<h2> CHAPTER XXII </h2>
<p>Before that well-nigh hopeless journey to the coast was half over I became
ill—so ill that anyone who had looked on me might well have imagined
that I had come to the end of my pilgrimage. That was what I feared. For
days I remained sunk in the deepest despondence; then, in a happy moment,
I remembered how, after being bitten by the serpent, when death had seemed
near and inevitable, I had madly rushed away through the forest in search
of help, and wandered lost for hours in the storm and darkness, and in the
end escaped death, probably by means of these frantic exertions. The
recollection served to inspire me with a new desperate courage. Bidding
good-bye to the Indian village where the fever had smitten me, I set out
once more on that apparently hopeless adventure. Hopeless, indeed, it
seemed to one in my weak condition. My legs trembled under me when I
walked, while hot sun and pelting rain were like flame and stinging ice to
my morbidly sensitive skin.</p>
<p>For many days my sufferings were excessive, so that I often wished myself
back in that milder purgatory of the forest, from which I had been so
anxious to escape. When I try to retrace my route on the map, there occurs
a break here—a space on the chart where names of rivers and
mountains call up no image to my mind, although, in a few cases, they were
names I seem to have heard in a troubled dream. The impressions of nature
received during that sick period are blurred, or else so coloured and
exaggerated by perpetual torturing anxiety, mixed with half-delirious
night-fancies, that I can only think of that country as an earthly
inferno, where I fought against every imaginable obstacle, alternately
sweating and freezing, toiling as no man ever toiled before. Hot and cold,
cold and hot, and no medium. Crystal waters; green shadows under coverture
of broad, moist leaves; and night with dewy fanning winds—these
chilled but did not refresh me; a region in which there was no sweet and
pleasant thing; where even the ita palm and mountain glory and airy
epiphyte starring the woodland twilight with pendent blossoms had lost all
grace and beauty; where all brilliant colours in earth and heaven were
like the unmitigated sun that blinded my sight and burnt my brain.
Doubtless I met with help from the natives, otherwise I do not see how I
could have continued my journey; yet in my dim mental picture of that
period I see myself incessantly dogged by hostile savages. They flit like
ghosts through the dark forest; they surround me and cut off all retreat,
until I burst through them, escaping out of their very hands, to fly over
some wide, naked savannah, hearing their shrill, pursuing yells behind me,
and feeling the sting of their poisoned arrows in my flesh.</p>
<p>This I set down to the workings of remorse in a disordered mind and to
clouds of venomous insects perpetually shrilling in my ears and stabbing
me with their small, fiery needles.</p>
<p>Not only was I pursued by phantom savages and pierced by phantom arrows,
but the creations of the Indian imagination had now become as real to me
as anything in nature. I was persecuted by that superhuman man-eating
monster supposed to be the guardian of the forest. In dark, silent places
he is lying in wait for me: hearing my slow, uncertain footsteps he starts
up suddenly in my path, outyelling the bearded aguaratos in the trees; and
I stand paralysed, my blood curdled in my veins. His huge, hairy arms are
round me; his foul, hot breath is on my skin; he will tear my liver out
with his great green teeth to satisfy his raging hunger. Ah, no, he cannot
harm me! For every ravening beast, every cold-blooded, venomous thing, and
even the frightful Curupita, half brute and half devil, that shared the
forest with her, loved and worshipped Rima, and that mournful burden I
carried, her ashes, was a talisman to save me. He has left me, the
semi-human monster, uttering such wild, lamentable cries as he hurries
away into the deeper, darker woods that horror changes to grief, and I,
too, lament Rima for the first time: a memory of all the mystic,
unimaginable grace and loveliness and joy that had vanished smites on my
heart with such sudden, intense pain that I cast myself prone on the earth
and weep tears that are like drops of blood.</p>
<p>Where in the rude savage heart of Guiana was this region where the natural
obstacles and pain and hunger and thirst and everlasting weariness were
terrible enough without the imaginary monsters and legions of phantoms
that peopled it, I cannot say. Nor can I conjecture how far I strayed
north or south from my course. I only know that marshes that were like
Sloughs of Despond, and barren and wet savannahs, were crossed; and
forests that seemed infinite in extent and never to be got through; and
scores of rivers that boiled round the sharp rocks, threatening to
submerge or dash in pieces the frail bark canoe—black and frightful
to look on as rivers in hell; and nameless mountain after mountain to be
toiled round or toiled over. I may have seen Roraima during that mentally
clouded period. I vaguely remember a far-extending gigantic wall of stone
that seemed to bar all further progress—a rocky precipice rising to
a stupendous height, seen by moonlight, with a huge sinuous rope of white
mist suspended from its summit; as if the guardian camoodi of the mountain
had been a league-long spectral serpent which was now dropping its coils
from the mighty stone table to frighten away the rash intruder.</p>
<p>That spectral moonlight camoodi was one of many serpent fancies that
troubled me. There was another, surpassing them all, which attended me
many days. When the sun grew hot overhead and the way was over open
savannah country, I would see something moving on the ground at my side
and always keeping abreast of me. A small snake, one or two feet long. No,
not a small snake, but a sinuous mark in the pattern on a huge serpent's
head, five or six yards long, always moving deliberately at my side. If a
cloud came over the sun, or a fresh breeze sprang up, gradually the
outline of that awful head would fade and the well-defined pattern would
resolve itself into the motlings on the earth. But if the sun grew more
and more hot and dazzling as the day progressed, then the tremendous
ophidian head would become increasingly real to my sight, with glistening
scales and symmetrical markings; and I would walk carefully not to stumble
against or touch it; and when I cast my eyes behind me I could see no end
to its great coils extending across the savannah. Even looking back from
the summit of a high hill I could see it stretching leagues and leagues
away through forests and rivers, across wide plains, valleys and
mountains, to lose itself at last in the infinite blue distance.</p>
<p>How or when this monster left me—washed away by cold rains perhaps—I
do not know. Probably it only transformed itself into some new shape, its
long coils perhaps changing into those endless processions and multitudes
of pale-faced people I seem to remember having encountered. In my devious
wanderings I must have reached the shores of the undiscovered great White
Lake, and passed through the long shining streets of Manoa, the mysterious
city in the wilderness. I see myself there, the wide thoroughfare filled
from end to end with people gaily dressed as if for some high festival,
all drawing aside to let the wretched pilgrim pass, staring at his fever-
and famine-wasted figure, in its strange rags, with its strange burden.</p>
<p>A new Ahasuerus, cursed by inexpiable crime, yet sustained by a great
purpose.</p>
<p>But Ahasuerus prayed ever for death to come to him and ran to meet it,
while I fought against it with all my little strength. Only at intervals,
when the shadows seemed to lift and give me relief, would I pray to Death
to spare me yet a little longer; but when the shadows darkened again and
hope seemed almost quenched in utter gloom, then I would curse it and defy
its power. Through it all I clung to the belief that my will would
conquer, that it would enable me to keep off the great enemy from my worn
and suffering body until the wished goal was reached; then only would I
cease to fight and let death have its way. There would have been comfort
in this belief had it not been for that fevered imagination which
corrupted everything that touched me and gave it some new hateful
character. For soon enough this conviction that the will would triumph
grew to something monstrous, a parent of monstrous fancies. Worst of all,
when I felt no actual pain, but only unutterable weariness of body and
soul, when feet and legs were numb so that I knew not whether I trod on
dry hot rock or in slime, was the fancy that I was already dead, so far as
the body was concerned—had perhaps been dead for days—that
only the unconquerable will survived to compel the dead flesh to do its
work.</p>
<p>Whether it really was will—more potent than the bark of barks and
wiser than the physicians—or merely the vis medicatrix with which
nature helps our weakness even when the will is suspended, that saved me I
cannot say; but it is certain that I gradually recovered health, physical
and mental, and finally reached the coast comparatively well, although my
mind was still in a gloomy, desponding state when I first walked the
streets of Georgetown, in rags, half-starved and penniless.</p>
<p>But even when well, long after the discovery that my flesh was not only
alive, but that it was of an exceedingly tough quality, the idea born
during the darkest period of my pilgrimage, that die I must, persisted in
my mind. I had lived through that which would have killed most men—lived
only to accomplish the one remaining purpose of my life. Now it was
accomplished; the sacred ashes brought so far, with such infinite labour,
through so many and such great perils, were safe and would mix with mine
at last. There was nothing more in life to make me love it or keep me
prisoner in its weary chains. This prospect of near death faded in time;
love of life returned, and the earth had recovered its everlasting
freshness and beauty; only that feeling about Rima's ashes did not fade or
change, and is as strong now as it was then. Say that it is morbid—call
it superstition if you like; but there it is, the most powerful motive I
have known, always in all things to be taken into account—a
philosophy of life to be made to fit it. Or take it as a symbol, since
that may come to be one with the thing symbolized. In those darkest days
in the forest I had her as a visitor—a Rima of the mind, whose words
when she spoke reflected my despair. Yet even then I was not entirely
without hope. Heaven itself, she said, could not undo that which I had
done; and she also said that if I forgave myself, Heaven would say no
word, nor would she. That is my philosophy still: prayers, austerities,
good works—they avail nothing, and there is no intercession, and
outside of the soul there is no forgiveness in heaven or earth for sin.
Nevertheless there is a way, which every soul can find out for itself—even
the most rebellious, the most darkened with crime and tormented by
remorse. In that way I have walked; and, self-forgiven and self-absolved,
I know that if she were to return once more and appear to me—even
here where her ashes are—I know that her divine eyes would no longer
refuse to look into mine, since the sorrow which seemed eternal and would
have slain me to see would not now be in them.</p>
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