Excerpt: "Twelve years ago, from the deck of the Snark, I had my first
glimpse of the New Hebrides. I was standing my trick at the wheel.
Jack London and his wife, Charmian, were beside me. It was just dawn.
Slowly, out of the morning mists, an island took shape. The little
ship rose and sank on the Pacific swell. The salt breeze ruffled my
hair. I played my trick calmly and in silence, but my heart beat fast
at the sight of that bit of land coming up like magic out of the gray
water. For I knew that of all the groups in the South Seas, the New
Hebrides were held to be the wildest. They were inhabited by the
fiercest of cannibals. On many of the islands, white men had scarcely
trod. Vast, unknown areas remained to be explored. I thrilled at the
thought of facing danger in the haunts of savage men. I was young
then. But my longing for adventure in primitive lands has never left
me. News of a wild 4country, of unvisited tribes, still thrills me and
makes me restless to be off in some old South Seas schooner, seeing
life as it was lived in Europe in the Stone Age and is still lived in
out-of-the-way corners of the earth that civilization has overlooked.
I have been luckier than most men. For my lifework has made my
youthful dreams come true. On my first voyage, in the Snark, I met
with a couple of pioneer motion-picture men, who were packing up the
South Seas in films to take back to Europe and America. They inspired
in me the idea of making a picture-record of the primitive, fast-dying
black and brown peoples that linger in remote spots. Into my boyish
love of adventure there crept a purpose that has kept me wandering and
will keep me wandering until I die. Two years ago, I again found
myself in the New Hebrides at dawn. London had taken the last long
voyage alone; and the little Snark, so white and pretty when we had
sailed it south, hung sluggishly at anchor in Api, black and stained,
and wet and slimy under the bare feet of a crew of blacks. My boat now
was a twenty-eight-foot open whaleboat, with a jury rig of jib and
mainsail; my crew of five, squatting in the waist, looking silently at
us or casting 5glances, sometimes down at the water, sometimes with
sudden jerks of the head upward at the little mast, like monkeys under
a coconut tree, were naked savages from Vao; and my companion, seated
on the thwart beside me, was my wife, Osa. We were nearing the
cannibal island of Malekula. But to start the story of our adventures
in Malekula at the beginning, I must go back and describe the
reconnoitering trip we took fourteen months earlier."
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783968652658
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Vendor
Otbebookpublishing
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter