when it was accomplished, approved
- it.... That the Negro, Jose, eighteen years old, and in the personal
- service of Don Alexandro, was the one who communicated the information
- to the Negro Babo, about the state of things in the cabin, before the
- revolt; that this is known, because, in the preceding midnight, lie used
- to come from his berth, which was under his master's, in the cabin, to
- the deck where the ringleader and his associates were, and had secret
- conversations with the Negro Babo, in which he was several times seen by
- the mate; that, one night, the mate drove him away twice;... that this
- same Negro Jose, was the one who, without being commanded to do so by
- the Negro Babo, as Lecbe and Martinqui were, stabbed his master, Don
- Alexandro, after he had been dragged half-lifeless to the deck;... that
- the mulatto steward, Francesco, was of the first band of revolters, that
- he was, in all things, the creature and tool of the Negro Babo; that, to
- make his court, he, just before a repast in the cabin, proposed, to the
- Negro Babo, poisoning a dish for the generous Captain Amasa Delano; this
- is known and believed, because the Negroes have said it; but that the
- Negro Babo, having another design, forbade Francesco;... that the
- Ashantee Lecbe was one of the worst of them; for that, on the day the
- ship was retaken, he assisted in the defence of her, with a hatchet in
- each hand, with one of which he wounded, in the breast, the chief mate
- of Amasa Delano, in the first act of boarding; this all knew; that, in
- sight of the deponent, Lecbe struck, with a hatchet, Don Francisco Masa
- when, by the Negro Babo's orders, he was carrying him to throw him
- overboard, alive; beside participating in the murder, before mentioned,
- of Don Alexandro Aranda, and others of the cabin-passengers; that, owing
- to the fury with which the Ashantees fought in the engagement with the
- boats, but this Lecbe and Yan survived; that Yan was bad as Lecbe; that
- Yan was the man who, by Babo's command, willingly prepared the skeleton
- of Don Alexandro, in a way the Negroes afterwards told the deponent, but
- which he, so long as reason is left him, can never divulge; that Yan and
- Lecbe were the two who, in a calm by night, riveted the skeleton to the
- bow; this also the Negroes told him; that the Negro Babo was he who
- traced the inscription below it; that the Negro Babo was the plotter
- from first to last; he ordered every murder, and was the helm and keel
- of the revolt; that Atufal was his lieutenant in all; but Atufal, with
- his own hand, committed no murder; nor did the Negro Babo;... that
- Atufal was shot, being killed in the fight with the boats, ere
- boarding;... that the Negresses, of age, were knowing to the revolt, and
- testified themselves satisfied at the death of their master, Don
- Alexandro; that, had the Negroes not restrained them, they would have
- tortured to death, instead of simply killing, the Spaniards slain by
- command of the Negro Babo; that the Negresses used their utmost
- influence to have the deponent made away with; that, in the various acts
- of murder, they sang songs and danced- not gaily, but solemnly; and
- before the engagement with the boats, as well as during the action, they
- sang melancholy songs to the Negroes, and that this melancholy tone was
- more inflaming than a different one would have been, and was so
- intended; that all this is believed, because the Negroes have said it.
-
- -That of the thirty-six men of the crew- exclusive of the passengers
- (all of whom are now dead), which the deponent had knowledge of- six
- only remained alive, with four cabin-boys and ship-boys, not included
- with the crew;.... -that the Negroes broke an arm of one of the
- cabin-boys and gave him strokes with hatchets.
-
-
- [Then follow various random disclosures referring to various periods of
- time. The following are extracted:]
-
-
- -That during the presence of Captain Amasa Delano on board, some
- attempts were made by the sailors, and one by Hermenegildo Gandix, to
- convey hints to him of the true state of affairs; but that these
- attempts were ineffectual, owing to fear of incurring death, and
- furthermore owing to the devices which offered contradictions to the
- true state of affairs; as well as owing to the generosity and piety of
- Amasa Delano, incapable of sounding such wickedness;... that Luys Galgo,
- a sailor about sixty years of age, and formerly of the king's navy, was
- one of those who sought to convey tokens to Captain Amasa Delano; but
- his intent, though undiscovered, being suspected, he was, on a pretence,
- made to retire out of sight, and at last into the hold, and there was
- made away with. This the Negroes have since said;... that one of the
- ship-boys feeling, from Captain Amasa Delano's presence, some hopes of
- release, and not having enough prudence, dropped some chance-word
- respecting his expectations, which being overheard and understood by a
- slave-boy with whom he was eating at the time, the latter struck him on
- the head with a knife, inflicting a bad wound, but of which the boy is
- now healing; that likewise, not long before the ship was brought to
- anchor, one of the seamen, steering at the time, endangered himself by
- letting the blacks remark a certain unconscious hopeful expression in
- his countenance, arising from some cause similar to the above; but this
- sailor, by his heedful after conduct, escaped;... that these statements
- are made to show the court that from the beginning to the end of the
- revolt, it was impossible for the deponent and his men to act otherwise
- than they did;... -that the third clerk, Hermenegildo Gandix, who before
- had been forced to live among the seamen, wearing a seaman's habit, and
- in all respects appearing to be one for the time; he, Gandix, was killed
- by a musket-ball fired through a mistake from the American boats before
- boarding; having in his fright ran up the mizzen-rigging, calling to the
- boats- "don't board," lest upon their boarding the Negroes should kill
- him; that this inducing the Americans to believe he some way favoured
- the cause of the Negroes, they fired two balls at him, so that he fell
- wounded from the rigging, and was drowned in the sea;... -that the young
- Don Joaquin, Marques de Aramboalaza, like Hermenegildo Gandix, the third
- clerk, was degraded to the office and appearance of a common seaman;
- that upon one occasion, when Don Joaquin shrank, the Negro Babo
- commanded the Ashantee Lecbe to take tar and heat it, and pour it upon
- Don Joaquin's hands;... -that Don Joaquin was killed owing to another
- mistake of the Americans, but one impossible to be avoided, as upon the
- approach of the boats, Don Joaquin, with a hatchet tied edge out and
- upright to his hand, was made by the Negroes to appear on the bulwarks;
- whereupon, seen with arms in his hands and in a questionable attitude,
- he was shot for a renegade seaman;... -that on the person of Don Joaquin
- was found secreted a jewel, which, by papers that were discovered,
- proved to have been meant for the shrine of our Lady of Mercy in Lima; a
- votive offering, beforehand prepared and guarded, to attest his
- gratitude, when he should have landed in Peru, his last destination, for
- the safe conclusion of his entire voyage from Spain;... -that the jewel,
- with the other effects of the late Don Joaquin, is in the custody of the
- brethren of the Hospital de Sacerdotes, awaiting the decision of the
- honourable court;... -that, owing to the condition of the deponent, as
- well as the haste in which the boats departed for the attack, the
- Americans were not forewarned that there were, among the apparent crew,
- a passenger and one of the clerks disguised by the Negro Babo;... -that,
- beside the Negroes killed in the action, some were killed after the
- capture and re-anchoring at night, when shackled to the ring-bolts on
- deck; that these deaths were committed by the sailors, ere they could be
- prevented. That so soon as informed of it, Captain Amasa Delano used all
- his authority, and, in particular with his own hand, struck down
- Martinez Gola, who, having found a razor in the pocket of an old jacket
- of his, which one of the shackled Negroes had on, was aiming it at the
- Negro's throat; that the noble Captain Amasa Delano also wrenched from
- the hand of Bartholomew Barlo, a dagger secreted at the time of the
- massacre of the whites, with which he was in the act of stabbing a
- shackled Negro, who, the same day, with another Negro, had thrown him
- down and jumped upon him;... that, for all the events, befalling through
- so long a time, during which the ship was in the hands of the Negro
- Babo, he cannot here give account; but that, what he has said is the
- most substantial of what occurs to him at present, and is the truth
- under the oath which he has taken; which declaration he affirmed and
- ratified, after hearing it read to him.
-
- He said that he is twenty-nine years of age, and broken in body and
- mind; that when finally dismissed by the court, he shall not return home
- to Chili, but betake himself to the monastery on Mount Agonia without;
- and signed with his honour, and crossed himself, and, for the time,
- departed as he came, in his litter, with the monk Infelez, to the
- Hospital de Sacerdotes.
-
- BENITO CERENO.
-
- DOCTOR ROZAS.
-
-
- If the deposition of Benito Cereno has served as the key to fit into the
- lock of the complications which preceded it, then, as a vault whose door
- has been flung back, the San Dominick's hull lies open to-day.
-
- Hitherto the nature of this narrative, besides rendering the intricacies
- in the beginning unavoidable, has more or less required that many
- things, instead of being set down in the order of occurrence, should be
- retrospectively, or irregularly given; this last is the case with the
- following passages, which will conclude the account:
-
- During the long, mild voyage to Lima, there was, as before hinted, a
- period during which Don Benito a little recovered his health, or, at
- least in some degree, his tranquillity. Ere the decided relapse which
- came, the two captains had many cordial conversations- their fraternal
- unreserve in singular contrast with former withdrawments.
-
- Again and again, it was repeated, how hard it had been to enact the part
- forced on the Spaniard by Babo.
-
- "Ah, my dear Don Amasa," Don Benito once said, "at those very times when
- you thought me so morose and ungrateful- nay when, as you now admit, you
- half thought me plotting your murder- at those very times my heart was
- frozen; I could not look at you, thinking of what, both on board this
- ship and your own, hung, from other hands, over my kind benefactor. And
- as God lives, Don Amasa, I know not whether desire for my own safety
- alone could have nerved me to that leap into your boat, had it not been
- for the thought that, did you, unenlightened, return to your ship, you,
- my best friend, with all who might be with you, stolen upon, that night,
- in your hammocks, would never in this world have wakened again. Do but
- think how you walked this deck, how you sat in this cabin, every inch of
- ground mined into honey-combs under you. Had I dropped the least hint,
- made the least advance toward an understanding between us, death,
- explosive death- yours as mine- would have ended the scene."
-
- "True, true," cried Captain Delano, starting, "you saved my life, Don
- Benito, more than I yours; saved it, too, against my knowledge and
- will."
-
- "Nay, my friend," rejoined the Spaniard, courteous even to the point of
- religion, "God charmed your life, but you saved mine. To think of some
- things you did- those smilings and chattings, rash pointings and
- gesturings. For less than these, they slew my mate, Raneds; but you had
- the Prince of Heaven's safe conduct through all ambuscades."
-
- "Yes, all is owing to Providence, I know; but the temper of my mind that
- morning was more than commonly pleasant, while the sight of so much
- suffering- more apparent than real- added to my good nature, compassion,
- and charity, happily interweaving the three. Had it been otherwise,
- doubtless, as you hint, some of my interferences with the blacks might
- have ended unhappily enough. Besides that, those feelings I spoke of
- enabled me to get the better of momentary distrust, at times when
- acuteness might have cost me my life, without saving another's. Only at
- the end did my suspicions get the better of me, and you know how wide of
- the mark they then proved."
-
- "Wide, indeed," said Don Benito, sadly; "you were with me all day; stood
- with me, sat with me, talked with me, looked at me, ate with me, drank
- with me; and yet, your last act was to clutch for a villain, not only an
- innocent man, but the most pitiable of all men. To such degree may
- malign machinations and deceptions impose. So far may even the best men
- err, in judging the conduct of one with the recesses of whose condition
- he is not acquainted. But you were forced to it; and you were in time
- undeceived. Would that, in both respects, it was so ever, and with all
- men."
-
- "I think I understand you; you generalize, Don Benito; and mournfully
- enough. But the past is passed; why moralize upon it? Forget it. See,
- yon bright sun has forgotten it all, and the blue sea, and the blue sky;
- these have turned over new leaves."
-
- "Because they have no memory," he dejectedly replied; "because they are
- not human."
-
- "But these mild trades that now fan your cheek, Don Benito, do they not
- come with a human-like healing to you? Warm friends, steadfast friends
- are the trades."
-
- "With their steadfastness they but waft me to my tomb, Senor," was the
- foreboding response.
-
- "You are saved, Don Benito," cried Captain Delano, more and more
- astonished and pained; "you are saved; what has cast such a shadow upon
- you?"
-
- "The Negro."
-
- There was silence, while the moody man sat, slowly and unconsciously
- gathering his mantle about him, as if it were a pall.
-
- There was no more conversation that day.
-
- But if the Spaniard's melancholy sometimes ended in muteness upon topics
- like the above, there were others upon which he never spoke at all; on
- which, indeed, all his old reserves were piled. Pass over the worst and,
- only to elucidate, let an item or two of these be cited. The dress so
- precise and costly, worn by him on the day whose events have been
- narrated, had not willingly been put on. And that silver-mounted sword,
- apparent symbol of despotic command, was not, indeed, a sword, but the
- ghost of one. The scabbard, artificially stiffened, was empty.
-
- As for the black- whose brain, not body, had schemed and led the revolt,
- with the plot- his slight frame, inadequate to that which it held, had
- at once yielded to the superior muscular strength of his captor, in the
- boat. Seeing all was over, he uttered no sound, and could not be forced
- to. His aspect seemed to say: since I cannot do deeds, I will not speak
- words. Put in irons in the hold, with the rest, he was carried to Lima.
- During the passage Don Benito did not visit him. Nor then, nor at any
- time after, would he look at him. Before the tribunal he refused. When
- pressed by the judges he fainted. On the testimony of the sailors alone
- rested the legal identity of Babo. And yet the Spaniard would, upon
- occasion, verbally refer to the Negro, as has been shown; but look on
- him he would not, or could not.
-
- Some months after, dragged to the gibbet at the tail of a mule, the
- black met his voiceless end. The body was burned to ashes; but for many
- days, the head, that hive of subtlety, fixed on a pole in the Plaza,
- met, unabashed, the gaze of the whites; and across the Plaza looked
- toward St. Bartholomew's church, in whose vaults slept then, as now, the
- recovered bones of Aranda; and across the Rimac bridge looked toward the
- monastery, on Mount Agonia without; where, three months after being
- dismissed by the court, Benito Cereno, borne on the bier, did, indeed,
- follow his leader.
-
- -THE END-
-