킬리만자로의 눈 (The Snows Of Kilimanjaro)
The story opens with a paragraph about Mount Kilimanjaro, the highest mountain in Africa, which is also called the “House of God.” There is, we are told, the frozen carcass of a leopard near the summit. No one knows why it is there. Then we are introduced to Harry, a writer dying of gangrene, and his rich wife Helen, who are on safari in Africa. Harry’s situation makes him irritable, and he speaks about his own death in a matter-of-fact way that upsets his wife, predicting that a rescue plane will never come. He quarrels with her over everything, from whether he should drink a whiskey and soda to whether she should read to him. Helen is obviously concerned for his welfare, but self-pity and frustration make him unpleasant to her.
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Kilimanjaro is a snow covered mountain igjio feet high, and is said to be the highest mountain in Africa. Its western summit is called the Masai 'Ngqje Ngai', the House of God.
Close to the western summit there is the dried and frozen carcass of a leopard. Mo one has explained what the leopard was seeking at that altitude.
'THE marvellous thing is that it's painless' he said. 'That's how you know when it starts.'
'Is it really?'
'Absolutely. I'm awfully sorry about the odour, though.
That must bother you.'
'Don't! Please don't.'
'Look at them/ he said. 'Now is it sight or is it scent that brings them like that?'
The cot the man lay on was in the wide shade of a mimosa tree and as he looked out past the shade on to the glare of the plain there were three of the big birds squatted obscenely,
while in the sky a dozen more sailed, making quick-moving shadows as they passed.
'They've been there since the day the truck broke down', he said. 'To-day's the first time any have lit on the ground.
I watched the way they sailed very carefully at first in case I ever wanted to use them in a story. That's funny now.'
'I wish you wouldn't/ she said.
'I'm only talking/ he said. 'It's much easier if I talk. But I don't want to bother you.'
'You know it doesn't bother me/ she said. 'It's that I've gotten so very nervous not being able to do anything. I think we might make it as easy as we can until the plane comes.'
'Or until the plane doesn't come.'
'Please tell me what I can do. There must be something I can do.
'You can take the leg off and that might stop it, though I doubt it. Or you can shoot me. You're a good shot now. I taftght you to shoot, didn't I?'
'Please don't talk that way. Couldn't I read to you?'
'Read what?'
'Anythingin the book bag that we haven't read.'
'I can't listen to it,' he said. 'Talking is the easiest. We
quarrel and that makes the time pass.
'I don't quarrel. I never want to quarrel. Let's not quarrel any more. No matter how nervous we get. Maybe they will be back with another truck to-day. Maybe the plane will come.'
'I don't want to move,' the man said. 'There is no sense in moving now except to make it easier for you.
'That's cowardly.'
'Can't you let a man die as comfortably as he can without calling him names? What's the use of slanging me?'
'You're not going to die.
'Don't be silly. I'm dying now. Ask those bastards.' He looked over to where the huge, filthy birds sat, their naked heads sunk in the hunched feathers. A fourth planed down to run quick-legged and then waddle slowly toward the others.
'They are around every camp. You never notice them.
You can't die if you don't give up.'
'Where did you read that? You're such a bloody fool.
'You might think about someone else.'
'For Christ's sake, 5 he said. 'That's been my trade.
He lay then and was quiet for a while and looked across the heat shimmer of the plain to the edge of the bush. There were a few Tommies that showed minute and white against the yellow and, far off, he saw a herd of zebra, white against the green of the bush. This was a pleasant camp under big trees against a hill, with good water, and close by, a nearly dry water hole where sand grouse flighted in the mornings.
'Wouldn't you like me to read?', she asked. She was sitting on a canvas chair beside his cot. 'There's a breeze coming up'
'No thanks.'
'Maybe the truck will come.'
'I don't give a damn about the truck.'
'I do.
'You give a damn about so many things that I dc^'+ '
'Not so many, Harry.'
'What about a drink?'
'It's supposed to be bad for you. It said in Black's to
.avoid all alcohol. You shouldn't drink.'
'Molo!' he shouted.
'Yes, Bwana.'
'Bring whisky-soda.'
'Yes, Bwana.'
'You shouldn't,' she said. 'That's what I mean by giving up. It says it's bad for you. I know it's bad for you.'
'No,' he said. 'It's good for me.'
So now it was all over, he thought. So now he would never have a chance to finish it. So this was the way it ended in a bickering over a drink. Since the gangrene started in
his right leg he had no pain and with the pain the horror
had gone and all he felt now was a great tiredness and anger
that this was the end of it. For this, that now was coming, he
had very little curiosity. For years it had obsessed him;
but now it meant nothing in itself. It was strange how easy
being tired enough made it.
Now he would never write the things that he had saved to write until he knew enough to write them well. Well, he would not have to fail at trying to write them either. Maybe
you could never write them, and that was why you put them off and delayed the starting. Well, he would never know, now.
'I wish we'd never come,' the woman said. She was looking at him holding the glass and biting her lip. 'You never would have gotten anything like this in Paris. You always said you loved Paris. We could have stayed in Paris or gone anywhere. I'd have gone anywhere. I said I'd go anywhere you wanted. If you wanted to shoot we could have gone shooting in Hungary and been comfortable.'
'Your bloody money,' he said.
'That's noffair,' she said. 'It was always yours as much as
mine. I left everything and I went wherever you wanted to go and I've done what you wanted to do. But I wish we'd never come here.'
'You said you loved it.'
'I did when you were all right. But now I hate it. I don't see why that had to happen to your leg. What have we done to have that happen to us?'
'I suppose what I did was to forget to put iodine on it
when I first scratched it. Then I didn't pay any attention to
it because I never infect. Then, later, when it got bad, it was
probably using that weak carbolic solution when the other antiseptics ran out that paralysed the minute blood vessels and started the gangrene.' He looked at her, 'What else?'
'I don't mean that.'
'If we could have hired a good mechanic instead of a half-baked kikuyu driver, he would have checked the oil and
never burned out that bearing in the truck.'
'I don't mean that.'
'If you hadn't left your own people, your goddamned Old
Westbury, Saratoga, Palm Beach people to take me on-'.
'Why, I loved you. That's not fair. I love you now. I'll
always love you. Don't you love me?'
'No,' said the man. 'I don't think so. I never have.'
'Harry, what are you saying? You're out of your head.'
'No. I haven't any head to go out of.'
'Don't drink that,' she said. 'Darling, please don't drink
that. We have to do everything we can.'
'You do it,' he said. 'I'm tired.'
Mow in his mind he saw a railway station at Karagatch and he was standing with his pack and that was the headlight of the Simplon- Orient cutting the dark now and he was leaving Thrace then
after the retreat. That was one of the things he had saved to write.,
wtth, in the morning at breakfast ', looking out the window and seeing
snow on the mountains in Bulgaria and Nanseris Secretary asking the old man if it were snow and the old man looking dt it and saying, JV0, thafs not snow. Ifs too early for snow. And the Secretary
repeating to the other girls, No, you see. Ifs not snow and them all
saying, Ifs not snow, we were mistaken. But it was the snow all
right and he sent them on into it when he evolved exchange of popula-
tions. And it was snow they tramped along in until they died that
winter.
It was snow too that fell all Christmas week that year up in the Gauertal, that year they lived in the woodcutter's house with the big square porcelain stove that filled half the room, and they slept on
mattresses filled with beech leaves, the time the deserter came with his
feet bloody in the snow. He said the police were right behind him and
they gave him woollen socks and held the gendarmes talking until the tracks had drifted over.
In Schrunz, on Christmas day, the snow was so bright it hurt your eyes when you looked out from the weinstube and saw everyone coming home from church. That was where they walked up the
sleigh-smoothed urine-yellowed road along the river with the steep
pine hills, skis heavy on the shoulder, and where they ran that great
run down the glacier above the Madlener-fyaus y the snow as smooth
to see as cake frosting and as light as pdiwfev^nd he remembered
the noiseless rush the speed made as you dropped dbwn like a bird.
They were snow-bound a week in the Madlener-haus that time in
the blizzard playing cards in the smoke by the lantern light and the
stakes were higher all the time as Hen Lent lost more. Finally he
lost it all. Everything, the skischule money and all the season's
profit and then his capital. He could see him with his long nose,
picking up the cards and then opening, 'Sans Voir\ There was always
gambling then. When there was no snow you gambled and when there
was too much you gambled. He thought of all the time in his life he
had spent gambling.
But he had 'never written a line of that, nor of that cold, bright
Christmas day with the mountains showing across the plain that
Johnson had flown across the lines to bomb the Austrian officers' leave
train, machine-gunning them as they scattered and ran. He rerr&m-
bered Johnson afterwards coming into the mess and starting to tell
about it. Arid how quiet it got and then somebody saying, 'You
bloody murderous bastard!''
Those were the same Austrians they killed then that he skied with
later. No, not the same. Hans, that he skied with all that year, had
been in the Kaiser-Jdgers and when they went hunting hares together
up the little valley above the saw-mill they had talked of the fighting
on Pasubio and of the attack on Pertica and Asalone and he had never written a word of that. Nor of Monte Corno, nor the Siete Commum, nor of Arsiedo.
How many winters had he lived in the Voralberg and the Arlberg?
It was four and then he remembered the man who had the fox to sell
when they had walked into Bludenz, that time to buy presents, and
the cherry pip taste of good kirsch, the fast-slipping rush of running
powder-snow on crust, singing 'Hi! Ho! said Roily T as you ran
down the last stretch to the steel drop, taking it straight, then running
the orchard in three turns and out across the ditch and on to the icy
road behind the inn. Knocking your bindings loose, kicking the skis
free and leaning them up against the wooden wall of the inn, the
lamplight' coming from the window, where inside, in the smoky,
new-wine smelling warmth, they were playing the accordion.
'Where did we stay in Paris? 3 he asked the woman who was sitting by him in a canvas chair, now, in Africa.
'At the Crillon. You know that.'
'Why do I know that?'
'That's where we always stayed.'
'No. Not always.'
'There and at the Pavilion Henri-Quatre in St. Germain.
You said you loved it there.'
'Love is a dunghill/ said Harry. 'And I'm the cock that gets on it to crow.'
64 THE SNOWS OF KILIMANJARO
'If you have to go away/ she said, 'is it absolutely necessary
to kill off everything you leave behind? I mean do you have
to take away everything? Do you have to kill your horse,
aiYd your wife and burn your saddle and your armour? 5
'Yes/ be said. 'Your damned money was my armour. My
Swift and my Armour.'
'Don't.'
'All right. I'll stop that. I don't want to hurt you.'
'It's a little bit late now.'
'All right then. I'll go on hurting you. It's more amusing.
The only thing I ever really liked to do with you I can't do now.'
'No, that's not true. You liked to do many things and
everything you wanted to do I did.'
'Oh, for Christ sake stop bragging, will you?'
He looked at her and saw her crying.
'Listen,' he said. 'Do you think that it is fun to do this? I don't know why I'm doing it. It's trying to kill to keep yourself alive, I imagine. I was all right when we started talking.
I didn't mean to start this, and now I'm crazy as a coot and being as cruel to you as I can be. Don't pay any attention, darling, to what I say. I love you, really. You know I love you. I've never loved anyone else the way I love you.
He slipped into the familiar lie he made his bread and butter by.
'You're sweet to me.'
'You bitch,' he said. 'You rich bitch. That's poetry. I'm full of poetry now. Rot and poetry. Rotten poetry.'
'Stop it. Harry, why do you have to turn into a devil
now?'
'I don't like to leave anything,' the man said. 'I don't like
to leave things behind.'
It was evening now and he had been asleep. The sun was
gone behind the hill and there was a shadow all across the
plain and the small animals were feeding close to camp;
THE SNOWS OF KILIMANJARO 65
quick dropping heads and switching tails, he watched them
keeping well out away from the bush now. The birds no
longer waited on the ground. They were all perched heavily
in a tree. There were many more of them. His personal
boy was sitting by the bed.
'Memsahib*s gone to shoot, 3 the boy said. 'Does Bwana
want? 5
'Nothing.'
She had gone to kill a piece of meat and, knowing how he
liked to watch the game, she had gone well away so she
would not disturb this little pocket of the plain that he could see. She was always thoughtful, he thought. on anything she knew about, or had read, or that she had ever heard.
It was not her fault that when he went to her he was
already over. How could a woman know that you meant
nothing that you said; that you spoke only from habit and to be comfortable? After he no longer meant what he said, his lies were more successful with women than when he had told them the truth.
It was not so much that he lied as that there was no truth
to tell. He had had his life and it was over and then he
went on living it again with different people and more
money, with the best of the same places, and some new ones.
You kept from thinking and it was all marvellous. You
\vere equipped with good insides so that you did not go to
pieces that way, the way most of them had, and you made an
attitude that you cared nothing for the work you used to do,
now that you could no longer do it. But, in yourself, you
said that you would write about these people; about the
very rich; that you were really not of them but a spy in their
country; that you would leave it and write of it and for once
it would be written by some one who knew what he was
writing of. But he would never do it, because each day of not
writing, of comfort, of being that which he despised, dulled
his ability and softened his will to work so that, finally, he
did no work at all. The people he knew now were all much
66 THE SNOWS OF KILIMANJARO
more comfortable when he did not work. Africa was where he had been happiest in the good time of his life, so he had come out here to start again. They had made this safari \tfith the minimum of comfort. There was no hardship;
but there was no luxury and he had thought that he could
get back into training that way. That in some* way he could work the fat off his soul the way a fighter went into the mountains to work and train in order to burn it out of his body.
She had liked it. She said she loved it. She loved anything that was exciting, that involved a change of scene, where there were new people and where things were pleasant.
And he had felt the illusion of returning strength of will to
work. Now if this was how it ended, and he knew it was, he
must not turn like some snake biting itself because its back
was broken. It wasn't this woman's fault. If it had not been
she it would have been another. If he lived by a lie he
should try to die by it. He heard a shot beyond the hill.
She shot very well, this good, this rich bitch, this kindly
caretaker and destroyer of his talent. Nonsense. He had
destroyed his talent himself. Why should he blame this
woman because she kept him well? He had destroyed his
talent by not using it, by betrayals of himself and what he
believed in, by drinking so much that he blunted the edge
of his perceptions, by laziness, by sloth, and by snobbery,
by pride and by prejudice, by hook and by crook. What was this? A catalogue of old books? What was his talent anyway? It was a talent all right but instead of using it, he had
traded on it. It was never what he had done, but always
what he could do. And he had chosen to make his living with
something else instead of a pen or a pencil. It was strange,
tod, wasn't it, that when he fell in love with another woman,
that woman should always have more money than the last
one? But when he no longer was in love, when he was only
lying, as to this woman, now, who had the most money of
all, who had all the money that was, who had had a husband and children, ' who had taken lovers and been dissatisfied
with them, and who loved him dearly as a writer, as a man,
as a companion and as a proud possession; it was. strange
that when he did not love her at all and was lying, that Ire
should be able to give her more for her money thamwhen he
had really loVed.
We must all be cut out for what we do, he thought. However you make your living is where your talent lies. He had sold vitality, in one form or another, all his life, and when
your affections are not too involved you give much better
value for the money. He had found that out but he would
never write that, now, either. No, he would not write that,
although it was well worth writing.
Now she came in sight, walking across the open towards
the camp. She was wearing jodhpurs and carrying her rifle.
The two boys had a Tommie slung and they were coming
along behind her. She was still a good-looking woman, he
thought, and she had a pleasant body. She had a great
talent and appreciation for the bed, she was not pretty, but
he liked her face, she read enormously, liked to ride and
shoot and, certainly, she drank too much. Her husband had
died when she was still a comparatively young woman and
for a while she had devoted herself to her two just-grown
children, who did not need her and were embarrassed at
having her about, to her stable of horses, to books, and to
bottles. She liked to read in the evening before dinner and
she drank Scotch and soda while she read. By dinner she
was fairly drunk and after a bottle of wine at dinner she was
usually drunk enough to sleep.
That was before the lovers. After she had the Ipvers she
did not drink so much because she did not have to be drunk
to sleep. But the lovers bored her. She had been married
to a man who had never bored her and these people bored
her very much.
Then one of her two children was killed in a plane crash
and after that was over she did not want the lovers, and drink
being no anaesthetic she had to make another life. Suddenly,
she had been acutely frightened of being alone. But she
wanted someone that she respected with her.
It had begun very simply. She liked what he wrote and she had always envied the life he led. She thought he did exactly what he wanted to. The steps by Which she had
acquired him and the way in which she had finally fallen in
love with him were all part of a regular progression in which
she had built herself a new life and he had traded away what
remained of his old life.
He had traded it for security, for comfort too, there was no
denying that, and for what else? He did not know. She
would have brought him anything he wanted. He knew that.
She was a damned nice woman too. He would as soon be in bed with her as anyone; rather with her, because she was richer, because she was very pleasant and appreciative
and because she never made scenes. And now this life that
she had built again was coming to a term because he had not
used iodine two weeks ago when a thorn had scratched his
knee as they moved forward trying to photograph a herd
of waterbuck standing, their heads up, peering while their
nostrils searched the air, their ears spread wide to hear the
first noise that would send them rushing into the bush.
They had bolted, too, before he got the picture.
Here she came now.
He turned his head on the cot to look toward her. 'Hello,'
he said.
'I shot a Tommy ram,' she told him. 'He'll make you
good broth and I'll have them mash some potatoes with the Klim. How do you feel?'
'Much better.'
'Isn't that lovely? You know I thought perhaps you
would. You were sleeping >vhen I left.'
'I had a good sleep. Did you walk far? 5
'No. Just around behind the hill. I made quite a good
shot on the Tommy.'
'You shoot marvellously, you know.'
'I love it. I've loved Africa. Really. If you're all right it's
the most fun that I've ever had. You don't know the fun it's
been to shoot with you. I've loved the country.'
'I love it too.' r
'Darling, you don't know how marvellous it is to see you
feeling better. I couldn't stand it when you felt that way.
You won't talk to me like that again, will you? Promise
me?'
'No,' he said. 'I don't remember what I said.'
'You don't have to destroy me. Do you? I'm only a middle-aged woman who loves you and wants to do what you want to do. I've been destroyed two or three times already.
You wouldn't want to destroy me again, would you?'
Td like to destroy you a few times in bed,' he said.
'Yes. That's the good destruction. That's the way we're
made to be destroyed. The plane will be here to-morrow.'
'How do you know?'
Tm sure. It's bound to come. The boys have the wood all ready and the grass to make the smudge. I went down and looked at it again to-day. There's plenty of room to land and
we have the smudges ready at both ends.'
'What makes you think it will come to-morrow?'
'I'm sure it will. It's overdue now. Then, in town, they
will fix up your leg and then we will have some good
destruction. Not that dreadful talking kind.'
'Should we have a drink? The sun is down.'
'Do you think you should?'
Tm having one.'
'We'll have one together. Molo, letti dui whisky-soda!' she
called.
'You'd better put on your mosquito boots,' he told her.
Til wait till I bathe . . .'
While it grew dark they drank and just before it was dark
and there was no longer enough light to shoot, a hyena
crossed the open on his way around the hill.
70 THE SNOWS OF KILIMANJARO
'That bastard crosses there every night/ the man said.
'Every night for two weeks/
'He's the one makes the noise at night. I don't mind it.
They're a filthy animal though.'
Drinking together, with no pain now except the discomfort of lying in the one position, the boys lighting a fire, its shadow jumping on the tents, he could feel the return of
acquiescence in this life of pleasant surrender. She was very
good to him. He had been cruel and unjust in the afternoon.
She was a fine woman, marvellous really. And just then it
occurred to him that he was going to die.
It came with a rush; not as a rush of water nor of wind; but
of a sudden evil-smelling emptiness and the odd thing was
that the hyena slipped lightly along the edge of it.
'What is it, Harry?' she asked him.
'Nothing,' he said. 'You had better move over to the other side. To windward.'
'Did Molo change the dressing?'
'Yes. I'm just using the boric now.'
'How do you feel?'
'A little wobbly.'
'I'm going in to bathe,' she said. Til be right out. I'll eat
with you and then we'll put the cot in.'
So, he said to himself, we did well to stop the quarrelling.
He had never quarrelled much with this woman, while with
the women that he loved he had quarrelled so much they had
finally, always, with the corrosion of the quarrelling, killed
what they had together. He had loved too much, demanded
too much, and he wore it all out.
He thought about alone in Constantinople that time, having
quarrelled in Paris before he had gone out. He had whored the whole
time and then, when that was over, and he had failed to kill his
loneliness, but only made it worse, he had written her, the first one,
tht one who left him, a letter telling her how he had never been able
to kill it . . . How when he thought he saw her outside the Regence
one time it made him go all faint and sick inside, and that he would
follow a woman who looked like her in some way, along the Boulevard,
afraid to see it was not she, afraid to lose the feeling it gave him.
How everyone he had slept with had only made him miss her mofe.
How what she had done could never matter since he knew he could
not cure himself of loving her. He wrote this letter at the Club, cold
sober, and mailed it to New York asking her to write him at the
office in Paris. That seemed safe. And that night missing her so much it made him feel hollow sick inside, he wandered up past Taxings, picked a girl up and took her out to supper. He had gone
to a place to dance with her afterwards, she danced badly, and left
her for a hot Armenian slut, that swung her belly against him so it
almost scalded. He took her away from a British gunner subaltern
after a row. The gunner asked him outside and they fought in the
street on the cobbles in the dark. He'd hit him twice, hard, on the
side of the jaw and when he didn't go down he knew he was in for a
fight. The gunner hit him in the body, then beside his eye. He swung
with his left again and landed and the gunner fell on him and
grabbed his coat and tore the sleeve off and he clubbed him twice
behind the ear and then smashed him with his right as he pushed him
away. When the gunner went down his head hit first and he ran
with the girl because they heard the M.P.s coming. They got into a
taxi and drove out to Rimmily Hissa along the Bosphorus, and
around, and back in the cool night and went to bed and she felt as
over-ripe as she looked but smooth, rose-petal, syrupy, smooth-
bellied, big-breasted and needed no pillow under her buttocks, and he
left her before she was awake looking blousy enough in the fast
daylight and turned up at the Pera Palace with a black eye, carrying
his coat because one sleeve was missing.
That same night he left for Anatolia and he remembered, later on
that trip, riding all day through fields of the poppies that they raised
for opium and how strange it made you feel, finally, and all the
distances seemed wrong, to where they had made the attack with the
newly-arrived Constantine officers, that did not know a god-damned
thing, and the artillery had fired into the troops and the British
observer had cried like a child.
That was the day he'd first seen dead men wearing white ballet
skirts and upturned shoes with pompoms on them. The Turks had
come steadily and lumpily and he had seen the skirted men running
and the officers shooting into them and running then themselves and
he and the British observer had run too until his lungs ached and his
mouth was full of the taste of pennies and they stopped behind some
rocks and there were the Turks coming as lumpily as ever. Later
he had seen the things that he could never think of and later still he
had seen, much worse. So when he got back to Paris that time he
could not talk about it or stand to have it mentioned. And there in the
cafe as he passed was that American poet with a pile of saucers in
front of him and a stupid look on his potato face talking about the
Dada movement with a Roumanian who said his name was Tristan
Tzarti, who always wore a monocle and had a headache, and, back
at the apartment with his wife that now he loved again, the quarrel
all over, the madness all over, glad to be home, the office sent his
mail up to the flat. So then the letter in answer to the one he'd written
came in on a platter one morning and when he saw the hand-writing
he went cold all over and tried to slip the letter underneath another.
But his wife said, 'Who is that letter from, dear?' and that was the
end of the beginning of that.
He remembered the good times with them all, and the quarrels.
They always picked the finest places to have the quarrels. And why
had they always quarrelled when he was feeling best? He had never
written any of that because, at first, he never wanted to hurt anyone
and then it seemed as though there was enough to write without it.
But he had always thought that he would write it finally. There was
so much to write. He had seen the world change; not just the events;
although he had seen many of them and had watched the people, but
he had seen the subtler change and he could remember how the people
were at different times. He had been in it and he had watched it and it
was his duty to write of it; but now he never would.
'How do you feel?' she said. She had come out from the
tent now after her bath.
'All right.'
THE SNOWS OF KILIMANJARO 73
'Gould you eat now?' He saw Molo behind her with the folding table and the other boy with the dishes.
'I want to write,' he said.
'You ought to take some broth to keep your strength up.i ,
'I'm going to die to-night,' he said. 'I don't need my strength up.'
'Don't be melodramatic, Harry, please/ she said.
'Why don't you use your nose? I'm rotted half-way up my thigh now. What the hell should I fool with broth for?
Molo, bring whisky-soda.'
'Please take the broth,' she said gently.
'All right.'
The broth was too hot. He had to hold it in the cup until it cooled enough to take it and then he just got it down without gagging.
'You're a fine woman,' he said. 'Don't pay any attention
to me.'
She looked at him with her well-known, well-loved face
from Spur and Town and Country, only a little the worse for
drink, only a little the worse for bed, but Town and Country never showed those good breasts and those useful thighs and
those lightly small-of-back caressing hands, and as he looked and saw her well-known pleasant smile, he felt death come again. This time there was no rush. It was a puff, as of a
wind that makes a candle flicker and the flame go tall.
'They can bring my net out later and hang it from the tree
and build the fire up. I'm not going in the tent to-night.
It's not worth moving. It's a clear night. There won't be
any rain.'
So this was how you died, in whispers that you did not hear. Well, there would be no more quarrelling. He could promise that. The one experience that he had never
had he was not going to spoil now. He probably would.
You spoiled everything. But perhaps he wouldn't.
'You can't take dictation, can you?'
'I never learned,' she told him.
That's all right.'
There wasn't time, of course, although it seemed as though it telescoped so that you might put it all into one paragraph if you could get it right.
There was a log house, chinked white with mortar^ on a hill above
the lake. There was a bell on a pole by the door to call the people
in to meals. Behind the house were fields and behind the fields was the timber. A line of lombardy poplars ran from the house to the dock. Other poplars ran along the point. A road went up to the hills along the edge of the timber and along that road he picked black-
berries. Then that log house was burned down and all the guns
that had been on deer foot racks above the open fire place were burned and afterwards their barrels, with the lead melted in the magazines,
and the stocks burned away, lay out on the heap of ashes that were used to make lye for the big iron soap kettles, and you asked Grandfather if you could have them to play with, and he said, no. Ton see they were his guns still and he never bought any others. JVbr did
he hunt any more. The house was rebuilt in the same place out of
lumber now and painted white and from its porch you saw the poplars and the lake beyond; but there were never any more guns. The barrels of the guns that had hung on the deer feet on the wall of the log house lay out there on the heap of ashes and no one ever touched them.
In the Black Forest, after the war, we rented a trout stream and there were two ways to walk to it. one was down the valley from Triberg and around the valley road in the shade of the trees that
bordered the white road, and then up a side road that went up
through the hills, past many small farms, with the big Schwarzwald
houses, until that road crossed the stream. That was where our
fishing began.
The other way was to climb steeply up to the edge of the woods and
then go across the top of the hills through the pine woods, and then out
to the edge of a meadow and down across this meadow to the bridge.
There were birches along the stream and it was not big, but narrow,
clear and fast, with pools where it had cut under the roots of the
birches. At the Hotel in Triberg the proprietor had a fine season.
It was very pleasant and we were all great friends. The next year came the inflation and the money he had made the year before was not enough to buy supplies to open the hotel and he hanged himself.
You could dictate that, but you could not dictate the Place Contre-
scarpe where the flower sellers dyed their flowers in the street and the dye ran over the paving where the autobus started and the old men and the women, always drunk on wine and bad marc; and the children with their noses running in the cold; the smell of dirty sweat and
poverty and drunkenness at the Cafe des Amateurs and the whores
at the Bal Musette they lived above. The Concierge who entertained
the trooper of the Garde Republicaine in her loge, his horse-hair-plumed helmet on a chair. The locataire across the hall whose husband was a bicycle racer and her joy that morning at the Cremerie when she had opened L'Auto and seen where he placed third in
Paris-Tours, his first big race. She had blushed and laughed and then gone upstairs crying with the yellow sporting paper in her hand.
The husband of the woman who ran the Bal Musette drove a taxi
and when he, Harry, had to take an early plane the husband knocked
upon the door to wake him and they each drank a glass of white wine at the zinc of the bar before they started. He knew his neighbours in that quarter then because they all were poor.
Around that Place there were two kinds: the drunkards and the
sportifs. The drunkards killed their poverty that way; the sportifs
took it out in exercise. They were the descendants of the Communards and it was no struggle for them to know their politics. They knew who had shot their fathers, their relatives, their brothers,
and their friends when the Versailles troops came in and took the
town after the Commune and executed anyone they could catch with
calloused hands, or who wore a cap, or carried any other sign he was a working man. And in that poverty, and in that quarter across the
street from a Boucherie Chevaline and a wine-co-operative he had
written the start of all he was to do. There never was another part
of Paris that he loved like that, the sprawling trees, the old white
plastered houses painted brown below, the long green of the autobus in that round square, the purple flower dye upon the paving, the
sudden drop down the hill of the rue Cardinal Lemoine to the River,
and the other way the narrow crowded world of the rue Mouffetard.
The street that ran up toward the Pantheon and the other that he always took with the bicycle, the only asphalted street in all that quarter, smooth under the tyres, with the high narrow houses and the cheap tall ~hotel where Paul Verlaine had died. There were only two
rooms in the apartments where they lived and he had a room on the
top floor of that hotel that cost him sixty francs a month where he did his writing, and from it he could see the roofs and chimney pots
and all the hills of Paris.
From the apartment you could only see the wood and coal man's plate. He sold wine, too, bad wine. The golden horse's head
outside the Boucherie Chevaline where the carcasses hung yellow gold
and red in the open window, and the green painted co-operative
where they bought their wine; good wine and cheap. The rest was plaster walls and the windows of the neighbours. The neighbours
who, at night, when someone lay drunk in the street, moaning and
groaning in that typical French ivresse that you were propaganded
to believe did not exist, would open their windows and then the
murmur of talk.
'Where is the policeman? When you don't want him the bugger
is always there. He's sleeping with some concierge. Get the Agent.'
Till someone threw a bucket of water from a window and the moaning
stopped. 'What's that? Water. Ah, that's intelligent' And the
windows shutting. Marie, hisfemme de menage, protesting against
the eight-hour day saying, 'If a husband works until six he gets only a little drunk on the way home and does not waste too much. If he
works only until Jive he is drunk every night and one has no money.
It is the wife of the working man who suffers from this shortening of hours'
'Wouldn't you like some more broth?' the woman asked now.
'No, thank you very much. It is awfully good. 5
Try just a little.'
'I would like a whisky-soda.'
'It's not good for you.'
'No. It's bad for me. Cole Porter wrote the words and the
music. This knowledge that you're going mad for me.'
'You know I like you to drink.'
'Oh yes. only it's bad for me.'
When she goes, he thought. I'll have all I want. Not all I want but all there is. Ayee, he was tired. Too tired. He was going to sleep a little while. He lay still and death was not
there. It must have gone around another street. It went in
pairs, on bicycles, and moved absolutely silently on the
pavements.
No, he had never written about Paris. Not the Paris that he cared about. But what about the rest that he had never written?
What about the ranch and the silvered grey of the sage brush, the
quick, clear water in the irrigation ditches, and the heavy green of the
alfalfa? The trail went up into the hills and the cattle in the summer
were shy as deer. The bawling and the steady noise and slow moving mass raising a dust as you brought them down in the fall. And behind the mountains, the clear sharpness of the peak in the evening light and, riding down along the train in the moonlight, bright across the valley.
Now he remembered coming down through the timber in the dark holding the horse's tail when you could not see and all the stories that he meant to write.
About the half -wit chore boy who was. left at the ranch that time and told not to let any one get any hay, and that old bastard from the Forks who had beaten the boy when he had worked for him stopping to get some feed. The boy refusing and the old man saying he would beat him again. The boy got the rifle from the kitchen and shot him
when he tried to come into the barn and when they came back to the
ranch he'd been dead a week, frozen in the corral, and the dogs had
eaten part of him. But what was left you packed on a sled wrapped in
a blanket and roped on and you got the boy to help you haul it, and the two of you took it out over the road on skis, and sixty miles down
to town to turn the boy over. He having no idea that he would be
arrested. Thinking he had done his duty and that you were his
78 THE SNOWS OF KILIMANJARO
friend and he would be rewarded. He'd helped to haul the old man in so everybody could know how bad the old man had been, and how he'd tried to steal some feed that didn't belong to him, and when the sheriff put the handcuffs on the boy he couldn't believe it. Then he'd
started to cry. That was one story he had saved to write. He knew
at least twenty good stories from out there and he had never written
one. Why?
'You tell them why,' he said.
'Why what, dear?'
'Why nothing.'
She didn't drink so much, now, since she had him. But if
he lived he would never write about her, he knew that now.
Nor about any of them. The rich were dull and they drank
too much, or they played too much backgammon. They were dull and they were repetitious. He remembered poor Julian and his romantic awe of them and how he had started
a story once that began, 'The very rich are different from you and me.' And how someone had said to Julian. Yes, they have more money. But that was not humorous to Julian.
He thought they were a special glamorous race and when he found they weren't it wrecked him just as much as any other thing that wrecked him.
He had been contemptuous of those who wrecked. You did not have to like it because you understood it. He could beat anything, he thought, because nothing could hurt him
if he did not care.
All right. Now he would not care for death. one thing he had always dreaded was the pain. He could stand pain as well as any man, until it went on too long, and wore him out, but here he had something that had hurt frightfully and just when he had felt it breaking him, the pain had stopped.
He remembered long ago when Williamson, the bombing officer, had been hit by a stick bomb some one in a German patrol had thrown as he was coming in through the wire that night and, screaming, had begged everyone to kill him. He was a fat man, very brave, and a good officer, although addicted to fantastic shows. But that night he was caught in the wire, with a flare lighting him up and his bowels spilled out into the wire, so when they brought him in, alive, they had to cut him loose. Shoot me, Harry. For Christ sake shoot me. They had
had an argument one time about our Lord never sending you anything
you could not bear and someone's theory had been that meant that a certain time the pain passed you out automatically. But he had always remembered Williamson, that night. Nothing passed out Williamson until he gave him all his morphine tablets that he had always saved
to use himself and then they did not work right away.
Still this now, that he had, was very easy; and if it was no worse as it went on there was nothing to worry about. Except that he would rather be in better company.
He thought a little about the company that he would like
to have.
No, he thought, when everything you do, you do too long, and do too late, you can't expect to find the people still there.
The people are all gone. The party's over and you are with your hostess now.
I'm getting as bored with dying as with everything else, he thought.
'It's a bore,' he said out loud.
'What is, my dear?'
'Anything you do too bloody long.'
He looked at her face between him and the fire. She was leaning back in the chair and the firelight shone on her pleasantly lined face and he could see that she was sleepy. He heard the hyena make a noise just outside the range of the fire.
'I've been writing,' he said. 'But I got tired/
'Do you think you will be able to sleep?'
'Pretty sure. Why don't you turn in?'
'I like to sit here with you. 5
'Do you feel anything strange?' he asked her.
'No. Just a little sleepy.'
'I do,' he said.
He had just felt death come by again.
'You know the only thing I've never lost is curiosity/ he said to her.
'You've never lost anything. You're the most complete
man I've ever known.'
'Christ/ he said. 'How little a woman knows. What is that? Your intuition?'
Because, just then, death had come and rested its head on the foot of the cot and he could smell its breath.
'Never believe any of that about a scythe and a skull,' he told her. 'It can be two bicycle policemen as easily or be a bird. Or it can have a wide snout like a hyena.'
It had moved up on him now, but it had no shape any more. It simply occupied space.
'Tell it to go away.'
It did not go away but moved a little closer.
'You've got a hell of a breath/ he told it. 'You stinking bastard.'
It moved up closer to him still and now he could not speak to it, and when it saw he could not speak it came a little closer, and now he tried to send it away without speaking, but it
moved in on him so its weight was all upon his chest, and while it crouched there and he could not move, or speak, he heard the woman say, 'Bwana is asleep now. Take the cot up very gently and carry it into the tent'.
He could not speak to tell her to make it go away and it crouched now, heavier so he Could not breathe. And then, while they lifted the cot, suddenly it was all right and the
weight went from his chest.
It was morning and had been morning for some time and he heard the plane. It showed very tiny and then made a wide circle and the boys ran out and lit the fires, using kerosene, and piled on grass so there were two big smudges at each
end of the level place and the morning breeze blew them toward the camp and the plane circled twice more, low this time, and then glided down and levelled off and landed smoothly and, coming walking toward him, was old Compton in slacks, a tweed jacket and a brown felt hat.
'What's th matter, old cock? 5 Compton said.
'Bad leg,' he told him. 'Will you have some breakfast?'
'Thanks. I'll just have some tea. It's the Puss Moth, you know. I won't be able to take the Memsahib. There's only room for one. Your lorry is on the way.'
Helen had taken Compton aside and was speaking to him.
Compton came back more cheery than ever.
'We'll get you right in,' he said. Til be back for the Mem.
Now I'm afraid I'll have to stop at Arusha to refuel. We'd tter get going.'
'What about the tea?'
'I don't really care about it, you know. 5
The boys had picked up the cot and carried it around the green tents and down along the rock and out on to the plain and along past the smudges that were burning brightly now, the grass all consumed, and the wind fanning the fire, to the little plane. It was difficult getting him in, but once in he lay back in the leather seat, and the leg was stuck straight out to one side of the seat where Compton sat. Compton started the motor and got in. He waved to Helen and to the boys and, as the clatter moved into the old familiar roar, they swung around with Compie watching for wart-hog holes and roared, bumping, along the stretch between the fires and with the last bump rose and he saw them all standing below, waving, and the camp beside the hill, flattening now, and the plain spreading, clumps of trees, and the bush flattening, while the game trails ran now smoothly to the dry waterholes, and there was a new water that he had never known of. The zebra, small rounded backs now, and the wildebeeste, big-headed dots seeming to climb as they moved in long fingers across the plain, now scattering as the shadow came toward them, they were tiny now, and the movement had no gallop, and the plain as far as you could see, grey-yellow now and ahead old Compie's tweed back and the brown felt hat. Then they were over the first hills and the wildebeeste were trailing up them, and then they were over mountains with sudden depths of green-rising forest and the solid bamboo slopes, and then the heavy forest again, sculptured into peaks and hollows until they crossed, and hills sloped down and then another plain, hot now, and purple brown, bumpy with heat and Compie looking back to see how he was riding. Then there were other mountains dark ahead.
And then instead of going on to Arusha they turned left, he evidently figured that they had the gas, and looking down he saw a pink sifting cloud, moving over the ground, and in
the air, like the first snow in a blizzard, that comes from nowhere, and he knew the locusts were coming up from the South. Then they began to climb and they were going to the
East it seemed, and then it darkened and they were in a storm, the rain so thick it seemed like flying through a water-fall, and then they were out and Compie turned his head and
grinned and pointed and there, ahead, all he could see, as wide as all the world, great, high, and unbelievably white in the sun, was the square top of Kilimanjaro. And then he
knew that there was where he was going.
Just then the hyena stopped whimpering in the night and started to make a strange, human, almost crying sound. The woman heard it and stirred uneasily. She did not waks. In her dream she was at the house on Long Island and it was the night before her daughter's debut. Somehow her father was there and he had been very rude. Then the noise the hyena made was so loud she woke and for a moment she did not know where she was and she was very afraid. Then she took the flashlight and shone it on the other cot that they had carried in after Harry had gone to sleep. She could see his bulk under the mosquito bar but somehow he had gotten his leg out and it hung down alongside the cot. The dressings had all come down and she could not look at it.
'Molo,' she called. 'Molo! Molo!'
Then she said, 'Harry, Harry!' Then her voice rising,
'Harry! Please, Oh Harry!
There was no answer and she could not hear him breathing.
Outside the tent the hyena made the same strange noise that had awakened her. But she did not hear him for the beating of her heart.
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