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<p><br/><br/></p>
<h1> GREEN MANSIONS </h1>
<h2> A Romance of the Tropical Forest </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<h2> by W. H. Hudson </h2>
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<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_FORE"> FOREWORD </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> <b>GREEN MANSIONS</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PROL"> PROLOGUE </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII </SPAN></p>
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<p><SPAN name="link2H_FORE" id="link2H_FORE"></SPAN></p>
<h2> FOREWORD </h2>
<p>I take up pen for this foreword with the fear of one who knows that he
cannot do justice to his subject, and the trembling of one who would not,
for a good deal, set down words unpleasing to the eye of him who wrote
Green Mansions, The Purple Land, and all those other books which have
meant so much to me. For of all living authors—now that Tolstoi has
gone I could least dispense with W. H. Hudson. Why do I love his writing
so? I think because he is, of living writers that I read, the rarest
spirit, and has the clearest gift of conveying to me the nature of that
spirit. Writers are to their readers little new worlds to be explored; and
each traveller in the realms of literature must needs have a favourite
hunting-ground, which, in his good will—or perhaps merely in his
egoism—he would wish others to share with him.</p>
<p>The great and abiding misfortunes of most of us writers are twofold: We
are, as worlds, rather common tramping-ground for our readers, rather tame
territory; and as guides and dragomans thereto we are too superficial,
lacking clear intimacy of expression; in fact—like guide or dragoman—we
cannot let folk into the real secrets, or show them the spirit, of the
land.</p>
<p>Now, Hudson, whether in a pure romance like this Green Mansions, or in
that romantic piece of realism The Purple Land, or in books like Idle Days
in Patagonia, Afoot in England, The Land's End, Adventures among Birds, A
Shepherd's Life, and all his other nomadic records of communings with men,
birds, beasts, and Nature, has a supreme gift of disclosing not only the
thing he sees but the spirit of his vision. Without apparent effort he
takes you with him into a rare, free, natural world, and always you are
refreshed, stimulated, enlarged, by going there.</p>
<p>He is of course a distinguished naturalist, probably the most acute,
broad-minded, and understanding observer of Nature living. And this, in an
age of specialism, which loves to put men into pigeonholes and label them,
has been a misfortune to the reading public, who seeing the label
Naturalist, pass on, and take down the nearest novel. Hudson has indeed
the gifts and knowledge of a Naturalist, but that is a mere fraction of
his value and interest. A really great writer such as this is no more to
be circumscribed by a single word than America by the part of it called
New York. The expert knowledge which Hudson has of Nature gives to all his
work backbone and surety of fibre, and to his sense of beauty an intimate
actuality. But his real eminence and extraordinary attraction lie in his
spirit and philosophy. We feel from his writings that he is nearer to
Nature than other men, and yet more truly civilized. The competitive,
towny culture, the queer up-to-date commercial knowingness with which we
are so busy coating ourselves simply will not stick to him. A passage in
his Hampshire Days describes him better than I can: "The blue sky, the
brown soil beneath, the grass, the trees, the animals, the wind, and rain,
and stars are never strange to me; for I am in and of and am one with
them; and my flesh and the soil are one, and the heat in my blood and in
the sunshine are one, and the winds and the tempests and my passions are
one. I feel the 'strangeness' only with regard to my fellow men,
especially in towns, where they exist in conditions unnatural to me, but
congenial to them.... In such moments we sometimes feel a kinship with,
and are strangely drawn to, the dead, who were not as these; the long,
long dead, the men who knew not life in towns, and felt no strangeness in
sun and wind and rain." This unspoiled unity with Nature pervades all his
writings; they are remote from the fret and dust and pettiness of town
life; they are large, direct, free. It is not quite simplicity, for the
mind of this writer is subtle and fastidious, sensitive to each motion of
natural and human life; but his sensitiveness is somehow different from,
almost inimical to, that of us others, who sit indoors and dip our pens in
shades of feeling. Hudson's fancy is akin to the flight of the birds that
are his special loves—it never seems to have entered a house, but
since birth to have been roaming the air, in rain and sun, or visiting the
trees and the grass. I not only disbelieve utterly, but intensely dislike,
the doctrine of metempsychosis, which, if I understand it aright, seems
the negation of the creative impulse, an apotheosis of staleness—nothing
quite new in the world, never anything quite new—not even the soul
of a baby; and so I am not prepared to entertain the whim that a bird was
one of his remote incarnations; still, in sweep of wing, quickness of eye,
and natural sweet strength of song he is not unlike a super-bird—which
is a horrid image. And that reminds me: This, after all, is a foreword to
Green Mansions—the romance of the bird-girl Rima—a story
actual yet fantastic, which immortalizes, I think, as passionate a love of
all beautiful things as ever was in the heart of man. Somewhere Hudson
says: "The sense of the beautiful is God's best gift to the human soul."
So it is: and to pass that gift on to others, in such measure as herein is
expressed, must surely have been happiness to him who wrote Green
Mansions. In form and spirit the book is unique, a simple romantic
narrative transmuted by sheer glow of beauty into a prose poem. Without
ever departing from its quality of a tale, it symbolizes the yearning of
the human soul for the attainment of perfect love and beauty in this life—that
impossible perfection which we must all learn to see fall from its high
tree and be consumed in the flames, as was Rima the bird-girl, but whose
fine white ashes we gather that they may be mingled at last with our own,
when we too have been refined by the fire of death's resignation. The book
is soaked through and through with a strange beauty. I will not go on
singing its praises, or trying to make it understood, because I have other
words to say of its author.</p>
<p>Do we realize how far our town life and culture have got away from things
that really matter; how instead of making civilization our handmaid to
freedom we have set her heel on our necks, and under it bite dust all the
time? Hudson, whether he knows it or not, is now the chief standard-bearer
of another faith. Thus he spake in The Purple Land: "Ah, yes, we are all
vainly seeking after happiness in the wrong way. It was with us once and
ours, but we despised it, for it was only the old common happiness which
Nature gives to all her children, and we went away from it in search of
another grander kind of happiness which some dreamer—Bacon or
another—assured us we should find. We had only to conquer Nature,
find out her secrets, make her our obedient slave, then the Earth would be
Eden, and every man Adam and every woman Eve. We are still marching
bravely on, conquering Nature, but how weary and sad we are getting! The
old joy in life and gaiety of heart have vanished, though we do sometimes
pause for a few moments in our long forced march to watch the labours of
some pale mechanician, seeking after perpetual motion, and indulge in a
little, dry, cackling laugh at his expense." And again: "For here the
religion that languishes in crowded cities or steals shamefaced to hide
itself in dim churches flourishes greatly, filling the soul with a solemn
joy. Face to face with Nature on the vast hills at eventide, who does not
feel himself near to the Unseen?</p>
<p>"Out of his heart God shall not pass<br/>
His image stamped is on every grass."<br/></p>
<p>All Hudson's books breathe this spirit of revolt against our new
enslavement by towns and machinery, and are true oases in an age so
dreadfully resigned to the "pale mechanician."</p>
<p>But Hudson is not, as Tolstoi was, a conscious prophet; his spirit is
freer, more willful, whimsical—almost perverse—and far more
steeped in love of beauty. If you called him a prophet he would stamp his
foot at you—as he will at me if he reads these words; but his voice
is prophetic, for all that, crying in a wilderness, out of which, at the
call, will spring up roses here and there, and the sweet-smelling grass. I
would that every man, woman, and child in England were made to read him;
and I would that you in America would take him to heart. He is a tonic, a
deep refreshing drink, with a strange and wonderful flavour; he is a mine
of new interests, and ways of thought instinctively right. As a simple
narrator he is well-nigh unsurpassed; as a stylist he has few, if any,
living equals. And in all his work there is an indefinable freedom from
any thought of after-benefit—even from the desire that we should
read him. He puts down what he sees and feels, out of sheer love of the
thing seen, and the emotion felt; the smell of the lamp has not touched a
single page that he ever wrote. That alone is a marvel to us who know that
to write well, even to write clearly, is a wound business, long to learn,
hard to learn, and no gift of the angels. Style should not obtrude between
a writer and his reader; it should be servant, not master. To use words so
true and simple that they oppose no obstacle to the flow of thought and
feeling from mind to mind, and yet by juxtaposition of word-sounds set up
in the recipient continuing emotion or gratification—this is the
essence of style; and Hudson's writing has pre-eminently this double
quality. From almost any page of his books an example might be taken. Here
is one no better than a thousand others, a description of two little girls
on a beach: "They were dressed in black frocks and scarlet blouses, which
set off their beautiful small dark faces; their eyes sparkled like black
diamonds, and their loose hair was a wonder to see, a black mist or cloud
about their heads and necks composed of threads fine as gossamer, blacker
than jet and shining like spun glass—hair that looked as if no comb
or brush could ever tame its beautiful wildness. And in spirit they were
what they seemed: such a wild, joyous, frolicsome spirit, with such grace
and fleetness, one does not look for in human beings, but only in birds or
in some small bird-like volatile mammal—a squirrel or a
spider-monkey of the tropical forest, or the chinchilla of the desolate
mountain slopes; the swiftest, wildest, loveliest, most airy, and most
vocal of small beauties." Or this, as the quintessence of a sly remark:
"After that Mantel got on to his horse and rode away. It was black and
rainy, but he had never needed moon or lantern to find what he sought by
night, whether his own house, or a fat cow—also his own, perhaps."
So one might go on quoting felicity for ever from this writer. He seems to
touch every string with fresh and uninked fingers; and the secret of his
power lies, I suspect, in the fact that his words: "Life being more than
all else to me. . ." are so utterly true.</p>
<p>I do not descant on his love for simple folk and simple things, his
championship of the weak, and the revolt against the cagings and cruelties
of life, whether to men or birds or beasts, that springs out of him as if
against his will; because, having spoken of him as one with a vital
philosophy or faith, I don't wish to draw red herrings across the main
trail of his worth to the world. His work is a vision of natural beauty
and of human life as it might be, quickened and sweetened by the sun and
the wind and the rain, and by fellowship with all the other forms of life—the
truest vision now being given to us, who are more in want of it than any
generation has ever been. A very great writer; and—to my thinking—the
most valuable our age possesses.</p>
<p>JOHN GALSWORTHY</p>
<p>September 1915 Manaton: Devon</p>
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<h1> GREEN MANSIONS </h1>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PROL" id="link2H_PROL"></SPAN></p>
<h2> PROLOGUE </h2>
<p>It is a cause of very great regret to me that this task has taken so much
longer a time than I had expected for its completion. It is now many
months—over a year, in fact—since I wrote to Georgetown
announcing my intention of publishing, IN A VERY FEW MONTHS, the whole
truth about Mr. Abel. Hardly less could have been looked for from his
nearest friend, and I had hoped that the discussion in the newspapers
would have ceased, at all events, until the appearance of the promised
book. It has not been so; and at this distance from Guiana I was not aware
of how much conjectural matter was being printed week by week in the local
press, some of which must have been painful reading to Mr. Abel's friends.
A darkened chamber, the existence of which had never been suspected in
that familiar house in Main Street, furnished only with an ebony stand on
which stood a cinerary urn, its surface ornamented with flower and leaf
and thorn, and winding through it all the figure of a serpent; an
inscription, too, of seven short words which no one could understand or
rightly interpret; and finally the disposal of the mysterious ashes—that
was all there was relating to an untold chapter in a man's life for
imagination to work on. Let us hope that now, at last, the romance-weaving
will come to an end. It was, however, but natural that the keenest
curiosity should have been excited; not only because of that peculiar and
indescribable charm of the man, which all recognized and which won all
hearts, but also because of that hidden chapter—that sojourn in the
desert, about which he preserved silence. It was felt in a vague way by
his intimates that he had met with unusual experiences which had
profoundly affected him and changed the course of his life. To me alone
was the truth known, and I must now tell, briefly as possible, how my
great friendship and close intimacy with him came about.</p>
<p>When, in 1887, I arrived in Georgetown to take up an appointment in a
public office, I found Mr. Abel an old resident there, a man of means and
a favourite in society. Yet he was an alien, a Venezuelan, one of that
turbulent people on our border whom the colonists have always looked on as
their natural enemies. The story told to me was that about twelve years
before that time he had arrived at Georgetown from some remote district in
the interior; that he had journeyed alone on foot across half the
continent to the coast, and had first appeared among them, a young
stranger, penniless, in rags, wasted almost to a skeleton by fever and
misery of all kinds, his face blackened by long exposure to sun and wind.
Friendless, with but little English, it was a hard struggle for him to
live; but he managed somehow, and eventually letters from Caracas informed
him that a considerable property of which he had been deprived was once
more his own, and he was also invited to return to his country to take his
part in the government of the Republic. But Mr. Abel, though young, had
already outlived political passions and aspirations, and, apparently, even
the love of his country; at all events, he elected to stay where he was—his
enemies, he would say smilingly, were his best friends—and one of
the first uses he made of his fortune was to buy that house in Main Street
which was afterwards like a home to me.</p>
<p>I must state here that my friend's full name was Abel Guevez de Argensola,
but in his early days in Georgetown he was called by his Christian name
only, and later he wished to be known simply as "Mr. Abel."</p>
<p>I had no sooner made his acquaintance than I ceased to wonder at the
esteem and even affection with which he, a Venezuelan, was regarded in
this British colony. All knew and liked him, and the reason of it was the
personal charm of the man, his kindly disposition, his manner with women,
which pleased them and excited no man's jealousy—not even the old
hot-tempered planter's, with a very young and pretty and light-headed wife—his
love of little children, of all wild creatures, of nature, and of
whatsoever was furthest removed from the common material interests and
concerns of a purely commercial community. The things which excited other
men—politics, sport, and the price of crystals—were outside of
his thoughts; and when men had done with them for a season, when like the
tempest they had "blown their fill" in office and club-room and house and
wanted a change, it was a relief to turn to Mr. Abel and get him to
discourse of his world—the world of nature and of the spirit.</p>
<p>It was, all felt, a good thing to have a Mr. Abel in Georgetown. That it
was indeed good for me I quickly discovered. I had certainly not expected
to meet in such a place with any person to share my tastes—that love
of poetry which has been the chief passion and delight of my life; but
such a one I had found in Mr. Abel. It surprised me that he, suckled on
the literature of Spain, and a reader of only ten or twelve years of
English literature, possessed a knowledge of our modern poetry as intimate
as my own, and a love of it equally great. This feeling brought us
together and made us two—the nervous olive-skinned Hispano-American
of the tropics and the phlegmatic blue-eyed Saxon of the cold north—one
in spirit and more than brothers. Many were the daylight hours we spent
together and "tired the sun with talking"; many, past counting, the
precious evenings in that restful house of his where I was an almost daily
guest. I had not looked for such happiness; nor, he often said, had he. A
result of this intimacy was that the vague idea concerning his hidden
past, that some unusual experience had profoundly affected him and perhaps
changed the whole course of his life, did not diminish, but, on the
contrary, became accentuated, and was often in my mind. The change in him
was almost painful to witness whenever our wandering talk touched on the
subject of the aborigines, and of the knowledge he had acquired of their
character and languages when living or travelling among them; all that
made his conversation most engaging—the lively, curious mind, the
wit, the gaiety of spirit tinged with a tender melancholy—appeared
to fade out of it; even the expression of his face would change, becoming
hard and set, and he would deal you out facts in a dry mechanical way as
if reading them in a book. It grieved me to note this, but I dropped no
hint of such a feeling, and would never have spoken about it but for a
quarrel which came at last to make the one brief solitary break in that
close friendship of years. I got into a bad state of health, and Abel was
not only much concerned about it, but annoyed, as if I had not treated him
well by being ill, and he would even say that I could get well if I wished
to. I did not take this seriously, but one morning, when calling to see me
at the office, he attacked me in a way that made me downright angry with
him. He told me that indolence and the use of stimulants was the cause of
my bad health. He spoke in a mocking way, with a presence of not quite
meaning it, but the feeling could not be wholly disguised. Stung by his
reproaches, I blurted out that he had no right to talk to me, even in fun,
in such a way. Yes, he said, getting serious, he had the best right—that
of our friendship. He would be no true friend if he kept his peace about
such a matter. Then, in my haste, I retorted that to me the friendship
between us did not seem so perfect and complete as it did to him. One
condition of friendship is that the partners in it should be known to each
other. He had had my whole life and mind open to him, to read it as in a
book. HIS life was a closed and clasped volume to me.</p>
<p>His face darkened, and after a few moments' silent reflection he got up
and left me with a cold good-bye, and without that hand-grasp which had
been customary between us.</p>
<p>After his departure I had the feeling that a great loss, a great calamity,
had befallen me, but I was still smarting at his too candid criticism, all
the more because in my heart I acknowledged its truth. And that night,
lying awake, I repented of the cruel retort I had made, and resolved to
ask his forgiveness and leave it to him to determine the question of our
future relations. But he was beforehand with me, and with the morning came
a letter begging my forgiveness and asking me to go that evening to dine
with him.</p>
<p>We were alone, and during dinner and afterwards, when we sat smoking and
sipping black coffee in the veranda, we were unusually quiet, even to
gravity, which caused the two white-clad servants that waited on us—the
brown-faced subtle-eyed old Hindu butler and an almost blue-black young
Guiana Negro—to direct many furtive glances at their master's face.
They were accustomed to see him in a more genial mood when he had a friend
to dine. To me the change in his manner was not surprising: from the
moment of seeing him I had divined that he had determined to open the shut
and clasped volume of which I had spoken—that the time had now come
for him to speak.</p>
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