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By
the
same Author
AGENT
RETREAT FROM GLORY
BRITISH
R. H.
BRUCE LOCKcHART
Return
to
Malaya
G-P-PUTNAM'S SONS
1936
C&pyright, 1936, by R.
H. BRTJCE LOCKIIART
CONTENTS
BOOK
TRAVELLER'S HOLIDAY
BOOK
page
II
A STRANGER RETURNS
BOOK
ROMANCE
67
III
IN RETROSPECT
BOOK
135
IV
JAVANESE INTERLUDE
BOOK
215
295
"I
defile
life/*
BOOK
Traveller's
"Ir
is
better for
mankind
to
Holiday
be impressionable than reflecI
mean, as affecting a
tive.
reflection."
CHAPTER ONE
Ishmaelites o this world are sincere and honest people.
But they have this defect. More than any other category of
mankind they suffer from the sin of self-deception. When they
express a desire to turn their back on the rising sun and settle down,
they think the desire is genuine. More often than not it is only temporary. They are troubled by the temptations of the wide spaces
and by the restlessness of unrealisable dreams. Almost in spite of
themselves they are forced to strike their tents and to be off again
on the endless road of travel.
THE
In British Agent
see again."
When
I referred to "that
wrote that
line I
East which
was
sincere.
should never
At
that time
make
the scenes of
There was
my
youth in Malaya.
certainly
wanted
at
visit it.
At nine
Joseph Conrad put his finger on the then unexplored heart of the
map of Africa and saw his future in the Congo. Although I have
spent
I
as
my
restlessness
is
say that I have seen everything under the sun and found
it
vanity.
dustry
and
have
Two
as a rolling stone.
a brother, a colonel in the
life
of his
spent the best years
West frontier.
Some blame,
life
Indian army,
in Afghanistan
for
my
and adventure in the Malay Archipelago. The book had been given
to my father as a prize for geography when he was a boy of twelve
at Partick Academy in 1870. I have it still- In one sense it has
influenced my life more than any other book. For its account of
in an open boat on a
giant durian trees, of sharks, of men adrift
tropical sea without food and,
lasting impression
on
my
above
all,
without water,
made
mind*
impression had active consequences. At the age of twentyone I turned my back on the "crammer** which was preparing me
for the Civil Service examination and went East to Malaya to join
The
my
uncles
who
foretold fortune
and favour
in the
new
plantation
rubber industry.
years, I
happy.
chronic ill-health.
The
doctors pronounced
malaria, but there were many people who said that I had been
poisoned. One day my uncle had come out to my bungalow, had
bundled
me
off
my
home
"An Exposure
of Lloyd Georgism"!
Lang
like so
many
been something
footsteps Eastward.
my
To
Rochefort,
made a pilgrimage
of gratitude.
visit:
the permission shyly sought
that
I
remember
well
author's
the
son; the grey November
M. Samuel Viaud,
the
the motor-drive through
bocage of La Vendee; the
therefore, I
How
from
morning;
marshlands of La Rochelle, where as a schoolboy and Oxford
undergraduate Mr. Anthony Eden, the young British Foreign
from a Protestant pastor;
Secretary, used to come to learn French
the long alleys of tamarisks, and then just before Rochefort itself,
the superb view of the Atlantic with the tiny He d'Aix, where
Napoleon spent
on French
soil
before surrendering
During the
still
first
when France
World, Rochefort was a great
New
To-day, the town has lost its ancient glory. It has ceased
even to be a naval base, and the {neighbouring town of Brouage,
still famous as the home of Champlain, the founder of Quebec,
port.
is
now
a ruin
left
sea.
street,
Lyc&
in the street
Loti,
and
his
same
And
at
No.
141,
name,
is
At
an old rating who had taken part with Loti in the Tonkin and
Boxer compaigns. He bowed me into a room full of family portraits, waved an arm towards the Japanese room heavy with
Buddhas and samurai armour, piloted me through a gimcrack
Louis XVI salon, and left me standing in a vast banqueting hall
with a high
roof, a staircase,
and an
M. Viaud,
ing modesty.
Under
his guidance I
now made a
Upstairs there was another period room with old oak doors and
stained glass windows taken mainly from local ruins. I felt as if
top floor.
Here was
Loti's
Turkish room
fitted
up
as
cism seemed out of place. Instead, I marvelled at the filial devotion of M. Viaud, who lives with his wife and sons in this literary
mausoleum.
Like most authors Loti was an egotist. His son is a devout
Protestant whose name in Rochefort is a synonym for unselfishness and good works. There are three Loti grandchildren. Two
are boys. They wish to go into the Navy. Fifty years ago, when
Loti was at the height of his fame, a Paris professor asked his
class to put down on paper their choice of profession. Forty out
of fifty put
down
Loti, although
"sailor."
it is less
il
de durer."
walls.
it;
with white-
cloth by
way
and
of toilet
table.
that this
of Paris wore
amazing little man, who in the salons
and rouged his cheeks, was a great gymnast who did
exercises daily until almost the last months of his
heels
high
his physical
life.
Above
was the
"citation
du
jour,"
was
in 1817, after we
bearing the new French Governor to the Senegal
had returned that colony to France after the Napoleonic Wars.
The wreck, marked by a combination of bravery and cowardice
naval doctor and twelve years older than Loti, had died of fever
in Saigon.
man
of this stock
had no need of
all this
exotic
junk
to
The box had belonged to Madame Itarthou, the wife of the statesman who was killed by the assassin of King Alexander at Marseilles*
an
exhibit. It
was
it
house in Rochefort
Its
immediate
effect
was to
translate
my dream
Lady Rosslyn has been my sheet-anchor and my better contwo inches of Irish Catholic saint, she is a woman
who
moment
she told
me
that
to
for
Malaya
the winter. I looked out at the grey November sky and found it
comfortless. Then I banged my fist decisively on the arm of my
chair. "By Saint Andrew," I said, "111 go with you."
The
next thing to do was to obtain the necessary leave of abThat same evening I sat down and racked my brains for
a sufficiently good reason to enable me to retain my job and at
the same time to be away from London long enough in order
to make the tour I had already contemplated. The excuses seemed
futile and unconvincing. A friendly consultation with the managing director of my newspaper brought me good advice, and the
next day I sat down to write the plain truth to Lord Beaverbrook,
I told him that after six and a half years in London I was sick
sence.
of the sight of
of
its traffic. I
wooden
my
take me
Agent when
me from
lift
my
my
sick-bed and to
away. It is the hour of my parting with
Amai. As the motor-car turns the corner of my compound, my
last view of my Malayan home is of Amai's little wooden shoes
on the steps at the entrance to my bungalow.
I was surprised, too, by Lord Beaverbrook's prescience. I had
not forgotten Amai. After the war I had made inquiries through
one of my highly-placed official friends in Malaya and had been
informed that she was dead. The information had left a permanent if shadowy regret tinged sometimes with remorse. But not
until I read Lord Beaverbrook's letter did I realise how much
my desire to re-visit the East was influenced by memories of Amai
and by a Loti-esque sentiment to pay a last tribute to her grave.
The days passed rapidly and pleasantly in the planning of my
voyage. For with the comparatively short time at my disposal
I had to have a plan. My programme was to land at
Singapore,
revisit
my
to Saigon,
taking
Bangkok, cross from Bangkok
to Batavia,
from
steamer
en
Saigon
route,
by
proceed
Angkor
of the Outer Islands
visit the native states of Java, make a tour
new
states to
way
would permit.
It was an ambitious if
have to be cut down. But
all
my
time in
Bali
in-
Sir
critical
moment
in
my
existence in
1918, and had subsequently been made a K.C.M.G. for his services
in securing the release of arrested British officials. I had taken
of passengers.
string of cabins,
a contraband talisman in my bag: a packet of home-made Esthonian marzipans which I had to post from Paris to Mr. Somerset
Maugham, then living in his beautiful villa at Cap Ferrat. This
on the East
on any subject, seemed a good omen. The fates
would be propitious. I had shed my worries as easily as a snake
sloughs its skin. For three months I should be as free as a man
can be in this modern world of ours.
vicarious
homage
matter,
CHAPTER TWO
has ironed all the creases out
perfection of organisation
of modern travel To-day, it is easier to go without a hitch
THE
from
Southampton to Singapore than from London to Littlehampton or from New York to Newark* There is, too, more
When I crossed through the
punctuality and less excitement.
and
set foot on board the Oldenat
Genoa
barrier
Fascist-guarded
barncvch I knew that, unless I was on my guard, 1 should be
drawn into the hum-drum routine of ship life in which one day
is
was Goethe who said that the English curry their tea-caddies
with them round the world. To-day, the tea-caddie has been
It
best-seller
stands.
As
The
English
who
behaviour
what they will say, what they will wear, what they will
and drink., at any given hour of the day. With rare exceptions
they are uninteresting as travel-companions. They have seen everyeffort
eat
On
is
They
and a
sleeve-
education, of
Irish, feel
eigners
all
and
is
complex
making
This inferiority
comments which
for-
make
Rudeness rightly has few defenders, but in the story of the two
English peers and the American naval officer, my sympathies have
always been with the American. The two peers met on board
the old Mauretania. The one had seen everything in the Northern
hemisphere; the other everything in the Southern. As they leant
against the cocktail bar, they went through the long list of the
places they had visited in a drawl which was limp with boredom.
"Then
the
of
his
He
cigars.
if
bird's nest or
put
The
entirely
on
'made up
13
town perched
between
Straits
was
Bonifacio, the
little
Corsican
like
an
as the garrison
was here
that
a failure.
tried to intervene.
The
sailors
had replied with "Ca Ira," had hurled the epithet "arista" at him,
and had struck him. Napoleon had been saved in the nick of time
by the arrival of the
But in my mind
it
not
is
Man
ciations as a school-book,
is
At
with reinforcements.
local sheriff
first real
still
lie
story of
"The Agony of
You
the Scmilltintc,"
all
before.
This
is
one of the
more
memory than
all
stories
clearly, far
every great story of the sea in literature, sailed his ship right
up
to the cliffs until one could
distinguish the faces of the inhabitants
on shore. In the stillness of a perfect
spring day both Corsica and
angry edges of the rocks. Then French Corsica and Italian Sardinia
look like two war-scarred bulldogs who would be at each other's
throats.
my
first
I tried to
havoc with
my
with snow.
In that
was
moment
like a schoolboy
the sunshine
hills
going home
meant more
to
were sprinkled
me
than sentiment.
Genoa was the birthplace of Columbus. There was even a Columbus house. But I was not interested in Columbus. He had sailed
West.
my mind
In
my
Conference. Against
kept obtruding
at
Genoa
itself
before
that Chicherin
my
eyes.
Then
remembered.
It
was
his
famous morning-coat.
knew
1918, I
to act.
One
in
white
its
shirt,
mediately.
quarter-of-an-hour later Chicherin, the most dutiful
of all Lenin's lieutenants, had appeared with a hang-dog expression
on
his face
From
his back.
that
moment
My
But
business,
and when
in the
tried to
by the
heart
evening
improper
approach
was not
we
in
this
passed Elba
electricity
life;
was
still
respect. In
marked
thought of
of
Baedeker
levity.
with submissive
a black
my
my
first
an attempt to
had watched
Lord
all
the
Napoleon worshippers
Northcliffe telling
Tom
cluster of
had met in my
news editor
My
of
of Masson's
La
feurnte de N&potton* I had been painfully imnumber of the Emperor's servants who had
remained
his
loyal to him in
Mameluke whom he
to wondering how
many of any great man's henchstand by him if he fell on evil
days, I had been
amused by the story of Napoleon's
surgeon who, when the Em-
in 1814.
1 fell
men would
bleau and galloped off to Paris in the middle of the night. The
inhabitants of Sycophantopolis are not renowned for their loyalty.
Among
a valet whose
day, too, I see a painting of that great gambler with life, the
Earl of Rosslyn. It portrays, indeed, the head of its titled subject.
But the body is the body of a groom whose figure resembled the
once sylph-like figure of the noble earl. Lord Rosslyn puts comfort
before pride. He would not have sat more than once for Titian
himself.
substitutes,
now
so popular
with the
the life-size
the
on the costumes
and
my
settled
for myself.
part in the
first
down
With
night
on board
to follow the
put a brake on
life
frivolity
had prepared
had decided to take no
programme which
characteristic egotism I
communal
my
men
my
time
on
On
pleasure
As
this occasion I
far as
my
life
maximum amount
on board
ship
and plain
of
living.
outward and on
When,
my homeward
therefore,
journeys.
on the afternoon of
my
we
approached Stromboli
The
was
weather,
ccptivc mood.
friends with the captain.
it
"made
in a
is
true,
With
re-
had
given
magical*
himself was an encyclopedia of sea lore. When every now and
then he threw out a feeler about secret service, 1 would assume
for
it
ad-
solely mine.
Then
remembered very
had passed
it
clearly
at night,
their wine and olives and on the fish they catch. There is another village at the south-cast corner. Both afford a remarkable
object-lesson of the diminishing effect of familiarity on danger.
Stromboli, the mythical home of the wind god -Aioluji, is an active
on
volcano. Every
issues
now and
there
own
choice*
means
suppose,
there
War the Carthaginian Fleet fled for refuge after its first
encounter with the Roman raven, the famous grappling machine
Punic
mer
camp
it
must be
Now
in
little
about
them,
some reason
from the
fact that
he has
towards both races the British public, which reacts more to instinct that to knowledge, draws a sharp line between Germans
and Italians. When Mussolini says "We must darken the skies
with our airplanes," we laugh. The English had not yet learnt to
take Mussolini seriously. When Germany begins to be truculent
or even mildly assertive, we react immediately.
are afraid of
We
Germany. That
is
perhaps
why
whose Empire
Germans
the
regard us
hands, and why
world.
the
in
and far-seeing diplomatists
British are a decadent race
I
life,
first
being
Straits of
the great
just before
my
one of the
are
was
a Cyclops' cave.
The
we
began
to negotiate Scyllti
&
own King handed down
the P.
on
on land,
Egypt and to
way
to
Cleopatra.
his boy-love
to Africa after the failure of the greatest military exploit in histo use it but was
tory. There was one famous man who longed
frustrated* From the bridge the captain pointed out to me a
where Murat was shot." After the failure of his expehe had lain in concealment there, waitwas to carry him to safetythe
which
ing for
English ship
is
the
coincidences
It
one of
of history that Napoleon's
strangest
two greatest marshals, Ney and Murat, were both shot by their
said, "is
late*
Doubtless,
if
ever
we go
to war
As we
Then,
statue
appear, slowly at first and then increasing in rapidity until presendy the whole hillside was like a black cushion studded with
Hong-Kong and
me
at Nagasaki. It
is
CHAPTER THREE
not the reader suppose that my whole time on board was
pent in the meditation of my past or in a rigid aloofness. If
mornings were devoted to study, they had their moments of
EF
my
grave, dignified men with small ankles and tiny, graceful hands
and beautiful kain kepala, a head-dress wonderfully tied from a
coloured square of silk or cotton, They spoke a Malay which dif-
He
divided
all
categories: those who spoke Malay fluently ami those who spoke
not a word. With
collection of Malay books, my ability to
my
and
read,
used
to
my
life
on board
back to me.
Every one who wishes to study seriously the life and customs
of the East Indies must be able to read Dutch, The Dutch are
the experts,
I
made no
difficult
end
and
swam
22
swimming bath
new Lcica camera which
in the luxurious
limbs
think
gyratheir
Or
life
them
to regard
all
first-class
passengers as demi-gods or at
least
as supermen.
descendant
of
the
famous
left
will
was
challenged, but
noble passengers should be good friends, To the historically sentimental reason must be added the bond of the same school tie.
As boys the Earl and the Baron had been at Eton together. The
course of schoolboy friendship, however, had not run smoothly.
During a game of football the future Lord Rendlcsham had
emerged from a bully and, neglecting the ball, had hacked the
future Lord Rosslyn on the shins, There had been retaliation
of the usual schoolboy sort. They did not
speak on board our
ship, holding each his separate court
the bewilderment
and chagrin of a
in the
rich
smoking-room to
American banker, who
his
Texas ranch or
his
that
of holidays.
full
of the 'rugger' international.""I did that," replied rny neighbour briskly, "Have you seen
the ship's newspaper? Full of ridiculous accounts of women's
cricket and thunderstorms, and not even the result of the inter-
national. I
complained
Rome
But ob-
has
still
passport.
My new
friend's
discovered
that, like
no subsequent
John,
football
man
great
knowledge
is
learnt,
Sir
rugby
eleven,
but even the Fettesian, the school magazine, had lapsed from its
customary kindness in its criticism of his performance as a wicketkeeper. In manhood the brilliant scholarship in forgotten or taken
iuui
many
and learnt much about Singapore life at ihc end of last century.
That night 1 went up to the bridge before dinner. The sea
wa^
dead calm after a cloudless day, and a moon that was almost futf
was shining. Far away on our right lay the long island of Crete,
I
rushed downstairs
to eat
From
snow
all
so far south.
Two
it was
surprising to see
peaks, almost side by side, over-topped
the others.
Unconsciously
26
my
thoughts turned to
St.
Paul,
whose
ship,
him
to his trial in
is
little later
we
clearly in the opalescent highway made by the moon, looked marvellously like Napoleon's hat. Venizelos's skull cap would have
been more appropriate, for Crete had just survived another revolution. As the ship changed her course, moon and shadow combined to give to the mountain slopes the appearance of a vast
cemetery. The scene reminded me of El Greco's "The Agony in
the Garden." Here, too, were the same wraith-like figures, the
same moonlight, the same rock, and the same colouring of motherof-pearl. Like Venizelos, El Greco was a Cretan, although his
name Domenico Theotocopoulos defeats most candidates in a
down
CHAPTER FOUR
quarter to six in the morning we berthed at Part Said.
The town takes its name from Mohammed Saul, the Viceroy
for the Suez; Canal.
Egypt, who gave to Lesscps the concession
A"
of
now
streaked with the palest pink. By a quarter past six the stars
had disappeared; the sky was the lightest of pale blue; the horizon
was a riotous maze of colour ranging from dark gold to the
rosiest
pink with intervening layers of mauve and saffron. At sixhorizon was still suffused with a pink which was grow-
thirty the
ing rapidly fainter. The sun had not yet shown itself, but, with
the light, scores of "feluccas** with their single swan-winged sail
out to sea. High up in the sky, looking not much
than
one
of the kites which surrounded our ship, was an
larger
still more bird-like because the throb of her
air-plane,
engine was
drowned by the raucous shouting of the native dockers who were
already loading our ship. It was the Eastern dawn such as 1 should
slid gracefully
now
see
it
painful in
every day for the next ten weeks. Its beauty, almost
gave me exactly the same shiver of emotional
its effect,
it had
given me twenty-seven years f>efore.
Neither age nor custom has staled my capacity for sightseeing. By seven I was already on shore in the place which in my
expectation as
youth was labelled the wickedest in the world. My memory sharpened by the renewed association, I suddenly remembered the
donkeys which met one on going ashore, They were always called
11
afield.
At
that time Port Said used to be called the Gate to the East.
is
the vice.
war
since.
do not mean to suggest that Port Said or, for that matter,
Egypt has become a monastery of virtue. The moralities still sit
I
on the
gentlemen
pleasure.
who
They
forms of
illicit
first
store
tion of "East
is
is
largest
for
the
commercially-minded
polyglots
of
Port
Few" might
Said.
and Buy
"Sport Shirts 3/9 each. Be
the approval even of Sir Charles Higham or Mr. Jesse Straus,
a Sport
receive
ferent.
its
street there
is
On
which stands
at
town not
far
from the
It
kind o
When my
fruit-
on the
visitor.
is
persistent
a limited knowl-
and
forbidding spinster
is
directed
is
as likely
On my
made
of
as uncut ivory
is
as
"good
proclaimed
could not discover. Probably
it is
when he
first
to
form
his impressions of
dence alone the Port Said natives cannot have a very high opinion
of the European. They are a rascally importunate band. But they
deserve some reward for their energy. When they sleep I do not
arrive at every hour of the day and night. The native
to meet them. His shops are always open.
there
always
last impression of Port Said is of the front at 10 a.m. As I
know. Ships
is
My
I am joined by
"Tommy" and Harry
in
dressed
flannels
and Deauville shoes.
grey
Rosslyn. Harry
He has a yachting cap on his head. There is a cigarette with a
stroll
ship's stride.
Rosslyn's
He
eyes.
stomach, sah!" The man's face is unpleasant. What is more dangerous to his safety, he causes Lord Rosslyn to stumble. The noble
Earl recovers and flourishes his cane. Then in a voice which
downs the
street vendors,
out at once.
ous.
Our
and the
How
rat slinks
cacophony of the
he roars: "Get
away. The
The
effect is instantane-
come
to
The
life.
sleeves.
I
am amused
and
slightly
these
morning
Rosslyn did,
their
this
prestige
way
as
Harry
does
it
of speed
is
commonplace
sunsets. It will
the
Pharaoh of 1500
B.C.,
as the
man who
built a canal
which
is
no
longer used.
Above
all, it
will be a
world of change*
And
to-day are
awakening from
My
passage through the canal provoked a mental struggle beand imagination. In vain I sought to see the canui
tween
reality
in
its
triumphs over
Te Dcum
3*
fleet,
on board,
celebrated
on
on
the
preceded by a cruiser
sailed solemnly
through
On my way home
which an
a
reminder.
brother
was
at
Gebel-Miriam
memorial
My
imposing
had been one of the few British officers wounded in repelling the
Turkish-German attack on the canal in February, 1915. But my
imagination rebelled against activity. The day was pleasantly cool,
and there was no excuse for my lethargy except the canal itself.
Since I passed through in 1908, it has, I suppose, been widened.
But the general impression remains unchanged: a surfeit of
sameness which is not relieved by efforts of the imagination to
visualise Joseph in the Land of Goshen or Moses leading the
Israelites across
Incidentally,
Red
modern
the
Sea.
Biblical scholarship
the site of the crossing. As the Red Sea varies from sixty to two
hundred miles in breadth, the experts have sought to bring the
miracle within the bounds of a more reasonable probability by
The
Sinai peninsula affords another opportunity for the imagibut because here,
riot, not merely because of Moses,
nation to run
thousand years before the birth of Christ, man first discovered the use of metals. From the copper mines of Sinai came the
chisels which were used to shape the Pyramids. And if the firstfive
class tourist,
looking
down from
promenade
all civilisation
and
were
33
now become
small;
and those
assuredly, for
it
is
that are
now
the rule of
great were
life,
will be
To most
Port Tcwfik,
is
Waghorn.
brilliant young Englishman was the man who in 1837
overland mail route to India. His chief ambition,
the
opened
to secure the sea route to the East for Britain by
was
however,
This
compublic bought no
more
than once reLord
Pabncrston
which
lists
to the public.
The
British
Nor
first
of the British public. From now on the reader will find the names
of British colonial administrators, beginning with Ruffles and end-
ing with Swettenham, whose greatest achievements were accomplished in face of the passive and sometimes even active opposition
of the British
34
Government
at
home.
CHAPTER FIVE
I find it hard to enthuse over the Suez
Canal, I have a
minor passion for the Red Sea. To most travellers it recalls a
nightmare of stifled breathing and sandy suffocation. But its reputation as a kind of sea-hell is undeserved, and in a modern liner
equipped with electric fans and refrigerators its worst heat has
now few terrors. During nine months of the year the weather,
on board ship at all events, is not unpleasantly hot. At times it
IF
wore
On
the occasion of
my
present voyage
the officers
heavy blue uniforms until we reached Perim.
My youthful memories of the Red Sea were vague and unpleasant. The vagueness meant that I took no interest in my surtheir
my
excelled.
first,
the
Now
Kremlin
relief,
ships
of history have been and still are to-day the scene of as much
human wickedness as the imagination can devise. To-day, it is
35
hard
which
civilisation started
set
first
from
transit I spent
at
Common
sense compels me to
physical unattractiveness.
admit that for the city-sick European misanthrope they would
be about the hottest home on the earth. They are all alike: voltheir
full
We
One
were too
for
Mecca, but the captain who in the past had taken many a pilgrim
ship there from Java, gave me an apposite illustration of the hard
times which had overtaken the Dutch East Indies since the world
"slump" of 1929, Seven or eight years ago, when economic conditions
were good
many
as 25,000
learnt quickly.
state league* I
two of my best players had returned their shorts and jerseys and
middle of the season had announced that they were leaving
on the pilgrimage which every Mohammedan hopes to accomplish
once. Mecca was their goal.
in the
In those days
found
and
with
fixed
my
on
terrestrial goals I
Why
which he has
merits of
I
my
was
resisted. It
must be counted
Mohammedanism
full
full-back
to his credit
and
to the
and
wondered
old football
leave their souls at peace for the rest of their earthly existence.
As we drew nearer to Perim, the number of islands increased.
slave-traders
in Montfreid for
some
37
man
who
himself,
smuggler has
made
as self-confessed gun-runner
enemy of every
and
pearl-
himself the
government, ineluding his awn, with which he has came info contact. Yet this
least,
of early
manhwxl
spent
among
and dope-smugglers of the Red 8e*i coast, not only made him a
picturesque figure but gave him an unrivalled knowledge of one
of the least-known corners of the earth.
The
captain interrupted
to point out to
me Mocha
City in
the
my
Celestial
Dutch and
to the
"em Mocha,
Mocha is
it
my
Viennese*
coffee
is
bitte."
38
tell
lived
an erudite hermit.
He
was kept
alive
Mocha
there once
by a small herd of
who brought him milk every day. The leader of the herd
was an old billy-goat who had long passed his youth. One
day the
hermit was surprised to see the billy-goat
springing in the air
and performing the antics of the gayest and
youngest of goats.
For some days he studied the goat's movements instead of the
pages of his Koran, and he noticed that, whenever the goat
browsed on the leaves of a few low trees which had
appeared
from nowhere in the desert, the light-hearted antics began
goats
again.
comes nearest
me
name
it
if
diplomatists can be
world
who
was
to
Sir
ing.
He
had gone
race-meeting at Doncaster.
and
me
Menelik's lime: strange tales of thr cnmic ant! the savage sides
life, af barharam justice ami n{ a man, who had
of Abyssinian
fcci
lucked
ff
for theft
had had
tt*
as
of
before Meneltk,
who
ordered
it?
and run by
Mowow
night-haunt owned
negro called
their mission.
It is not
stories
the Straits
Bab-d-Mandeb. The
40
pretty
Straits themselves
all,
to the
P.
&
O., for
officers
the P.
sengers' dances*
CHAPTER
JL
Dutch
saw only
boats
do not
call at
SIX
Aden* and on
this occasion
exotic
where I saw native boys diving for pennies. All my life I have
felt an unwilling fascination for the turns of trajKw acrobats and
other artists who risk their lives for the amusement of the public
and for their own gain. High in this category of performer I
place the native divers who recover small silver ami copper coins
almost from the teeth of the waiting sharks, I always imagined
the sharks were waiting, although I doubt now if the loss of life
was ever as great as the Mr, Know-alt passenger who is on every
ing cigar in his mouth ami rarely missed a coin. He told me that
he had been at the jab for thirty years.
Secondly* since my childhood Aden has Ireen associated in my
mind with
a tune
which
is
known
officially ;w
of Aden,**
It is
heart
I went to sch<x>l at Fcttes, I found that the tune bad a new name
and that on Pop nights the whole school sang to it a ribald chorus
about a lady called "Mrs, Grunt," My respect for Scotland's foothymn diminished. But even to-day the tune wakes savage
emotions in my heart, and I feel that if there were another war
ball
and
had
go over
die top
more
bravely
to the skirl of
Wha
Hae" or any
And
finally
Aden
to
me meant
redeemed himself by
the precocious
everything
flies
to
Rimbaud had
Geneva, there
is
poems in
his pocket.
and whose
who
taught French
classical
litera-
The
life-story thrilled
me.
When
two
years later I
made
mankind.
was going to the Malay Archipelago and that Rimbaud's first Eastern adventure had begun
there, when in order to see the world he had taken the Dutch
f
prime d engagement and had enlisted in the Dutch East Indian
army, seemed to give me one of those vague personal contacts
which like shadows follow the traveller for the rest of his life.
The fact that he had deserted almost immediately after landing
attitude towards
too, that I
my
43
Here nearly fifty years ago he had arrived after having walked
the length of the Arabian coast in a vain search for work* Here
in Aden had been the headquarters of the French coffee merchants
who had
had understood
M.
Hartley, the
and had
head of the
sent
him
firm,
to take
But
at
Harar the
poet,
who had
for the sake of his art, wrote no poetry. He had no time for
dreams. He was too busy extracting ivory from the savage tribes,
selling arms to Menelik, ami saving money. He learnt a number
of native dialects.
He
formed some
sort of a
harem. Doubtless,
And
The
money
money
main
he had achieved prosperity. Then
was
his
a cruel trick.
too well
began*
born.
Was
his recantation a
44
months
As
by the
ties
warm
of this strange
life:
Rimbaud unknown and neglected in his lifetime and which today has given him perhaps a greater influence over modern poetry,
both French and English, than any other poet; the contrast between de Montfreid, who began life as a commercial adventurer
and is now finishing it as a writer, and Rimbaud, the poetadventurer, who from the day on which he became a man of
business never wrote another line of verse; and, lastly and most
all, the spell which a vagabond like Rimbaud can
weave round a man so immaculate in thought, word and deed as
Mr, Anthony Eden.
For Mr. Eden's expert knowledge of Rimbaud I found an explanation. The appeal of beauty unites all kinds and conditions
of men. The influence of heredity is perhaps even stronger, and
from his father, an eccentric squire and painter of distinction,
Mr* Eden has inherited a highly developed artistic sense, which
curious of
revealed to-day not only in his taste for poetry, but in his expert
knowledge of modern French painting. Rimbaud, too, was peris
is
mostly
women and
poets
who
are prepared
no progressively-minded
man who
languages
began
is
sufficient
an admirer,
hope that
it
Since that night of passage off Aden I have made the pilgrimage to Charleville, the little industrial town in the Ardennes
where Rimbaud was born and where he is buried. To-day, many
of the chimneys are smokeless, for depression has laid a heavy
valley of the Meuse. There is a fine square with old-
hand on the
There are
and
osiers
traces
the
have
Holy
now
dis-
Sepulchre,
where he went
to school, has
cemetery and the house in which he was born, and his memory
is not forgotten.
When
hill
main path
grille and
contains
follows: "Jam-Arthur
n
lui.
pour
mother
Beside
who
him
Rimbaud, 37
ans. to
Novcmbrc,
ifigi.
Priez
is
and
his
During
occupation
46
perhaps had so
the
all
master.
many
German
all
who
within the
memory
of
owned by a war-veteran
hired a car,
chauffeur,
and drove
and
on the top of a hill. Its present owners were abheavily shuttered windows added a certain grimness
itself
its
to its general
lane,
"That house," he
"I suppose in
see the Kaiser's headquarters?" I asked.
"No," he
said,
replied.
"We
me
a large
the chateau."
until a
residence
first
station.
visitors
tourists
to see 'that.'"
who come
to
He waved
his
arm
"A
la
is
Musique":
"Sur
la place tailUc
Square
Tous
oil
les
en mesqtdnes f douses,
The
as a
bust, however,
young and
is
attractive collegian. It is
47
original
was taken away by the Germans during the war and was
melted down.
1*
clever.*'
paid
him
off
to the rather
dingy
station,
mankind,
CHAPTER SEVEN
who
sailor
ONLY
Colombo
in a
modern steamship
Work
Two
virtues I concede willingly to the Dutch. They are extraordinarily kind to their children, and on this occasion we carried
almost as many children as grown-ups. Their ship's officers are
lin-
guists.
boys, spotless in white drill relieved by their gaily-coloured headdresses, bring in the ice in ceremonial stateliness. Each ice-dish is
and the effect of these ghostly figures, bareand mysterious, is unforgettable. After the ice
come the speeches, and the Dutch captain makes his speech in
lit
up by a
fairy-lamp,
footed, impassive,
as
many
On
among
his guests.
made more or
49
who
responded, although
must
It is
helped by its rank,
sphere and usefulness.
of
mare
boast
other aristocracies can
quarter! ngs, an Eng-
not outlived
for, if
its
a higher value, especially in republican and democratic countries, than that of any other nation.
Indeed, much as I like the citizens e>f the United States and adlish title
has
still
carried
endeavour
is
leaning
My own
opinion
is
saw
it.
50
itself into
a series
and a
finally of a
Chinaman with
The
a red
effect
Malayan novels
the
them
in
Malaya
like
Their appeal to
Islands.
me
was
An
just as strong as
twenty-seven years before.
Outcast of the
I first read
when
pelago.
And
trees
it
my memory.
It is
in the mind. In
my
dramas of
tion with
history.
whom
Of
life
that are
varied career
the great figures of the Russian revoluclosely connected the photograph which
all
was
was walking, towards dusk, with a friend in Kenmaking our way up to Kensington
came striding down the pavement.
His head, covered by a soft black hat, was bent forward until his
years ago I
chin almost touched his chest. His coat collar was turned up. His
hands clutched a paper-bag. As he brushed past us, I caught sight
of his face.
sky."
"Good God,"
Although
have
I said to
my
known him
stop him but
companion,
"that's
Keren-
now
for nearly
intimately
turned to watch him until
5*
on
whenever
island,
it is
my mind
the same*
carry in
dream
that
treasure island.
The
Governor's launch.
found
my
first
was a
cool
my
first
or,
5*
and,
the trail of
of the
station,
Western
civilisation
had blazed
itself
huge new
bay. Neither the vast array of cars nor the pernicious hoarding,
advertising Ceylon's "Lido," could quite destroy the natural beauty
it
who
whom
can be
listed
common
ing a
word
53
Malays in referring
As we
continued
number
"Ah
of Christian churches
Colombo
very
Go
method/'
When I was in Japan twenty-five years ago, the young Japanese were learning languages by the same method. To-day, like
Japanese goods, the system seems to have spread all over Indonesia.
Our Malay hopeful, however, was still a good Mohammedan*
As we passed the mosque, he pointed it out with obvious pride,
1
"To-morrow,* he
The motto
of
Macan Markar
is
"known
for reliability."
The
epithet
is
new
is
rivalled only
Ocean on the calmest and sunniest of days. It was found in a riceand is valued at ^50,000, but until the United States turns
field
found in 1907, weighed 466 carats, and was bought by the late
Mr. J. P. Morgan, Senior, when he passed through in his yacht.
The
price paid
the price fixed
"The Blue
Belle of Asia." In spite, however, of the deof it, the East is still the East, and the
because
or perhaps
pression,
and
of
firm's methods
bargaining are still pleasant and
trading
name
of
entertaining.
When we entered
the shop,
we found
With
Harry's finances.
They
adornment consisted of ear-rings with jewels set in the most delicate filigree work, anklets, bracelets, a turban tiara studded with
a bejewelled breastplate.
sapphires, and
Meanwhile Lady Pembroke had just concluded an excellent
at the Galle Face Hotel for the
bargain. She had been staying
on the day of her arrival had gone into the store
past week, and
to complain about a slight defect in a stone which she had bought
in Colombo some eight years before. The manager was apologetic.
"I'll put everything right, my lady. We want our customers to be
satisfied. I'll make you one big bargain." He had then produced
a sapphire bracelet, a sapphire and diamond necklace, and
a
ring,
He
first,
fit
on a black
velvet cloth
and then on
55
to the
suddenly, he had turned
"
and cheap at the price
window.
"
for the
lot,
my
lady,
The
New
broke had looked at the collection and had liked it. But she had
had offered a sum rather
kept her head and with great firmness
less
knocked off yet another ten per cent. On the fifth day, with the
mournful tones of an undertaker, he had resigned himself to a
further reduction, pointing out that his sole object was to retain
the goodwill of so august a customer and that he was losing money
on die
deal.
departure,
higher than Lady Pembroke's bid, but about fifty-five per cent
below his own original demand. After consulting her husband,
Lady Pembroke
The
accepted.
deal had just been concluded
when we came
into the
who
also
to Singapore,
was playing an
exhibition
by.
liners.
and
Lady
full of poise,
looked
tired.
tall,
very
working night and day superintending the battle against the malaria epidemic which was then raging in the
low-country districts
of Ceylon.
There were two explanations, she told us, for the scourge
which had suddenly descended on the island. The official one was
that it was caused by the unprecedented drought which not
only
had ruined the crops but had dried up the streams leaving everywhere pools of stagnant water as fertile breeding-grounds for
mosquitoes.
The
tion.
pose that
sat
on
King George
it*
of a
window,
I feel that
its
way through
Ceylon
is
know
better
fit.
Reluctantly I decided to omit the Indo-China part of
Desire had outrun the time-limit at my disposal.
my
tour.
57
CHAPTER EIGHT
hours later we arrived at Sabang, the
port of
Pulau
Wei,
FIFTY-SIX the most Western island of the Malay archipelago
I rose at six to sec the ship steering
its
way
in a
rose-pink dawn
The
perfection of
The
the
jetty,
The
have no aptitude
itself
for,
and no
interest in,
small garrison
are a
bungalows,
noon-day
between the crew and the passengers of our
steamer, I took a car
and made a tour of the island. The road,
gratefully shaded by
lofty trees, was a switchback in which steep gradients alternated
with pleasant glades with butterflies o
size and colour
every
58
green grass,
Away from
town
there
was
little
as far as scenery is concerned, should be as attracas Tahiti. But, for all their warrior
an island which,
tive to
modern Gauguin
qualities,
painters,
institution
which
inspected and
which
gives
considerable
its
establishment
is
excellently
wire entanglements it
camp than an asylum. There are coconut plantations and a vegetable
garden run
to the road
and
by the
entirely
is
close
and patients, and to dance at the annual ball with the more innocuous of the female patients. Asylums have furnished the theme
of a series of humorous and successful novels written by an old
on me their effect has always been shatpupil of my father. But
tering,
and
reality exiles
from
of
lingering on the brink
Since
my
visit to
with people
who
life itself,
are in
those
death.
Sabang
The
giver to other
of that policy of social
minister
was
rich.
He
was a generous
charities.
Above
59
might conclude
sane."
In
this institution I
saw a
case of a strange
Malayan
disease
known
form
of
an involuntary
muscular reaction which forces the patient to imitate the movements of any one who engages his attention. Some one raises his
hand or makes a
It is
an
face.
affliction
tical jokers. I
The
which lends
remember from
itself to
my
early days in
fruit at the
a train
came
or football,
we would amuse
me
with shame.
Here in Sabang
the patient
was an
elderly
him
from
mockery of his fellow creatures, although
as
a
are
kind to "latah" victims and
Malays,
rule,
reprove the
to spare
the
my
this
voyage
it
my
memory,
during
much
luck.
The Dutch,
as usual,
my way home
Sabang on
at
which are
its
prey.
was either too slow or too fast, and I could never strike the hook
home. When I struck too quickly, the fishermen would say: "You
must wait, Tuan." If I waited, there was a gentle reprimand of
"Too slow, Tuan."
bright. It
was
down my
ing
We
closed,
suddenly the
paddles that the water soaked my coat and the boat began to rock
with a rapidity that made my balance precarious, "What are you
doing?"
Two
swam
if
one
by accident
it
would be
My
We
a brand-new
line.
This piece of
it
The
the products of Eastern Sumatra, and through its wharves pass the
vast quantities of tobacco, rubber, palm-oil and tea which in less
fifty years have turned a virgin jungle into
areas in the world.
than
one of the
richest
The
palace
with their
and
The
the
artificial
mosque were
whole surroundings gave me the impression of a temporary jerrybuilt structure put up for a colonial exhibition.
The place, however, was a concrete proof of the wealth of the
62
Deli
district.
^300 a
boom
it
America.
Medan,
to the
the world.
ing up from them the threads of Amai's story and of her subfate. Then the doubts of middle age would obtrude them-
sequent
preparing
BOOK
II
Stranger Returns
"EVEN SUCH
Our
And
CHAPTER ONE
must always be something exotic in the return of a
country which he had known in his youth
re-visited for a quarter of a century. The
he
has
not
which
but
man
to a foreign
geographical progression
exile
who
is
returning
is
home
Yet the
is
and from
fulfilled
my
expectations. I
awoke
out in bold
Malaya
relief.
my
And
in the
as blue, as languorous,
and went on deck. We were someitself was invisible. The sea was
where
off Malacca,
67
as
as a lake
calm
pression of
who had
my
found
Instead, I
sailed
on a windless day.
first
my
down
the early Dutch traders and sea-captains, unappreciated Imlike Raffles, and Catholic missionaries, turning their backs
perialists
forever on the Old World, to the cheerful youths who, like myself,
gal,
attracted
had
by the new plantation rubber industry,
in the Indian
it
Ocean
man of twenty-five,
and
of
found safety in its
glimpse
Singapore
caught his
friendly harbour. No wonder that the prose which was in the man
boat that the future author, then a young
first
had
perience helped
him
to
an Eastern theme. Doubtless, too, the exform his magnificent philosophy towards
life.
"Man
and
is
one had lived beside them in England for a life-time, and yet
one realised instinctively one would never see again. These
whom
duties finished, I
who
as
We
greenness were
68
now
by huge
decks. It
airplanes,
shimmering
like
And
smoking saloon to await our turn. Freddie, always in his element as a host, produced cocktails, and while he gave the local
gossip to the others, Reggie Pembroke told me a story of Wardlaw,
the
a slim, rather silent man who impresses by the quiet efficiency with
which he gets things done.
Reggie was in the "Blues" and fought all through the war.
Through his grandmother he has Russian blood, and had his father
cared to change his nationality Reggie would now be the head of
the princely family of Vorontzoff.
On account of his
Russian con69
uniform," said the Ruler of all the Russias. Reggie, who is particular about these matters, was taken aback. "You should be wearing
a Russian uniform,' said the Tsar, relieving him of his embar1
rassment.
What
doing
all
those other
little
looked at
Wardlaw with
new
some
my
The
passport queue
still
seemed
we
as
as ever, and, as
long
decided to lunch on board.
it
was
Our
The Pembrokes, who
party
liked
up, but only temporarily.
the sea, were going on by steamer to Java and then to Bali. The
was breaking
was
Cunningham. Then
to
meet
restless
70
He looked
at
alone.
me
some news
"I've
At
last I
got
him
into
a corner by ourselves.
you
my
feeling of
nervousness. I
clammy
in the glass
pictured to myself the ravages of twenty-five years of tropion the former beauty of a young Malayan girl. I rememsun
cal
of
my figure
ness
Fortunately,
All was
ness.
minutes
my
reflections
in
its possibilities
of ridicule,
now
As we
They seemed
strangely deserted.
We
pulled
up
at the Singapore
were transferred
to that centre of
London
clubland.
The sun
beat
down on
the old enervating humidity in the air. Here was another miracle.
I had arrived in the middle of a drought almost unprecedented in
which
7*
is
Now
Place close
name
little
bedraggled, a little in
is never
forgotten
of Raffles
Perhaps
this
The memory
of
more value
is a
healthy sign.
generation to generation is
that
is
passed
to a race
down from
or marble.
left was the Cathedral of St. Andrew,
very
its stately grcyness conveying an
and
in
atmosphere of
English
more permanence than any other building in Singapore. Here on
the right was the old "padang" with the British Singapore Cricket
Club at one end and the Eurasian Recreation Club at the other, a
as equals.
the
car
Suddenly
pulled up, and a tall Indian chasseur, magnifiblack
cent in
beard, turban and red sash, came forward to open
British
to
is
We
the door.
for planters
My
It
and
first
was
down from
the Federated
Malay
Armenian
proprietors. Gone,
Gone were
too,
was
the
"J06 *"
vivid-
first arrival at
Now
T2
little
my
knew
Tamil
clerk
efforts to
break
it
now
whom
only
Some
tection.
When we
arrived, the
the Raffles managers still tell the story of the old lady who stuck in
one, the old Siamese jar with its tin-pan for sluicing one's self was
evidently a thing of the past. I felt a pang of regret, and after my
is still
by far
We
73
We
down on
I lay
made my way
was
impossible,
and presently I
where I could
and
official.
arcade,
still
many
With
74
by H.M.S. Kent, stood out like black swans in the fading sunlight.
I could have lingered long over this imposing and unforgettable
But the others were impatient. Freddie had asked some
picture.
friends to
meet
us.
The
we went
is
By
this
women
life
last
women and
is
a change
For
say that they are not capable of ordering it more wisely and more
in accordance with their own need than the tourist and passing
much
is
as
London office stool to sigh for the green fields and placid
streams of the English countryside.
I shall permit myself only one adverse observation. Throughout
to a
is
The
alcohol
is
become
its
sole topic.
concentration
my
is
back
is
that
it
more
we dined
the
parent evening dress that suggested
homard d
table. I
pommes
failles.
Here
stopped, but
had
wished
which in the old days had formed the staple menu of every gala
dinner. Here was a revolution. Indeed, cold storage* electricity, and
the motor-car have entirely changed life in the tropics and have
robbed it of nearly all its discomforts. To-day Singapore gets fresh
meat from Australia, fresh butter from New Zealand, swede turnips from Sumatra, potatoes from Palestine, tomatoes from Java,
rhubarb from New South Wales, oranges from China, and cabbages, lettuces and salads from the Malayan hill-station of Cameron
Highland. Soon, too, this Scottish-sounding resort will provide Malaya with fresh trout, for the ova which were put down in its mountain streams
results. Fishing,
however,
is
not
my
76
Freddie's two friends, who completed our party, were a Dr. and
Mrs. Hanna. Both are Americans and both are known throughout
the length and breadth of British Malaya. Their popularity is
merely one of countless proofs of my contention that, whatever
differences
may
exist
"Doc" Hanna
is
a racing
man
As he had
recently won a big race, most of our conversation was about the
turf. I recalled the up-country racing of
early days: the raw
Australian "walers," the auction sweeps, the amateur jockeys.
my
There was,
called Tully,
who went
written in
Malaya:
Dan
fyeja
besar seJ(alif
Matcham
Then you'd
better start in as
'
empty pockets with which most of us, totally ignoform and of horseflesh, came back from our local meetings.
To-day, racing must be nearly the most profitable by-industry in
reflection of the
rant of
77
inspired
Paris,
of
of
mean*
He
at Freddie. I
know
they were
of the local experts. Their joy was renewed when they saw their
best efforts perpetuated in print. The story of the Nigerian chief
who on
seeing the sea for the first time rushed forward to drink it
in the belief that it was crime de menthe; the first-hand account
of the traveller who, having been
regaled with roast monkey, believed that he had taken part in a cannibal feast; these and many
similar stories could be ascribed to the
pleasant
78
game
of hoax,
is
as old as
first traveller
my
alive. Other men, who had spent their lives in the Malayan jungle,
had had the same experience. Yet even to-day a tiger might walk
into Government House, and no one except the Governor himself
would be unduly astonished. At all events no one can say that such
a visit is beyond the bounds of possibility.
My first comparison after landing now seemed foolish. Singapore
is not like Liverpool. Except for the thin surface layer of Western
civilisation imposed by the industry and energy of a few thousand
Englishmen and maintained by the might of Britain's sea power,
there is nothing European about it. Six hundred years ago a
flourishing kingdom in Singapore was destroyed by foreign invaders from Java, and the island went back to jungle. In the light
of the thousand new problems which confront the East to-day it is
just conceivable that in another six hundred years it may go back
to jungle again.
79
CHAPTER TWO
this chapter I give a short
summary
of the geographical
IN
House of Commons
British
Empire
for
responsible.
When, in 1935, the Bindings, a
narrow
strip
of territory on the
about
the
it
this
in Perak
is
member
reads in
Irak. It
its
is
is
word
it
as
with
some thousands
valuable strip
of territory.
Let
me
latitudes
state at
and 7
80
The
total area
is
There are just under two million Malays, one million seven hundred thousand Chinese, and over six hundred thousand Indians.
The Indians are principally Tamil coolies employed on the rubber
estates. There arc approximately twenty thousand Europeans and
seventeen thousand Eurasians.
The
forming
made up
The
interests of the
Province Wellesley on the mainland; Malacca, historithe most interesting city of the Malay Archipelago; and
Labuan, another small island off the north-east coast of Borneo.
trative area
cally
were fed-
tans.
form a
The
British Protectorate
to
to
one in the
Straits
on
their land.
From
by a marked
known as Malaya,
In the early days of European colonial expansion the Malay
States arc
Archipelago was the centre of the lucrative spice trade, and provoked what Lenin would have called the inevitable capitalist conflict
Indies,
English,
who came
last
of all
Malaya
exports spices of various kinds, but the twin gods
of her wealth are Tin and Rubber. In 1933 she exported two-thirds
of the world's rubber and nearly sixty per cent, of the world's tin.
still
and
is
Malaya only a
tiny fraction of what she buys, Britain buys less from Malaya than
she sells to her. To-day a complicated system of import duties and
quotas have further reduced American and other foreign imports
into Malaya.
82
There
Straits
existence,
still free-traders
to-day among the
some
of them over a hundred years old,
mercantile
houses,
great
of Singapore and Penang. The Malay States are producing countries. They are in favour of protection.
Taken
almost every class of goods which formerly the British manuand the reader has a general idea of the
racial and economic lay-out of a part of the world of which, sooner
facturer used to supply,
he
is
likely to hear
more.
Tucked away
Malay
village in
is
my
som-
new
all
defence scheme.
It is
true that in
my
day
also Singapore
on
the
life
The
officers infused
they lent to the social life of the colony. It was rarely, if ever, that
military matters obtruded themselves into the garrulous conversation of "pahit" time.
The
all,
the disturbing
menace
of the
East,
local
community, there
is
new
seriousness behind
Playing
volunteer forces
if,
head, he
realises the
apart
hidden in a secluded
which no one can enter without a permit.
It is an imposing sight to come suddenly on the naval base
after a drive through palm groves and shady trees interspersed
with market gardens and peaceful kampongs. It is as if one were
political
The
Batu Pahat, the centre of the richest iron deposits in the Malayan
Archipelago.
The Japanese
Nor
is
Malaya. There
8s
Now
The
reason
is
that ilmenite
is
tetrachloride, a liquid which fumes on contact with water. It provides the quickest and most efficacious smoke-screen for battleships.
To a neutral observer the fact that a country which adjoins the
man
How
far
layman's
criticisms of the strategic reasons which have dictated this conversion of Singapore into a modernised and impregnable Gibraltar
86
Of
all
the changes which have taken place during the last twentythe most important and the most far-reaching in
consequences.
its
Through
which the defence scheme has been carried out, British prestige in
Malaya has recovered much of its former glamour.
But even if every favourable argument is accepted at its face
value, the fact remains that the scheme itself is primarily defensive
and not offensive. Given that Britain can maintain two powerful
fleets at the same time, a fleet, based on Singapore, could afford
reasonable protection to the outlying islands of the Malay Archiare mosdy Dutch possessions, and for that reason the
pelago. These
It is
as
itself.
justifies
on
responsibility
is
the
is
with
a potential
87
is
human
ingenuity can
me
it
seemed
ago every
Chinaman
star-
in Singapore
wore a
pigtail, the
Europeans undress
uni-
88
for
CHAPTER THREE
TNLIKE
L/ propaganda,
But
passing stranger.
of recommendation
to old friends or to
letters
from old
my
Dutch East
In Singapore
Indies
was
and
my
all
thought of
passage home.
to cancel
House
One was
Sir
literary ambitions.
I took the earliest possible opportunity of seeking out both.
Gordon, who was now in the Secretariat of the Straits Settlement
Government, was just leaving Singapore. Andrew, however, was
at home, and he came at once to Raffles to carry me off in his car
to luncheon. Although we had not met for twenty-five years, I
had no difficulty in recognising him. In the old days we had
played fierce home-and-home matches of football, transporting our
my
case
up
if
We
Don't funk!")
("Quick
half-a-dozen motor-cars in
Negri
the journey being long, we had
there!
stayed the night at each other's bungalows. Andrew was a delightful host. He was already a good Malay scholar with literary
on the shaping of
my
literary destiny.
Outwardly our re-union was unemotional. After years of separation even the closest friends meet more or less as strangers. He
looked tired and overworked. Indeed, I was lucky to catch him
in Singapore, for he was leaving in two days' time for a short
and well-earned local leave at a Java hill-station. During the last
four years he had had nine different jobs, including those of
Resident or Acting Resident in several states, Acting Chief Secretary of the FJMS, Government, and Acting Governor in Singa-
Luncheon, served in the cool dining-room of the Colonial Secretary's official residence, which occupies one of the best hill sites
in Singapore, was a pleasant meal. Only Lady Caldecott was pres-
and she let us talk our fill. It was great fun to discuss old
and informative to me to hear Andrew's views on the
changes which had taken place since my time. I gathered that
routine office work had increased beyond all standards of comparison, and that if a Colonial Secretary were to do all he was
ent,
times,
90
expected to
do he would have
even sleep.
After luncheon I went
down
all
relaxation but
He
office.
had
piles,
and
noiselessly in
The
tions.
out, bringing
Some one
at the
instruc-
Air Base
wanted to
know
the various units of the defence forces until they found their
had not exactly decreased the labours of the civil
tropical legs
Andrew dealt with the questions and fixed up my arrangements with an unruffled composure and efficiency which were
impressive. It was in this atmosphere that he proposed to settle
service.
work without
reproof, took
little
Above
all, he lacked the presence, the dignity, and the other he-man qualities of his predecessors of the old days. In short, the criticisms
were much the same as those one hears every day from old gentle-
men
in the London clubs about the delinquencies of the presentday youth of England.
There may well be some truth in these assertions. It is the
weakness of
all
government
were
men
in re-
who, more
sponsible posts
particularly in the matter of dignity,
fell far short of the standard set by the high officers of the service
in
my
Frank
whom
It is also
man
in Britain as
young
it
used to do.
The rewards
The
But in
loss in attractiveness
of
life
in Malaya
work
is
He
deals as a
modern
but mentally
He
must point
less
is
civi-
virile
well-equipped predecessors.
too,
Smelting Company, smelt all the tin ore mined in Malaya and
sold in the open market as well as ore from Siam and other pro-
Americans were doing a rather unprofitable shipthe Philippines, which they had acquired after
with
business
ping
the Spanish-American War. Their ships came from the States with
At
passengers and freight and had to return empty to their home port.
It was then that the American group conceived the idea of
ore, carrying
it
to
San
of
92
to obtain control
its
distress the
Sir
Frank informed
not consult
beforehand.
it
Secretary,
day.
local
by
air-plane,
spend a feverish
week in touring the country, and return home with a little dangerous learning, and even if he be blessed with the rare qualities
of a Swettenham the local Governor is, like most British Ambassadors, little more than a human post-box for receiving the instructions of the
Home
Government.
'
The system
It
puts a
initiative.
The
93
strange reason known only to the sacred circle of Cabinet Minishas been a neglected department. When in the Cabinet recon-
ters,
The
and lack of
direction of intention.
symptom of
all
of spirit
Roman
Rome
servants of
civil
want
decline of the
empires
The
is
started to suppress
local administrators.
hall
and the
man and
inability of the
Home Government
may
effects
on the future
how
far will
his
by the intervention of a
Hugh
Clifford,
who was
The
which ever
restrictive
disabilities
him
minor degree
Malaya
a secluded invalid.
members
of the
ment
in a land, which,
94
Much
of conquest
from
outside
nationalist ambitions
every healthy young man preferred the "ulu" to the town, not
merely because he found the life more attractive in itself, but also
because
It is also
my
my
works
is
true
of the planter, the miner and the merchant. The passing tourist
may find little attraction in the life of the British community.
He may
unknown
formed
is
after
steamers.
He
wants to
He
is
literature as there
Sir
in the
is
own
it.
is
French
Sir
Hugh
books to their credit, no British resident in Malaya has yet produced a work of outstanding merit. How vividly I still remember
the romantic enthusiasm which I brought to my first reading of
Sir Hugh Clifford's In Court and Kampong and The Further
Side of Silence. Alas! their glamour has now gone beyond hope
of recapture, and the accurate portrayal of local colour is no compensation for the stilted artificiality of the language in which Sir
Hugh makes
his
Malays
talk.
To-day
first
the accuracy or the brilliance with which Mr, Maugham has described certain exceptional aspects o European life in the East.
But no one
The
other writer
who commands
Mr,
Maugham
is no
same manner or
because there
And,
physical fitness is
There
96
is
certainly
it
was in
life,
my
his
day.
which the
true that
many
fly
in the
life
of
knew
since 1910- In
community
my day everybody
everybody, and there were few men who had not received a public
school education. The large increase in the numbers of the white
the British
affairs,
my
new
There
unknown
increase
is,
among
too,
in
and undesirable
it is
a disturbing
which
woman
in
be found.
The
disadvantages are obvious: an enervating climate, a multiplicity of servants to attend to her wants, and nothing to do all
day except to seek amusement. As far as the amusements are
concerned, she plays golf and tennis with the men, but in other
cases she sets the course of pleasure. Dancing, a rare form of amuseis now a weekly or daily part of the social life
community, and even up-country it is a commonplace event for a young planter to motor fifty miles to the nearest
town to provide a partner for the wife of some official or business
ment in
my
time,
of the British
man who
a one-step.
There are some
and
women whose
their
their
light drive at night with
women in Malaya who have not the national love of gardening and who have not translated it into practical results which
British
soul.
But
in spite of the
accessibility
some
on the
climate,
is
lower than
general atmosphere
is still
it
was
The
sometimes
refreshingly invigorating
unnecessarily noisy, and there is still a good deal of the public
school and Empire spirit about it. Since my time the old school
has added
are
Cambon, the
the kindness of
a safe channel.
dispute into
"My
dear
ambassador," he
said,
"why
all
this
fuss
about
You know
French one.
We'd
99
CHAPTER FOUR
VISITOR
with friends
among
the
local
British
residents
mainspring
the social
life
British the
is
typically
will hardly
deign
servant will spend
tennis,
cricket,
yachting,
rowing, and
private flying, and since my time there has been a boom in bathing* Indeed, on a Sunday the scene at the Singapore Swimming
Club pool, fenced off from the sea and said to be the largest in
the world, is an unforgettable sight. The costumes of the women
lose nothing by comparison with those of Paris
Plage and Deauand
iced-beer
softens
the rigours of sun-bathing, At night,
ville,
apart from dancing, the social round has few attractions, and the
visitor is likely to find time
hang heavily
theatricals are amateur theatricals all the
an
on
his hands.
Amateur
one is
one of the performers. There is, too, more discomfort
than pleasure in the official dinner parties at which on gala occainfliction unless
interest in
and a
my
by the Prince's
jacket.
Singapore.
much time
arranged
my programme
so as to
have as
is
my
by day
and by night. I would rise early in the morning and go out to
watch the native population preparing for its day's work: Chinese
and Japanese shopkeepers waiting passively for custom behind the
counters of their windowless shops, fat Bombay "Chetties" with
Japanned boxes full of notes ready for the day's moneylending,
lean and hungry Arab capitalists plying the same trade, French
Singapore. Mosquito buses, Chinese-owned and with their destinamarked in half-a-dozen languages, commercial vans, also
tions
Chinese-owned and
illustrated
with a
tiger's
force of
tall,
bearded Sikhs
101
The
scene
or
New
of origin.
The Japanese
are
few
in
increased
very
little
since
my
a cheap fountain
their fishing fleets
women, and
some
bespectacled,
some
pass-
streets
on
their
way
games.
102
Malays,
and Eurasians,
on the traditional British educational lines of work and games. The young men and women
have the same passionate urge for education which characterises
Indians,
slovakia
trained
all
new
is
certain to
become
services
Moscow among
the gospel of
the coolie
class.
No
They
and
entrance there
is
its
Above
the
text matter
or clutched in a
fierce
It is severe on
which revolutionary scenes are depicted. It banned the
film of my book British Agent. Let me hasten to add that I have
films in
no grievance about
man's
woman
be blamed
he was.
man
is
not the
man
In Malaya bananas grow like weeds. Now that the arboricultuhave discovered that the fig-leaves with which Adam
ral experts
in
reality
banana leaves I feel that the censors might approprienforce the banana standard on the Singapore cinemas.
full-sized
ately
But perhaps the greatest change in Malayan life is the emergence of the modern Chinese capitalist and industrialist. Singapore
has always been famed for its rich towkays. But the towkay of
to-day is a very different being from the courteous, pig-tailed gentleman of two generations back. Externally, at least, he is Westernised from the soles of his brown shoes to his tie and collar, and
in the evening he can wear his boiled shirt and dress-coat with the
best European. More often than not he wears horn-rimmed glasses.
If he is the son of a rich father, he is almost certain to be a university graduate and perhaps a bencher of one of London's inns
of court. If he is self-made and among the Singapore towkays
there are
still
ordinary coolie
tire-
the world's bourses at his finger-tips. He is an authority on commodity prices. He owns rubber estates and tin mines. His factories
stuffs,
world.
the social
104
protects
may be
institutions,
Singapore.
lives
on a
scale
commensurate
On
is
the entertainment
down
and
tables
on a
terrace
some
Chinese at
When
Bryce,
that
houses.
all events,
who won
planter,
Colonel "Teddie"
during the Great War, was in Johore, the Chinese painted a sign
in Chinese on the outside wall of his servants' quarters. It stood
there for
When
he
owner of
heart,
white employers.
British diplomacy, too, has a story rich in its value as an illustration of the dangers of acquiring beautiful objects decorated with
Chinese symbols of whose meaning the purchaser is ignorant. Although it has, doubtless, been embroidered in the telling, this
is true, and has its setting in Peking in the
days of the
Chinese Empire. At that time the brightest star in the diplomatic
firmament of the Chinese capital was the wife of a British secretary. She was a daughter of an ancient and aristocratic family,
story
and a
beautiful
action
It
nese "puller" with the torso of a Greek athlete. But its chief glory
was two lanterns, borne by two picturesquely-dressed bearers and
decorated on the one side with an idyllic moonlit scene featuring
a pagoda, a bridge, a river and a garden, and on the other side
with exquisitely painted Chinese symbols* This brilliant turn-out
was not bought as a museum-piece. It was intended to add lustre
Chinese scholar,
who
encountered
it
one evening
as
he was
enter-
difficulties
of an intervention which
behind a
fortified
"I'm sorry," he
to give
The
tea-table.
said,
rickisha."
up using your
She foresaw
a social battle,
and was
at
Minister.
Yours
is
not at
all suitable
a diplomatist."
"But
it
means?"
"No, and
I don't care.
on those
lanterns.
tell
Do
me
if
is
Five Yen.'
"
my
vice itself
was never
at
it is
on
the evening of
my
third day I
107
Street,
like so
Death
Malaya. As
appear on the
lights began
would
which
vanish
lives
little
many
to
an early
is still
had chosen
this
drove
the
morning,
By
There was
which
spirit of a past
a
with
returned
Recognition
momentary
thrill,
as
down
o the
sway. Somewhere in
where
set
made my way
Somewhere in
secret societies
still
held
were the
of white
women
pimps from
and Eastern Europe, and drifting
farther East as their charms declined, via Bucharest, Athens and
Cairo, until they reached the ultima Thute of their profession in
army
Singapore.
girls
among them. On
political
and
nationality,
globe-trotters, travellers,
way
money on an orgy
and perhaps
temple in order
to satisfy
an
exotic
embraces of the
Gone,
108
too,
their
lower
shuttered with
windows
bamboo
and brightly coloured kimonos, heavily painted and powdered, essentially doll-like and yet not without a certain charm
dress
and made an
regain her
When
was to
it
all
off,
she
was
free to
rest
human
souls
had roused in
me
of these
young Japanese
my
moods of
reflec-
The
and
self-sacrificing heroine.
will
stories
109
up-country gold mine which then employed several thousand Chinese coolies. Two Japanese brothels served the needs of these
primi-
tive proletarians,
that
money
whose
knowledge
was hard to come by and in a determination to extract
me
remain in
Street will
my memory
my
street furtively,
windows were
lest any
witnesses to the
white man's secret shame and not daring to emerge until one had
ascertained if Rose or Madeline or Wanda were free.
to
Then
show
the
way and
and obsequious
to carry messages.
Now
no
sense of
was a
no
peaceful
and
on
to
infinitely
floor,
khaki
were half-a-dozen
assist-
suits.
at
my
we moved
request
stared at the
who
of romance.
up from
his
vacantly at the
row of sordid
my chauffeur.
He
buildings.
jumped
over to the tailor. The old man looked
machine and
moment. Then,
said.
city
now.
New
houses every
Botanical
air
"ta'
As we drove through
behind
us,
my
wisdom of
am
aware that
their
in
are shared
apprehensions
who
of
officers,
of several thousands
are responsible for the hygienic welfare
young
British soldiers
and
sailors
and airmen.
young
all intercourse
the problem
These
is
facts,
sex.
In a semi-puritanised Singapore
one of hygiene.
must be stated,
proved by centuries of experience,
for they are frequently ignored by well-meaning reformers. Neverthere can be few who will seriously
theless, even among old-timers
new
Singapore
method which a
traveller
local
Before
the garage,
had
now
mown down
Capone's headquarters in the Lexington Hotel. I had seen Mr. William Collins, brother of the famous Irishman, Michael Collins,
and then superintendent of the DCS Moines police force, interrogating some of Chicago's lowest down-and-outs. I had noticed
nothing half so sordid as I could have witnessed by myself, at
any hour of the day, in Glasgow or Birmingham. I had returned
to
here
now
whole hall, shot down the head porter and a couple of cashiers,
and walked off with all the cash in the hotel till in broad dayand only a year ago almost to a day."
light, too,
In the Singapore Club I used the same method. I told my
hosts of my Singapore rambles. I told them how my illusions had
been shattered. I described the dancing at Raffles and my descent
into
Malay
Street.
Where was
all this
portrayed in the books of post-war globe-trotters? Raffles had appeared to me to be more decorous and more middle-class than any
defied even
let
an
alone discover
tout.
friends,
man
looks
a double-edged weapon in these Eastern triangles. If the motorillicit meetings, the telephone has strengthened
the defences of the cuckold. In this story the husband official besuspicious. He enlisted the aid of his servants. They were
came
to let
house.
official.
its
adultery,
113
CHAPTER FIVE
Ty
TY visit to Singapore
J^r JLmemories
of
governor at the
jail
my
jail
will
Eastern tour.
As
had
to
my
My
way
led
me by
In
but each hole has its distinctive landmark. These landmarks include
two mortuaries, a maternity hospital, an infectious disease hospital,
a lunatic asylum, a powder magazine, the
prison itself, and a Chinese graveyard. In the case of the graveyard there is a serious
breach of die rules which does not commend itself to those true
golfers who stand or fall by the rigour of the game. In order to
soothe Chinese susceptibilities niblick shots are not or used not
to be permitted between the
gravestones.
As he was
playing off
The
propaganda
confined to
were
executions
who were
shot
came
down
in cold
The
was
When
we
jail I found Captain Bloxham, the goverme. Attended only by a warder and an interpreter,
reached the
on our tour of inspection. My previous prison experihad been few. I had been shown over the French convict
prison at Fontevrault, where some of the Plantagenet kings and
queens of England lie buried. I had inspected the prison on the
fle de R off Rochefort where Dreyfus was nearly mobbed by the
crowd in 1896, and where unfortunate criminals spend their last
night on French soil before being shipped to Devil's Island. During
a fishing holiday on Dartmoor I had once attended mass at the
grim Princetown prison, and had even had a cut in my head
stitched by the prison doctor. And, of course, I had spent a week
in the dreaded Loubianka in Moscow and three weeks in the
Kremlin as the political prisoner of the Bolshevik Government.
But this was my first visit to a prison in a British colony.
set off
ences
115
Externally the
is
jail
it is
was
there
years
serious overcrowding.
On
the day
on which
I rftade
my visit the total was just over 1000. The reduction was the result
of the world slump in rubber and tin and in the repatriation of
thousands of Chinese
coolies.
there
is
an
effective
movements
of
jail
are Chinese.
was taken
first
The
from
the
control of crime in
of the prison.
Malaya depends largely
on informers. Occasionally these Chinese informers get into trouble
rest
themselves.
rate
ward.
When
If they
As
work
work
The
stricdy utilitarian.
The
by
men
suffering mainly
European
prisoners.
priated funds or
Most of them are men who have misapprotried to obtain money under false pre-
who have
total inability to
his
antecedents.
He,
too,
the other
prisoners.
me
as the
only blot
on an administration which,
was as
humane
as
entirely
wrong, and
in cruelty
from the gangsters of New York and Chicago. There were about
eighteen of them. They were working on looms. Their expression
this cage,
us, the
beads of sweat
my
my
youth in
famous Pahang murder, when an English planter taking back
money from the town in order to pay his coolies had been tripped
up by a wire stretched across the road. Foolishly he had forgotten
his revolver.
Even more
foolishly
local
Eng-
lish
set
The
doctor, a powerfully-built
men
with
his bare
heroically
fists
before
and had
he was
He
knifed to death.
had disfigured one man so badly that
the gang-robbers killed their
colleague and buried him lest his
bruises should lead to their detection. At the time of
first
finally
my
117
to
my lonely home in
of jungle.
came
jail it
Pantai
miles
And now
reality.
When we
gave any
days ago
came
out, I
men
ever
"ten
if
these
their
try to keep
section,
them together
communists and
in%^c
in another. Occasionally
political prisoners
have minor mutinies. Gang-robbers still exist; they use all the
modern American methods, motor-cars and revolvers, and a few
we
of their
We
own
as well."
went over
to
another
full of Chinese
communists. In type they differed considerably from the gangbeing less villainous-looking and of poorer physique.
Most of them had been convicted of spreading seditious literature.
During my stay in Malaya I was shown several examples of these
communist pamphlets. They were mostly to the address of Chinese
coolies on rubber estates and tin miners. The script was in Chinese,
but the language was the language of Moscow. "Sons of the soil.
robbers,
Now
is
The
coolies
working on
estates
are suffering because the price of rubber has fallen. Wages have
been reduced. Although we have to live, the government demands
a licence for carrying on business. Kings fight with each other and
try to squeeze money out of us. There is a surplus of rubber on
all estates,
British
made a
was struck by
faces. I
Some
men
of the
looked intelligent. They made no complaints. Only a certain dignified surliness revealed a hate which seemed deep-rooted.
My
to
my own
experiences in the
Moscow Cheka
the constant
shadow
of death.
The
Bolshevik
jailers carried
guns
and even hand-grenades. Here in Singapore there was little interference and considerable tolerance. The warders, aU Englishmen
brought out specially from Britain, looked sleek and good-natured.
There were no arrows or other marks on the prisoners' clothes.
In humaneness and, above all, in cleanliness the bourgeois-run
prison of Singapore seemed like a well-run school compared with
the insanitary horrors of the Loubianka.
political
after release is
is
And
indefinite
and whose
fate
even
belief in
the kindest-looking
quietly, "is
He
him
'Little
work and suspects awaiting trial were conThere were two Japanese in neighboring cells who had
been arrested in connection with a recent spy case which had
caused a sensation in Singapore. It was a story of an
attempt to
prisoners unfit for
fined.
course of business.
it
for
who had
been concerned in the case, had committed suicide. The two priswere suspected accomplices.
oners, who were now before me,
of all the prisoners whom I saw in the jail
Strangely enough,
voluble and the most truculent. They commost
the
were
they
the food and about the lack of exercise. They
plained about
threatened, they cajoled, they whined. Bloxham listened to them
with reasonable patience. He never lost his temper or tried to
of this fact.
I also talked
The
who
told
me
something about
warders in
the Singapore jail is about fifty. They form part of a regular service
recruited in Britain and carrying at the end of it a pension. They
are picked more for character than for physique. Their life is not
men
are
peace-
ful
and so
silent
uncanny and
120
was the
sinister
setting.
about these
And
was something
high grey walls which shut
yet there
whim.
has
The
plot is
It
its
and in the
uses.
early morning
penter's hammer,
of the Governor, the prison doctor, and a
silently
while the
Mitchell's
game
hangman
hangings.
When we had
torrents. I
came down in
back to Raffles.
My
clothes
appetite
eyes to the cruelty of
opened
My
my
it
My
settled
but
when
stupidity
121
CHAPTER
"TNURING my five
I
^hospitality that
SIX
man
can
all the
desire.
why
avoided
it.
my
For
going
my
form them-
young man. He had a brother on the staff of the London newspaper for which I wrote. He produced a column of
matter in which he referred flatteringly to the Malayan chapters
of British Agent. He touched on Amai, and apparently had taken
intelligent
pains to obtain the latest information about her, for in his paragraphs he predicted that, having seen Malaya for the first time
through the eyes of romantic youth, I should now experience a profound disillusionment. And to give point to this truism he added
that "the girl Amai was now a betel-stained
hag."
and
But the
He
treated
me
well
122
publicity
a hole in
business presented itself in the person of the Far Eastern representative of Messrs. Warner Brothers, the film magnates.
He
had been having trouble with the censors in all the Eastern counover the film of British Agent. Couldn't I
tries, including China,
take the governor or the censor or Chiang Kai-shek by the scruff
of the neck and tell him where he got off? There were telegrams
why
Singapore
satisfy either
pack
is
my
still
my
friends or
my business
colourful,
it
lacks
all
acquaintances
had no
regrets, for,
123
The
canny
There
verse.
is
his capital
on a
man who
As
Scottish engineers.
over the seven seas of the world than any one since Burns. And
I still get a thrill out of the old story which the local
captains
tell when I first came out to Malaya. The steamer is
going
through a typhoon, and in natural anxiety some American lady
passengers turn to the captain with an appealing cry : "What can
we do to be saved?" And the captain answers gravely: "Say your
used to
And
if
God
fails
engineer."
from Singapore
following evening.
124
suited to
perform the
For even
take.
if I
be a vehicle of the
had some
rites at
me
difficulty in
mile.
My
came
Street
was
at night.
stadium.
of
all
classes
stalls,
and of
all
and even a
Naval
races.
centre, Japanese
Aujwiedersehen when
came
in,
in white
European
had their own partners. But when the dance was over I noticed
a number of girls who left their partners as soon as the music
stopped and went to join other girls in a kind of pen. They
were the professional Chinese dancers who can be hired for
a few cents a dance.
There were other Europeans dancing, and after asking an
attendant how the thing was done I plucked up my courage
and, as soon as the music started for the next dance, went over
and engaged a partner. More intent on information than on
pleasure I ambled slowly round the floor, I
my own clumsiness to feel self-conscious.
My
Chinese partner
punished.
registered
They
on a
card,
and
at the
who
and who
126
To me
this
of the
ground.
Singapore
men
inside.
The
Tung Ah
Shanghai
and went
Girls School
champion team
was playing a side of
arc lights.
men
The
fired a last battery as they left the arena. The umpire looked
watch and blew his whistle, and to shrieks of encourage-
at his
tators.
To me, who
seen a Chinese
class,
here
When
was
came
out, I
found
my
faces of the
if
He
to find his
placed.
The
basket-ball
but was
I said. "I
want
at a loss
"
eat 'Satai.'
my
narrow
street close to
like the
men who
sell
mouth. The
we came
to a
sea.
and a
delicious
ritual.
sticks in
much
the
same way
is
them.
The
little
stall-keeper pays
All he watches are the sticks.
them and
128
charges, I think,
At
two
attention to
cents a stick.
eat.
he collects
For a dollar you
can
'
on what, to
gorge yourself
of Eastern dishes.
On my way home
my
mind,
to Raffles I
is
by
saw a
far the
most appetising
sight even
more
startling
than the basket-ball match that I had seen at the "New World."
As my puller turned into Beach Road, I passed a string of Chinese
running down the streets in Indian file. Until I noticed their
legs, I
clerk told
slightly bewildered.
Straits
acres of pineapples.
In
my
which separates
129
Apart from
tigers,
him
He was
had met
thirty-five, and
then about
was a
penchant for the lights of London and Paris. His great friend at
that time was Colonel "Teddie" Bryce, whom I have already
mentioned and who was then living in Johore. One of the trials
of Teddie's
woken up
the Sultan.
To-day the Sultan has more or less settled down. He still likes
life, and has a fund of racy stories which he
tells well and likes telling. On this occasion he had only
recently
returned from a world tour and was full of his reception by the
during
the
crisis
Sultan Ibrahim
sultans.
To
is
by
his natural
state,
but
my
far the
store of knowledge
acquired during his travels. As he still enjoys
more independence than the other Sultans, his
goodwill is of
some importance to the British authorities. He has
given
many
creamy
plexion, she spent most of her time on board playing bridge. She
has considerable influence over the
Sultan, and has used it wisely.
It is well that she has
poise, for her life cannot be easy.
That same night I left Singapore for Port Dickson. I took
my
130
home
begin.
BOOK
Romance
III
Retrospect
"THOUGH WE
And
CHAPTER ONE
T ARRIVED
at
just
JL before
town had grown greatly. Soon we were out of its preand racing past acres and acres of rubber, most of it planted
since
my
that the
owe much
time. I
in
my
life
to the generosity of
my
Coatless in
an open
winter's day.
The
car, I
was
on a
uninhabited,
still
my
my
of the language, that was myself, the lusty Chinese puller gesticulating by the side of the road. I had given him a dollar about
three times his legitimate fare and he had asked for more. As
I stood,
stupid in
my
dumbness,
He
litde Hussein, a
had
said
Malay half-back,
some phrase in which I
135
had happened,
man had slunk
fifty cents change, and the Chinawith the bare foot of the Malay planted firmly
had received
off
my
him on
his
way.
all
my
old friends now? I could recognise the old buildings, but among
all the passers-by there was not a face that I knew. I was at home
and yet
a
was a
new world.
As we set out
stranger, a junior
to
The
a modest
bungalow on the
sea-shore
which
he used to lend to British planters for the week-end. This was not
Port Dickson. It was Brighton.
At
had
place of the
bungalow
mind. In
"atap"4eaf roof was a
my
stood.
its
than a bungalow.
hedge that had shut off the house from the road,
the casuarina tree that had stood in the untidy compound, where
splendid
The
steps, the
hotels
We
136
and there on a
cliff
a strip of jungle with enormously high trees shut off the civilisaaround us was Freddie's garden, heavily-scented
kinds of bougainvillea.
long stair of steps neatly carved in the
a strip of beach with a Malay fisherled
down
to
soil
laterite
red
the
man's prahu nosing
golden sand. Between house and sea was
sluicing one's
and
Chinese "ketchil"
and dignified Chinese cook, the Malay
intelligent
for gardeners in
Strictly
Malay to
whom
man on my
first
steps in
He
knew about
rubber-
planting,
estate
I have an immense affection for Malays. I bristle with resentment when Europeans refer to them as black men. More than
any other oriental race, they have qualities akin to our own, and
there are few Englishmen or Scots who have lived alone among
them who do not like them. They are proud, courageous and
own
and
as
companions on a shooting
As
befits
formerly by piracy and war, they like most of the white man's
games, especially football, and play them well. Ninety-nine per
cent, of the English in Malaya
prefer Chinese to Malays as house
servants,
more
and
efficient.
But
if
you
my
infinitely
When
Not even
his
which wandered.
He
then. I
pean assistants, for even during the worst period of the slump
Freddie has managed to make his rubber pay.
After breakfast we all went down to the sea for a swim. It
first
the open sea for many years. I was already some way out when
he strode majestically into the water, his gigantic figure, impressive but slightly top-heavy, brushing the waves aside with an easy
laughter as his
water.
sat
down on
139
the
Human
very different
Harry Rosslyn had to sit in the front seat next the driver. On my
way down from Seremban I had formed the conclusion that
Kassim, Freddie's chauffeur, was the most staid and silent Malay
I had ever met. I was right. He was. But suddenly I saw him
bend over his wheel, his whole body shaking with laughter.
Freddie pulled him up sharply. In stammering tones he confessed
that the sight of the big
Tuan (Harry)
us in that
way
before,
much
trying to
for him. It
lift
we
agreed that
the spectacle justified the internal explosion. Harry will live for
ever in that chauffeur's memory. The humour of those long, unwieldy legs never staled, and on every subsequent occasion when
had
to
perform contortions
Harry
as
much amusement
as
I plying
new
the past. Freddie told me the names of the new bungalows and
of their new owners. That he waved an arm towards a building
on the
Where
German
of
cavalry regiment
and had become a remittance man. In my time he lived on a
coconut estate with a stout, middle-aged Tamil lady for a
paramour. He never did a stroke of work, but drank beer by the
gallon. I had often met him driving back from Port Dickson in
him round
was James McClymont, a Scot with the broadest of Girvan acwho had begun his career as a clerk on the little railway
which runs from Port Dickson to Seremban. He was a character
who would have appealed to Kipling. In my early days in Malaya
cents,
when we were
trousers
and
The
we would
him
find
in white
bills
of lading.
young
Yon's no the way to get rich." Then out would come a bottle of
champagne.
Like most successful Scots "Jimmie" was a
strict
Presbyterian
1909 he went
us and, more
my
health
was a royal
celebration
and the
host's
Apart from
made
full
mm
in Malaya
kings, and another Scot who from humble beginnings
has risen to the highest heights in commerce.
I shall not weary the reader further with the necrologies of
my
my
now
Saxons. I realise
pioneers with
position.
The
was, too,
all
high and
ernor.
govhas
were unknown
men
of
my
day may not have worked hard. But they did go out
into the uncomfortable districts and never hesitated to break new
ground. It may have been largely a matter of necessity, but on
the whole they preferred life in the "ulu"
(up country) to life in
the towns like Kuala
Lumpur and Ipoh. And personally I have
and which have played their part in world commerce for over a
hundred years, the Malay States were uncivilised less than sixty
and internecine warfare between the neighbouryears ago. Piracy
ing states flourished almost unchecked.
Out
and with almost no bloodshed the British rule has created a model
administration with admirable roads, hospitals, law-courts, schools,
the appurtenances of modern civilisation. Under this rule
various Eastern races which a few decades ago were engaged
and
all
within the
and for
them would
of
to-day just
how
achievement
this
my
it,
if
much
credit
although many
they could see
last
ten years.
saw
little
since
my
my
itself
fifth
it
has
mile was
we had an Eng-
and
The
like the
tariff.
officer is
now a
is
Malay.
Much
as I
ciple
And
that
is
Malaya
their effort to
is still far
prepare the
from
ripe for
Malay for his
we
"punai"
am
got on to
aware that
tigers.
tigers, especially
its
ing what the reading public especially the American publicwill swallow in the form of travel tales. The finest travel book
written since the war in any language could not find a
publisher
in the United States until it had become an established success in
England. It was refused by scores of publishers. I have seen their
letters. The same note ran
through all of them. The story was
not exciting enough. Had the author not had some
personal adventures? Personal adventure was what the American
public liked
personal adventures like those of X or Y. Mr. "X" and Mr.
"Y" were generally professional globe-trotters whose adventures
were self-manufactured. Sometimes, too,
they are borrowed. There
is one author who writes on
life
and who has apparently
tropical
lifted his personal
famous
writers.
He
tiger
life-time in the
country and never see one.
144
Penang for the first time, drive down by car to Kuala Lumpur,
and run over a cub on the way. Does not the best and most truthrelate how a
Malayan tiger
young English girl
home
saw
a
from
out
tiger
washing its face by the roadstraight
side and said nothing about it to her parents because she had been
ful of all
stories
were
as
common
in
Malaya
as rabbits in
England?
I have
at Pantai. I
remember meeting a procession one morning close to my bungalow. It was headed by a group of road "coolies" carrying on
an old tiger, a "man-eater" for whose
poles the dead body of
corpse the Government had offered a reward of a hundred dollars. Behind the tiger walked a skinny little Indian superintendent
carrying a gun. A chattering crowd of Chinese, Tamils, and
Malay boys and girls brought up the rear. The Indian had been
in charge of a gang a mile or two up the road. The tiger had
walked across early in the morning, and the Indian had killed it
with a home-made cartridge, full of slugs and nails, fired from
I
was a hero with riches in his grasp, for in addition to the Government reward he would sell the skin to a European who later
would tell his friends and his children how he had stalked the
monster through the depth of the jungle the flesh to the Chinese
as a table delicacy, and the claws and whiskers and other extremities to Malays as charms for courage or as ingredients for
making
love-philtres.
This preamble will have prepared the reader for the tall but
which now follows. As we drew near to Freddie's
home, he said to us: "You've heard the story of the seventh mile
tiger, of course?" We hadn't. The whole coast looked far too
civilised for tigers. I suggested to Freddie that it was no good
trying to pull our legs. He laughed: "Oh, yes! there are still
tigers even here. The government has a forest reserve behind
true story
Sendayan.
sionally.
The
tigers
come over on
made
quite a
good bag of
coolies
on your old
estate.
When
the
number
of vic-
up
we
never even as
much
as got a sight of
the man-eater.
When
the
nineteenth coolie was found badly mauled and dead one morning,
the estate manager came to see me.
"We decided that drastic action must be taken. We sent in for
the Indian dresser at the Port Dickson hospital and told him to
then took him to the
bring out all the strychnine he had.
We
down
for a radius of
had a
"The
known and
received a
the coolie's chance of salvation. After all, old boy, you wouldn't
mind your dead body being used to save your fellow-countrymen."
It was a nice point. I could have
quoted a case where Euroin
had
used
human
bait
to destroy, not a tiger,
peans
Europe
but other human beings. In 1925 I was in the Balkans when the
communists tried to blow up King Boris and the Bulgarian
under one
roof, they
old gentleman.
146
was another
say, it
up
sport.
As
my
body
They
would not worry me. The only sound of wild animals that I was
likely to hear during my present tour was the chattering of
monkeys in Freddie's two strips of jungle.
That evening, as we sat on the terrace watching the roseyellow reflections cast on the sea by the last embers of the dying
sun, Freddie was full of plans for my future delectation. Tomorrow we should spend the whole day at Malacca. The day
was the
after there
by the Governor.
in the history
It
affair
interested.
an
district to
all-
look
was not
fumigating
oil
burning
at
my
feet to
keep
present,
an impression
147
own
all
to talk
knew
thoughts.
too short. I wanted to
148
make
I realised
Suddenly
because there one never
possible.
that
its
exactly
sees the
sun
best
moments
why
rise
or
last as
hate big
set.
long as
cities. It
was
CHAPTER TWO
We
OUR
my
through rubber
estates,
rice fields,
with
we had
simply
The artist was in England, but the Malay carehome and he showed us over the house. It was very
furnished. The walls were hung with attractive oriental
studies
by the owner.
was
at
Had
been a rich
man
should have
"Tuan Lockhart?" he
remember me.
team
Fm
said,
tentatively.
Haji Sabudin.
"The Tuan
doesn't
at Pantai."
I didn't recognise
tell
him
so.
For a few
minutes
we
We
149
me
promise from
him
to
make
green which
my
reception.
We
We
ago
too, at the
me
was
Freddie told
their
Presently
150
little
Malacca for
onward thou
come to f(now
emporium famed and strong,
wilt
all
Englishman to sail
Golden Hind. But the
in the
who
we
British
pore.
The Portuguese
of time.
But the
and mass has been said here daily for over four hundred years,
and in the sleepy old-world atmosphere of the town it is easy to
re-create in the
empire.
After the Portuguese had
after the
Dutch
came with British troopships to take command of the expeand it was from Malacca that the expedition sailed. I do not
suppose that any other Englishman has ever captured or ever will
capture the affection of the Malays in the same degree as Raffles
succeeded in doing. In the Hikayat Abdullah, the autobiography
of .Raffles's Malay secretary, and one of the most entertaining
books in the Malay language, the author pays a Malay's tribute
to a
his
man whose
countrymen.
greatness
is
only
To-day, Raffles
is
He
races.
was
severely censured
Company, who
reducing their
profits.
When
The harbour, once so highly prized by the British Government for its geographical and strategic position, is useless, and
even small steamers cannot approach within a mile of its walls.
39,000.
Most of the
the charming early eighteenth century Dutch houses remain intact. Looking down from the hill
you see the long rows of tiled
Dutch
roofs extending
and the
down
the narrow
street.
You go down
interiors are
Chinese smells.
I
But
on Malacca,
set
152
up
Freddie and
technical
problems
must have changed
The Chairman
office
Wiseman
discoursing eloquently
work
As I
on such
my
of the
is
Sir Eric
my
conversations with
me more
in charge of bicycles. Mr. Lloyd George asked for the latest production figures for Birmingham and for Coventry. Could he have
forefinger
boomed
me
Rubber Company
metaphorically, the Dunlop
comfort of
The
in
spacious
Malaya.
bungalow
high-ceilinged
rooms, the beauty of its gardens, the mown elegance of its private
above all, the Roman opulence of its marble
golf-course, and,
And
is
a heavy
man who
the bungalow has electric fans in every room, including even the
de toilette.
Wiseman, who is
cabinets
benefit of these
after
luxuries,
his office in order to ascertain whether in the last twentyfour hours Dunlops had made a profit of i-935d. per Ib, of rubber
or whether they were a fraction of a farthing on the wrong side.
This devotion to business in the heat of the day was not the least
back to
With
the free
in luxurious beds;
We
We
We
silver collection at
the old
cemetery with
dates
its
We
154
Here we could
rest
undisturbed until
it
was time
to
where on the King's birthday the Union Jack flies to proclaim the
might, majesty and dominion of the British Empire. But otherwise the British have done nothing to dim the glory of its past.
The grass is well tended. Within the roofless walls is a stone which
marks the former grave of St. Francis Xavier, that ascetic Basque
who
ascetic.
Europeans
who know
and the
who,
they come East, turn their back for ever on Europe. The
example of this self-denial was set by Francis Xavier, who to-day
the
figures in every Missal as St. Francis Xavier, Apostle of
when
And
his
every year, on December 3rd, the anniversary of
followthe
the
world
Catholic
says
death, every good
throughout
Indies.
ing prayer:
we may
have been
Portuguese adventurers were and how shamefully they
treated by the Anglo-Saxon historians. Every schoolboy knows
155
name
the
first
Englishman
sailing ship.
to
travel
is
The United States has blazoned the name of Colummuch the same way as it has made a national
god out of Lindbergh. But what Englishman can tell you the
name of Albuquerque's ship? What American knows anything
about Vasco da Gama, as great a man as Columbus, yet now
in danger of being forgotten, just as the exploit of Brown and
Alcock has been suppressed, even in the British Dominions, for
the greater glory of the American flying hero? It is not the fault
of
their
shrug
some apocryphal
incident of the great war. Tell him that Portugal was
building
an empire when we were still engaged in civil war at home, that
alike in courage and in culture her captains and conquistadors were
the foremost men of the sixteenth century, and that in the world
his shoulders in
refer to
We
and
after the
and
English
three of us.
me
an
like
I pictured to
ill-shaped
now known
very much alive. Men
Hindus from
and Javanese as
then had come the
wdl
as Malays,
first
composed
its
population.
And
by years of
fighting against the Moors in Africa and impelled hither as much
by the zeal of the Crusader as by the cupidity of the merchant.
This first squadron of five ships had come to trade and not to
156
Ruy
Aranjo.
to the Malays.
well,
and then
fate in the
form of
eternal
that
patriots and, above all, his friend Ruy de Aranjo. There had
been negotiations with the sultan for the release of the prisoners,
make no
him
Holy Faith.
until
the
had
waited
day of his Patron
July 25,
Albuquerque
Saint, St. James the Greater, before launching his attack. There
had been fierce fighting. Like Hannibal, the Malays had used
elephants in their charges. A second assault had been necessary
in order to conquer the city. But in the end the Portuguese had
and Albuquerque had
prevailed. The prisoners had been liberated,
shown his gratitude to God by erecting a Church to Our Lady
of the Annunciation and his trust in powder by building a fort
such as the impressionable Orientals had never seen before. He
had done more than this. At one blow he had destroyed the
Mohammedan commercial route to Europe and had secured for
placed
Malacca has seen the Portuguese evicted by the Dutch and the
157
British.
Her square
The
last
occasion
of naval preparations
blew up.
But long before
portance.
Her
develop Java,
this
and
it
was
when
finally destroyed
Dutch began
the
by the
rise
Her
visits
to
of Penang.
is to those
when one
Malacca.
first
assault
Portuguese called
They
given
158
second-division clerks
My
former
assistant
who
if
Empire and
the Indian
I paid
my
first visit to
many hours
in the
richly decorated Gothic church at Belem where Henry the Navigator, whose mother, incidentally, was the sister of England's
John of Gaunt, lies buried. I had seen the tower from which
Vasco da
Gama
had
set out.
As a
foreigner
on
whom
Malaya has
my
censured
him
as the British
King because
of
men
it
were
gone."
But in death the king and the Portuguese had relented, and
to-day the conqueror of Malacca looks down on his present-day
compatriots from one of the most imposing statues in the world.
I
it
new
As
same
who
stimulus to their
a colonial power
One day the British
stage.
sees the
Empire
as a con-
reflection may
the world itself,
ception as permanent as
treason.
But there
to
like a lack of faith equivalent
high
my
seem
no
is
The
theories
two hundred
years
may seem
which in
true
enough
if
applied to the
day
in the history of the world. Otherwise, they do not bear examination. Some of the greatest empires and civilisations have been
built up by peoples like the Hindus, the Egyptians, the Greeks,
we
who
lived in climates
which to-day
world
leadership.
is
even appropriate.
I continued my reflections during the long drive
moon. The
home
in the
shadows of
the
my imagination;
gentle murmur of the waves lapping on the shore lulled me to a generous
complacency. The faults of the British in Malaya were easy enough
to see. They consisted chiefly in a standard of
luxury which was
fantastic
much
higher than that of any other European race in the East or,
Europe itself. The luxury was material and not
intellectual. In all parts of the world the
Englishman made a fetish
for that matter, in
American
read
its
history.
assets,
160
him and
of imagination.
less
him
the belief was fundamental and had deeper roots of justification. His lack of imagination was a gift from God. It enabled him
not only to keep calm in a crisis but to rise superior to it because,
man
an increasingly
coming and refused to
in spite of
it
treat
as a colonial
empire
we had
reached an
and there
able, of
is
is still
be
man-made
161
CHAPTER THREE
Emay
have been the moonlight bathe or an infection conBe this as it may, I rose the next morning
acted in Singapore.
was
malaria which
my
my
Malaya
boots.
puttees
From
When
the laterite
but during
soldier,
guardsmen. Drilled by a Scottish Sergeant-Major, a short, redfaced Cameron Highlander with a hoarse whisper of a voice
which sounded just as if he had completed a three-months' lecture
in the United States, they performed a series of complicated evolutions not only with machine-like precision, but also with exultant
pride.
At
up with
forty yards
whistle,
curdling
yells.
was quite
sober, but as I
dilated nostrils,
mattressed plank
made an
They were
form
The regiment
of English sport,
is
run on English
is
an
and
and
encouraged. Tommy
she presented the regiment with a challenge cup.
cricket
lines,
un-
It is to
be com-
163
like
stick. It is
They have to buy it with their own money. They are paid
Malay dollars a month or rather less than two pounds.
At first the Sultan of Perak was upset by the idea of the royal
sarong being worn by ordinary soldiers and made an official
it.
fifteen
and a thin
strip of
red to
mark
the
on a plank bed
When
he joined,
his
mother sent
down
to Port
my
arrival
tell
young Rajah.
He
had heard of
took place:
a cannon.
swell
see?" This
man
"Tuan."
visitor
walked away.
"Fine-looking Malay," he said to the commanding officer. "InHe seemed to understand everything I said."
"Yes," said the officer, "I think he did. He was four
at
telligent too.
years
Balliol."
is
new Malay
prince-
is
new
On
the
member
of
the Sultan's family should marry any one who had not embraced
the Mohammedan faith. The young man circumvented both his
graduated from Kuala Kangsar. I remember him from twentywhen he was a young man in Government serv-
is
new
states,
who remembers
my
165
tongues wagging
all
it
who
Men
permit myself only one observation. Several decades of centralisation created a new bureaucracy in Kuala Lumpur and destroyed
Now
no longer
there.
Time may
by direct British
timer
was the
interference.
to
an
old-
he
Thomas is a rather short, thick-set, clean-shaven man who, especially when he spoke, reminded me a little of the late Lord
Birkenhead. He is fifty-seven and is a member of the
Singapore
Non-Benders Cricket Club. The members are presumed to have
reached an age when they can no
longer bend, but Sir Shenton
looked active enough to get his hands
166
down
He has a keen, alert mind, talks very much to the point, and has
a thoroughly business-like manner. He was quick to notice the
weak spots in the parade. During his inspection he had noted that
many of the new recruits had sores on their legs and other traces
of skin affections on their bodies. The men who had been six
months or more with the regiment had none and were as clean and
as
fit
as trained athletes.
The creation
G. M. Bruce, a
of the
Malay regiment
is
the
work
of
Major
job.
He
is assisted
from England
Malay
of Oriental Languages.
The idea of a Malay regiment for Malaya
nearly
was
officially
who
at the
was
London School
first
suggested
my old
put forward by
The
mutiny.
But perhaps
had
In
its
"Bengalis."
To an
The
insult, and that evening part of the regiment had broken loose
and had chased and beaten up the "Bengali" victors all over Port
Dickson. Fortunately, there was no serious consequences. As soon
as the
commanding
officer
came
to heel at
officers of the
were
still
My
head
felt as
almost closed.
who was
doctor
Government
hospital.
"Give
me
a
week
part of
F.M.S. Abandoning
Two
Clad in
I
my
turned
my face
to the wall.
Rosslyns
by steamer for Singapore.
and
I
sarong
baju,
struggled out of bed to see them off.
heard
all resistance, I
much
of
to
left
him from
several of
their steamer. I
had
friends in Malaya. He
had sailed all the eastern
my
had
my
would
my grasp, to
life
The
difficulties.
ability
had never
credited
of great
had been a
coward. Like
pictured myself as a
my
of
and that
had made
And now,
my
life,
my
first
here I was back again before the self-same scene and the
self-same sea.
The
the steamer
myself
on
my
pillows.
The
devil in
me
reasserted himself as I
off by steamer
remembered the
from Port Dickson. My first Tuan Besar, anglico senior manager,
had been going home on leave after seven unbroken years in
Malaya. Before his departure he had given a farewell party which
had lasted for four days. It had been a carousal tempered by seabathing. Freddie, then just straight out from school and innocent
as a lamb, had been shocked. The cliffs had echoed with the roar
of ribald choruses. The piano had been oiled with beer. No "wild
party" in the United States during Prohibition could have shown
last
time that
I,
it
was
this
169
went
Dickson on the
effort to get
my own
day and by
all
back
into Port
last
the Japanese
morning
as a rigid
official
with his
churchman and
ladies,
sister.
He was known
as the straitest-laced
to us
Englishman
in the East.
Our
My
as the steamer
was about to
and
as every
cession of ladies,
sail
last
and kissed back. It was a touching and graceful scene. But I saw
a thundercloud come over the dignified serenity of the high official's face. As he went below at once, I felt instinctively that I
was in for trouble. I was. The story travelled round very quickly,
and I was severely reprimanded by my uncle.
Now as I lay on Freddie's verandah, the whole scene came
back to me with a vividness which the intervening years had been
unable to dim. Instead of repentance I felt a glow of self-satisfaction. And when the steamer
passed opposite the bungalow, I went
to
When
That
When
170
the
little
illness.
able to report progress. In three days I might go about again. Behe left, he delivered himself of one classic Babu
fore
gem.
recommended a
He
"What
not*"
171
CHAPTER FOUR
A LTHOUGH
jM^plans,
send. Travel
am
my
my
spots.
Hitherto
my
desperate effort
172
down
and seeing on that vague horizon line where sky and sea seem to
blend the mirage of my half-forgotten romance. In the
evenings
I talked to
Freddie or to Buntak.
it.
And as
an
man,
whom
me
out by night.
I felt
Now
me
knew
that for
there
He
was a
Now
to
that they had become mechanically-minded, they had begun
173
save
up
for motor-cars
cycles
me, there
is still
Straits Settlements
than
whom
pirate instinct
thrilling
some Highland
river.
We
we had had
little
clearings were
literally clear-
fully-grown rubber, and thereshade. Estate roads and very often estate bungalows
fore very
Then
were primitive.
Now half
rubber
Matured
little
estates.
trees
came
across a
duce can
sell at
is little
need of economy,
and the planters of 1910 who thought the millennium had come
never stinted expenditure. The fall in the price has meant a reducEuropean planter's salary. The
bungalows which I saw had belonged to European assistants whose services had been dispensed with during the slump.
They will never be reoccupied.
The sight of them was depressing. For there is nothing beautiful
about a rubber estateonly a monotony of regularity which corrodes one's outlook on life, and in ill-health reduces even the most
robust Philistine to a dangerous melancholy. If I were the High
Commissioner of the Malay States, I should make a public protest
against the building of planters' bungalows in the middle of huge
blocks of rubber. Bungalows should be built on sites where a man
can see beyond a forest of leaves and the mutilated trunks of
rubber trees. In Europe men do not live in their offices or in their
factories, and in Malaya there is neither reason nor commonsense
in subjecting the European planter to this restricting and demoralising influence. And to-day when the motor-car and every planter
has a car or a motor-cyclecan take a man to his work in a few
minutes, such callous indifference on the part of the large rubber
companies to the housing of their employees is not merely an
tion of all costs, including the
derelict
inefficiency.
estate,
there
is
My
Macgregor grandmother,
who owned
a distillery in Scot175
land,
had a
large family.
Her
third
At this time
there
was a man
called Ridley
who was
the director
In 1876 the
first
were
Kew
my
I believe,
uncle's property,
are
now
those early
economic
distress those
who
family circle at
home
was
into bearing.
176
estate
would
eat
money.
badly.
The
In 1902
my
uncle came
public company.
He met
home and
tunes.
Under
my
grand-
mother would probably have sold the whole of the family interest
for ready cash. The sum would have been comparatively small.
But again, although unwittingly, Lampard was a deliverer. Rubber,
he said, was an unknown adventure. The vendors must share the
risk. A large part of the purchase price must be taken in shares.
The Macgregors had little choice in the matter. They took the
shares.
40/-.
make my
passage easy.
177
me
as
on her
lap,
Where would we
all
were on
my
grandmother's side.
Alister himself
He
had been
by the slump, but he was still a rich man, Mr. J. G. Hay, the
rubber expert, and now the head of Guthrie & Co., the great
Singapore and London firm of merchants, was then a junior emhit
You can
send some one over to check them and arrange for the necessary
security,"
Hay was
my
my
275,000."
200,000 worth
was
the
Optimism
keynote in
He
director,
178
The
realised his
but
still
profit, smaller
He
than that of
1910,
comfortably
again in the minor boom of 1924 he refused to
sell.
And
that
was
the end.
same unfaltering courage which had characterised his whole outlook on life. I received the news of his death on my way home
from Malaya, and with
in
my
cess
life
which in 1908
first set
generosity in sending
word from him, and his death has left me with a sense of personal
which remains poignant to this day.
I tell his story at some length because it is the story of the vast
loss
majority of the proprietary planters of those early days. Opporknocked at their door only to deceive their judgment.
tunity
Rubber had brought them gold undreamt of, and their fidelity
it was
pathetically disastrous. The same obstinate refusal to sell
characterised nearly all, and only a few were wise enough to accept
gratefully, and to cash in on, a gift which the god of financial
chance brings perhaps only once in a hundred years.
Since then the whole plantation rubber industry in the East
Indies has altered its character. When my uncle started on his crazy
to
Malaya produced only 200 tons of plantacompared with the world output of 60,000 tons of
wild rubber mainly from Brazil. To-day Malaya has a planted
area of over 3,000,000 acres, and even under the restriction scheme
career of success in 1905,
tion rubber as
now
in force the annual export of plantation rubber is, approximately, 400,000 tons. The old proprietary planters have disappeared,
179
has
return to the dream days of 1910 for ever impossible, and the
white planter of to-day is a salaried official entirely at the mercy
rubber
boom
About
of 1910.
office
named
"Gobilt."
on the Kariman Islands, which lie about thirty miles to the west
of Singapore and whose green slopes the traveller sees on his
approach from Colombo. The factory was also duly completed,
and at even greater cost than that of Gobilt. But it was never put
into operation. Before the great dream could be realised, the bottom
fell out of the rubber market. While it is conceivable that the
180
on
181
CHAPTER FIVE
on a Monday morning that I took my farewell of
Port Dickson. Although the sun was high in the sky, the air
was dry and not unbearably hot. Like Singapore the F.M.S. had
experienced an unprecedented drought. Here it had not broken,
and the sea, like a horse-shoe mirror of mother-of-pearl in a frame
was
late
IT
the verandah.
Then
where
presents of
brown
relieved
know these white men. In many lands I have seen them; always
the slaves of their desires,
always ready to give up their strength
and their reason into the hands of some woman." But I could
not tell whether he or
of the others felt
emotion and,
"I
any
fearful of betraying
them in a
any
my own
with
As
of banter.
painful.
before, sick in
182
farewell.
Then
my
by pneumonia
is still
Malaya.
was
surprisingly
suffering
from
sores.
Most
this hospital.
new
recruits
its
best aspect.
Seremban
cemetery
is
who during
itself
made up
them
to call
on one of
his rich
Chinese friends.
behind the front room of teak furniture and lacquer cabinets were
women-folk. But we never saw them. I could see again the towkay
himself, his resplendent Chinese robes, his glossy pigtail, the long
nail on his little finger, his series o profound bows. The bows had
We
me
just
walked
The towkay,
and
we
neatly
boss, I calculate by the sun it's a quarter after twelve!" The man
had been a washerman in San Francisco and had wandered via
Shanghai, Hongkong and Singapore into the Malay States.
In those days few, if any, Chinese in Negri Sembilan spoke
English. But Freddie's friend spoke it as if it were his native
language. He discussed rubber prices and the state of the American
market with the knowledge of an expert. He was affable and
racily amusing. But he spoke as equal to equal. He was no rare
of Malaya.
of the
184
One
town
visit,
lived
however,
I
I
my
days.
Forteviot,
road.
little
on
life
had
altered.
reminiscences
we
we
set
We
home
community of
Negri Sembilan, and various people, including my assistant, had
been "stuck up" by gang-robbers. My only means of conveyance
was a "push" bicycle or a native pony "gharry." I preferred the
bicycle. Setting out from Pantai in a spirit of sober caution I always
took the long way round. But sometimes coming home late at
night with my courage fortified by late hours at the dub, I would
the
is
days of
was
all
my
youth
when
life
before one.
The Sekamat
and a roadside shop with soft drinks and cigarettes for passers-by.
The tin which gave the place its unattractive population has long
since been exhausted. Unlike the coal-miners of Scotland and
had gone
to seek their
rice
had known in
my
was
rolled
youth
Malaya outwardly
still
unspoilt and
little
changed.
passed the cross-roads at Ampangan, I felt a momentary
pang of regret. Here on the right was the palace of the Dato'
Klana, the Malay chief who had been Amai's guardian. There on
surprisingly
As we
the
left
first
to
my
we had
met.
186
those
rare
memory
in the
to a purple sea by the rays of the setting sun. The colour came
of cloud, and I had a curious
feeling that the
lasted for nearly two months, and which was
when
came
We reached Kuala
felt at
rainfall,
would break
to visit Pantai.
home. Pilah
is
sarong, their eyes, like ripe sloes, raised for a moment towards the
passing car and then turned demurely to the ground.
Mohammedan
she
is
strictness.
She may
romance.
As
Malay
my
considerable antiquity
are
known
to every
Malay. There
is
one
187
in.
venture has been, since the birth of time, the favourite recreation
of young Malay bucks. The young European has indulged in it,
too,
approach. If he
services of
immodesty
is
both
country takes the place of the hotel in the smaller towns. These
rest-houses are under Government control, and are generally
we
sat
down on
During
Malayan career our Camera, who
had a grievance and could express it fluently, had been most
things: planter, engineer, commercial manager, and had spent the
far into the night.
his
and was
East and
*
critical
The
188
the
white man's prestige. He attacked the civil service and the commercial community with equal vigour. Malaya, he said, was
going
to become Chinese one day, and the day was not very far distant.
in
of their predecessors.
When
question was:
how
far
nearest dance-hall?
As
have made
The Chinese
my
fortune.
man and
My new
but the
man
after his
For years Berkeley was District Officer at Grik, a lonely, unspoilt outpost, where he was accepted by the Malays as infallible
judge, counsellor, and father-confessor. Few men have ever
handled Malays so successfully or been so loved by them, and for
he was never transferred. His privileged position gave
that reason
and a telegraph
line
immediately
followed.
It
often
huge
trees
across that road, thereby blocking it and destroying the telegraph wires, than across any other road in the country, and how
fell
He
Another of
my big friend's
who began
life
of a feudal chief.
heroes
his
189
tractor
tin
own
island
eruption,
which destroyed
Grant Mackie, a great character in whom the spirit of advenwas strong, was known to all Englishmen in Malaya as
ture
from home, would trespass too far on his good nature. "Father,"
they would say, "have a drink?" Then the eyes would flash.
"Grant Mackie to you, sir," he would reply. "I'm not the father of
every bastar-rd in this club." As I have already said, Grant Mackie
retired to Port Said, where he died three years ago at the ripe age
of eighty.
He
common
enough
my
own mind
my
is
available. I
am
think that
control
190
old generation has wrung its hands over the failings of the new,
and that the race has survived. Nor do I forget that, in the eyes of
the European commercial community, all governors and high
officials are good when times are good and that in bad times even
the best official in the world is exposed to criticism.
What
seems to
me
armour is the fact that since the war the middle classes, who are
the bulwark of the British colonial system, have accustomed themselves to a standard of luxury and ease which in the face of modern
competition will be increasingly
of pleasure in Malaya
is
much
difficult to
maintain.
The
standard
colonies.
criticisms.
Almost
certainly
be
right.
191
CHAPTER
AT
dawn
the next
SIX
morning Freddie
left
by car in order
to
across country.
me
my
Now
it
was not
left entirely
The
to
Its
school
and
pupils.
Knapp
She took
me
chorus of:
smiled.
from the boys and coy glances from the girls. Then in my presence
and under the keen scrutiny of Miss Knapp, the unfortunate
Indian or Malay teacher had to conduct his class in English, for
all the teaching here is in English and the use of any native
language
is
strictly
The equipment
better
forbidden.
was
and
less
laid
much
of their
of the
same
age.
A.D.
the
Romans
left Britain.
Why?" Up
The
number
The boy stopped. Memory had broken down. This time the
a
shot
several hands.
teacher
Malay schoolboy of twelve. Even more unreal was the geography lesson. "What," asked the teacher, "is the area of South
America?" Then, having been given the correct answer, he asked
again: "It is twice as big as what other continent?"
I come of a family of schoolmasters and have therefore a
of a
193
time of
my
visit there
clerks for
or
later,
The
is
whom
will
educational authorities in
best,
job
stand
but with
why
this
all
the
will in the
English education
is
peans
least,
Most
of
to learn English
let
to the end.
beautiful
she
is
come
194
to the school
from long
distances.
bicycles.
By noon
daughters
is
make
fierce.
MenantL
With my
for,
my
evening after dinner we were joined by one of the Indian schoolmasters, and once again we sat down on the verandah in the cool
night air and discussed Malaya's problems with more restraint
than before, but nevertheless, with considerable freedom. This,
too,
was a change
since
my
better.
One
Malay
gotten, are a
Civil Service.
another Malayan
district
We
on our way
road which ran' round the north side of the mountain range.
It was new since my day. Then this whole area was virgin jungle.
Even now it is a lonely road with few habitations, but except for
stage
estates,
my
time. I conceived a
new
admiration and a
new
fear for
yellow race which can bring the most unlikely soil to cultivation and can endure the most gruelling discomfort for the prospect
of material profit. Indeed, the Chinese and the motor-car have
this
rice-fields,
of
coconut
195
and Chinese
Then
coolies
My
cousin,
who owned
mained
to
remind
me
of the past.
In the heat of the early afternoon sun the main street was
almost deserted. The Chinese population had dwindled a sure
sign of vanished prosperity.
The
fearful ravages among the attractive Malay population of the district. The football padang, where Andrew Caldecott
and
and
my
the state of the football field, the impression of desolation conformed with my mood of the moment. The great tidal wave of
progress had not merely passed Jelebu by. In its course it had
thrown the
196
little
town
far
up on the beach
of the past.
We went over
and
went
over the little building. There were cobwebs
everywhere and
myriads of flies. In the bedrooms the mattresses, rolled up like
bales, looked stiff from want of use. We ordered drinks and sat
to have a wash.
down
We
the damp.
we
As
it
was only
afternoon
siesta.
we
half-past three,
He
brilliant doctor in Malaya and the pioneer whose work led to the
discovery of the cure for beri-beri, the "Abang" had been the oldest
Negri Sembilan when I arrived there twentywas now seventy-eight and did not look a day
older than when I first knew him. His lean and spare
figure
was as erect as ever. His hair was grey, but all his faculties were
unimpaired. The combined age of the two brothers is now one
hundred and fifty. The combined total of their years of residence
British resident in
in
Malaya
is
the tropics.
He
now
close
on a hundred and
is,
I think,
a record for
European
bungalow. His servants moved with the quiet efficiency which
only a Tuan who is respected can exact. From his open windows
my
It
Jelebu
flame-
"Abang"
1
While
doorway, the
of the decline of Jelebu in the terms of
press,
197
own
his
tin
great cash box stolen. The thieves had never been discovered,
for all proof of identification was missing. The Sikh watchmen,
true to the universal characteristic of their profession, had slept
peacefully throughout the hold-up.
Jelebu was dead. The tin
Now
was
finished.
The
coolies
had
why
His
He
He
views.
My
that
it
Not
that the
is
wholly
is
money from
native town-dwellers to
The
on the Malay
is a
simple one. The postman
and the recipient signs his name in
the postman's receipt book. If he is
illiterate, he makes an inky
thumbmark in place of a signature. In this case the postman had
all the
receipts for the missing letters. They were properly provided
with thumbmarks.
The marks
Nor
did not correspond with the thumbdid they in any way resemble the
thumb, came
I could
it
have
was now
listened to the
after four,
He
as
arm
and
farewell, a motionless
my
cousin's
and
grown
rubber,
to the careful
The
bends.
Below us on
"Adek" Braddons'
car
had skidded
199
over the side and had been miraculously held up by a sturdy bush.
The sun was still shining, but heavy clouds, harbingers of the
horizon. We should have
coming storm, were banking up on the
that
I
realised
but
a true Malayan sunset,
my forebodings about
true.
come
would
die
the end of
drought
At one corner of the road we passed an enormous tall trunk
of a tree, erect as a steel girder, with its bark an ashen grey. Every
branch had disappeared. Its jagged summit was black for twenty
feet downwards a grim reminder of the lightning which always
is at its worst in these mountains. It looked for all the world like
a gigantic match with which some pre-history Cyclops had lit his
had then planted nonchalantly in the ground.
pipe, and which he
From Bukit Tangga, at the top of the last hill which leads
down into the Pantai valley, we had a superb view over the wide
expanse of the Negri Sernbilan plain. The old Government
hill-station where I sometimes used to spend a night in a homesick desire to sleep again under a blanket had been demolished.
The
my
state,
native Strathspey.
I caught a
glimpse of a dark silver thread below me.
was the Jeralang River which had flowed past my old bungalow
at Pantai. I became silent and nervous. My
feelings were strangely
mixed. Freddie was not a romanticist, and I longed to be alone.
On the other hand, I was afraid lest without him my meeting
with Amai should end in a fiasco.
Everything was going to be so different from what I had
visualised when I set out from
England. Then I had believed
that Amai was dead.
During the weeks on board ship I had
attuned my mind to a harmonious
sentimentality. Now she was
not only alive but married and married to the local muezzin,
who from the mosque summons the faithful to prayer. While I
had lain in my sick-bed at Freddie's
bungalow, there had been
mysterious comings and goings between Port Dickson and Pantai.
Messengers had come from Pantai to know when I was to be
expected. Freddie had prepared me for the worst. He had told
Suddenly
It
200
me
that the Malays had changed, that their memories were short,
their attitude towards the white man had altered. Amai
and that
would be
Malay woman
panion.
As we descended
the
hill all
marks came back one by one. There was the rubber estate, most of
which I had planted up myself from virgin jungle. The trees were
Pantai did not seem to have altered. I was
larger, but otherwise
so litde change. I did not wish to meet
had
been
there
that
glad
Amai in an atmosphere of cinema theatres and dancing halls.
But this consolation brought no relief to my emotional tremors.
When we turned the last bend and came into the straight which
led to my former bungalow, I was overcome by the same paralysing nervousness which always afflicts me when I speak in public
and which not even the rigours of a lecture tour in the United
States have been able to eradicate.
Whatever motive may have inspired my voyage to the East
while I was in England, I realised now with that pellucid clearness
which comes at one time or another even to the most indecisive
of
men
my
sentimental attachment to
Malaya was Amai. The reflection that I was to see her again in the
living flesh and to repeat the farewell which had been interrupted
twenty-five years before by the sudden arrival of my uncle served
merely to strengthen the conviction that she was the impulse
steps of
my
destiny.
201
CHAPTER SEVEN
was now driving very slowly. Hitherto he had been
he knew only vaguely.
guide and cicerone. But Pantai
was as much at home as if I had never left the place.
T7REDDIE
JLthe
Here
We
The gap had been the entrance of the short drive to my old
bungalow. The hedge had screened my garden from the gaze
Now
Amai. I had been the first white man to live in Pantai, and it
had taken me some time to establish friendly relations with the
local Malays. In the end the Dato' Klana's father and mother,
who, although holding no official position from the British, still
exercised a feudal authority over the whole district, had invited
me to a "rong-geng," a kind of Malay dance in which two or
more professional dancers provide the entertainment. In return
I had invited them and, indeed, all the local Malay population to
another "rong-geng." I had converted my compound into a Venetian garden with little
lamps made of coconut shells, I had sat
between the Dato' and his wife, a wizened old lady who feared
neither man nor Allah and who had only to frown to be obeyed.
suite of attendants I
had caught
my first glimpse
Amai.
"Big
Hussein" and "Little Hussein." They, too, were on my conscience.
They had been great footballers. When I had started football in
had brought them from Port Dickson to assist me in developing the local talent and had given them at my company's
expense a very soft job which consisted in fumigating the rubber
trees with a strange contraption worked by a hand pump.
I do not think that they ever earned the shareholders' money.
Across this bridge I had watched only too often Tamil coolies
carrying the cheap white-wood coffin of some dead man, woman
or child. For the death rate of my labour force had been high
and the victims of malaria and dysentery numerous.
Across this bridge, too, I had helped Amai on that night when
I had met her a mile or two down the river and had brought her
to my bungalow. For some days we had stood a kind of siege. The
old Dato's wife had both cajoled and stormed. Every kind of
pressure had been brought to bear on me to give her up. But the
difficulties had merely strengthened my obstinacy and my passion,
and there she had remained for over a year until that day when,
my health undermined by malaria or by poison, I had been
bundled into a blanket and taken away in a car by my uncle and
my cousin. The bridge, doubtless, had been renewed. But it was
the same river, and yet how changed since my time. Then it had
been a turgid stream, swollen by the continuous rains and muddy
"tailings" from the tin mines. Now the drought and the absence
of "tailings" had reduced it to a shallow silver trickle.
As I stood looking down on the water, Freddie touched my
arm. We had still much to do, and the time at our disposal
was short. Disconsolate and ill at ease, I went back to the car, but
Pantai, I
as
we
my
spirits revived.
Here there was no change. Pantai, like Jelebu, had not shared in
the general progress. Just beyond the cross-roads we pulled up at
Woh's house, and here a great surprise awaited us. Woh, a local
Malay who had seen life in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur, had
been something more than the stalwart of my Pantai football
team. From the beginning, and especially in my time of trouble,
203
he had been
my
friend
and counsellor in
And now
all
matters
pertaining to
swore
it
have told
We
me?" he
was
me
there he
He
asked.
true. Indeed,
beforehand. ,
it
new house
time in
back,
and
my life
was
was
since
my
little
sign
prosperous. For the
taken into the women's quarters at the
bending down,
back to
Rather nervously
great formalists,
men
and a
false
opening might
easily
have
spoilt
"How was
the
village
204
Woh took
we had
here,
Now there
men were
Woh
impressive had
tional
he
Malay costume,
now wore
In
my
incantations over
fields. I
was mildly
looked at Drau,
who
took
my
suggestion
literally.
From
dead and
football
age,
men
were
My
Only one white man had lived there since my time, and he had
become a Mohammedan in order to marry a Malay girl. As I
recalled how nearly I had embraced Islam because of Amai, I won205
was some romantic contagion in the atmosphere of this still unspoilt Malay village.
All this while there had been no mention of Amai. I had
Woh's bungalow and was relieved because
expected to meet her at
his sense of the fitness of things had prevented what would cerdcred vaguely
tainly
if
there
pretence of showing
my
pass,
her.
simply.
"Years ago,"
I replied, "I
was
you were
dead."
"Who
told
"Tuan
official
friend.
Her
was
"Yes."
child?"
"Yes."
"A
son?"
"Yes."
had
If she felt
it.
old Dato' and his wife forgiven me?" I asked, sudhad stormed
denly remembering my fear of the old harridan who
Dato* was
The
Amai.
of
surrender
the
my house and demanded
"Have the
207
dead. But the old lady was alive. She was nearly a hundred. She
had not forgotten. Doubtless, the Tuan had seen her as he passed
her house.
had
whom
Was
he alive?
He
was
Since
well, but he
self-respect.
how much
Amai was
Freddie.
I
He
if
my
breath
cursed
in any
way?
No, times were not too good, but one could always live, and
to-day desires were fewer. Her dignity and her composure were
impressive.
Far away
the village
still
Amai
to
understood at once.
way
"Tuan mau
jalan?
out.
am
returning to
my own
I
country. Before I leave for Europe,
shall try to
pause.
old," said
"I
am
we belonged
to the
Amai
in our lives
we
shook hands.
"Go
away
there
by the
rice,
her
arm
Huge
When we
Away
back in the
'eighties, in
Conrad's time,
it
had been a
jungle.
morgue of a rest-house it was playing a gramoAmerican, of course. Some famous crooner was
singing "You Made Me What I Am," and as the sickly notes
209
Here
in this
phone record
Soon,
reflected,
My
lake below
An
still
three hours
until
left.
chauffeur to wait,
way
got 'out
deserted.
to the
irresistible
The golden
foot.
the
damp, scented
night
made me
What
between
air
tropical
shiver.
me
this
and
bandwrangling
civilisation
or perhaps
210
making love
in a material Malay
never know. Back to
my mind came
me:
pelita,
"Why
Why
If
My
you do not
regrets for
and for
mean
really
it?"
It
my
my
to
One
sentiment dominated
my
who had
stood by
me
Malay
in health
own
and in
sickness
and
who had
people.
211
BOOK
IV
Javanese Interlude
"PERFORCE HIDE other vasty lands from thee
what time no land remains unfound;
But leave thou not those islands of the sea,
Where Nature rises to Fame's highest round.*'
Until
CHAPTER ONE
order to save as
much
time as possible
Batavia
whenever
had made up
my
could. Singapore to
obvious stretch, for the journey by air takes less
fly
than six hours, whereas the journey by steamer wastes the best part
it is
unpatriotic to travel by a foreign
in
line,
good company, including that of Lady Chetthe
former British commander-in-chief in India.
wode, the wife of
The truth is that at the time to which I refer the Dutch KJL.M.
then
service
was
am
faster
ways*
These
criticisms
travellers
British
and
company.
made
German
become a
brilliant
The
greatness of Britain
overcome
difficulties. I
was
am,
new
proposal or
new
policy.
up on her former
capacity to
therefore, in favour of criticism where
built
215
Amsterdam was
storm of the previous night. During this slight delay I had time to
take a look at the various units of the Royal Air Force, who were
busily engaged in testing
and tuning up
their airplanes.
They
Of
by the
The
soldiers
under a
fierce sun.
The
flying
men
and
food.
their exercises
to
perform
can soar above these
terrestrial
my
.the
by
no
air
thrills. It
it
gives me no aesthetic enjoyment. After a short and
view of Singapore Island, I therefore lay back in my chair
and began to study my Dutch language books, at which I had
very low,
distorted
been working ever since I left England. I was not disturbed until
we were approaching the coast of Sumatra. Then I was conscious
me in English.
"You're Bruce Lockhart, aren't you?"
of a voice addressing
The
voice
came from
"Oh, yes! you have. Only a man who has flown for years could
have read through that terrific storm. Why, you never even looked
of the plane."
I
rain
that,
on the
had
days,
slept
now
and, if they do not read this book, perhaps for ever, a wholly
undeserved reputation for courage and indifference to danger.
minutes,
to
me
With
my
officials,
checked
village order.
New
London and
and curried
crocodile
tail.
Recent
and
is rather
superior to venison.
a picturesque Malay Venice situated on the
banks of the river Moesi. Many of the Malay houses are built on
like plovers',
Palembang
itself is
came
mass of green
islands.
are uninhabited.
Sunda
look
They
They have a
Straits.
fertile
sinister
and
name
To
the right
is
in history.
Among
217
them
is
has ever known. Forty thousand human beings lost their lives in
the eruption of 1883 and in the tidal wave which accompanied it.
Krakatoa is still active, still emits smoke and throws up great
rained ashes over the greater
spouts of water. The giant who
part
crater and gathering his forces
a
new
himself
of Asia is building
for another attack
on humanity.
one has
sea.
whole
Then,
city.
down
previous
visit
twenty-
On my
at the
by
closer inspection.
is
an
international
Batavia
is
provincial,
my headquarters.
Dutch view
drink too
much
and gin "pahits" with water. The Dutch drink their Bols gin neat,
and they do not stint it. I must admit, however, that they stand
their drink
stairs,
and again
but by local
of Russians
my
has
its advantages and disadvantages. Throughout the Dutch East Indies the number of
half-castes
eyes. It
is
Only one
it
to school in Holland.
supporter of the
who
do anything for
it.
The
half-castes at
slimmer than the hundred per cent. Dutch blondes. But all,
both men and women, deported themselves with a stolid dignity
that sent my thoughts back to the Dutch Calvinists. They drank
innumerable cups of coffee and sipped their liqueurs. They clapped
the various turns with the appropriate decorum. If they were
tainly
their gratification
When
trolled smile.
When
impression
book of rules
as, doubtless, it
onlooker that night would never have suspected. After my imof Singapore I felt a new respect for the Dutch, who,
pressions
The
delivery till the next weekusual practice, I refused the services of a guide,
hired a car with a Malay-speaking chauffeur for the week.
to myself, I
left their
Following
and
my
and
on a
carried
lively conversation as
he drove
me
slowly round
the town.
Our way
hundred
to
to
In the canal
itself
men
The
rafts are
way with
countless bathers.
pulls
and begins
The
220
to build his
pieces
and
girls.
are sitting
and drying themselves in the sun. Green trees, white houses and
red-tiled roofs, and yellow water, white-crested by the rays of the
sun, blend together with the brown bodies of die boys and the
variegated colours of the women's clothes to form as vivid and
can be seen anywhere in the world.
which impresses the English visitor
the predominance of the various Malay races
as picturesque a kaleidoscope as
The
first
feature of Batavia
from Singapore is
and the comparatively small number of Chinese. More than
400,000
My
first
Batavia
is divided.
Batavia,
and
is
banks and
offices,
my
Dutch.
in
tiles
221
serious trouble.
some
price.
But he shook
do
fairly well,"
and introduced
me
he
said,
earn.
kampong
off the
to his father
The
is at its
dawn.
this
the
Dutch
Englishman
tried to
sale
duty.
The
stern
refused.
officials
known
of the road.
The
floral tribute
Dutch
"What
will happen,
Tuan," he
me
of
two
inspired
"Why, Tuan, the Dutch will go. And what will happen, Tuan,
when the whole world is encircled by wireless?"
I gave him the Malay equivalent for "I'll buy it."
223
many
Dutch East
Indies, but
made
a considerable impression on
I
me. One could travel,
reflected, the length and breadth of
British Malaya without hearing even a whisper o discontent from
at the time Ahmat's nonsense
a Malay against the British rule. Yet here was a Batavian chauffeur
talking the same kind of suggestive revolutionary superstition as
the Russian peasantry talked in 1910.
Before we returned to the hotel for luncheon,
me two gruesome illustrations of the ancient and
Ahmat showed
modern
history
Dutch
crated
spot
is
inscription,
as follows:
"In exe-
whose memory is thus perpetuated, was an influential halfcaste who in 1722 formed a plot to massacre all the Dutch in
Batavia and to set up a native government with himself at its
head. True to all European historical legends in the East, be they
Portuguese or Dutch or British or American, the plot is said to
have been revealed by a beautiful native woman to her Dutch
lover. Pieter Elberfeld's skull was the illustration from the ancient
feld,
history of Batavia.
The example from the modern came a few minutes later, when
Ahmat pulled up beside a long one-storied building with an extended roof which formed a covered verandah. Stretching out
it a
long queue of people stood waiting patiently. They
behind
were of
and even young boys and girls. There were old men, toothless
and lean and scraggy as a starving horse. There were young
wives with babies at their breasts.
Every one carried something:
and
carved
pots
pans, clothes,
ornaments, pieces of embroidery,
224
Exchange.
sum
many
cases the
is
a very good advertisement for the capitalist system which, temporarily at least, had broken down here even more calamitously
than it has in Europe and America. Even when I made every
a larger population than any other area of the same size in the
225
world.
their
all
the
half-castes of to-day,
perhaps even
successful, there
might be
ning because they were better educated. There were
other Pieter Elberfelds,
half-castes
After
my
siesta I set
Here
new
government buildings, the offices of the great shipping companies, the museums, the spacious Koningsplein with
its race-course in the middle, the
Waterlooplein with its football
and
grounds, shady public gardens
pleasure grounds, row after
row of red-tiled houses, very neat, very Dutch, rather uniform
in style, and each with its well-trimmed flower garden, and scores
are the
who
had
The Dutch preceded the British in the East. They had been
the distributors for Europe of the Eastern goods brought home
by the Portuguese. About eighty years after the Portuguese conquest of Malacca they came to the conclusion that the wealth which
hitherto they had only distributed
might be captured on the spot.
The Dutch sent out the first expedition in 1595. It was a
failure, but with the same perseverance which has enabled them to
226
is
written in blood.
Dutch
first
rere-
settlement right
up
to the
It
is
triumph
been Englishmen or Americans, their names to-day would be
household words throughout the world. But when Holland lost
her sea supremacy in the eighteenth century she became a small
nation,
to their disadvantage,
is
memory.
On
is
Jan Pieterson Coen, the founder of Batavia and the greatest of all
Dutch governors-general. The town came into being as a result of
a concerted attempt by the British and the Bantamese to drive
Dutch out of Eastern Java. They besieged the Dutch in Fort
the
particular,
227
memorial
Montreux
to General
who
died at
The monument,
opposite
modern
dictators are
without
illusions.
He
never asked
who
At Gondangdia Ahmet
him to push on to Meester
Cornelis.
victory
For
Raffles
228
Java,
after the
smiled cynically
"nothing
we
Low
first
that the
two
of
much
so,
were an Englishman
serve Napoleon. During the
to instant defeat.
to
was the great road-builder of the island and the founder of modern
Batavia. It was he who removed the European settlement from the
malaria-infested lower
On my way
knowledge of German he clung to me. With German thoroughness he had planned a motor-trip for the next day a three hundred
kilometre circular journey over the Puntiak, including Buitenzorg,
my
attention.
night Presently a
rooms were in a corner
star-lit
My
229
immediately
of a white
at right angles to
woman.
Two
my own
hotel.
In the
suite
human
statue.
face. I
to the verandah.
Had some
her?
My
230
CHAPTER TWO
was punctual the next morning, and
MIEDL
after six
until they
were
few minutes
We had two
The road
was not
as if
we had
flat
country with
rice-fields
Our way
on every
to
side
families,
it
numerous.
Every
now and
would charge
red motor-bus, driven as furiously as our own car,
miracle.
last-minute
a
down on us and miss our mudguards by
The
their names
buses were Chinese owned. Curiously enough,
231
One
Malaya struck
me
forcibly.
Our
They
command
of language
is
coolie class.
we
passed on our
Gardens.
appointing.
am no
I
horticulturist,
had expected a
but
riot of colour.
The
dis-
glory of the
my
memory
June 1823, that Raffles sailed for the last time from Singapore.
He was only forty-two, but his work was done. Like Clive and
Hastings he was sailing back to trouble and to Britain's habitual
indifference to the
work
But the
troubles
wards
childbirth, Raffles,
write to the
much
Dutch Governor-General
Baron van der Capellen's
wife to land.
reply was couched in stiff
terms. It expressed the Governor-General's
surprise that a man like
232
Raffles,
should
Javanese
the British,
set foot
on
soil.
We
untidy.
and
famous
its
deer.
is
the
lotus-lake.
The Dutch
very
is
efficient
civil servants
body
on the whole,
life is far
lower than
highway, over the 4000 feet high Puntiak. The humid flatness of
Batavia had given us no indication of this fairy-land which lay
behind it. At first the road seemed to rise and fall in a series of
easy switchbacks. Then we began to mount by hairpin bends until
On
the air
became
cool
and
finally cold.
No
233
one island of Java and that the sources which produce it were
introduced from other countries: rubber from Brazil, sugar-cane
overawing. Like so many of the Java mountains, Gedeh is a volcano which from time to time erupts in a violent and death-
tain lake,
As we drew
234
The
air
became suddenly
cliff
colder, affecting
My
moment
or
two we turned
its
my
this
Puntiak view
is
woven
entirely
superb and
aesthetic
slices of
The Dutch
and
intellectual
standards are far higher than those of the British or the Americans.
They have a genuine love and understanding of art in all its
forms. This culture is not confined to a small class of intellectuals.
Its roots
hair cut
by
Dutch
barber.
His enthusiasm was genuine, but neither in his case nor in the
most Dutch men and women is it allowed to interfere with
the national capacity for food and drink. Here in this mountain
case of
in design.
Dutch drinking
verse:
235
te veel,
Dnni(
Beter
Dan
i^ niet,
te
niet gedronl^en
much
Than not
The
clients
I die,
seemed
to
to drin\
much and
and
die
to decay!'
live
up
to this
aphorism.
my
We
way through
its
Were
on
been
came to the conclusion that trout had not entered into the
Dutchman's all-embracing scheme of things.
Bandoeng itself is a mountain city situated more than 2000 feet
tantly I
above
Daendels, but
was opened,
To-day,
it is
it is
that
it
and
not
make
their
own
it
good
Bandoeng
236
is
is
certainly
by far
magnificent, hot
why the Dutch do
is
reasons.
Indies
and
is
The army
is
We
new
way
to
out,
Power
to lay a
own
allow an outside
Indies.
moment when
it
we went
airplane
light of
life.
is
Bandoeng
These Dutch
pilots
this
place.
the north-east. I accepted the suggestion with alachad no wish to stay longer in Bandoeng. I recognised its
claims to be a model city and the last word in Dutch colonial
efficiency. But it is a completely modern city, and after a glut of
away towards
rity. I
years spent in
modern
cities
to escape from
modernity.
Luncheon had
and we
The
As we began
and
On
horizon.
air
now
black
At Lembang, a
litde village
was the kind of freak palace which a premight have built for himseE "Rumah
Biretti" (Biretti's house), said the chauffeur with a
grin. He had
no need to say more. I had not been twelve hours in Batavia Without having had the story of Biretti told me by half-a-dozen people.
We had discussed it with the pilots in the Bandoeng hotel less
than an hour before.
Biretti was a half-caste genius who had made a fortune as a
super-dreadnought.
war Moscow
238
It
millionaire
and
his
power and
his influence
were said to
Biretti's
after
to mouth.
that
on Lake Maggiore. It looked repellently new. The name had been as fatal to him as it was to be a
few weeks later to the reputation of Mr. Ramsay MacDonald and
Sir John Simon when they met Mussolini at the Italian "Isola
Bella" during the Stresa conference and failed to warn him about
Bella" after the island palace
would have
It
was a
site that
only a Napoleon
chosen.
on another four
its
239
there
is
myth
attached to it
sultan of
who
an ink-black
crest,
sky.
We
Before
The
was
had no time
to
we
could
fix
be
afraid.
rain
like a waterspout.
hung to us
As
farewell between
Batavia, and
240
Dutch
their native
soldiers,
woman had
by.
With some
difficulty
we
secured
two window
seats opposite
left
Rivers,
The
the great enigma of the East. Was this a man and there
were millions like him who had found in resignation the way of
Here was
of his higher
patient waiting the road to the fulfilment
the Chinese
and
Dutch
the
he
what
Or
was
capitalists
aspirations?
life
and in
with no other
bourgeois said he was a willing beast of burden
to suffice
have
now
which
a
four
cents
the
than
of
day
thought
for his daily existence? Time which reveals all things would reveal this, too, at the hour of its own choosing. For myself I was
content to be grateful to the storm which had enabled me to see
this ethereal loveliness.
As they wished
went out
was
main
empty. The
me
by:
women
them
early
and
amounts to the
had ceased,
traffic
noise. Occasional
shadowy
aroma of
241
cheap scent in their train and lithe boys with their coloured kerbecoming headdress and their
Now
and then a
sarongs falling in a straight line to their ankles.
smile and whisper "Tuan." Sometimes a
boy would
make a furtive half-turn and bare his teeth in a significant grin.
woman would
242
CHAPTER THREE
T HAVE always been an early
riser.
The
habit, developed in
my
J[ youth in Malaya, has never left me. Yet on the next morning
room before I had finished dressing. It
the telephone rang in
my
was the Governor-General's Secretary. Jonkheer de Jonge had returned. His Excellency would receive me at eleven o'clock.
Five minutes before the appointed time I was in his palace, a
long one-storied white Greek temple with pillars of false Doric.
With not more than a moment's delay I was ushered into a highwalled room, very cool and comfortably but simply furnished.
There was a big table in one corner with a photograph of a girl
whom I took to be His Excellency's daughter. A large map of
Indonesia hung on the wall. As I entered, a very tall man with
iron-grey hair and moustache came forward to meet me. His clear
cut features had a pleasant expression. He had the long tapered
fingers of an artist or an aristocrat. His figure, lank and lean as an
Englishman's, astonished me most. He was the only slim Dutchman of over fifty that I had ever seen. His eyes looked tired but
were unmistakably friendly. His English, spoken with an exceptionally pure accent, was excellent. He had been a director of the
Royal Dutch oil combine and had lived for nine years in London.
He still had a house in Wimbledon. Almost his first question was
regarding the present prospects of selling
it.
had
him
hit the
that I
was
Dutch Eastern
possessions,
and
there
Now
I
by
the British
sions in Java,
men who
business
Lord Willingdon,
me.
of
whom
policy.
ment
by
After that
we
can
talk/"
On
Dutch
are rather
more
general with conservative governors-general with considerable success. This policy of gradualness with a Westinghouse brake has
much
it.
too liberal portion of reform would be
the natives to digest. The Dutch East Indies are full
of political as well as real volcanoes. An unyielding reaction might
cause a second Krakatoa.
his own admission Jonkheer de
to
recommend
difficult for
On
in-
crops up
trade negotiations with Japan. They had established a trading station there as far back as 1800. They had given to Japan her first
warship and had taught her to build others. They were the fathers
of the Japanese Navy,
and to-day
still have Dutch names. I had heard the Japanese bogey mentioned
frequently in British Malaya. The Dutch, more exposed and less
able to defend themselves, were likely to be more alarmed. I re-
know
if
little
might be
Their economic position was very strong. Japan bought little from
Holland, but her market in the Dutch East Indies was very valuable to her. Admittedly, the Dutch were weak in the military
north of Singapore. I recalled a conversation with my friend Victor Lowinger, the former Surveyor-General of Malaya and now
the very able and active representative of British Malaya on the
245
international tin
and rubber
restriction committees.
Twenty-six
the then very vaguely fixed Siayears ago he had been surveying
mese boundary. The local Malays gave him a great welcome,
them over for the British Governthinking he had come to take
ment. At the time Siam was negotiating for a British loan. Britain
could have had the Kra isthmus for the mere chink of her money.
Then nobody cared. Now Japanese influence in Siam was ex-
mon
had heard
of recent
defence of their
with a laugh.
"I don't need any agreement with Britain," he said. Obviously,
like many other Dutchmen, he believed that Britain could not
afford to allow Japan to touch a single acre of Dutch East Indian
Guinea
territory. I was not sure. Would Britain fight for
New
it
seemed more
than doubtful.
There was
also the
its
on
their
wealth and potential strength of the American nation was profound and unshakable. They had been disturbed but not un-
and her
former colony.
help you?" We had talked long. His Excela
was
and
over-worked
man. I realised that it was time
lency
busy
to go. Hurriedly I asked if he could arrange for me to be received
by the Sultan of Djokjakarta, which has always been and is to-day
the centre of the Javanese nationalist movement.
246
He
I
thought I recognised a
embarrassment. He believed the Sultan was
away. The
Sultan of Solo would be easier. In any case the interviews would
have to be arranged through the local Governor and Resident.
certain
There was a rule that no one was allowed to see a native ruler
without a Dutch official being present. He would give me a
special
letter to the Governor at Djokja and to the Resident at Solo and
a general letter of recommendation which I could use in Borneo
the Celebes, Bali, Lombok, Timor or anywhere in the whole Archi-
Dutch writ
ran.
me
He
would
in every way.
full heart.
meant.
My
man, and
that
what he said he
my
were on my table.
were
worded.
generously
They
They were accompanied by a
note that if I were in any difficulty I had only to telephone.
I remained in Batavia for three more days after my interview
with the Governor-General. They were something of an anticlimax and rather frivolously spent. With Miedl I indulged in the
famous Rijst-tafel at the Hotel des Indes. It is a ceremony, accomreturn to
my
hotel
my
letters
panied by an elaborate ritual, rather than a feast and to the untook our places at our
initiated an ordeal rather than a pleasure.
We
The Dutch
table.
made a
The
head-waiter asked us
sign.
He
curried chicken.
He
added
his pile
chillies,
all
looked
at
and we
Miedl with arched eyebrows. He smiled optimistiWe drank beer and more beer. Soon there
fell to.
to the
Dutch
The
Rijst-tafel
of
it.
is
For
this
my hat to them as
part of this gargantuan concoction is the krupak, a large crisp biscuit made of rice-flour and flavoured with prawns. It would make
an
London and
New York.
248
already. It
burning of coffee in Brazil, the use of wheat for manure in Canada, the ploughing up of cotton in the United States, and the
to
throwing back of herrings into the sea in Britain can
help
right
there are millions of people in the world who lack
clothes, not to mention fish and coffee.
the
when
things
bread and
economists in their
wisdom must be
Doubdess,
have succeeded
have realised
how
got
I
off,
but
met one
of labour,
it is
I feel that
who was
He
for nothing,
nobody would
it
he deserved
industrialist,
it
precious
his
life.
a big cheerful
prepared
to
man and
a large employer
began by asking me
my
I was older than he was, and I suggested politely that I had
slept
with one before he had.
A Dutch wife, I had better explain, is a long bolster which both
British and Dutch in the Malay Archipelago sleep with between
economics.
The
British christened
it
and the amiable Dutch have accepted the name without affront. Then he told me a story on the same theme. An Australian delegation from the town of Albury had recently been
visiting Java. The visit had a curious origin. During the great airrace to Melbourne in 1934 the Dutch airplane, piloted by Moll
and Parmentier, was well in the lead, when it had to come down
on the race-course at Albury. The mayor and the officials of the
Dutch
wife,
race-course did
all
have disappeared.
Thanks
cessfully
to this lighting the Dutchmen were able to take off sucnight and to win the second prize.
by
In gratitude the Dutch in the East Indies gave the mayor and
the leading race-course officials a free trip to Java. At the end of it
the mayor, a crippled old Scot, was asked what souvenir he would
like to take
the form.
back.
With
Dutchman
details of
Post-war
visitors to
Klitzing, an attractive
itors as
certain Baron Baud, a relation of the former governor-general of the same name and a very rich man, was living in
Batavia some fifty years ago. He had been having difficulties with
a nephew whom he regarded as his heir and who wished to
true story.
marry
his
first
whom
person
rushed out of his
ness
of the
Dutch
aims
little
a good husband.
erally
He
is
at ^500,000."
is his castle"
applies much
Dutchman in Batavia than to the Englishman in
Singapore. He is, too, much less snobbish and is content with
simple pleasures. Above all, he makes no attempt to keep up ap-
more
to the
He
is
certainly
more of a
There
will be formal.
after a
few drinks
is
at the club
based largely on incomes and salaries, and one of the best stories
I heard in Batavia was of a well-known business man, the head of
a local shipping line, who was invited to a gala dinner at Buitenzorg by the Governor-General When he came back, his friends
asked him how he had got on and if he had been given his right
place.
excellent.
My
my bonus."
my evenings
fate
my
wants.
After examining
my
letter
of credit, he said to
me
with
this
evening
it
at the
They turned up
Two
a bed of
roses.
over a hundred years old, which, until the depression, had done a
wonderful business in the East Indies. The British American To-
bacco Company,
too,
little
of them.
moment
likely to be transferred to
Singapore or
Hong-Kong
or,
They were
cheerful
two of them
or
later,
am
much valuable
me
The Dutch, they told me, were more anxious about the Imperial
ambitions of Japan than the Dutch officials had led me to believe.
252
In Singapore I had found the local British more worried by Japanese economic competition than by any scare of conquest, although
I had heard a story of a Japanese naval officer who had made a
frank indiscretion at a dinner at which he was being entertained
by British officers. In replying to the toast of his country he had
owed
to
it.
we require so badly."
in Batavia stories of this nature could be gathered like
colonies that
Here
off a tree. One which my English friends told me was corroborated afterwards by several Dutch officials. Shortly before the
war a Japanese applied to the Dutch Government in Batavia for a
plums
official visited
fishing.
The
Dutch Consuling and charting the local seas. Two years later the
General in Singapore gave a dinner to ^ visiting Japanese warship.
The Dutch official who had visited the islands was present. In one
of the Japanese officers at the dinner he recognised the rubber
fishing concessionaire.
and
On my
When,
later,
proved
After dinner
my
Gomi," the
The
local
me
New
Year
festivities.
As
we
up
ing a side
the
supernatural.
it
explored
it
better
than Singapore in
museums
of
Europe
lasting place in
my
better
much
now I feel
way as
the same
know
know the
that I
I
it
has no
affections.
The
asleep.
254
CHAPTER FOUR
journey from Batavia to Djokjakarta lasts seven hours.
has to be made by day, for, unlike the British in
Malaya,
the Dutch run no night trains. The scenery is pleasant enough and
even beautiful, but by their constant recurrence even rice-fields,
palms and mountains become commonplace and cloying. Moreover, the density of the population is an irritating distraction, and
nowhere in Java could I ever recapture that sense of remoteness
It
to
me
is
Malaya.
Djokjakarta
itself,
much
the
after
Ba-
same
gives
feeling of satisfied relief as the transition from Singapore to the Malay States. Djokja is the capital of
the most important of the four Vorstenlande or Princes' States,
tavia
it
it is
the
of Java.
After the arrival of the Dutch, Djokjakarta was the last stronghold of Javanese independence. It has a national hero, Dipo Negoro,
raised all Middle Java against the Dutch. An ascetic
who in
1825
imbued with
religious fanaticism
255
Dutch
15,000 lives
a quiet, rather
speaking chauffeur. After some trouble I engaged
told
and
him
to call for
sad-looking, but neatly-dressed Javanese,
me the next
my room to
I
at six.
have
afternoon
my
when
but
Then,
morning
I rose
tired
by
my
journey, I went
to
siesta.
on
General,
me
as far as Singapore,
who was on
his
China.
the
brilliant sol-
dier,
months
in China,
associated
had
where the
large interests.
British
He
He
told
me
that in his
life
he had met only two men whose eyes could make him feel afraid.
One was Chiang; the other was Lord Kitchener. As the General
himself has a respect-commanding presence, the compliment
is
no
empty one.
down on the Woodroffes' verandah and talked. The Genwas much impressed by the peacefulness of Java. In China he
I sat
eral
slump
256
no
The Dutch
who
has
hotel
He
He had
He
main
were
street
was
still
open, their
something to the all-too-rare
still
visitors.
The
European
civilisation.
The
more
but far
which
is
sewn
"kain"
is
bottom to
tied
by a
it,
series
of
the Javanese
difficult
and
attractive folds.
is
not in
itself
a local
bold.
darling." Obviously the English and Ameribit to spread the cult of the English
language.
The next morning I called on the Governor, an efficient, cleanshaven man, without affectation, and very simply dressed in a
white
drill suit
with tunic-form
coat.
He was
prepared for
my
257
Sultan. If I
me
give
He
I tried to
is
no
nationalist ques-
The Governor spoke very fair English. It was not, he said, one
of his best languages. His French and German were better. In addition,
He
did
type of
he had
all his
Javanese,
He
was a
fine
civil servant.
the
Dutch
civil servants.
They
commerce,
administration
much from
is
excellent.
Our
an
who have risen to high rank in the Governand who have never even set foot in Java. The fault
ment
lies
service,
Office. It is
258
The
My interview over,
goldsmiths,
silversmiths,
The
Sultans' cemetery
is
is
He
With proper
long prayer.
going
down
Then he opened
musty and
acrid. It
I could
cream-white cloth,
distinguish the graves. Heavily draped with
basement of a
the
in
out
set
old
beds
of
rows
they looked like
size
in
varied
according to the rank
primitive store. The graves
of their dead incumbents.
The body-servant was determined that I should see everything.
In turn he knelt and prayed before each grave. Then gingerly he
and whispered the name of the dead Sultan.
lifted the
bedspread
259
sight of a grave
and
which seemed
half-outside. I
it
was.
He
repeated the
Mohammedans,
carp,
life.
My
interest leapt to
devised a simpler method of preventing poaching than any European landowner has ever dreamed of.
picturesque old gentleman
title
of Keeper
on the
cloth
except the
itself.
waxed
The
part
is
cloth
is
all
coloured.
To-day the cloth for the cheaper sarongs and kains comes from
Manchester and now, alas, Japan, but the silk sarongs are still
260
hand-woven, and the dyes are natural dyes extracted mainly from
the bark or fruit of trees.
After admiring the skill of the expert craftsmen, I went into a
of
fessor
light
will be alone,
and the
visit is
worth
afternoon's
rest,
room.
He
introduced himself.
He
necessary
gave
the United States, I began
lowing the practice which I learnt in
was a half-caste and proud
He
himself.
to ask him questions about
on without
he
said, could not get
of his mixed blood. The Dutch,
261
the half-castes.
Some
had been half-castes. To-day they were everywhere, in every government department, even in the Council of India, the small advisory body of seven members nominated by the Crown, who assist
the Governor-General.
Incidentally, the
Our
India
is
My new
of the effect
me
a harrowing account
of the sugar slump on the population of Djokjakarta.
journalist acquaintance
gave
The
Now
sugar-growers.
From
my new
many
cheerful edition of
262
in
local conditions
Ahmat
less
CHAPTER FIVE
road was comparatively empty of vehicles, and there
more native traps than motor-cars. The traps, fourwere
J_
known as "andong" and more like a doll's carriage
affairs
wheeled
for
human beings, were drawn by tiny but sturdy
a
vehicle
than
Javanese ponies of the same breed as those imported by Napoleon
for his European campaigns. To-day their export is forbidden. Our
route took us at first through flat country cultivated with rice and
tobacco
and
Now
and sugar-cane.
few years before there had been acres
as a result of the slump there were
acres of sugar-cane.
here
and
there.
only patches
first unimpeded view of
From this plain I had
Merapi and
my
The hermit
rice-birds.
him
say that
mountain
he
spirit
fears neither
who
lives at the
bottom of MerapFs
crater.
The
tell
263
me
bump.
a better explanation of
saw
by Merapi in
its last
There was a
crater. It disappeared.
when
1300 people
To-day the
villagers
have
re-built
I ex-
it.
But
my chauffeur
over-cultivated land."
as
And,
In
justice to the
Dutch,
must admit
that they
have done
their
whim
of a volcano which, according to popular fancy, is supposed to seek its kill once every ten years. There is now a watch-
the
ervation.
At
and
flowers
wrath of the
On
fruit,
one always
stands, I
saw
the
last
I pulled
up
at
Two
roll
of thunder.
ulating.
At
Baraboedoer
up
on
its
terraced galleries.
The
rain,
bought a
design in silver
My
full of
optimism.
A little patience
all
well.
shining.
I woke up Kamar, my chauffeur, and away we went on a
crazy
drive in the dark. Presently we were racing along an avenue of
magnificent kenari trees, which under the glare of our headlights
stood out like ghosts.
passed a village where there was not
We
even the glimmer of a candle. The next kampong was very much
awake.
Javanese opera troupe was giving a performance, and
the whole village had turned out to hear it. I wished to stop, but
the manager shook his head.
should see something better in
We
Magelang.
But when we reached the town its streets were deserted, their
wet surface like a lake of tears under the rays of the street-lamps.
We drove past the barracks and past the courthouse. They, too,
were in darkness.
few years before, the haltcaste manager told
the
had
courthouse
been the scene of the degradation of a
me,
Dutch officer. His epaulettes had been ripped off, and he had been
marched to the railway station in the sight of all the natives, and
put in a third-class carriage with a guard to be shipped to Holland
to serve his sentence. This was not a Dutch Dreyfus case. It was
the usual
of a woman, of extravagant expenditure, and
tragedy
subsequently embezzlement.
We went into
265
last
Kamar
up with a
I hesitated.
smile.
"Here we
are,
Tuan," he
said.
The
Chinaman,
dressed in a
Kamar plunged
European
white-drill suit,
came
out,
and
He
was an important
There was no other performance in Magelang.
The Chinaman understood at once and bowed me into a long
room. It was his birthday or feast day, and about twelve of his
friends were there to do him honour. The wayang koelit was proceeding at the far end of the room, but no one was watching it.
Some of the Chinese were playing mahjong. Others were engaged
in some gambling game with cards. There were two tables laden
with sweet cakes and beer. I was offered both, and was then given
a seat all by myself in front of the shadow-play. I felt embarrassed,
but the Chinese did not seem to mind, and went on with their
games in the most natural manner. For some time I watched the
"Dalang" or puppet-proprietor as, with the assistance of a boy, he
moved his beautifully carved dolls from the side of the stage to
the centre and declaimed their parts. The stage itself was merely
the soft stem of a banana tree stretched across the room. The puppets had a narrow spike which was easily inserted into the banana
stem. They were assembled in rows at the sides of the stage, and
were moved into the centre when their turn in the play came. The
"Dalang" spoke in Javanese, of which, of course, I understood
nothing. The performance, too, seemed interminable. After halfan-hour I had had enough, and with many bows I took my leave.
On our homeward journey to Baraboedoer the manager pointed
out to
me
The
road, however,
villagers staggering
along patiently with their heavily loaded "pikulans." It was only
two a.m., but already they were on their way with their fruit and
266
walk would
would yield
cents.
Perhaps
was
over-excited. Perhaps
it
woke
at
on
needed
all
my
courage to approach
far, lest
in
it,
my
and its gargoyles which over-awed me. A thousand years of time were looking down on me. A thousand years
before, Djokjakarta had been the centre of a vast Hindoo temple
I was exalted and yet
city stretching as far as Baraboedoer itself.
with
its bas-reliefs
me
back to bed.
Towards
six the
me
monument
in order to get a
Below
to the left
tains.
Some time
me
267
the hand
about Baraboedoer.
neighbouring prince once sought
of the daughter of the local Sultan. The Sultan gave his consent
on condition that the suitor built a temple to the Sultan's design
The suitor almost achieved his task. But he forgot
in one
night.
The temple
is
the present
Baraboedoer.
a
prosaic archaeologists Baraboedoer is
It
was
built
Mataram.
relic of the old Hindoo-Buddhist empire of
According
to the
more
cremated, and many cities of the East claim to possess his ashes.
ashes repose under the bell-shaped stupas, of which there are
hundreds at Baraboedoer, with an enormous one crowning the
The
peak of the
edifice.
The
bas-reliefs,
which,
if
laid
With
Hindoo
empire
The
charge, then
excessive,
prodi-
during the prosperity period, when, according to the manager, tips of fifty dollars were not uncommon and a consumption
of two bottles of whiskey per night by no means a
rarity for a
gality
American male.
had had enough of the manager. On my way back I wanted
see Tjandi Mendoet alone. But I lacked the moral hardness to
single
I
to
impres-
and
him
of his interest in
talked
On
all
at the entrance I
the
my
was
and waved
his
him
thousand
still
best,
twelve hours
Tomorrow,
. . .
short. I did
under the
would understand.
in advance.
had a bed.
was
That magnificent monument .was a lasting testimony to the greatness of a vanished Hindoo empire. When
the British and Dutch empires vanished, as one day vanish they
must, would they leave behind them as permanent a memorial?
moonlight, and by
Exhausted but
the lost hours of
sunrise.
still
my
exalted, I
went
to
my room
to
make good
sleepless night.
269
CHAPTER
SIX
book in
And
yet, for
me
is
the confession
easily say:
his
"Look
at
the
my
Djokja
Taman
life. I
Sari or
had spent an
Water Castle
from the
against the walls, occupying every inch of space was the army of
They were of all kinds and conditions: old men, fat
tourists.
270
the brishirts of
my
being
played with great vigour and effect on the marble space reserved
for the dancers.
Frenchman, accompanied by his wife and
arrived by train from Batavia. He was not a member of the cruise party.
had booked his rooms months before.
daughter, had
He
He
and violent language, replete with rare and rich adjectives and
accentuated by a whirlwind of gesticulation, the Frenchman was
telling the manager exactly what he thought of him, of his hotel,
Dutch East
the whole
Dutch
Indies, of Holland,
and of
race.
out,
Dutch.
the
The
Dutch
come
first.
blame the
tourist-traffic.
Even
my
table "boy"
garrulousness by
art not
chronicler. Probably
art
Malay
"The West has the gold, but the East has the
it is
Arab aphorism:
soul."
In
all cer-
had a
his
had nearly
soul,
it
finished.
and,
itself
across to
was.
The
me.
I felt
that there
was going
else? If there
to be trouble.
There
was nothing
fit
cold.
to eat,
271
was
My
champagne?
sympathies were
If I
wayang
manager
In one sense the Javanese, who have a far more ancient culture
than that of the Malays of the Peninsula, can be compared with
the Russians. Music and dancing are in their blood. To the ordiexotic and difficult to understand.
nary European Javanese music is
but the numerous varieties of rhythm
is
primitive,
are baffling and the tone-scale has different intervals from those
of the European scale.
The highest form of native orchestra is the gamelan, composed
of percussion instruments in which gongs and various
The melody
mainly
Nearly
all
the musicians
Hindoo and
partly
still
play by
is
ear,
sacrifice to Shiva,
Hindoo
the
Hindoo god
to
an
early
dancers remain.
The themes
epics, the
peal.
The
best dancers
Some
and regular
oflE,
272
When
their
who
has
members of the
won
Java-
or has
as
had a
child
one of the
movements of
the
skill,
an
is
ballet in its
combined perform-
lover is jealous
kill her.
She defends
and wishes
to
But when
girl,
273
from
that of the
first
dance, their
When
if I
now
old
their
appeared.
I felt ashamed,
had been in
vain.
is
balm
The
me.
He
assumed that
he could
should not
mind
their
going with
make
lacked the decision and the courage to say no. In any case I had
now begun to see the humour of the tourist racket. Nine o'clock
found
me
at the tail
of the palace.
The
walls live
274
some
is called, is
30,000 people,
all
city in itself.
relatives,
Within
its
personal servants, or
own
his
the Sultan's.
is
right
room
The
Dutch governor.
there are
other
two
thrones.
is
which
finally
The weakness
of
all
oriental sultanates
he
The
who may
is
the
number
of royal
be regarded as possible
an enlightened
is
to,
oriental magnificence
garity.
terious past.
In spite of the early hour, the heat was already scorching, and,
we waited under the open sky for the official army of inter-
while
preters
sun.
we
effect,
a comic per-
formance.
rooms with
priceless treasures,
me by
my
its
No
one is allowed
as a painful deterrent to I2se-majest.
to stand upright on the polished floor. The cleaners who polish
it have to do so prostrate. Here again the effect of natural dignity
upwards
At every
was
a laborious performance.
Dutch-speaking Javanese official
recited the historical points to the Dutch hotel manager. The
officer,
in
a well-groomed
them to the tourists with jocular comments of his own very much
in the manner of the approved cabaret conferencier. The tourists
added their own asides. Over the entrance to one hall was painted
the word "welkom."
"Charles,** shouted one married woman to her husband, "come
here and see how they spell 'welcome.' Isn't it funny?"
Charles evidently thought it was, for he unhooked his Leica
camera and commemorated in photograph the supposed spelling
mistake.
To me
the guard
at St.
James's Palace,
and every day they have their hour of glory. To the shrill notes
of a flute player they parade round the palace. Their uniforms are
the queerest in the world. The helmets are like flower-pots turned
upside down.
The
tunics,
These warriors are of all ages. There was one old gentleman,
clean-shaven with bushy eyebrows and with the clear-cut features
of an aristocrat. He must have been well over sixty. Yet he had
the superb carriage of a
his flower-pot
with a finer
face.
unicorn.
was eleven
national-
277
ist
movement
at first
rather futile, I
and
The
is
only
streams of liquid sand. They have their source at the foot of
Merapi and serve a useful function in carrying away the sand
crater.
Djokja, Solo
is
do not
entitle
me
if
he
receives
He
more he
will
on which
to
378
He is fond
he likes to win.
expected to
let the
first.
Occa-
the Sultan's horse jibbed at the start and, in spite of its jockey's efthe other jockeys saw what had
forts, refused to move.
When
hap-
pened, they pulled up and waited until the Sultan's horse had got
into his stride and was able to pass the grand stand a popular and
comfortable winner.
The
He
The
on the
Sultan's horses
man. Naturally
to a
table
and
time
when
to
go round the
The only
the royal privilege is suspended is when once or twice
a year the Sultan and the Dutch Governor of Solo challenge their
counterparts of Djokja to a bridge match.
let
is
By
figure.
This
is
far
whose
case.
He
is
a shrewd
gent ruler,
not more harmful than, those of some European monarchs.
He is loyal to the Dutch by whom he is much liked. He has a
slightly anti-British bias,
is
He
my
an Englishman
who
The "Nail of the World" smiled gently. "Well," he said, "we Javanese are not very well up in European history. But I do know that
there was a Dutchman who became King of England. I've never
to find
main
the
street, I
accompanied
ter's
head.
Kamar
told
me
that they
were
relatives of the
Sultan
on
foot.
On my way
to Djokja I tried to summarise my impresand confused day. I wished to get a proper perI felt a little ashamed. In my
spective of this tourist business.
allowed
I
had
myself to be irritated and even
egocentric conceit
here
was I with a Leica camera
Yet
to become downright sulky.
back
sions of a hectic
on
strung
my
good
tourist.
whom
most objected.
In the Kraton I had let my
was
certainly a very
Now
saw displayed *in the travel literature: "Ideas for Lighter Moments
on the Cruise. Coolie jackets, coolie trousers, etc." and by the
attempts of some of the tourists to put these ideas into practice.
It seemed to me that this
aping of native dress must earn the
contempt of the native himself.
In theory it was a good thing that English people should see
280
on
of finding out
like you,
we
this
more
capitalists
of.
281
CHAPTER SEVEN
'
my
late after-
me
all
to
my
The
Dutch.
it
As I left the Governor's office, a violent thunderstorm had darkened and drenched the town. Before the rain had ceased, it was
had already packed and had gone to the
home by parcel post the collection of
Dutch books that I had bought. I had already made friends with
the Dutch bookseller, an
exceptionally intelligent and well-read
young man. But I did not know his name and he did not know
late in the afternoon. I
mine.
When
smiled.
guilty.
"You
His
interest
was stimulated.
How
my
books, he read
Agent?" he
Was
had
I
I
said. I
it
and
pleaded
going to write a book
liked Djokia?
'
J
him
I told
that I
movement and,
He was
slip of a
forehead.
if possible, to
He
man
He
bald.
wore glasses
that
he
was
about
guessed
forty.
in his small house was stacked with
He
He
was a
socialist
and an
anti-
imperialist.
sat
We
talked
references to my Russian experiences and to my meetand Trotsky, and soon he was giving me firstLenin
with
ings
hand information about the various nationalist parties, with which
him out by
The
first
nationalist society,
formed in Djokja in
by the disgruntled
who saw
their
mem-
home-made
its activities
so as to embrace
and in the long run probably the most dangerous is the Insulinde
formed in 1912 and composed of Eurasians and Javanese.
Party,
As
movement in Java
re-
ceived a great stimulus from the Great War, and in 1916, yielding
to the pressure, the Dutch introduced the Volksraat, a kind of
At
fledged communist
affiliated
New
Guinea, at Tanah
means
"Red Land."
enough,
drawing
the greatest
Here
in Java
Kartini,
whose
letters, first
women by
now
into half-a-dozen
tion conscious.
The poor
half-castes,
of
whom
translated
classic.
The
now
educa-
there were
many,
would
When
of
284
a Javanese prince.
room
Of course
I said yes,
and he went
Although
I tried to
for a day. It was already ten o'clock. It seemed unlikely that the
Prince would receive me so late at night. The telephone conversa-
tion in
For the
well.
Dutch seemed
first
The
interminable.
Then my
host
came back.
All was
face.
The
soft notes of a
gamelan orchestra
By
the
We
meet
had
tea,
lids in
and then
natural dignity
He
was supplemented by
reserves
tact
and
discretion.
wrong,
But,
to the tips of his long, delicately-shaped fingers.
I was careful not to embarrass him with indiscreet questions,
remarks to a desire for knowledge about
and confined
my opening
He
took no salary.
Many
From
I told
him
alist parties
and
nationalist leaders.
dissipation of forces
that owing to the diversity of interests represented
plained to
and to the number of different races in the Dutch East Indies many
me
leaders
were
and even necessary. He insisted that the nawas strong even among the poorest Javanese and,
inevitable
tionalist feeling
proletariat than
if
on
quoted
there are
286
those Javanese
cases of
many
there
that
communism was
a communist. But
wanted land and more of
I tried to
would
last.
was
Dutch
make him
it,
say
how
to be
three-hundred-years-old Javanese proverb to the effect that another foreign rule would succeed the Dutch. The Japanese per-
stitious belief.
he
still
sultans,
stead, I
asked him
subject. In-
the sultans
still
rather sourly.
the Sultan of Djokja.
He
finally,
the Chinese revolution and the triumph of Kemal Atamost of all, the Great War. The eyes of the East had
turk. But,
answer.
people.
He
"With
The
my
told
ignorance
me
the war progress in Java had been relatively more rapid. The East
would move more rapidly still during the next twenty-five years.
It was now long after midnight. We had drunk innumerable
cups of tea, and I, at least, had smoked half-a-dozen cigars. My
287
Dutch
first
friend
move
had warned
to leave.
The
me
in advance that I
dawn
must make
the
were so
Javanese nobility
We
which were entered the minutes of the meetings of the agricultural co-operative society which he had founded and which he
ran himself. I scrawled my name with the date, in the same way
as one signs the visitors' book in an English country house. We
bowed again, and then we went out into the night.
After dropping my Dutch friend at his house, I drove home
through the silent town. The teeming millions of Java were asleep.
They had been sleeping for three hundred years. How far ahead
was the day of awakening? Within a few days I had heard a
Dutch Governor declare that there was no nationalist question
and a Dutch socialist maintain that Dutch Imperialism was
doomed.
in
for Soerabaja.
The
train,
with a Dutch
tion
was
Raffles
leonic wars,
288
It
slaves of Java.
had forced
matter.
The
was
left to
special
government
who
The
rife
the
among
Dutch
officials
the system.
It was left to a retired Dutch official, called Dekker, to expose
the iniquities of forced cultivation. Under the name of Multatuli
he wrote a book called Max Havelaar. Published in 1860, it stirred
Dutch
in
much
the
same manner
fields.
the system
was
finally abolished.
after the
selling at 100
per 100
kilos.
much
factory managers,
as 300,000 guilders in
bonus in a
single year, were the gayest, the most generous, and the most reckless spenders in the world.
times had changed. Soerabaja was
Now
289
go back to
them enough
natives could
their
would
at
yield
any
fertile soil
He
staring
war she
in
my mind
of Antony Fbkker,
remembered how he had
shortly
Fokker
he had wanted
told
to help England.
offered to sell his patents to Britain.
No
inter-
est in them, and in the end he had sold his machines to Germany.
Volcanoes in Java inspire a deep respect. If Kloet had belched a
best
The town
streets-
and
itself is
built,
do not share
a European
however, very
cities
admirably
in Java
flat,
it
has enchanting
is stifling.
hill stations
it.
offices,
wide
approach to
Dutch. It is,
within comparatively
290
De
of
pay and
service.
They overpowered
their
officers
who
native colleagues.
like
blame on their
most Malays have
home and
station. Just
ever,
more
made up
plays havoc with the remains of their beauty. If they are a genuine
291
members
boom one
sugar
colleagues
made
young
girls to
Here in the Soerabaja "Tutti Frutti" there was a certain imiEuropean elegance. But the atmosphere was even more
tation of
drank quickly and in a business-like manner* She was Hungarianborn, the daughter of a German father and a Hungarian mother.
Her German had the sing-song intonation of Budapest. She danced
well. But she was not there to waste her time.
"Also," she said, "wie werden wir unsere Sacher regeln?"
I led her on. "What do you mean?" I asked.
"Well, what are you going to pay?"
The price was 200 gulders ^30 for the night. It was the tariff.
In the boom days the Dutch sugar planters paid it when they came
to Soerabaja for a "jolly." Since the
slump they can no longer
afford it. The girls, however, have not reduced their price. They
have merely changed their clientele. To-day they sleep with the
rich.
292
BOOK V
we
CHAPTER ONE
my youth, when I was the only white man in
dream which haunted me in my hours o
had
one
Pantai,
in a sea-prahu, manned only by Malays,
depression. I saw myself
heading for an uninhabited island in the Malay Archipelago. I
never reached the island, but the vision of it was very clear to
me. Everything on it was perfect. The sun was always shining.
Yet everything was green. There was always a cooling breeze to
temper the tropical heat. There was the soothing music of the surf.
To perfect the modern idea of "going native" there was a conv
fortable bungalow complete with hot and cold water. There was
no cocktail bar. In those days dreams had not included cocktails
in their scheme of things. But there was an English grass lawn past
which flowed a tropical river strangely like the Spey. It teemed
with fish. Of course, they took a fly, although on my island there
the days of
IN
it
Now,
am bound
one tropical
island is very like another. Those islands which are uninhabited
are uninhabitable. Those which are inhabited have already become
realisation of
tainted
by
And
choice
dream,
to confess that
civilisation
yet
and
my
on
no one
else
knows
it.
295
In the Merah
had a cabin
to
we
in the morning,
when we anchored
myself
fitted
with an
electric
carried only
was an angry
at Boeleleng,
bank of dark clouds. I did not go ashore, but stood on deck and
watched the freight being loaded from open boats with side supa curious freight: mostly capons and
ports like a catamaran. It was
and pig-exporters.
pigs, for the Balinese are pig-eaters, pig-breeders
Pigs and capons were packed alive in tight-fitting palm-leaf coops.
The packing seemed incredibly cruel. Yet, strangely enough, both
animals and poultry survive a longish journey in these suffocating
strait-packets.
At Macassar
spatched to Portuguese
even to Hong-Kong.
All that morning
we steamed along
on
to
whole
island.
Bali
set
an
The
interesting history.
for two hundred years
inhabitants of
Lombok
sea,
has
are Sassaks,
who
296
made
still
a treacherous attack
the
Dutch
officers
retreat.
more or
stroyed.
less
As
and placed
in cold blood,
and many fine buildings being deDutch drove out the Balinese
Lombok under
their
own
administration.
Poeri or palace of the Balinese Sultan was in Mataram itBut to-day there is no trace of it. The Dutch razed it to the
The
self.
On my
police.
two farther on
to Tjakra Negara, where the last Balinese ruler had a second
the palace is a temple which for a few hours
palace. Opposite
to
Dutch on that fatal night when they were
the
shelter
gave
chauffeur's advice I drove a mile or
On
Here every year come pilgrims from Bali to pray to Doerga, the
Goddess of Death. Close by is a plain obelisk to the memory of
General van Ham, the most important Dutch victim of the war.
Curiously enough, both Dutch and British acquired their Malayan possessions by playing off one Sultan against another. But
little
Nearly everywhere,
too,
way
who
fell at
297
breasts
and threatening
to
did not
was
tell
where
their
was
women
If the information
carried out.
Commune in
1871.
These
first
bolsheviks were
known
He won
his
own
spurs in the
Acheh war,
for like
He
many
was
well-
full of
war
started in 1873
may
well be true.
not go ashore, but stayed on deck to watch the cargo being loaded.
It was an exciting
performance, for there was a heavy swell, and
at
any moment
it
seemed
must
lose their
have been small. Here the cargo was mostly small onions, which
I was told were in
great demand for flavouring soups. For the
next twenty-four hours they flavoured everything.
The heaviest item was an unexpected addition to our freight.
I had noticed a Chinese kitchen hand
fishing from a lower porthole
with a line like a rope and a huge hook baited with raw meat,
298
little
yell.
The
Chinese "koki" was into something big. Two heads were now
the porthole and four skinny hands were holding
protruding from
on to the line. There was a violent commotion in the water. Down
The loaders
quickly manoeuvred
the side.
grinning and
with their broad-shaped paddles. In less time than a fly-fisher would
take to land a trout of a pound they had the shark on board one
of the boats and had finished it off with their knives. With the aid
it
Chinaman with a
The
rest of that
At
officers.
first
making
Dutch
and heavy, but at
found the Bols gin
stolid
On
much
and looked fit enough for another fifteen. Both were big,
powerful men. Both spoke English and German and, of course,
seas
fluent
Malay.
With
talked sex.
Women
seemed
to
have
the white man's troubles in the East came from young men
girls too early in their career. Their
forming attachments to
only thought was to get married, and then they wanted a soft job
near a city. To-day you could not find young men to stay in the
outlandish places where the best chances were* In a service like his,
early marriage without sufficient money was hell. It was true that
his service
had been
affected
it
brought
steamers
made
its
as
by the slump
man who
much
299
his salary,
and
this
of
Curiously enough, on
my
administrators
greatest colonial
return home,
this
The
passengers.
him that I wanted to visit Timor. He produced his timeThere was no boat for over a fortnight, and I could not
I told
tables.
My face
fell.
and a fine time the Dutch officials had in trying to check the cattle
and horse-thieving which flourished on this artificial frontier. The
Portuguese administration, he said, was comic. The governor and
his handful of officials were paid no salary from Portugal, but took
it from the
proceeds of the coffee sales. When coffee was bad,
times were bad. The coffee plantations were on the other side of
the island from the official headquarters. Sometimes the weather
was bad, and the steamers could not take the coffee on board.
Then the officials had to go without their salary!
In the captain's time the real boss of the island was the local
Portuguese banker. He fixed the exchange price of coffee and had
his
When
his
for
300
who not only dicterms but also arranged for the free transport of
own
his
own
Once
coffee.
Governor on a
smuggling
His
house.
visit to
cases.
own
They
minor earthquake!
I
am bound
to
admit that
came into
on a very
different footing.
From
informed British
time to time fears are expressed even in wellPortugal may one day sell part of the
circles lest
At eight o'clock the next morning we entered Macassar harbour. I do not think that I have ever seen a more peaceful or
it
the islands.
Away
a mountainous
admit that
was prepared
to
the capital of the Celebes. The name itself had an old-world ring.
Vaguely I remembered the antimacassars which covered the black
horse-hair chairs in
Scotland.
my
stains
from
Here Almayer had come as a young man, ambitious, full of hope, ready to conquer the world. Here Williams,
the strong outcast, had married old Hudig's half-caste daughter
and had taken the first step towards his descent. Here had come
that great Conrad hero, Tom Lingard. Rajah Laut the Malays
had called him the King of the Seas. He, too, had been one of
the heroes of my youth, and whatever the literary critics may say,
I still maintain that these two early novels with Lord Jim and
The Nigger of the Narcissus are Conrad's best books, and are
of the Islands.
six trips as
a mate
in.
the merchant
spent on the sea, and between cruises there were long gaps. His
Malay was "bazaar" Malay and poor at that. He had no first-hand
men
life
have given to
all
who,
fitting
out
on many a
302
coast as yet,
making money
fast,
general
pation."
The
drawn from
real
in the East.
Above
all,
covering
new
was
attracted
material about
Conrad
himself.
303
dis-
CHAPTER TWO
WITH
these thoughts in
my mind
selecting
and Singapore.
chauffeur.
He
looked
very smart in his short white coat and gaily coloured Buginese
trousers. I did not regret my choice. He was the best and most
intelligent of all the chauffeurs I engaged.
first visit was to the Governor to
My
whom
had a
special
letter.
no
frills.
officials,
he was
full
of friendli-
in insignificant quantities.
The Celebes, or rather Macassar
itself,
deposed.
The
rest
1905,
the country.
especially,
by the stars
dred years ago. With a following wind they could make Singapore in five days. They were strong competitors of the Dutch
K.M.P. boats,
They
still
basis, profits
still
justifies
At
his side
brilliant coloured
her face. "That's the ex-Sultan," said the Governor, "and the
is his Sultana. She comes to see me about politics every
woman
Amazon who
car. She's a
my
leave I
305
there?
ant Resident.
his eyebrows.
knew
Neither of them
He
that
buried in Macassar.
arrival of the Assistant Resident
The
me,
for, as I said
goodbye
to the
should
suggested that his assistant
Governor,
this excellent
for
man
Goa made
Dutch
Europeans of Macassar
fort. Among them was
who was
colonial service.
spurn the
flesh
and
day
of wrath!
From
we made
residential part
306
me
beyond
the road
qualify for the colonial service. Their standards are far higher than
I felt glad that I was a citizen of a rich and easy-going
our own.
nation.
Had
Dutchmen, we
labour.
to the hotel to
found the
assistant
He was
The
hotel proprietor
had
been a lifetime in the Celebes and had met every one who had
ever been in Macassar.
sought him out in his office. He was
We
and
to Macassar.
But
my
trouble he
could not solve. He, too, had a suggestion. There was only one
man in Macassar who could have known Conrad. This was an
old Swiss gentleman named Jenni. He was over eighty, had spent
sixty years in the Celebes and had not been home since 1900.
307
I went back
at
our
which
we were
"pahits"
manager
had
been
who
the
rny only fellowyoung Englishman
joined by
traveller in the Merah, and a young Dutchman, the son of a very
rich merchant in Holland.
determined
with the
to
to
assistant
For half-an-hour we
ing manager. It was a
bundand
The
Japanese had driven the Europeans off the market. Yet their
cheap goods were a godsend, for how else could a Dutch employee
live
on
Here
in Macassar a
Dutchman
could
fit himself out from head to foot for four years for the
price of
one English suit.
he gave
20 white
drill suits
20 singlets
@
(2)
5 guilders
50 cents
@ 20 cents
@ 1.50 guilders
raincoat
@ 10 guilders
10 pairs of shoes
@ guilder
10 pairs of pyjamas @ 2 guilders
50 pairs of socks
20 shirts
i
Handkerchiefs,
ties,
etc.
= 100 guilders
= 10 guilders
= 10 guilders
= 30 guilders
= 10 guilders
= 10 guilders
= 20 guilders
=
5-6 cents
10 guilders
One
Savile
Row
English suit
308
16 i6s.
= 200
guilders.
To prove
manager pointed
to his
own
clothes.
Japanese
of socks
pair
and a
six cents
handkerchief
checked the
figures.
They were
Shedding the manager, we went into luncheon where I heard
more first-hand information about the Japanese. Macassar, I gathered, was Japanese-conscious and Japanese-afraid. I heard a strange
substantially correct.
story,
doubtless untrue but symptomatic of the atmosphere of unabout a Japanese mission which had come to investigate
certainty,
the Dutch system of education. They had gone into one school
where there was a map of the East Indies on the wall. When
they left, the word Dutch across the Celebes had been crossed out
"
its
place!
told,
in
Large
was
still
were
still
unexplored, and
as lonely as it
life
He
woman
into his house, had had children by her, had come to love
and had then fallen desperately ill with fever. After weeks of
illness a doctor had b.een sent to bring him down to the coast. He
had been shipped home to recuperate, had gone into business,
and was now head of a big office and was married. Yet he was
unhappy and obsessed by only one wish: to return to his former
her,
My
himself.
down
weeks
later the
After luncheon
and
its
blue here.
burden. They carried no "pikulan." I felt that the Celebes were all
the better for the Pax Batavica. Otherwise the cheerful rascals
at
"Of
course,
run from
the
governor's house, and there it was a queer little hut with a corrugated tin roof built at the side of a gate into a small disused yard.
But for its open barred bamboo walls it might have passed for a
Scottish golf-caddies' shelter. There was a small native laundry at
right angles to it, and on a rope strung across the cul-de-sac the
week's washing was hanging out to' dry. Neglected and cage-like,
was, indeed, a prisoner's grave. But obviously it was not forgotten. My Buginese chauffeur was impressed. "The Tuan knows
it
Dutch Navy,"
said
my
mutiny of
De
Ma-
Seben
so
something
a pound. The best nests are made by a species of swift and have
a whitish colour. The natives believe that the gelatinous substance,
so attractive to the
Chinese gourmet,
is
dried sea-foam
which
not with nets, but with rods. In the background the mounhad that same blue-green tint as the hills at Pantai. I was
enchanted. I found myself in danger of forgetting my first landscape love, and landscapes are more reliable friends than human
fishing,
tains
On my way
recently been
back
levelled.
moods
to
"What's that?"
field
which had
men come
311
all
Later, I
civil
Jenni very wise man. Get up with the sun, go to bed with the
sun. Tuan must see my village."
to
bumpy apology for a road and crossing a ramshackle bridge, he pulled up beside a narrow river-mouth and
waved his hand. "That's my village," he said proudly.
It was a kind of Malayan Venice. Before a background of
turning into a
on
made a picture of
exquisite loveliness. I hope that, when the white medical officers
have cleared away all these old Malayan water-villages, the Venice
insalubrious, but in the fading sunlight they
From
the
its
and illusory
Lying
bay shut off from the
main harbour was a tiny motor-yacht. It was flying the British
flag. It belonged to a retired naval commander. He had sailed his
fragile boat from Australia. He had come to Macassar for pleasure
and not for gain, but in my mood of the moment I pictured him
as the last of the Conrad adventurers. His boat, at
any rate, was the
islands.
at
anchor by
itself
in a
cities
little
Dutch have a
virtual
the
tired, I
ten
the
should have been the red lights which shine in every port,
were dimmed. In the brilliant moonlight even the
almost
was
sea
silent, its wash against the shore the faintest of
there
lullabies.
to
Mr.
Jenni's
outside his house at the corner of a shady boulevard just opposite the hotel The veriest idiot could not have failed to
recogcarried a stick, but his tall, slim figure was still
nise him.
He
He was
and Mr. Jenni had stayed with his own times. But it was his
which endeared him to me. In spite of his eighty years his
cheeks were as pink as a boy's. His keen, blue eyes twinkled
face
His beard, white with a faint flaxen tint, was wellHe was so like Mr. Bernard Shaw that for a moment
wondered if I had stumbled on that great man masquerading in
merrily.
trimmed.
I
Macassar.
was a writer, was he not? I'm afraid I never knew him. I don't
think he could have stayed in Macassar. Jack London, yes. He
came here before the war after the war. I cannot remember. But
I
met him*
He was
good
writer*
sentence was pronounced with the slighdy contemptuous authority of all local experts who are only too prone to measure knowledge by the number of years spent in the East. And with
This
last
year less
my
me
in last
port
The
1905
the military commander had gone so far as to order yes, orderall the Dutch to leave their houses and come into the fort. He
had, of course, refused. He was a friend of the Sultan.
My
fine old
chap himself.
Nor
did he exaggerate.
me
afterwards that he was held in great rethe Buginese. He certainly had a very high regard
chauffeur told
spect by all
for the dignity of the white man's position in the East, and I do
not think that in his whole life he had ever put a foot wrong.
But
pure Javanese.
I could not help noting that, whereas the purely Dutch officers
looked heavy and corpulent, the half-castes were vigorous and
athletic. There was one
swarthy young man whose well-cut white
uniform, flashing eyes, and conscious swagger would have qualihim for any hero's r61e in Hollywood.
fied
The
He
we who
from
us,
but
my
my
my London
life.
minute the assistant manager rushed up to say goodwas clammy. He seemed more down-in-his-luck
hand
His
bye.
a nervous smile he informed me that he had just
With
everthan
been sacked. For the first time I felt sorry for him and ashamed of
At
the
last
my own egotism. To
whom
it
has
left
behind.
315
CHAPTER THREE
the voyage back we carried more passengers. They were
mostly minor Dutch officials going on leave or being transferred. The centre of interest was the Javanese regimental doctor.
ON
also
He
table and ate the same heavy food which the Dutch eat. He was
both dignified and reserved, taking little part in the conversation.
I should have liked to discuss politics with him, but was reself-consciousness. In any case the lanhave
a bar. I had been warned not to
would
been
guage difficulty
address Javanese, who had been educated in Holland, in Malay.
They were apt to regard it as an insult. The doctor knew no English and very little German. As far as reading was concerned,
my
Dutch had made good progress but had not reached the stage of
strained by
my over-sensitive
coherent speech.
With the ship's
length.
bonese were very good soldiers. But once started they did not
stop.
They saw red. Like the Ghurkas they preferred the bayonet to
the bullet.
My
spent several
had been carried out by civilian guards. There had been trouble.
Then, of course, the government had to send a soldier, and at once
the disaffection ceased. The communists were divided into two
camps: one for the well-behaved and the other for the recalcitrants.
Escape was almost impossible.
way through
If
a communist tried to
make
his
ate
'him.
The
after
Island.
3*7
and
idle on-lookers
surged forward to
meet me. The company's agent brushed them aside, and before
I knew where I was, I found myself in the hall of the K.P.M.
tourist office.
an English-speaking
to-day, and if you wish
it
ing chauffeur."
He smiled and shook his head. 'You will waste
money," he
said.
"The
chauffeurs
know
money by saving
nothing about the history
When
he saw
that I
meant what
I said,
he was
crestfallen;
but
who wants
trial.
He
speaks a
little
English, but he
knows
on splendidly."
the island, and, if you speak Malay, you
More out of physical exhaustion than inclination, I agreed to
will get
see him.
member
princely caste.
There was a
delicate refinement
and a
I said.
318
temple to
me
bicycle. I
had
read that Balinese art was a living force. There was certainly no
stagnant classicism about this cycling Shiva.
In a few minutes
on the
we were
eighty-miles' journey to
The
island.
chauffeur, a
more highly-strung.
"You must be in time
"To
hell
me
seat
on
on
He
had
topee with
violently out of
clutching
me
my
my
grinned broadly.
get
to
gravely.
I said,
my
want
together.
The
by means of
hills.
Certain features
made
apple-green
obvious. Bali was greener than any other part of the Archipelago
that I had seen. The villages were totally unlike the kampongs of
Mohammedan
Malays. They were laid out rectangularly, interclosed in by high clay walls. The island and
and
sected by roads,
I noted the fact with some feeling of regret was not only densely
cultivated, but densely populated. Java, long reputed the most
the
did not need to observe the scores of temples with their open
know that I was in a Hindoo country. I passed
carved entrances to
their sarongs
'like
a loin
regard
which
is
319
were
busily engaged in road-mending. Obviously they
for the government. I asked Bagoes what rate of pay
They were
working
me
The government
forced labour.
The Dutch
this
work
told
to paying
me
taxes. I
work a day in
Englishmen and more Scots who would willingly
from
the persereleased
be
to
in
order
each week breaking stones
cution of the income-tax inspector.
I saw a cloud on Bagoes' face.
"You do not
roads.
my
attention.
on
"That
He
is
keeps away
the spirits
"He
is
We
320
The
at the cremation. It
Den
for
Pasar
is
me
moment
allowed
him
to carry
off.
We drove a
and
little
our car
way beyond
We
walked along a
reached
three
shaded
gaudy, garlanded wooden bulls
mounted on bamboo tresdes. Farther down the road was the high
funeral tower bedecked with ornaments and mounted on a platleft
path until
we
many
But the chief points of vantage were held by the European tourists. I saw several Balinese women with naked breasts,
but they looked modest beside an English girl in an almost transparent dress with no back to it. From time to time a tourist would
unfold his Leica and take a snapshot of the images. Otherwise
Balinese.
Beside
women
filled
The
the
shoulders, carried it
full
gamelan
or-
The
and placed
Before the burning started, there were further elaborate ceremonies, including a dance by a number of old gentlemen dressed
in square-checked trousers and carrying lances and eggs. On both
sides the tourists, their cameras clicking with the regularity of a
taximeter, closed in
on the dance
until they
now
formed a narrow
young men set fire to the logs with torches. The fire licks its
way round the bodies of the wooden effigies. Soon the whole pyre
is a
blazing mass of flames, which add a new fierceness to the
stifling heat.
The Balinese will wait beside the pyre until nightfall. On the
morrow they will carefully gather up the ashes and consign them
to the sea, for only by the double
purification of fire
the soul be freed from its terrestrial
bondage.
have had enough. I am, I think, not insensitive to the
decencies and solemnities of all ceremonial. I admit that I should
have been impressed by those rites, and that
my thoughts should
have been concentrated on
I should have
But
comparative religion.
asked myself what the Balinese would think of our own
lugubrious
332
from some hidden point of vantage, I could have watched a Balinese cremation at which no Europeans were present, my emotions
might have been
different. But, as it was, the whole scene reof a film being shot in exotic surroundings. I felt
quite erroneously, of course that the efficient organisers of the
K.P.M. had arranged the show for the tourists' special benefit.
me
minded
turned to
rites.
"Bagoes,"
cremation." He
"It wasn't
cremation.
my
high-caste guide,
I said, "let
us go.
made no
protest.
much
That
is
who was an
have seen
of a show," he said.
my
on these
and my last
expert
first
"You should
see a prince's
something."
Cremations are very expensive, and the richer Balinese spend on them thousands of guilders and in some cases thousands of pounds. The poor, on the other hand, may have to wait
for months and even years before they can afford to cremate their
It
was
true.
We
went back
to the hotel. I
was exhausted.
had
electricity,
and 6 pjn.!
operate between the hours of 6 a.m.
better. I was in a quandary
felt
I
a
and
a
After
bath,
sleep
what to put on. The tourists were exclusively English and Americans. Doubtless, they would dress for dinner. I compromised with
a white
drill
a shady tree and ordered myself a drink. The terrace was separated from the main street only by a low hedge. I had not been
there for more than a few seconds when I heard a rustle. Looking
down,
3*3
"Like visit
yet another. Finally, one came who had some English:
I show you."
sir? Very nice
Balinese
dancer,
pretty
world.
first
whom
was in Bali after the war, the island was still unspoilt and there
was no European hotel.
The visits of these great men struck no travel-compelling chord
in the hearts of their countrymen. Since then, however, an English peeress, finding its
known
Bali
to her compatriots.
who lived here
of the President,
Bali, has done the same for the Americans. They had been followed by the journalists and the writers, and during the last three
or four years a score of books have sung the praises of "the last
The Dutch genius for tourism and the lurid advertisements of the shipping companies have completed the work of
popularisation. Those who seek a resort where an old-world civilisation remains intact must come quickly. The conversion of "the
paradise."
last
soon Bali
may become a
is
proceeding apace, and
second Port Said.
all
too
foods, I
the K.P.M.,
traffic.
ness
From
long ago they were cannibals and chess players with a few geniuses
who were a match for the world's greatest champions. They still
are now
play chess, but they no longer eat "long pork." They
fathered by the famous Rhineland Mission. In Bali, missionaries
are encouraged neither by the Dutch nor by the Balinese, and the
only missionaries
who have
of converts.
My new
tourist traffic
would
suffer.
325
CHAPTER FOUR
HAD
dogs.
a plague.
case their howling
still
my
to read
to later.
Dewa Agoeng
326
oils.
krises.
The women,
too,
had put on
all
their finery.
Draped in white, they wore their hair loose. They carried a kris
or a lance. Children, capable of lifting a knife, were likewise armed.
went
first,
is
now
carried
little
the
on
the
first
moved forward
main
even the Persians advancing on Leonidas's seven hundred at Thermopylae could have been more astonished than was the Dutch
infantry
company when on
that September
morning
it
caught
its
did
all
all
who remained
alive
until
twelve scarcely able to carry his lance. The captain summoned him
to surrender. For a moment he hesitated. Then, urged on by his
followers, he gave the order to charge. All met the same fate.
When
The body
of the prince
was found
at the very
bottom
327
of the highest heap. He had led the way and had fallen first. His
dead followers had made a human cairn over him.
one Dutch soldier was killed a sergeant called Bakker.
Only
He, too, died a
hero's death.
the Dutch, in
off the
in this
cases,
had refused
life.
Djokjakarta, he
knew
his grandfather, a
the war.
We
North
Balinese,
landmarks of the batde. Where the poeri once stood is now a museum and a football field. The K.P.M. hotel is on the site of the
former palace temple.
this
now
peaceful scene,
we
took the
Our way
close to
shrine
and
with lime.
Many people were at work, but they were mostly women. For
the Balinese man will undertake only work which a woman is incapable of doing, and in the Balinese philosophy work of this kind
is rare. In consequence the Balinese man has the
necessary leisure,
is
dancing and sculpture, the two primary and essential arts which
have made him so attractive in the eyes of the European. As in the
poultry world the male is definitely the finer animal, and with
the exception of the young girls of thirteen and fourteen the
caste
women go
mark on
their figures,
baskets of fruit
make an
and
rice
attractive picture.
known
as the
the same national suicide or "poepoetan" as his colleague of Baits site is now an open square
dominated by the Dutch comptroller's residence. There are, however, a few remains, including some fine gateways and a couple of
quaint Balinese statues. One shows a Dutchman counting guilders;
die other a Dutchman drinking beer. The statues are an accurate
reflection of the white man's life in the East in the days before an
enlightened policy towards the native put some check on commer-
cial rapacity.
refusal angered him and was one of the causes of the war.
I asked Bagoes if the story was true. His answer was that the
Dutch taught history in their own way, but that the Dewa
Agoeng had
warrior.
fighters.
ago
Dutch controllers
by a Dutch Resident, two Dutch assistants, seven
and a handful of police!
Very wisely the Dutch rule through the native regents, who,
in most cases, are the lawful heirs of the former princes. When
they are not the legitimate heirs, they are less popular with their
life the Balinese
people, for in spite of the speed of modern
retain much of their former feudal loyalty. Regents are chosen
own
still
by the government, but the native form of administration is retained throughout, and in the lower branches such as the headsmanship of a village the office is elective. On the whole, the system
works well, and, whether it be permanent or not, the Pax Batavica
is in some ways a more remarkable achievement than even the
Pax
Britannica.
Here the
priest.
native court
Beside
him
sat
had taken part in the "poepoetan." He still limps from the Dutch
which hit him in the knee. He is now a grandfather, is
very popular with both the Dutch and his own Balinese, and
has no vices except gambling on his fighting cocks.
The roof of the Court was decorated with weird friezes illustrating the heavenly punishments which await the evil-doers. They
were intended to intimidate and were far sterner than those prescribed by law for this temporary world. They were mostly to the
address of women, whose two chief crimes in Balinese eyes are
indolence and sterility. There was one picture of a woman who
had been unwilling or unable to learn weaving. She was being
bullet
330
male-and-female twins
month, that
is,
Balinese
woman who
bears
apparently justified
are non-productive.
and canyons
last part
of the road
open to motor
The
is
traffic.
Then
after
corner and
much
came
to the left
Batoer,
The
pelago which
ever,
is
religion,
how-
is still
Hindoo
in the study of
it
little
its intricacies.
maze
Indeed,
of super-
stitions
and mixed
is
331
on a
built
and new
The
The numerous
with brick
walls.
the temple like sentinels have attractive black roofs made of sugarcane bark. Every Balinese is supposed to visit Besakih once a
tower there.
Every district of the island has its own
the
of
We were shown over part
building by a priest. The
March
on
6th, was only a few
Balinese New Year, which begins
year.
by paying a heavy
fine. It is
the day
on which Heaven
is
for evil spirits. After the silence there are feasts followed
orgy of cock-fighting.
swept
by an
it
is
supposed to have
This tune the Chinese guide raised his voice: "No, no, Missie,
these are the wrong fruits. This kind make you pass water six or
seven times."
Balinese religious customs take a lot of knowing. After this
showed
and the
332
coast.
Before
I said, "if I
The fight itself was not very exciting. The cocks were fierce
enough but rather small. They wore no spurs. Long before any
serious damage was done my better feelings reasserted themselves,
and I gave the signal to stop. Not understanding my motives, the
men looked disappointed until I handed them their reward. Then
they grinned again. They had earned it, for they themselves had
put up an excellent performance, dancing around their animals
like professional boxers and urging them on with the same vigour
and, doubtless, the same expletives as a cockney brings to bear
on a donkey race. I expect that after we left there was a dispute
over the division of the prize money. Almost certainly the fight
was continued to a finish, for Bagoes told me that all the men
had been making side bets, and without a proper finish the bets
could not be
The
settled.
regent has nearly ruined himself through his betting losses. The
gambling instinct is strong in every class and caste of the population.
cocks,
But
opposite each other in baskets in order to stimulate hatred.
when no feast is near the Balinese use them for another form of
gamble. They take one down and let him loose among the village
hens. They then sit round and bet on which hen the lord of the
kampong poultry will bestow his affection. The fellow who picks
the
first
hen favoured
and on a particularly
whose
crickets,
gladiatorial arena
enclosed until
are
Here
match-box.
an ordinary European
they
Even
cruel form of
is
on
insect races
duelling between
333
one has
more work than the men. Throughhad been impressed by the glorious panorama of the
Dewi
the guardian
goddess of rice, who brings the slender green shoots to fruition.
More mundanely effective are the shelter huts for the Balinese
rice-fields.
it is
its
to chase
shrine to
away the
Sir,
rice-birds
from the
ripe
They employ an
ears.
tins rattle.
According
to
To me
rice-field is
to the
most
is
burnt
rice is
each shoot
sawah. Everything
At Koesambe,
is
a small village
Kloeng-Koeng, we
334
is
on the
Goa Lawah
or Bats'
Cave.
It
is
Here
temples.
cause against the Dutch. Stimulated by this historic association I
advanced to the mouth of the huge cavern. Thousands of large
bats clung to
its
The
the street and the tourists teed up on chairs in front of the hotel,
was grotesque. But the dancing itself was much less stereotyped
had seen in
Java.
modern and
rhythmic
to modern American music.
at times the
Two
girls, so
young
The
effects
man
Then
Goesti
Ngura
a long fan
Raka, one of the best male dancers of Bali, danced
ever
without
the
across
moved
he
releasing
which
in
stage
dance,
movements
arm
The
crossed
their
his legs from
sitting position.
and the swaying of the lithe body were very attractive, and even
to the uninitiated it was a remarkable performance.
The dances, however, were long, and before the end I found
I
And
myself yawning.
among
grow
rice
my
choice
336
would be a
satisfactory solu-
CHAPTER FIVE
EOM
November
to April Bali
is
The monsoon
a time
of
my
six-thirty.
The
tourists
other,
who
Kodak
with a photograph.
It
was
their
it specially.
is
girls
337
own
dancing when
The guild
villages.
Most of them
retire
from
Bali.
worker to play a leading native role. The young man was offered
what to a Balinese must have been a fabulous salary. He refused
to take it until the film was finished. Then he gave his money
to the guild.
In another
to a
temple gate.
work. Indeed, in their love of architecture, dancing, and the drama,
the Balinese afford a striking comparison with the ancient Greeks
whom
why
the island
I tried to
patriots.
me
One
of the
Dutch
business
men on
life
of his com-
the island
disease.
had
told
On
this
abduction.
promiscuity
After marriage there was little infidelity. I
remembered how Catherine the Great's liaison with Count
before marriage.
338
dog jumping
Then
policy.
archaeologist, I
was glad
to escape
quickly.
At Oeboed itself I saw something more to my fancy a charming modern Balinese house, which would have made an admirable
home for a European. I guessed that it must have been built by
one of the various European artists who have made Bali their
temporary home. But I was wrong. The house belonged to the
Balinese deputy of the Dutch East Indies Parliament. It was this
first troupe of Balinese dancers
progressive Balinese who took the
French Colonial Exhibition at
at
the
to
They appeared
Europe.
Vincennes in
1931,
and took
all
Paris
themselves resisted
all
Now
live in
state in
Oeboed.
semi-European
Bersakih the royal tombs near Tampaksiring are the most
With
339
had
An
short cut through the long lalang grass ended in disaster, for the
suit
ground was soft from the constant rains. But the ruin to
my
was
richly
in a deserted glory, to which solitude and landscape have combined to give a solemnity unrivalled by any other sepulchre in the
World or the Old.
New
the
with
my
usual reluctance to
bothered to use
make new
it.
My
surprise
I discovered that
made
a fortune in
oil,
the firm
340
as Russians than
Germans.
were
on Balinese
life
That
night,
Victor, to
my own
any one
The
at
it
with
else.
once from
Balinese.
He
my
being infringed.
As we drove out to the sacred forest of Boekit
told
me
life.
Sari,
Bagoes
to join
him some
years ago.
He
the sea.
Bali is not a bathing paradise, although there is one strip o
beach at Koota near Den Pasar which is safe from sharks. Nor,
They
and Eastern
Bali,
because these
me
a good story.
party of
American men came to Bali. Inspired by an ardent wish to bring
back the first Balinese wild buffalo head to the United States,
They sought
the services of a
their destination.
The
satisfied.
Would
that
all
Thus
big-game expeditions
ended so happily.
Our
visit to the
At
the
my
hand.
They followed
we came
to the
plebiscite
commission.
enough
and
retired, leaving
its
wounded and
dead behind.
its
When
nationalists
there
is,
in fact, little
difference.
I
made
whose
grave mien and dignified gait would have entitled him to a seat
of honour in any assembly of politicians. He was the leader of
the tribe. I soon saw that, like the wolf law in Kipling's
Jungle
Boo^
monkeys
is
The
is
his subjects at
some
distance
from
himself.
My
hunger and his fear. For a moment or two the leader watched this
performance with growing anger. The next peanut provoked him
to action. Two bounds, and his teeth were fixed in the posterior
of his offending subject, who took this forceful hint at
value, and with a reproachful glance at me scampered
its
proper
away
into
the grove.
the
for
he took his place beside us and sat placidly on the low wall, while
I took in the beauty of the scene. True, when the peanuts were
finished,
dignity, for
he ambled across
343
made
Don
Arjuno,
who
is
when
was
finished,
it
the
gazed our
From
monkeys the
tree
its little
wood and
344
was
surrounded by people.
We
amazingly
stopped soon with an apology for the inadequacy of
his interpretation, pointing out that seven pianos were necessary
in order to score Balinese music.
varied.
By
He
the time
we
it
We
We
thatched roof.
Limba gave
We
At
feet.
first
Then
the
men
in perfect
fro,
lasted
During the
attention so completely. I
am
have seen
and Nijinsky to
every Russian dancer of note from Pavlova
confused
are
Lifar.
and
Danilova
though pleasant
already
They
even if I never see the
figures in the shadows of my mind. But,
345
remain
distinctly
During the
with
me as
long as
when he was
intervals
warmth o
memory
a Bali night
lasts.
not performing
Limba
Only
few
years ago,
when South
Bali
introduced.
The dancing
all
on
fire,
and
mained unmarked.
When
we went
back
to
Miss Waterman's
to dinner.
The
in the stomach.
naked down
It
to the waist.
After dinner
we
listened to Spiess,
who
talks as well as
he
the Balinese. He
paints and plays. He had a genuine affection for
to dancing
devotion
of
their
admired their happy philosophy
life,
and
the
and music, their natural good taste,
plasticity of their
minds, always receptive of new ideas. But he, too, was filled with
forebodings regarding their future and with fears of their decay
from the corroding rust of tourism and modern civilisation. Already many of the leading Balinese dancers had received extravagant offers from American impresarios and Hollywood agents.
So far they had refused, but one day the temptation would be
too strong.
I could well believe
looking, intelligent,
it.
One had
and an
And
346
leader,
education.
He
are
strange, you white men. You think it is only your wisdom and
your virtue and your happiness that are true. You are stronger
black tiger knows when
than the wild beasts, but not so wise.
he
is
not hungry.
You do
not."
347
CHAPTER
SIX
ON
via
Kintamani by the
Den
east
rises steeply
into
mountainous and
less culti-
The
solitude
was very
pleasant.
feet
above
sea-level,
there
is
Agoeng and behind it, across the narrow straits, is the cone-shaped
peak of Lombok. Straight in front of one, with a wide valley
intervening, is a semi-circular range of mountains with Goenoeng
Batoer in the centre. Deep down at its base the placid waters of
Lake Batoer
The whole
scene reminded
me
From no
point in Scotland
mountains.
From no
smoke which
is
there such
Scottish
This peak
rises
is less
villagers
Who
times.
When,
On
began to hurl
348
is
no
With Bagoes
.lava.
we
until
crust through
feet
above
sea-level.
Even
and
than
tropical.
found European
the sky
was
Bagoes.
We
Here
to
had an hour
to wait for
my
insisted
duced
me
to
Ma
is
he
intro-
stock one is
legends are told. The
a princess and one of the widows of the Dewa Agoeng
who fell at the head of his household in the
woman, about
that she
office
whom many
of Kloeng-Koeng
"poepoetan" of 1908.
Ma
Patimah
is
said to
to
She
is,
nevertheless, the
349
me
my
to wait.
only
woman capitalist
as a
woman
of natural intelligence.
Bagoes was emotional.
My farewell with
him
last
year
We
him
My
steamer was
him for
At any
much
My
feelings
have
mongrel population of
Arabs, Chinese, Javanese, Buginese and Indians that part of Bali
seemed remote. Here on board the Treub I was back with a
vengeance in European
its
civilisation.
New
York dining at a
Subconsciously I saw myself again in
house in order to meet Mr. H. M. Warner, the head of
the great film company which bears his name. The
company had
friend's
had come
350
to
rights of
New
my
first
who
make my
deal,
thought
it
acquaintance.
knew nothing
At
him
point
got to put in two days in Italy, two in France, and two in London,
but I'm keeping one day for your little
country. There's a place
there I've got to see. But I can't remember the name."
I
who
told
me
had
"Carnoustie!"
to
go
I said
he
it
was he
there."
triumphandy.
it,"
said,
and
human,
tender,
full of love,
lit
up
his
it
cheering thought.
I must not be ungrateful to the Treub. It provided
one of the most thrilling episodes in my long life as a
Owing
to
my
had cut
me
with
traveller.
my
time-
the
steamer's
beadng
The Dutch
its
time schedule.
authorities, to
efficiency I
have
He
me
off. I
told
me
The
The normal time
minutes.
The harbour-master
had promised
to
forty-five minutes.
Then began a terrifying
city
was
and
He
on them
all
re-
minded
my
352
flesh. I
I felt
in Soerabaja
my
all
life
death-ride."
When,
me
madman
deposited
had been
minutes."
was
and
saw
The
place,
pilot
a train ploughing
its
on
his
way.
We
years. Nevertheless,
air flight, I went off with
many
my
nerves
still
ex-
Ahmat
to pay the
hurrying back to
by my
which had been the chief reason for my
Batavia. This was to Thamrin, the Javanese nationalist leader, to
whom my socialist friend in Djokja had given me letters.
received me at once.
Fortunately, I found him at home. He
hilarated
visit
He was
353
Dutch line which had taken me to Bali and the islands. Now
villa with a car and a "boy" to
was
he
living in a comfortable
him.
wait on
he spoke English
Although he had never been out of Java,
the nationalist
discussed
we
hours
two
For
nearly
tolerably well.
and
anti-communist
was
He
strongly
question in all its aspects.
in
and
never
communism
real
Java
maintained that there was no
would be. His great theme was that the Dutch East Indian Government should stimulate Javanese nationalism as a bulwark
of Japanese encroachment. He was very
against the danger
cautious in his references to the Dutch. But he had no illusions
about Europe, was fully conscious that the East had awakened,
that events in the Pacific would move swiftly.
and
the
prophesied
As we
They
considerable erudition.
self
favour of Javanese
guessed that, like all nationalists, he was in
converted him to
a
caution
natural
that
had
but
independence,
I
and
had
was
this
fleet
States. Britain,
The book
vourville,
354
is
is interesting only because its author, M. de Poua recognised authority on the East and because it
The
my
me
man
to
whom
had
letters of
introduction
can vouch.
Callenfels, like
as the laziest
there
man
was a jungle
than himself.
He
at once organised
gentleman
a pikulan across her shoulder,
place. His wife walked behind,
rice and everyzing that
in
hens
with
down
baskets,
oil,
weighed
was lying back on
man
The
ze
market.
in
had
bought
they
cushions. He looked very comfortable, but I saw that in his right
hand he carried a small cage with a dove. And zen I knew that I
had nozzing to learn from zat man or from zat tribe. If I had
been zere, I should have had a second wife to carry ze dove."
In the evening I dined with Miedl, my German friend, who
was still in Batavia and still engaged in wrangling with the Dutch
over his mining claims. The heat was stifling. For three days a
low blanket of heavy cloud had hung over the town. The slightest
movement made the sweat run down one's face. Even breathing
was an effort. It was a salutary reminder that, even with all the
355
modern comforts
of ice
man
and
electric fans,
to the
town.
mended
to us
was
closed.
The
We went
cabaret that
on
was open but empty except for the waiters and the orchestra
of three. We went in, ordered drinks, and sent for the pianist.
He was a Viennese. Both his colleagues were Austrians. All three
were obviously men of education. Indeed, the pianist had taken a
doctor's degree at Vienna University.
We asked him to play some old Viennese Schlager for us. To
the fierce patter of the tropical rain, with the sweat dripping in
beads from his brow, he hammered out "Servus Du" and "In der
kleinen Amerikan Bar." I hope that he was a better doctor than
he was a pianist. False notes and a piano sadly out of tune were
too much for us. We paid him lavishly and went out again into
It
the rain.
After many futile peregrinations our chauffeur pulled up outside a small villa in the "down town" area.
Javanese "boy"
ushered us into a large living-room with easy chairs and a gramophone, brought a row of beer bottles, and went to fetch his misa Batavian Malay past her early youth, but not without
allure. She clapped her hands, and presently in came three young
their eyes.
girls dressed in sarongs and rubbing
tress,
When
The
I explained
mistress opened negotiations at once.
to her that we were not interested in "business," but had come
for a talk
was
girls
partner like a bear dancing with a small monkey. The sight of this
German giant dancing with a slip of a girl whose head barely
came up to his chest should have been funny. But there was no
356
Now
it
membered how,
seemed that
it
had gone
for ever.
on
my
Then
I re-
Eastern
trip,
very dignified in her simple black dress and with the beautiful
deep voice of the real gipsy. Then, to the accompaniment of the
guitar, she had sung an emigre song which was new to me. The
tune was old, but the words, although they made no direct reference to politics, had an unmistakable significance. It was an exile's
days of Tsardom:
"Molts,
now on
a foreign strand;
in our time.
turned to Miedl.
was
still
and
357
table were two copies of the Bible: one in Dutch and the other
in English. They had been placed there by the "Gideonites," an
American Bible society started in the 'nineties by two commercial
with myself.
358
that I took
my
last leave
CHAPTER SEVEN
the thirty-four hours' journey from Batavia to
Singapore I kept myself aloof from the other passengers. I
DURING
wanted to capture all I could from these last few hours in the
East. True, there would be the pleasant voyage home. I should
meet my friends again. The Pembrokes were already on board.
The
it is
whom
am
indebted for so
much
new
on Malayan
soil.
me
off to
spend
my
in evening dress.
At a
table I
last
with
Johore.
To-morrow
his
resort.
It
my
old football
As
I was not
Cup
a
written
I
wanted
scribbled a few
message.
coming back, they
words in Malay on a copy for each.
There was also a picture of Amai standing by the golden rice
Final winners.
younger.
My memory jumped
dressed in
to
all
have her
first
of
My
rest
pen
to Freddie.
He shook his
head.
"You must
if
had
when
my
love
learnt
Malay
from
teacher:
"A
pearl
may
fall
From Amai we turned to the future. During these last few days
had begun to crystallise the impressions I had formed during my
trip. I wanted to try them out on Freddie before I went home.
I
There was the incontrovertible fact that Japan is to-day the most
powerful nation in Asia, and that her word, and not the word of
the League of Nations or any other combination of
powers, is law
to half the world.
As
had more than doubled her popuShe had to import increasingly, and to
pay for her imports she had to export increasingly. To express surprise and indignation at the growth of Japan's export trade was
merely to shut one's eyes to the acutest population problem of our
times. If Japanese goods were to be shut out, Japan must either
starve or fight. For climatic reasons she would probably find her
lation
main
during
my
lifetime.
Malay Archipelago.
my
fellow-
he
"We
The
and Karne-
he could obtain a
The
said.
this declaration,
would rather
that
Dutch East
"Why
not?"
else."
Then,
to
speak
too, there
was America.
It
was the
as
colonial
administrators.
361
They lacked
their
during
that I
my
selves
had formed an
association
whose
was
altruistic motives. It
interests,
which wanted
dictated
protection.
It
mind
would be
the real
my
the long run from the inside. I had been astounded by the vast
strides in education made since my time by the various native races
dated back to the early Egyptians. Empires were like flowers, trees,
animals, human beings and everything else that had life. They had
their birth, their childhood, their
middle age,
How
their decline,
and then
youth, their
manhood,
new
their
their death.
now
fertile
362
ideas
owns
Most
experts, including
many
British,
the
Dutch were
weaker position than the British if only beefficiency. Their colonial empire had reached a very
cause of their
in a
threshold to nationalism.
New World
my
neither better nor worse than other Europeans in the East, but, as a
high official put it bluntly, they did not believe in breeding bastards,
and the
white
men and
fact
native
women
in the peninsula
is
insignificant.
still
Dutch
The Dutch
predecessors.
The weaknesses
To
make
the
in
neighbouring countries.
had acquired a dominating position, and had assumed for its chief
the new and dangerous title of Head of the Civil Service. Policy
at home had no definite objectives and was complicated by contradictory aims of uninspired opportunism. The administrative
machine was too big.
Rome had given to the world the greatest free trade empire
and
end
the longest period of peace that it has ever known. But in the
the efficiency of the Roman colonial administration had been
and over-bureaucratisation of
same fate now threatened the
British colonial administration in the East. Already this centralisawas expressing itself in a certain lack of initiative on the part
tion
Frank Swettenham,
before
364
as I sat
remembered the
with him
in,
is
his
bitter
London
words of
flat
shortly
to-day a better road to
a successful
official
career than
all
was the
civil
Here in Singapore,
were
gramophones,
ings, lipstick,
bicycles
and even
method. The
ing the right men and in allowing them a free hand to maintain
a proper balance between concessions and the necessities of ordered progress.
Freddie listened to
me
very patiently.
He made
a good point.
The changes to-day were so rapid that the most dangerous advisers
at home were the men who had spent their lives in the East and
who had
dow
water like
The Lion
street
city
fitfully.
The
Sepoy
shots with
golf-course
a couple of Malay
"caddies."
365
I
all
was already
bustle.
the
streets.
Scores of
were cycling
government
among them
Unlike Shanghai,
clerks,
to their offices.
will cause
its
no
for
my
Leica
camera.
young
in
London than
in the Sahara.
But
there
is
no place in the
is at a
higher premium or where acquaintmore difficult to avoid than on an ocean liner. And
last few hours of farewell the desire to be alone was over-
is
whelming in
The
its
physical pain.
conversation
East.
France, in Germany, in
powers. But
East Indies.
it
was a
Italy,
in
vice in India,
Moscow was
all
the
pendence in the
Soviet Russia.
East.
And
in spite of
all
remained
that, in
order to suppress
Malay Archipelago.
was easy to attack Imperialism. But what did
the Geneva
behind us some
367
The
One doubt
obsessed
mind: the
my
effect
on
man
European war
the end not only of Europe's possessions in the East, but also of the
benefits of her ordered rule to millions of people.
There was not very much that was wrong with the British in
the East. If trouble came, they would do their duty like the "lost
legion" in the days of Rome's decline. But civilisation destroyed
itself
Hong-Kong
or in
now
spreading their
no
The
mense problem.
were
was
368
bungalow
The
sea
was
The
In
my
sunset.
mind
And
we drew
still
landmarks:
came from a
its
reflection
whom
was now
Passionately I desired to prolong the scene, but the great motorship moved silently and relentlessly on her course. As we passed
the point at Port Dickson, only a few lights twinkled from the
shore.
369
INDEX
Abyssinia, 37-41, 44,
106
Bantimoeroeng, 311
Baraboedoer, 261-9
Bardey, M., 44
Barthou, Madame, 8
Barton, Sir Sydney, 106-7
Batavia,
215-30,
Ling, 140
Beaverbrook, Lord, 9,
Beaverbrook Press, 3
Albert, 17
Belawan
Besakih, 331-2
Biretti,
64,
71,
122,
172,
186,
238-9, 253
Blanche,
Madame,
108,
in
Ampenan, 296
Angkor, 3, 10
Anjou, 5
Antinoiis, 20
Bongkasa, 344
Bonifacio, 14
Borneo, 81
Arjuno, 344
Artz, Simon, 29,
368
38
9,
17, 290,
Bernard, M., 40
Albury, 249
Alexander, King, 8
Alexandria, 35
4,
n,
Deli, 62-3
Berkeley of Grik, 189
Amai,
240,
Batu Pahat, 85
Baud, Baron, 250
Algiers,
233-7,
Ah
22,
10,
30
Australia, 25,
Bab-el-Mandeb, 40
Badoeng, Prince of, 326
"Bagoes," 318-23, 326, 328-30, 333,
337-9, 341-2, 349-50
Bakker, Sergeant, 328
Bali, 10, 256, 296-7, 317-50
Bandoeng, 237-41
Bangkok, 10
359
252
Broadmoor, 59
Brouage, 6
Brace, Major G. M., 167
Brunei, 8x
Bryce, Colonel "Teddie," 105-6, 130
Buddha, 268
Buitenzorg, 220, 231-3, 251
King
37 1
Daniel, Georges, 38
Bulow, Prince, 99
Buntak, 138-9, 173-4, 182, 201
Darius, 32
Dartmoor, 115
Daudet, Alphonse, 14
Dckker
35
Caesar, 20,
20
Calabria,
289
(Multatuli),
Caldecott, Sir
Den
Caprera, 15
Djibuti,
Carnarvon, Lord, 17
Djo-Djo, 22
Djokja,
Callenfels, Dr.,
277-8,
280,
of,
247-8,
270,
45
Elberfeld, Pictcr,
224
El Greco, 27
Engler, Robert, 140-1
Paul, 43-4
20
Eritrea,
6, 43,
Elba, 16
Tom, 16
Clemenceau, 5
189
298
Columbus, 15, 156
Congo, 3
Conrad, Joseph, 3, 10, 39, 51, 68, 96,
182, 302-4, 307, 312-3, 324, 347
Cook, Captain, 222-3
Corsica, 14-5
Sultan
Hugh,
267-70,
Dreyfus, 115
Chicherin, 15-6
Cleopatra,
254-62,
Chicago, 1 12-3
Clifford, Sir
36
Charleville, 45-8
Cheka, 119
Chetwode, Lady, 215
Chiang Kai-shek, 256
M.
Diaz, Bartholomew, 35
Dindings, 80
Djokjakarta,
Claudel,
319-20,
282-3, 335
Chamberlain, Joseph, 93
Champlain, 6
Clarke,
Pasar,
26
39
Etna, Mt., 20
Fauconnier, 96
Ferrajo, 16
Fcttes, 26,
42
Fontainebleau, 16
115
France, Anatole, 7
Goethe, 12
Cunningham,
Guaglino, 19
Gondangdia, 227-8
Galle Face Hotel, 54-5
Gama, Vasco da, 35, 156, 159
Gana, 320
Garibaldi, 15
Freddie,
69-79,
124,
136-8, 139-40, 144-5. i47-6i, 168-73,
182-4, 186, 192, 197, 200-8, 359-60
Cunningham, Sir George, 73-4
372
244
Gauguin, 38
Gebel-Miriam, 33
Geddes, Sir Eric, 153-4
Genoa, n, 15
Genoa, Conference of, 15
George, King, 57
George, Lloyd, 5, 153
Georgieff, General, 146
Gericault, 8
Germany,
19,
Gibraltar,
86
Kajang, 60
20
Kartini, Princess,
284
Hadrian, 20
Haji Sabudin, 149-50* 204
Kedah, 81
Kedah, Sultan
165
of,
Ham, Gordon, 89
Ham, General van, 297
Kelantan, 81
Kerensky, A.
Harar, 44
Harnish
islands,
Kcmal
51-2
Kingsley, 136
37
Hassan, 199
Kloet, 290
Kra, 245-6
Krakatau, 218
105
Hitler, 19,
Hong-Kong, 21,
He de
Re",
115
287
Labuan
80
Japan,
54,
83,
85-7,
1 19-20,
245-6,
361
Java,
195-6
Labuan, 81
Ipoh, 142
Irak,
of,
79,
Jeddah, 36
Jelebu, 90, 195-8
Haji, 298
Lampard, Arthur, 177
Lang, Andrew, 6
Lembang, 238
Lenin, 15-6, 82
34
Limba, 345-7
Linggi River, 150
Lipari Islands, 19
Lisbon, 159
Litvinoff, 10
373
114, 121
Mocha, 38-9
Moll, 249
Monte
Morgan, Mr.
Ludendorff, 47
24
Carlo,
Morocco,
J.
P.,
55
99
Nagasaki, 21
Mackensen, General, 10
Macgregor, 175-9
Mackie, Grant, 30, 189-90
200, 206,
Maddalena, 15
New
Madura
Ney, Marshal, 20
Island, 291
Northcliffe, Lord,
Oeboed, 339
81
of,
174,
184-7,
369
Zealand, 297
Magelang, 265-9
population
economics
172,
153,
143,
192-7,
16
Qldenbarnvelt, 11-13
Oliver, Captain, 52
92-3
Ma
Pahang, 51
Patimah, 349-50
Makar, Macan, 54-6
Massawah, 36
Masson, 16
Palcmbang, 217
Palmerston, Lord, 34
Pantai,
Mataram, 296-8
Maugham, Mr. Somerset, n, 96, 168,
302, 324
Mauretania, 13
360
Parmentier, 249
Patrick Academy, 4
Pasar Gedeh, 258-9
Peking, 106
Pembroke, Countess of, 54-5
Pembroke, Earl of, 50, 54, 69-70, 359
Menelik, 40, 44
Menangkabau, 53
Merah, the, 292-296
Perak, 80-1
Perak, Sultan
Pereira,
Don
Pericles,
39
Medan, 62-3
Miedl,
218,
229,
231,
233,
236-7,
of,
78, 164-5
Leonis, 158
Petain, Marshal, 8
Minikoi, 51-2
Philippines,
Pilgrim's Progress, 38
374
362
Plessen,
Semllante, 14
131*
Port Dickson,
162,
237-8
Selefis,
Pompey, 20
I35>
i4 I- 7>
*37
Sendayan, 145
Senegal, 8
368-9
Pouvourville,
49
Potjer, Captain,
M.
16
Shelley,
de, 354-5
Silva,
Pulau Wei, 58
Sinai,
Puntiak, 233-5
33
Rabel, 16
68, 72, I5*'2,
Raffles, Sir Stamford, 34,
245,
242,
Singaradja, 318
Ramazan, 36
Red Sea, 33-8
Reid, Mayne, 4
Reiliy, Sidney,
232-3,
215,
209,
192,
288
159, 228-9, 232, 268, 275,
16
of,
247, 277-80
Sir,
105
Ridley, 176
Spiess, Captain,,
Isabella, 44
Rimbaud, Jean-Arthur, 43-8
Rimbaud,
304
Rochefort, 6-8
344-7
35*
Times, 79
Stromboli, 18-20
Mr. Andre,
Rosslyn, Countess
of,
10,
8,
Stubbs, Lady,
324
9,
52-3,
137, 368
Rosslyn, Earl of, 17, 24, 31-2,
5<>>
55,
55i
Sultan
Rendlesham, Lord, 24
Roosevelt,
63, 68-79*
100-5,
Radek, 15
Rome,
183-5,
197-8, 252
Port Tewfik, 34
52, 103,
57
16
Rustoum, Napoleon's Mameluke,
Ruyter, Michael de, 19
Tahiti, 38
Taiping, 162
Taman
Sabang, 58-61
Saigon, 10
St. Paul,
26
270
Samoa, 23
Tanjong Priok,
Thamrin, 353-4
San Giovanni, 20
Sarawak, 180
221-2
Thellusson, Peter, 24
Sardinia, 14-5
Scotland, 4
Scott, Sir Walter,
Sari,
Tampaksiring, 339
Tanah Merah, 3*7
24
Sekamat, 185-6
Selangor, 81
100
Selangor, Sultan of,
Theotocopoulos,
Domemco
27
Thomas, Mr.
H., 94
Thomas,
J.
Thucydides,
(El Greco),
166
121
375
Victor
Emmanuel, King, 33
290
Toulon, 14
Trajan, 32
Trelawney, 16
Trenganu, 81, 85
Troth, the, 350-1
Waghorn, Lieutenant, 34
Wallace, Alfred Russel, 225, 233, 305,
324
Wardlaw,
Commodore Mark,
75
Warner, Mr. H. M., 350-1
Waterman, Miss, 341, 344
Weede, Dr. van, 326
Weigall, Mr. "Gerry," 147
Trugnet, Admiral, 14
Wellesley, Province, 81
Turner, 20
Tutankhamen, 17
Wickham,
Sir
Henry, 176
Willingdon, Marquess
Vendee,
la,
Venizelos,
5-6
27
of,
Verlaine, 43
Woh, 203-6
244
69-70,