Âmona; The Child; And The Beast

From “The Strange Adventure Of James Shervinton and Other
Stories”

By Louis Becke

T. FISHER UNWIN, 1902 
  LONDON

 ÂMONA; THE CHILD; AND THE BEAST
 THE SNAKE AND THE BELL
 SOUTH SEA NOTES
 I
 II




ÂMONA; THE CHILD; AND THE BEAST


Âmona was, as his master so frequently told him—accentuating the remark
with a blow or a kick—only “a miserable kanaka.” Of his miserableness
there was no doubt, for Denison, who lived in the same house as he did,
was a daily witness of it—and his happiness. Also, he was a kanaka—a
native of Niué, in the South Pacific; Savage Island it is called by the
traders and is named on the charts, though its five thousand sturdy,
brown-skinned inhabitants have been civilised, Christianised, and have
lived fairly cleanly for the past thirty years.

Âmona and Denison had the distinction of being employed by Armitage,
one of the most unmitigated blackguards in the Pacific. He was a
shipowner, planter, merchant, and speculator; was looked upon by a good
many people as “not a bad sort of a fellow, you know—and the soul of
hospitality.” In addition, he was an incorrigible drunken bully, and
broke his wife’s heart within four years after she married him. Âmona
was his cook. Denison was one of his supercargoes, and (when a long
boat of drunkenness made him see weird visions of impossible creatures)
manager of the business on shore, overseer, accountant, and
Jack-of-all-trades. How he managed to stay on with such a brute I don’t
know. He certainly paid him well enough, but he (Denison) could have
got another berth from other people in Samoa, Fiji, or Tonga had he
wanted it. And, although Armitage was always painfully civil to
Denison—who tried to keep his business from going to the dogs—the man
hated him as much as he despised Âmona, and would have liked to have
kicked him, as he would have liked to have kicked or strangled any one
who knew the secret of his wife’s death and his child’s lameness. And
three people in Samoa did know it—Âmona, the Niué cook, Dr. Eckhardt,
and Denison. Armitage has been dead now these five-and-twenty
years—died, as he deserved to die, alone and friendless in an
Australian bush hospital out in the God-forsaken Never-Never country,
and when Denison heard of his death, he looked at the gentle wife’s
dim, faded photograph, and wondered if the Beast saw her sweet, sad
face in his dying moments. He trusted not; for in her eyes would have
shown only the holy light of love and forgiveness—things which a man
like Armitage could not have understood—even then.

She had been married three years when she came with him to Samoa to
live on Solo-Solo Plantation, in a great white-painted bungalow,
standing amid a grove of breadfruit and coco-palms, and overlooking the
sea to the north, east, and west; to the south was the dark green of
the mountain-forest.

“Oh! I think it is the fairest, sweetest picture in the world,” she
said to Denison the first time he met her. She was sitting on the
verandah with her son in her lap, and as she spoke she pressed her lips
to his soft little cheek and caressed the tiny hands. “So different
from where I was born and lived all my life—on the doll, sun-baked
plains of the Riverina—isn’t it, my pet?”

“I am glad that you like the place, Mrs. Armitage,” the supercargo said
as he looked at the young, girlish face and thought that she, too, with
her baby, made a fair, sweet picture. How she loved the child! And how
the soft, grey-blue eyes would lose their sadness when the little one
turned its face up to hers and smiled! How came it, he wondered, that
such a tender, flower-like woman was mated to such a man as Armitage!

Long after she was dead, Denison heard the story—one common enough. Her
father, whose station adjoined that of Armitage, got into financial
difficulties, went to Armitage for help, and practically sold his
daughter to the Beast for a couple of thousand pounds. Very likely such
a man would have sold his daughter’s mother as well if he wanted money.


As they sat talking, Armitage rode up, half-drunk as usual. He was a
big man, good-looking.

“Hallo, Nell! Pawing the damned kid as usual! Why the hell don’t you
let one of the girls take the little animal and let him tumble about on
the grass? You’re spoiling the child—by God, you are.”

“Ah, he’s so happy, Fred, here with me, and——”

“Happy be damned—you’re always letting him maul you about. I want a
whisky-and-soda, and so does Denison—don’t you?” And then the Beast, as
soon as his wife with the child in her arms had left the room, began to
tell his subordinate of a “new” girl he had met that morning in Joe
D’Acosta’s saloon.

“Oh, shut up, man. Your wife is in the next room.”

“Let her hear—and be damned to her! She knows what I do. I don’t
disguise anything from her. I’m not a sneak in that way. By God, I’m
not the man to lose any fun from sentimental reasons. Have you seen
this new girl at Joe’s? She’s a Manhiki half-caste. God, man! She’s
glorious, simply glorious!”

“You mean Laea, I suppose. She’s a common beacher—sailor man’s trull.
Surely you wouldn’t be seen ever speaking to _her?_”

“Wouldn’t I! You don’t know me yet! I like the girl, and I’ve fixed
things up with her. She’s coming here as my nursemaid—twenty dollars a
month! What do you think of that?”

“You would not insult your wife so horribly!”

He looked at Denison sullenly, but made no answer, as the supercargo
went on:

“You’ll get the dead cut from every white man in Samoa. Not a soul will
put foot inside your store door, and Joe D’Acosta himself would refuse
to sell you a drink! Might as well shoot yourself at once.”

“Oh, well, damn it all, don’t keep on preaching. I—I was more in fun
than anything else. Ha! Here’s Âmona with the drinks. Why don’t you be
a bit smarter, you damned frizzy-haired man-eater?”

Amona’s sallow face flushed deeply, but he made no reply to the insult
as he handed a glass to his master.

“Put the tray down there, confound you! Don’t stand there like a
blarsted mummy; clear out till we want you again.”

The native made no answer, bent his head in silence, and stepped
quietly away. Then Armitage began to grumble at him as a “useless
swine.”

“Why,” said Denison, “Mrs. Armitage was only just telling me that he’s
worth all the rest of the servants put together. And, by Jove, he _is_
fond of your youngster—simply worships the little chap.”

Armitage snorted, and turned his lips down. Ten minutes later, he was
asleep in his chair.


Nearly six months had passed—six months of wretchedness to the young
wife, whose heart was slowly breaking under the strain of living with
the Beast. Such happiness as was hers lay in the companionship of her
little son, and every evening Tom Denison would see her watching the
child and the patient, faithful Âmona, as the two played together on
the smooth lawn in front of the sitting-room, or ran races in and out
among the mango-trees. She was becoming paler and thinner every day—the
Beast was getting fatter and coarser, and more brutalised. Sometimes he
would remain in Apia for a week, returning home either boisterously
drunk or sullen and scowling-faced. In the latter case, he would come
into the office where Denison worked (he had left the schooner of which
he was supercargo, and was now “overseering” Solo-Solo) and try to
grasp the muddled condition of his financial affairs. Then, with much
variegated language, he would stride away, cursing the servants and the
place and everything in general, mount his horse, and ride off again to
the society of the loafers, gamblers, and flaunting unfortunates who
haunted the drinking saloons of Apia and Matafele.

One day came a crisis. Denison was rigging a tackle to haul a
tree-trunk into position in the plantation saw-pit, when Armitage rode
up to the house. He dismounted and went inside. Five minutes later
Amona came staggering down the path to him. His left cheek was cut to
the bone by a blow from Armitage’s fist. Denison brought him into his
own room, stitched up the wound, and gave him a glass of grog, and told
him to light his pipe and rest.

“Àmona, you’re a _valea_ (fool). Why don’t you leave this place? This
man will kill you some day. How many beatings has he given you?” He
spoke in English.

“I know not how many. But it is God’s will. And if the master some day
killeth me, it is well. And yet, but for some things, I would use my
knife on him.”

“What things?”

He came over to the supercargo, and, seating himself cross-legged on
the floor, placed his firm, brown, right hand on the white man’s knee.

“For two things, good friend. The little fingers of the child are
clasped tightly around my heart, and when his father striketh me and
calls me a filthy man-eater, a dog, and a pig, I know no pain. That is
one thing. And the other thing is this—the child’s mother hath come to
me when my body hath ached from the father’s blows, and the blood hath
covered my face; and she hath bound up my wounds and wept silent tears,
and together have we knelt and called upon God to turn his heart from
the grog and the foul women, and to take away from her and the child
the bitterness of these things.”

“You’re a good fellow, Âmona,” said Denison, as he saw that the man’s
cheeks were wet with tears.

“Nay, for sometimes my heart is bitter with anger. But God is good to
me. For the child loveth me. And the mother is of God... aye, and she
will be with Him soon.” Then he rose to his knees suddenly, and looked
wistfully at the supercargo, as he put his hand on his. “She will be
dead before the next moon is _ai aiga_ (in the first quarter), for at
night I lie outside her door, and but three nights ago she cried out to
me: ‘Come, Amona, Come!’ And I went in, and she was sitting up on her
bed and blood was running from her mouth. But she bade me tell no
one—not even thee. And it was then she told me that death was near to
her, for she hath a disease whose roots lie in her chest, and which
eateth away her strength. Dear friend, let me tell thee of some
things... This man is a devil.... I know he but desires to see her die.
He hath cursed her before me, and twice have I seen him take the child
from her arms, and, setting him on the floor to weep in terror, take
his wife by the hand——”

“Stop, man; stop! That’ll do. Say no more! The beast!”

“_E tonu, e tonu_ (true, true),” said the man, quietly, and still
speaking in Samoan. “He is as a beast of the mountains, as a tiger of
the country India, which devoureth the lamb and the kid.... And so now
I have opened my heart to thee of these things——”

A native woman rushed into the room: “Come, Âmona, come. _Misi Fafine_
(the mistress) bleeds from her mouth again.”

The white man and the brown ran into the front sitting-room together,
just as they heard a piercing shriek of terror from the child; then
came the sound of a heavy fall.

As they entered, Armitage strode out, jolting against them as he
passed. His face was swollen and ugly with passion—bad to look at.

“Go and pick up the child, you frizzy-haired pig!” he muttered hoarsely
to Amona as he passed. “He fell off his mother’s lap.”

Mrs. Armitage was leaning back in her chair, as white as death, and
trying to speak, as with one hand she tried to stanch the rush of blood
from her mouth, and with the other pointed to her child, who was lying
on his face under a table, motionless and unconscious.

In less than ten minutes, a native was galloping through the bush to
Apia for Dr. Eckhardt. Denison had picked up the child, who, as he came
to, began to cry. Assuring his mother that he was not much hurt, he
brought him to her, and sat beside the lounge on which she lay, holding
him in his arms. He was a good little man, and did not try to talk to
her when the supercargo whispered to him to keep silent, but lay
stroking the poor mother’s thin white hand. Yet every now and then, as
he moved or Denison changed his position, he would utter a cry of pain
and say his leg pained him.

Four hours later the German doctor arrived. Mrs. Armitage was asleep;
so Eckhardt would not awaken her at the time. The boy, however, had
slept but fitfully, and every now and then awakened with a sob of pain.
The nurse stripped him, and Eckhardt soon found out what was wrong—a
serious injury to the left hip.

Late in the evening, as the big yellow-bearded German doctor and
Denison sat in the dining room smoking and talking, Taloi, the child’s
nurse entered, and was followed by Amona, and the woman told them the
whole story.

“_Misi Fafine_ was sitting in a chair with the boy on her lap when the
master came in. His eyes were black and fierce with anger, and,
stepping up, he seized the child by the arm, and bade him get down.
Then the little one screamed in terror, and _Misi Fafine_ screamed too,
and the master became as mad, for he tore the boy from his mother’s
arms, and tossed him across the room against the wall. That is all I
know of this thing.”

Denison saw nothing of Armitage till six o’clock on the following
morning, just as Eckhardt was going away. He put out his hand, Eckhardt
put his own behind his back, and, in a few blunt words, told the Beast
what he thought of him.

“And if this was a civilised country,” he added crisply, “you would be
now in gaol. Yes, in prison. You have as good as killed your wife by
your brutality—she will not live another two months. You have so
injured your child’s hip that he may be a cripple for life. You are a
damned scoundrel, no better than the lowest ruffian of a city slum, and
if you show yourself in Joe D’Acosta’s smoking-room again, you’ll find
more than half a dozen men—Englishmen, Americans and Germans—ready to
kick you out into the _au ala_” (road).

Armitage was no coward. He sprang forward with an oath, but Denison,
who was a third less of his employer’s weight, deftly put out his right
foot and the master of Solo Solo plantation went down. Then the
supercargo sat on him and, having a fine command of seafaring
expletives, threatened to gouge his eyes out if he did not keep quiet.

“You go on, doctor,” he said cheerfully. “I’ll let you know in the
course of an hour or two how Mrs. Armitage and the boy are progressing.
The seat which I am now occupying, though not a very honourable one,
considering the material of which it is composed, is very comfortable
for the time being; and”—he turned and glared savagely at Armitage’s
purpled face—“You sweep! I have a great inclination to let Eckhardt
come and boot the life out of you whilst I hold you down, you brute!”

“I’ll kill you for this,” said Armitage hoarsely.

“Won’t give you the chance, my boy. And if you don’t promise to go to
your room quietly, I’ll call in the native servants, sling you up like
the pig you are to a pole, and have you carried into Apia, where you
stand a good show of being lynched. I’ve had enough of you. Every
one—except your blackguardly acquaintances in Matafele—would be glad to
hear that you were dead, and your wife and child freed from you.”

Eckhardt stepped forward. “Let him up, Mr. Denison.”

The supercargo obeyed the request.

“Just as you please, doctor. But I think that he ought to be put in
irons, or a strait-jacket, or knocked on the head as a useless beast.
If it were not for Mrs. Armitage and her little son, I would like to
kill the sweep. His treatment of that poor fellow Amona, who is so
devoted to the child, has been most atrocious.”

Eckhardt grasped the supercargo’s hand as Armitage shambled off “He’s a
brute, as you say, Mr. Denison. But she has some affection for him. For
myself, I would like to put a bullet through him.”

Within three months Mrs. Armitage was dead, and a fresh martrydom began
for poor Amona. But he and the child had plenty of good friends; and
then, one day, when Armitage awakened to sanity after a long drinking
bout, he found that both Amona and the child had gone.

Nearly a score of years later Denison met them in an Australian city.
The “baby” had grown to be a well-set-up young fellow, and Amona the
faithful was still with him—Amona with a smiling, happy face. They came
down on board Denison’s vessel with him, and “the baby” gave him, ere
they parted, that faded photograph of his dead mother.




THE SNAKE AND THE BELL


When I was a child of eight years of age, a curious incident occurred
in the house in which our family lived. The locality was Mosman’s Bay,
one of the many picturesque indentations of the beautiful harbour of
Sydney. In those days the houses were few and far apart, and our own
dwelling was surrounded on all sides by the usual monotonous-hued
Australian forest of iron barks and spotted gums, traversed here and
there by tracks seldom used, as the house was far back from the main
road, leading from the suburb of St. Leonards to Middle Harbour. The
building itself was in the form of a quadrangle enclosing a courtyard,
on to which nearly all the rooms opened; each room having a bell over
the door, the wires running all round the square, while the front-door
bell, which was an extra large affair, hung in the hall, the “pull”
being one of the old-fashioned kind, an iron sliding-rod suspended from
the outer wall plate, where it connected with the wire.

One cold and windy evening about eight o’clock, my mother, my sisters,
and myself were sitting in the dining-room awaiting the arrival of my
brothers from Sydney—they attended school there, and rowed or sailed
the six miles to and fro every day, generally returning home by dusk.
On this particular evening, however, they were late, on account of the
wind blowing rather freshly from the north-east; but presently we heard
the front-door bell ring gently.

“Here they are at last,” said my mother; “but how silly of them to go
to the front door on such a windy night, tormenting boys!”

Julia, the servant, candle in hand, went along the lengthy passage, and
opened the door. No one was there! She came back to the dining-room
smiling—“Masther Edward is afther playin’ wan av his thricks, ma’am——”
she began, when the bell again rang—this time vigorously. My eldest
sister threw down the book she was reading, and with an impatient
exclamation herself went to the door, opened it quickly, and said
sharply as she pulled it inwards—

“Come in at once, you stupid things!” There was no answer, and she
stepped outside on the verandah. No one was visible, and again the big
bell in the hall rang!

She shut the door angrily and returned to her seat, just as the bell
gave a curious, faint tinkle as if the tongue had been moved ever so
gently.

“Don’t take any notice of them,” said my mother, “they will soon get
tired of playing such silly pranks, and be eager for their supper.”

Presently the bell gave out three clear strokes. We looked at each
other and smiled. Five minutes passed, and then came eight or ten
gentle strokes in quick succession.

“Let us catch them,” said my mother, rising, and holding her finger up
to us to preserve silence, as she stepped softly along the hall, we
following on tiptoe.

Softly turning the handle, she suddenly threw the door wide open, just
as the bell gave another jangle. Not a soul was visible!

My mother—one of the most placid-tempered women who ever breathed, now
became annoyed, and stepping out on the verandah, addressed herself to
the darkness—

“Come inside at once, boys, or I shall be very angry. I know perfectly
well what you have done; you have tied a string to the bell wires, and
are pulling it. If you don’t desist you shall have no supper.”

No answer—except from the hall bell, which gave another half-hearted
tinkle.

“Bring a candle and the step-ladder, Julia,” said our now thoroughly
exasperated parent, “and we shall see what these foolish boys have done
to the bell-wire.”

Julia brought the ladder; my eldest sister mounted it, and began to
examine the bell. She could see nothing unusual, no string or wire, and
as she descended, the bell swayed and gave one faint stroke!

We all returned to the sitting room, and had scarcely been there five
minutes when we heard my three brothers coming in, in their usual way,
by the back door. They tramped into the sitting room, noisy, dirty, wet
with spray, and hungry, and demanded supper in a loud and collected
voice. My mother looked at them with a severe aspect, and said they
deserved none.

“Why, mum, what’s the matter?” said Ted; “what _have_ we been doing
now, or what have we not done, that we don’t deserve any supper, after
pulling for two hours from Circular Quay, against a howling, black
north-easter?”

“You know perfectly well what I mean. It is most inconsiderate of you
to play such silly tricks upon us.”

Ted gazed at her in genuine astonishment. “Silly tricks, mother! What
silly tricks?” (Julia crossed herself, and trembled visibly as the bell
again rang.)

My mother, at once satisfied that Ted and my other brothers really knew
nothing of the mysterious bell-ringing, quickly explained the cause of
her anger.

“Let us go and see if we can find out,” said Ted. “You two boys, and
you, Julia, get all the stable lanterns, light them, and we’ll start
out together—two on one side of the house and two on the other. Some
one must be up to a trick!”

Julia, who was a huge, raw-boned Irish girl, as strong as a working
bullock, but not so graceful, again crossed herself, and began to weep.

“What’s the matter with you?” said Ted angrily.

“Shure, an’ there was tirrible murders committed here in the ould
convict days,” she whimpered. “The polace sargint’s wife at Sint
Leonards tould me all about it. There was three souldiers murdered down
beyant on the beach, by some convicts, whin they was atin’ their
supper, an’ there’s people near about now that saw all the blood and——”

“Stop it, you great lumbering idiot!” shouted Ted, as my eldest sister
began to laugh hysterically, and the youngest, made a terrified dart to
mother’s skirts.

Ted’s angry voice and threatening visage silenced Julia for the moment,
and she tremblingly went towards the door to obey his orders when the
bell gave out such a vigorous and sustained peal that she sank down in
a colossal heap on the floor, and then went into violent hysterics. (I
assure my readers that I am not exaggerating matters in the slightest.)

My mother, who was a thoroughly sensible woman, pushed the whole brood
of us out of the room, came after us, shut the door and locked it.
_She_ knew the proper treatment for hysterics.

“Let her stay there, boys,” she said quietly, “she will hurt the
furniture more than herself, the ridiculous creature. Now, Ted, you and
your brothers get the lanterns, and the little ones and myself will go
into the kitchen.”

We ran out into the stables, lit three lanterns, and my next eldest
brother and myself, feeling horribly frightened, but impelled to show
some courage by Ted’s awful threats of what he would do to us if we
“funked,” told us to go round the house, beginning from the left, and
meet him at the hall door, he going round from the right.

With shaking limbs and gasping breath we made our portion of the
circuit, sticking close to each other, and carefully avoiding looking
at anything as we hurried over the lawn, our only anxiety being to meet
Ted as quickly as possible and then get inside again. We arrived on the
verandah, and in front of the hall-door, quite five minutes before Ted
appeared.

“Well, did you see anything?” he asked, as he walked up the steps,
lantern in hand.

“Nothing,” we answered, edging up towards the door.

Ted looked at us contemptuously. “You miserable little curs! What are
you so frightened of? You’re no better than a pack of women and kids.
It’s the wind that has made the bell ring, or, if it’s not the wind, it
is something else which I don’t know anything about; but I want my
supper. Pull the bell, one of you.”

Elated at so soon escaping from the horrors of the night, we seized the
handle of the bell-pull, and gave it a vigorous tug.

“It’s stuck, Ted. It won’t pull down,” we said.

“Granny!” said the big brother, “you’re too funky to give it a proper
pull,” and pushing us aside, he grasped the pendant handle and gave a
sharp pull. There was no answering sound.

“It certainly is stuck,” admitted Ted, raising his lantern so as to get
a look upwards, then he gave a yell.

“Oh! look there!”

We looked up, and saw the writhing twisting, coils of a huge carpet
snake, which had wound its body round and round the bell-wire on top of
the wall plate. Its head was downwards, and it did not seem at all
alarmed at our presence, but went on wriggling and twisting and
squirming with much apparent cheerfulness.

Ted ran back to the stables, and returned in a few seconds with a
clothes-prop, with which he dealt the disturber of our peace a few
rapid, but vigorous, blows, breaking its spine in several places. Then
the step-ladder was brought out, and Ted, seizing the reptile by the
tail, uncoiled it with some difficulty from the wire, and threw it down
upon the verandah.

It was over nine feet in length, and very fat, and had caused all the
disturbance by endeavouring to denude itself of its old skin by
dragging its body between the bell-wire and the top of the wall. When
Ted killed it the poor harmless creature had almost accomplished its
object.




SOUTH SEA NOTES




I


That many animals, particularly cattle and deer, are very fond of salt
we all know, but it is not often that birds show any taste for it, or,
if so, the circumstance has not generally been noted. In 1881, however,
the present writer was residing on Gazelle Peninsula, the northern
portion of the magnificent island of New Britain in the South Pacific,
and had many opportunities of witnessing both cockatoos and wild
pigeons drinking salt water. I was stationed at a place called Kabaira,
the then “furthest-out” trading station on the whole island, and as I
had but little to do in the way of work, I found plenty of time to
study the bird-life in the vicinity. Parrots of several varieties, and
all of beautiful plumage, were very plentiful, and immense flocks of
white cockatoos frequented the rolling, grassy downs which lay between
my home and the German head-station in Blanche Bay, twenty miles
distant, while the heavy forest of the littoral was the haunt of
thousands of pigeons. These latter, though not so large as the Samoan,
or Eastern Polynesian bird, formed a very agreeable change of diet for
us white traders, and by walking about fifty yards from one’s door,
half a dozen or more could be shot in as many minutes.

My nearest neighbour was a German, and one day when we were walking
along the beach towards his station, we noticed some hundreds of
pigeons fly down from the forest, settle on the margin of the water,
and drink with apparent enjoyment. The harbour at this spot was almost
land-locked, the water as smooth as glass without the faintest ripple,
and the birds were consequently enabled to drink without wetting their
plumage. My companion, who had lived many years in New Britain, told me
that this drinking of sea-water was common alike to both cockatoos and
pigeons, and that on some occasions the beaches would be lined with
them, the former birds not only drinking, but bathing as well, and
apparently enjoying themselves greatly.

During the following six months, especially when the weather was calm
and rainy, I frequently noticed pigeons and cockatoos come to the salt
water to drink. At first I thought that as fresh water in many places
bubbled up through the sand at low tide, the birds were really not
drinking the sea-water, but by watching closely, I frequently saw them
walk across these tiny runnels, and make no attempt to drink. Then
again, the whole of the Gazette Peninsula is out up by countless
streams of water; rain falls throughout the year as a rule, and as I
have said, there is always water percolating or bubbling up through the
sand on the beaches at low tide. What causes this unusual habit of
drinking sea-water?

Another peculiarity of the New Britain and New Ireland pigeon is its
fondness for the Chili pepper-berry. During three months of the year,
when these berries are ripe, the birds’ crops are full of them, and
very often their flesh is so pungent, and smells so strongly of the
Chili, as to be quite uneatable.


On all of the low-lying islands of the Ellice, Kings-mill and Gilbert
Groups, a species of snipe are very plentiful. On the islands which
enclose the noble lagoon of Funafuti in the Ellice Group, they are to
be met with in great numbers, and in dull, rainy weather, an ordinarily
good shot may get thirty or forty in a few hours. One day, accompanied
by a native lad, I set out to collect hermit crabs, to be used as fish
bait. These curious creatures are to be found almost anywhere in the
equatorial islands of the Pacific; their shell houses ranging in size
from a pea to an orange, and if a piece of coco-nut or fish or any
other edible matter is left out overnight, hundreds of hermits will be
found gathered around it in the morning. To extract the crabs from
their shells, which are of all shapes and kinds, is a very simple
matter—the hard casing is broken by placing them upon a large stone and
striking them a sharp blow with one of lesser size. My companion and
myself soon collected a heap of “hermits,” when presently he took one
up in his hand, and holding it close to his mouth, whistled softly. In
a few moments the crab protruded one nipper, then another, then its red
antennae, and allowed the boy to take its head between his finger and
thumb and draw its entire body from its shell casing.

“That is the way the _kili_ (snipe) gets the _uga_ (crab) from its
shell,” he said. “The _kili_ stands over the _uga_ and whistles softly,
and the _uga_ puts out his head to listen. Then the bird seizes it in
his bill, gives it a backward jerk and off flies the shell.”

Now I had often noticed that wherever hermit crabs were plentiful along
the outer beaches of the lagoon, I was sure to find snipe, and
sometimes wondered on what the birds fed. Taking up two or three
“hermits” one by one, I whistled gently, and in each case the creature
protruded the nippers, head and shoulders, and moved its antennæ to and
fro as if pleasurably excited.

On the following day I shot three snipe, and in the stomachs of each I
found some quite fresh and some partly digested hermit crabs. The
thick, hard nippers are broken off by the bird before he swallows the
soft, tender body.


In a recent number of _Chambers’s Journal_ the present writer was much
interested in a short paragraph dealing with the commercial value of
the skin of the shark, and, having had many years’ experience as a
trader and supercargo in the South Seas, desires to add some further
information on a somewhat interesting subject.

In all the equatorial islands of the North and South Pacific, shark
fishing is a very profitable industry to the natives, and every trading
steamer or sailing vessel coming into the ports of Sydney or Auckland
from the islands of the mid-Pacific, always brings some tons of shark
fins and tails and shark skins. The principal market for the former is
Hong Kong, but the Chinese merchants of the Australasian Colonies will
always buy sharks’ fins and tails at from 6d. to 11d. per lb., the fins
bringing the best price on account of the extra amount of glutinous
matter they contain, and the which are highly relished by the richer
classes of Chinese as a delicacy. The tails are also valued as an
article of food in China; and, apart from their edible qualities, have
a further value as a base for clear varnishes, &c.; and I was informed
by a Chinese tea-merchant that the glaze upon the paper coverings of
tea-chests was due to a preparation composed principally of the refuse
of sharks’ fins, tails, and skins.

All the natives of the Gilbert, Kingsmill, and other Pacific equatorial
islands are expert shark fishermen; but the wild people of Ocean Island
(Paanopa) and Pleasant Island (Naura), two isolated spots just under
the equator, surpass them all in the art of catching jackshark. It was
the fortunate experience of the writer to live among these people for
many years, and to be inducted into the native method of
shark-catching. In frail canoes, made of short pieces of wood, sewn
together with coco-nut fibre, the Ocean Islanders will venture out with
rude but ingeniously contrived _wooden_ hooks, and capture sharks of a
girth (_not_ length) that no untrained European would dare to attempt
to kill from a well-appointed boat, with a good crew.

Shark-catching is one of _the_ industries of the Pacific, and a very
paying industry too. Five-and-twenty years ago there were quite a dozen
or more schooners sailing out of Honolulu, in the Hawaiian Islands, to
the isolated atolls of the North Pacific—notably Palmyra and Christmas
Islands—where sharks could be caught by the thousand, and the crews,
who were engaged on a “lay,” like whalemen, made “big money”; many of
them after a six months’ cruise drawing 500 dollars—a large sum for a
native sailor.

The work is certainly hard, but it is exciting, and the writer will
always remember with pleasure a seven months’ shark-fishing cruise he
once had in the North Pacific, the genial comrades—white men and
brown—and the bag of dollars handed over to him by the owners when the
ship was paid off in Honolulu.




II


It is not generally known, except to scientists and those who are
acquainted with the subject, that a large percentage of the various
species and varieties of sea snakes are highly venomous. These snakes
must not be confounded with the very numerous species of sea eels,
which, though exceedingly savage and armed with strong needle-pointed
teeth, are all non-venomous, though their bite produces high
inflammation if not at once properly attended to and cleansed by an
antiseptic. The sea snake is a true snake in many respects, having
either laminated scales or a thick corduroyed skin resembling
rudimentary scales. The head is flat, and the general structure of the
body similar to that of the land snake. Whether any of them possess the
true poison glands and fangs I do not know, for although I have killed
many hundreds of them I never took sufficient interest to make a
careful examination; and I was told by a Dutch medical gentleman, long
resident on the coast of Dutch New Guinea, and who had made some
investigation on the subject, that he had failed to discover any poison
sacs or glands in any one of the several snakes he had captured. Yet in
some instances he found what at first appeared to be the two long front
teeth common to venomous land snakes, but on detailed examination these
always proved to be perfectly solid; nevertheless a bite from one of
these sea serpents was generally regarded by the natives as fatal; in
my own experience I know of two such cases, one at the island of Fotuna
in the South Pacific, and the other in Torres Straits.

In Sigavi Harbour, on Fotuna, there is a rock to which vessels
occasionally make fast their stern moorings. In the boat which I sent
away with a line to this rock were several boys, natives of the island,
who went with the crew for amusement. One of them, aged about ten,
jumped out of the boat, and in his hurry fell on his hands and knees,
right on top of a large black and white banded sea snake, which at once
bit him savagely on the wrist, causing the blood to flow from a score
of tiny punctures. The boy at once swam on shore to be treated by a
native; in the evening I heard he was suffering great agony, in the
morning the poor little fellow was dead.

The second instance was near Raine Island, in Torres Straits. A
stalwart young Kanaka, one of the crew of a pearling lugger, was diving
for clam shells on the reef, when a snake about three feet in length
suddenly shot up from below within a foot of his face. In his anger and
disgust he unthinkingly struck it with his hand, and was quickly bitten
on the forefinger. A few hours later he was in a high fever,
accompanied with twitchings of the extremities; then tetanus ensued,
followed by death in forty-eight hours.

Although these sea snakes are common to all tropical seas, they are
most frequent about the Great Barrier Reef of Australia. On any smooth
day they may be seen disporting themselves on the surface, or rising
suddenly from the depths, erect their heads and some inches of their
bodies clear from the water, gaze at the passing vessel, and then
swiftly disappear. In nearly all the Pacific Islands the natives hold
them in detestation and horror, and when one is seen lying coiled up on
a rock sunning itself or crawling over the surface of the reef in
search of food, a stone, accompanied by a curse, is always hurled at
it. In the Ellice Oroup, when catching flying-fish at night, one (or
more) of these horrid serpents is sometimes swept up in the scoop-net
before it can be avoided. They range from six inches to nearly four
feet in length, and all have one feature—a blunted tail-end.

Quite recently much further light has been thrown on the subject by Sir
James Hector, of the Philosophical Society of Wellington, New Zealand.
At one of the Society’s meetings, held in April last, Sir James showed
several specimens of _hydrida_, some from Australasian Seas, others
from the Atlantic. The usual habitat of sea snakes, he said, were the
tropical seas generally, but some had been captured in the
comparatively cold waters of the New Zealand coast, at the Catlins
River. These latter were all yellow-banded; those from the islands of
the Fijian Oroup were black-banded, and those taken from the Australian
coast grey-banded. There were, he said, no fewer than seventy species,
which, without exception, were fanged and provided with glands
secreting a virulent poison. In some of the mountainous islands of the
South Pacific, such as Samoa, Fiji, &c, there were several species of
land snakes, all of which were perfectly harmless, and were familiar to
many people in Australia and New Zealand, through being brought there
in bunches of island bananas—it was singular, he thought, that the sea
snakes alone should be so highly venomous. “They were all characterised
by the flattened or blunted tail, which they used as a steer oar, and
were often found asleep on the surface of the water, lying on their
backs. In this state they were easily and safely captured, being
powerless to strike.” The present writer, who has seen hundreds of
these marine snakes daily for many years, during a long residence in
the Pacific Islands, cannot remember a single instance where he has
seen one of these dangerous creatures asleep _on the water_, though
they may frequently be found lying asleep on the coral reefs, exposing
themselves to the rays of a torrid sun. They usually select some knob
or rounded boulder, from the top of which, when awake, they can survey
the small pools beneath and discern any fish which may be imprisoned
therein. In such case they will glide down into the water with
astonishing rapidity, seize their prey, and after swallowing it, return
to their sun bath. The natives of the Paumotu Archipelago informed me,
however, that they are most active in seeking their prey at night-time,
and are especially fond of flying-fish, which, as is well known, is one
of the swiftest of all ocean fishes. The sea snakes, however, seize
them with the greatest ease, by rising cautiously beneath and fastening
their keen teeth in the fish’s throat or belly. A snake, not two feet
six inches in length, I was assured, can easily swallow a flying-fish
eight inches or ten inches long.

With regard to their habit of lying asleep on their backs on the
surface of the water, it may be that Sir James Hector is alluding to
some particular species, but whether that is so or not Sir James’s
statement must of course be considered authoritative, for there is, I
believe, no higher authority on the subject in the world. Apropos of
these venomous marine serpents I may mention that the Rev. W. W. Gill
in one of his works states that he was informed by the natives of the
Cook’s Group that during the prevalence of very bad weather, when fish
were scarce, the large sea eels would actually crawl ashore, and ascend
the _fala_ (pandanus or screw-pine) trees in search of the small green
lizards which live among the upper part of the foliage. At first I
regarded this merely as a bit of native extravagance of statement, but
in 1882, when I was shipwrecked on Peru (or Francis Island), one of the
Gilbert Group, the local trader, one Frank Voliero, and myself saw one
of these eels engaged in an equally extraordinary pursuit. We were one
evening, after a heavy gale from the westward had been blowing for
three days, examining a rookery of whale birds in search of eggs; the
rookery was situated in a dense thicket scrub on the north end of the
island, and was quite two hundred yards from the sea-shore, though not
more than half that distance from the inside lagoon beach. The storm
had destroyed quite a number of young, half-fledged birds, whose bodies
were lying on the ground, and busily engaged in devouring one of them
was a very large sea eel, as thick as the calf of a man’s leg. Before I
could manage to secure a stick with which to kill the repulsive-looking
creature, it made off through the undergrowth at a rapid pace in the
direction of the lagoon, and when we emerged out into the open in
pursuit, ten minutes later, we were just in time to see it wriggling
down the hard, sloping beach into the water. Instinct evidently made it
seek the nearest water, for none of these large sea eels are ever found
in Peru Lagoon.

Many of the rivers and lakes of the islands of the Western Pacific are
tenanted by eels of great size, which are never, or very seldom, as far
as I could learn, interfered with by the natives, and I have never seen
the people of either the Admiralty Islands, New Ireland, or New Britain
touch an eel as food. The Maories, however, as is well known, are
inordinately fond of eels, which, with putrid shark, constitute one of
their staple articles of diet.

In the few mountainous islands of the vast Caroline Archipelago, in the
North-western Pacific, eels are very plentiful, not only in the
numberless small streams which debouch into the shallow waters enclosed
by the barrier reefs, but also far up on the mountainsides, occupying
little rocky pools of perhaps no larger dimensions than an
ordinary-sized toilet basin, or swimming up and down rivulets hardly
more than two feet across. The natives of Ponapé, the largest island of
the Caroline Group, and of Kusaie (Strong’s Island), its eastern
outlier, regard the fresh-water eel with shuddering aversion, and
should a man accidentally touch one with his foot when crossing a
stream he will utter an exclamation of horror and fear. In the heathen
days—down to 1845-50—the eel (tôan) was an object of worship, and
constantly propitiated by sacrifices of food, on account of its
malevolent powers; personal contact was rigidly avoided; to touch one,
even by the merest accident, was to bring down the most dreadful
calamities on the offender and his family—bodily deformities,
starvation and poverty, and death; and although the natives of Strong’s
Island are now both civilised and Christianised, and a training college
of the Boston Board of Missions has long been established at Port Lelé,
they still manifest the same superstitious dread of the eel as in their
days of heathendom. I well remember witnessing an instance of this
terror during my sojourn on the island when I was shipwrecked there in
1874. I had taken up my residence in the picturesque little village of
Leassé, on the western or “lee” side, when I was one evening visited by
several of the ship’s company—a Fijian half-caste, a white man, and two
natives of Pleasant Island. At the moment they arrived I was in the
house of the native pastor—a man who had received an excellent
education in a missionary college at Honolulu, in the Hawaiian
Islands—instructing him and his family in the art of making _taka_, or
cinnet sandals, as practised by the natives of the Tokelau Group. Just
then the four seamen entered, each man triumphantly holding up a large
eel: in an instant there was a united howl of horror from the parson
and his family, as they made a rash for the door, overturning the lamp
and nearly setting the house on fire. In vain I followed and urged them
to return, and told them that the men had gone away and taken the
_tôan_ with them—nothing would induce them to enter the house that
night, and the whole family slept elsewhere.

One singular thing about the eels on Strong’s Island is that they
hibernate, in a fashion, on the sides or even summits of the high
mountains, at an altitude of nearly two thousand feet. Selecting, or
perhaps making, a depression in the soft, moss-covered soil, the ugly
creatures fit themselves into it compactly and remain there for weeks
or even months at a time. I have counted as many as thirty of these
holes, all tenanted, within a few square yards. Some were quite
concealed by vegetable _débris_ or moss, others were exposed to view,
with the broad, flat head of the slippery occupant resting on the
margin or doubled back upon its body. They showed no alarm, but if
poked with a stick would extricate themselves and crawl slowly away.

In the streams they were very voracious, and I had a special antipathy
to them, on account of their preying so on the crayfish—a crustacean of
which I was particularly fond, and which the natives also liked very
much, but were afraid to capture for fear their hands might come in
contact with the dreaded _tôan_.

One afternoon I was plucking a pigeon I had just shot by the margin of
a mountain stream. After removing the viscera, I put the bird in the
water to clean it properly, and was shaking it gently to and fro, when
it was suddenly torn out of my hand by a disgustingly bloated,
reddish-coloured eel about four feet in length, and quickly swallowed.
That one pigeon had cost me two hours’ tramping through the
rain-soddened mountain forest, so loading my gun I followed the thief
down stream to where the water was but a few inches deep, and then blew
his head off.