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Wrecker, The
CHAPTER VIII - FACES ON THE CITY FRONT
Robert Louis Stevenson
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       CHAPTER VIII - FACES ON THE CITY FRONT
       It is very much the custom to view life as if it were exactly
       ruled in two, like sleep and waking; the provinces of play and
       business standing separate. The business side of my career in
       San Francisco has been now disposed of; I approach the
       chapter of diversion; and it will be found they had about an
       equal share in building up the story of the Wrecker--a
       gentleman whose appearance may be presently expected.
       With all my occupations, some six afternoons and two or three
       odd evenings remained at my disposal every week: a
       circumstance the more agreeable as I was a stranger in a city
       singularly picturesque. From what I had once called myself,
       The Amateur Parisian, I grew (or declined) into a waterside
       prowler, a lingerer on wharves, a frequenter of shy
       neighbourhoods, a scraper of acquaintance with eccentric
       characters. I visited Chinese and Mexican gambling-hells,
       German secret societies, sailors' boarding-houses, and "dives"
       of every complexion of the disreputable and dangerous. I have
       seen greasy Mexican hands pinned to the table with a knife for
       cheating, seamen (when blood-money ran high) knocked down
       upon the public street and carried insensible on board short-
       handed ships, shots exchanged, and the smoke (and the
       company) dispersing from the doors of the saloon. I have heard
       cold-minded Polacks debate upon the readiest method of
       burning San Francisco to the ground, hot-headed working men
       and women bawl and swear in the tribune at the Sandlot, and
       Kearney himself open his subscription for a gallows, name the
       manufacturers who were to grace it with their dangling bodies,
       and read aloud to the delighted multitude a telegram of
       adhesion from a member of the State legislature: all which
       preparations of proletarian war were (in a moment) breathed
       upon and abolished by the mere name and fame of Mr.
       Coleman. That lion of the Vigilantes had but to rouse himself
       and shake his ears, and the whole brawling mob was silenced.
       I could not but reflect what a strange manner of man this was,
       to be living unremarked there as a private merchant, and to be
       so feared by a whole city; and if I was disappointed, in my
       character of looker-on, to have the matter end ingloriously
       without the firing of a shot or the hanging of a single
       millionnaire, philosophy tried to tell me that this sight was
       truly the more picturesque. In a thousand towns and different
       epochs I might have had occasion to behold the cowardice and
       carnage of street fighting; where else, but only there and then,
       could I have enjoyed a view of Coleman (the intermittent
       despot) walking meditatively up hill in a quiet part of town,
       with a very rolling gait, and slapping gently his great thigh?
       Minora Canamus. This historic figure stalks silently through a
       corner of the San Francisco of my memory: the rest is bric-a-
       brac, the reminiscences of a vagrant sketcher. My delight was
       much in slums. Little Italy was a haunt of mine; there I would
       look in at the windows of small eating-shops, transported
       bodily from Genoa or Naples, with their macaroni, and chianti
       flasks, and portraits of Garibaldi, and coloured political
       caricatures; or (entering in) hold high debate with some
       ear-ringed fisher of the bay as to the designs of "Mr. Owstria"
       and "Mr. Rooshia." I was often to be observed (had there been
       any to observe me) in that dis-peopled, hill-side solitude of
       Little Mexico, with its crazy wooden houses, endless crazy
       wooden stairs, and perilous mountain goat-paths in the sand.
       Chinatown by a thousand eccentricities drew and held me; I
       could never have enough of its ambiguous, interracial
       atmosphere, as of a vitalised museum; never wonder enough at
       its outlandish, necromantic-looking vegetables set forth to sell
       in commonplace American shop-windows, its temple doors
       open and the scent of the joss-stick streaming forth on the
       American air, its kites of Oriental fashion hanging fouled in
       Western telegraph-wires, its flights of paper prayers which the
       trade-wind hunts and dissipates along Western gutters. I was a
       frequent wanderer on North Beach, gazing at the straits, and
       the huge Cape-Horners creeping out to sea, and imminent
       Tamalpais. Thence, on my homeward way, I might visit that
       strange and filthy shed, earth-paved and walled with the cages
       of wild animals and birds, where at a ramshackle counter, amid
       the yells of monkeys, and a poignant atmosphere of menagerie,
       forty-rod whiskey was administered by a proprietor as dirty as
       his beasts. Nor did I even neglect Nob Hill, which is itself a
       kind of slum, being the habitat of the mere millionnaire. There
       they dwell upon the hill-top, high raised above man's clamour,
       and the trade-wind blows between their palaces about deserted
       streets.
       But San Francisco is not herself only. She is not only the most
       interesting city in the Union, and the hugest smelting-pot of
       races and the precious metals. She keeps, besides, the doors of
       the Pacific, and is the port of entry to another world and an
       earlier epoch in man's history. Nowhere else shall you observe
       (in the ancient phrase) so many tall ships as here convene from
       round the Horn, from China, from Sydney, and the Indies; but
       scarce remarked amid that crowd of deep-sea giants, another
       class of craft, the Island schooner, circulates: low in the water,
       with lofty spars and dainty lines, rigged and fashioned like a
       yacht, manned with brown-skinned, soft-spoken, sweet-eyed
       native sailors, and equipped with their great double-ender boats
       that tell a tale of boisterous sea-beaches. These steal out and in
       again, unnoted by the world or even the newspaper press, save
       for the line in the clearing column, "Schooner So-and-so for
       Yap and South Sea Islands"--steal out with nondescript cargoes
       of tinned salmon, gin, bolts of gaudy cotton stuff, women's
       hats, and Waterbury watches, to return, after a year, piled as
       high as to the eaves of the house with copra, or wallowing deep
       with the shells of the tortoise or the pearl oyster. To me, in my
       character of the Amateur Parisian, this island traffic, and even
       the island world, were beyond the bounds of curiosity, and how
       much more of knowledge. I stood there on the extreme shore of
       the West and of to-day. Seventeen hundred years ago, and
       seven thousand miles to the east, a legionary stood, perhaps,
       upon the wall of Antoninus, and looked northward toward the
       mountains of the Picts. For all the interval of time and space, I,
       when I looked from the cliff-house on the broad Pacific, was
       that man's heir and analogue: each of us standing on the verge
       of the Roman Empire (or, as we now call it, Western
       civilization), each of us gazing onward into zones unromanised.
       But I was dull. I looked rather backward, keeping a kind eye
       on Paris; and it required a series of converging incidents to
       change my attitude of nonchalance for one of interest, and even
       longing, which I little dreamed that I should live to gratify.
       The first of these incidents brought me in acquaintance with a
       certain San Francisco character, who had something of a name
       beyond the limits of the city, and was known to many lovers of
       good English. I had discovered a new slum, a place of
       precarious, sandy cliffs, deep, sandy cuttings, solitary, ancient
       houses, and the butt-ends of streets. It was already environed.
       The ranks of the street-lamps threaded it unbroken. The city,
       upon all sides of it, was tightly packed, and growled with
       traffic. To-day, I do not doubt the very landmarks are all swept
       away; but it offered then, within narrow limits, a delightful
       peace, and (in the morning, when I chiefly went there) a
       seclusion almost rural. On a steep sand-hill, in this
       neighbourhood, toppled, on the most insecure foundation, a
       certain row of houses, each with a bit of garden, and all (I have
       to presume) inhabited. Thither I used to mount by a crumbling
       footpath, and in front of the last of the houses, would sit down
       to sketch. The very first day I saw I was observed, out of the
       ground-floor window by a youngish, good-looking fellow,
       prematurely bald, and with an expression both lively and
       engaging. The second, as we were still the only figures in the
       landscape, it was no more than natural that we should nod.
       The third, he came out fairly from his intrenchments, praised
       my sketch, and with the impromptu cordiality of artists carried
       me into his apartment; where I sat presently in the midst of a
       museum of strange objects,--paddles and battle-clubs and
       baskets, rough-hewn stone images, ornaments of threaded
       shell, cocoanut bowls, snowy cocoanut plumes--evidences and
       examples of another earth, another climate, another race, and
       another (if a ruder) culture. Nor did these objects lack a fitting
       commentary in the conversation of my new acquaintance.
       Doubtless you have read his book. You know already how he
       tramped and starved, and had so fine a profit of living, in his
       days among the islands; and meeting him, as I did, one artist
       with another, after months of offices and picnics, you can
       imagine with what charm he would speak, and with what
       pleasure I would hear. It was in such talks, which we were
       both eager to repeat, that I first heard the names--first fell under
       the spell--of the islands; and it was from one of the first of them
       that I returned (a happy man) with _Omoo_ under one arm, and
       my friend's own adventures under the other.
       The second incident was more dramatic, and had, besides, a
       bearing on my future. I was standing, one day, near a boat-
       landing under Telegraph Hill. A large barque, perhaps of
       eighteen hundred tons, was coming more than usually close
       about the point to reach her moorings; and I was observing her
       with languid inattention, when I observed two men to stride
       across the bulwarks, drop into a shore boat, and, violently
       dispossessing the boatman of his oars, pull toward the landing
       where I stood. In a surprisingly short time they came tearing
       up the steps; and I could see that both were too well dressed to
       be foremast hands--the first even with research, and both, and
       specially the first, appeared under the empire of some strong
       emotion.
       "Nearest police office!" cried the leader.
       "This way," said I, immediately falling in with their precipitate
       pace. "What's wrong? What ship is that?"
       "That's the Gleaner," he replied. "I am chief officer, this
       gentleman's third; and we've to get in our depositions before the
       crew. You see they might corral us with the captain; and that's
       no kind of berth for me. I've sailed with some hard cases in my
       time, and seen pins flying like sand on a squally day--but never
       a match to our old man. It never let up from the Hook to the
       Farallones; and the last man was dropped not sixteen hours
       ago. Packet rats our men were, and as tough a crowd as ever
       sand-bagged a man's head in; but they looked sick enough
       when the captain started in with his fancy shooting."
       "O, he's done up," observed the other. "He won't go to sea no
       more."
       "You make me tired," retorted his superior. "If he gets ashore
       in one piece and isn't lynched in the next ten minutes, he'll do
       yet. The owners have a longer memory than the public; they'll
       stand by him; they don't find as smart a captain every day in the
       year."
       "O, he's a son of a gun of a fine captain; there ain't no doubt of
       that," concurred the other, heartily. "Why, I don't suppose
       there's been no wages paid aboard that Gleaner for three trips."
       "No wages?" I exclaimed, for I was still a novice in maritime
       affairs.
       "Not to sailor-men before the mast," agreed the mate. "Men
       cleared out; wasn't the soft job they maybe took it for. She isn'
       the first ship that never paid wages."
       I could not but observe that our pace was progressively
       relaxing; and indeed I have often wondered since whether the
       hurry of the start were not intended for the gallery alone.
       Certain it is at least, that when we had reached the police
       office, and the mates had made their deposition, and told their
       horrid tale of five men murdered, some with savage passion,
       some with cold brutality, between Sandy Hook and San
       Francisco, the police were despatched in time to be too late.
       Before we arrived, the ruffian had slipped out upon the dock,
       had mingled with the crowd, and found a refuge in the house of
       an acquaintance; and the ship was only tenanted by his late
       victims. Well for him that he had been thus speedy. For when
       word began to go abroad among the shore-side characters,
       when the last victim was carried by to the hospital, when those
       who had escaped (as by miracle) from that floating shambles,
       began to circulate and show their wounds in the crowd, it was
       strange to witness the agitation that seized and shook that
       portion of the city. Men shed tears in public; bosses of
       lodging-houses, long inured to brutality, and above all,
       brutality to sailors, shook their fists at heaven: if hands could
       have been laid on the captain of the Gleaner, his shrift would
       have been short. That night (so gossip reports) he was headed
       up in a barrel and smuggled across the bay: in two ships
       already he had braved the penitentiary and the gallows; and yet,
       by last accounts, he now commands another on the Western
       Ocean.
       As I have said, I was never quite certain whether Mr. Nares
       (the mate) did not intend that his superior should escape. It
       would have been like his preference of loyalty to law; it would
       have been like his prejudice, which was all in favour of the
       after-guard. But it must remain a matter of conjecture only.
       Well as I came to know him in the sequel, he was never
       communicative on that point, nor indeed on any that concerned
       the voyage of the Gleaner. Doubtless he had some reason for
       his reticence. Even during our walk to the police office, he
       debated several times with Johnson, the third officer, whether
       he ought not to give up himself, as well as to denounce the
       captain. He had decided in the negative, arguing that "it would
       probably come to nothing; and even if there was a stink, he had
       plenty good friends in San Francisco." And to nothing it came;
       though it must have very nearly come to something, for Mr.
       Nares disappeared immediately from view and was scarce less
       closely hidden than his captain.
       Johnson, on the other hand, I often met. I could never learn
       this man's country; and though he himself claimed to be
       American, neither his English nor his education warranted the
       claim. In all likelihood he was of Scandinavian birth and
       blood, long pickled in the forecastles of English and American
       ships. It is possible that, like so many of his race in similar
       positions, he had already lost his native tongue. In mind, at
       least, he was quite denationalised; thought only in English--to
       call it so; and though by nature one of the mildest, kindest, and
       most feebly playful of mankind, he had been so long
       accustomed to the cruelty of sea discipline, that his stories (told
       perhaps with a giggle) would sometimes turn me chill. In
       appearance, he was tall, light of weight, bold and high-bred of
       feature, dusky-haired, and with a face of a clean even brown:
       the ornament of outdoor men. Seated in a chair, you might
       have passed him off for a baronet or a military officer; but let
       him rise, and it was Fo'c's'le Jack that came rolling toward you,
       crab-like; let him but open his lips, and it was Fo'c's'le Jack
       that piped and drawled his ungrammatical gibberish. He had
       sailed (among other places) much among the islands; and after
       a Cape Horn passage with its snow-squalls and its frozen
       sheets, he announced his intention of "taking a turn among
       them Kanakas." I thought I should have lost him soon; but
       according to the unwritten usage of mariners, he had first to
       dissipate his wages. "Guess I'll have to paint this town red,"
       was his hyperbolical expression; for sure no man ever
       embarked upon a milder course of dissipation, most of his days
       being passed in the little parlour behind Black Tom's public
       house, with a select corps of old particular acquaintances, all
       from the South Seas, and all patrons of a long yarn, a short
       pipe, and glasses round.
       Black Tom's, to the front, presented the appearance of a fourth-
       rate saloon, devoted to Kanaka seamen, dirt, negrohead
       tobacco, bad cigars, worse gin, and guitars and banjos in a
       state of decline. The proprietor, a powerful coloured man, was
       at once a publican, a ward politician, leader of some brigade of
       "lambs" or "smashers," at the wind of whose clubs the party
       bosses and the mayor were supposed to tremble, and (what hurt
       nothing) an active and reliable crimp. His front quarters, then,
       were noisy, disreputable, and not even safe. I have seen worse
       frequented saloons where there were fewer scandals; for Tom
       was often drunk himself; and there is no doubt the Lambs must
       have been a useful body, or the place would have been closed.
       I remember one day, not long before an election, seeing a blind
       man, very well dressed, led up to the counter and remain a long
       while in consultation with the negro. The pair looked so ill-
       assorted, and the awe with which the drinkers fell back and left
       them in the midst of an impromptu privacy was so unusual in
       such a place, that I turned to my next neighbour with a
       question. He told me the blind man was a distinguished party
       boss, called by some the King of San Francisco, but perhaps
       better known by his picturesque Chinese nickname of the Blind
       White Devil. "The Lambs must be wanted pretty bad, I guess,"
       my informant added. I have here a sketch of the Blind White
       Devil leaning on the counter; on the next page, and taken the
       same hour, a jotting of Black Tom threatening a whole crowd
       of customers with a long Smith and Wesson: to such heights
       and depths we rose and fell in the front parts of the saloon.
       Meanwhile, away in the back quarters, sat the small informal
       South Sea club, talking of another world and surely of a
       different century. Old schooner captains they were, old South
       Sea traders, cooks, and mates: fine creatures, softened by
       residence among a softer race: full men besides, though not by
       reading, but by strange experience; and for days together I
       could hear their yarns with an unfading pleasure. All had
       indeed some touch of the poetic; for the beach-comber, when
       not a mere ruffian, is the poor relation of the artist. Even
       through Johnson's inarticulate speech, his "O yes, there ain't no
       harm in them Kanakas," or "O yes, that's a son of a gun of a
       fine island, mountainious right down; I didn't never ought to
       have left that island," there pierced a certain gusto of
       appreciation: and some of the rest were master-talkers. From
       their long tales, their traits of character and unpremeditated
       landscape, there began to piece itself together in my head some
       image of the islands and the island life: precipitous shores,
       spired mountain tops, the deep shade of hanging forests, the
       unresting surf upon the reef, and the unending peace of the
       lagoon; sun, moon, and stars of an imperial brightness; man
       moving in these scenes scarce fallen, and woman lovelier than
       Eve; the primal curse abrogated, the bed made ready for the
       stranger, life set to perpetual music, and the guest welcomed,
       the boat urged, and the long night beguiled, with poetry and
       choral song. A man must have been an unsuccessful artist; he
       must have starved on the streets of Paris; he must have been
       yoked to a commercial force like Pinkerton, before he can
       conceive the longings that at times assailed me. The draughty,
       rowdy city of San Francisco, the bustling office where my
       friend Jim paced like a caged lion daily between ten and four,
       even (at times) the retrospect of Paris, faded in comparison.
       Many a man less tempted would have thrown up all to realise
       his visions; but I was by nature unadventurous and uninitiative:
       to divert me from all former paths and send me cruising
       through the isles of paradise, some force external to myself
       must be exerted; Destiny herself must use the fitting wedge;
       and little as I deemed it, that tool was already in her hand of
       brass.
       I sat, one afternoon, in the corner of a great, glassy, silvered
       saloon, a free lunch at my one elbow, at the other a
       "conscientious nude" from the brush of local talent; when, with
       the tramp of feet and a sudden buzz of voices, the swing-doors
       were flung broadly open and the place carried as by storm. The
       crowd which thus entered (mostly seafaring men, and all
       prodigiously excited) contained a sort of kernel or general
       centre of interest, which the rest merely surrounded and
       advertised, as children in the Old World surround and escort
       the Punch-and-Judy man; the word went round the bar like
       wildfire that these were Captain Trent and the survivors of the
       British brig Flying Scud, picked up by a British war-ship on
       Midway Island, arrived that morning in San Francisco Bay,
       and now fresh from making the necessary declarations.
       Presently I had a good sight of them: four brown, seamanlike
       fellows, standing by the counter, glass in hand, the centre of a
       score of questioners. One was a Kanaka--the cook, I was
       informed; one carried a cage with a canary, which occasionally
       trilled into thin song; one had his left arm in a sling and looked
       gentlemanlike, and somewhat sickly, as though the injury had
       been severe and he was scarce recovered; and the captain
       himself--a red-faced, blue-eyed, thickset man of five and forty
       --wore a bandage on his right hand. The incident struck me; I
       was struck particularly to see captain, cook, and foremost
       hands walking the street and visiting saloons in company; and,
       as when anything impressed me, I got my sketch-book out, and
       began to steal a sketch of the four castaways. The crowd,
       sympathising with my design, made a clear lane across the
       room; and I was thus enabled, all unobserved myself, to
       observe with a still-growing closeness the face and the
       demeanour of Captain Trent.
       Warmed by whiskey and encouraged by the eagerness of the
       bystanders, that gentleman was now rehearsing the history of
       his misfortune. It was but scraps that reached me: how he
       "filled her on the starboard tack," and how "it came up sudden
       out of the nor'nor'west," and "there she was, high and dry."
       Sometimes he would appeal to one of the men--"That was how
       it was, Jack?"--and the man would reply, "That was the way of
       it, Captain Trent." Lastly, he started a fresh tide of popular
       sympathy by enunciating the sentiment, "Damn all these
       Admirality Charts, and that's what I say!" From the nodding of
       heads and the murmurs of assent that followed, I could see that
       Captain Trent had established himself in the public mind as a
       gentleman and a thorough navigator: about which period, my
       sketch of the four men and the canary-bird being finished, and
       all (especially the canary-bird) excellent likenesses, I buckled
       up my book, and slipped from the saloon.
       Little did I suppose that I was leaving Act I, Scene I, of the
       drama of my life; and yet the scene, or rather the captain's face,
       lingered for some time in my memory. I was no prophet, as I
       say; but I was something else: I was an observer; and one
       thing I knew, I knew when a man was terrified. Captain Trent,
       of the British brig Flying Scud, had been glib; he had been
       ready; he had been loud; but in his blue eyes I could detect the
       chill, and in the lines of his countenance spy the agitation of
       perpetual terror. Was he trembling for his certificate? In my
       judgment, it was some livelier kind of fear that thrilled in the
       man's marrow as he turned to drink. Was it the result of recent
       shock, and had he not yet recovered the disaster to his brig? I
       remembered how a friend of mine had been in a railway
       accident, and shook and started for a month; and although
       Captain Trent of the Flying Scud had none of the appearance of
       a nervous man, I told myself, with incomplete conviction, that
       his must be a similar case.
       Content of CHAPTER VIII - FACES ON THE CITY FRONT [Robert Louis Stevenson's novel: The Wrecker]
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