Lord Jim eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 490 pages of information about Lord Jim.

Lord Jim eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 490 pages of information about Lord Jim.
The connection thus begun is kept up, as long as the ship remains in harbour, by the daily visits of the water-clerk.  To the captain he is faithful like a friend and attentive like a son, with the patience of Job, the unselfish devotion of a woman, and the jollity of a boon companion.  Later on the bill is sent in.  It is a beautiful and humane occupation.  Therefore good water-clerks are scarce.  When a water-clerk who possesses Ability in the abstract has also the advantage of having been brought up to the sea, he is worth to his employer a lot of money and some humouring.  Jim had always good wages and as much humouring as would have bought the fidelity of a fiend.  Nevertheless, with black ingratitude he would throw up the job suddenly and depart.  To his employers the reasons he gave were obviously inadequate.  They said ‘Confounded fool!’ as soon as his back was turned.  This was their criticism on his exquisite sensibility.

To the white men in the waterside business and to the captains of ships he was just Jim—­nothing more.  He had, of course, another name, but he was anxious that it should not be pronounced.  His incognito, which had as many holes as a sieve, was not meant to hide a personality but a fact.  When the fact broke through the incognito he would leave suddenly the seaport where he happened to be at the time and go to another—­generally farther east.  He kept to seaports because he was a seaman in exile from the sea, and had Ability in the abstract, which is good for no other work but that of a water-clerk.  He retreated in good order towards the rising sun, and the fact followed him casually but inevitably.  Thus in the course of years he was known successively in Bombay, in Calcutta, in Rangoon, in Penang, in Batavia—­and in each of these halting-places was just Jim the water-clerk.  Afterwards, when his keen perception of the Intolerable drove him away for good from seaports and white men, even into the virgin forest, the Malays of the jungle village, where he had elected to conceal his deplorable faculty, added a word to the monosyllable of his incognito.  They called him Tuan Jim:  as one might say—­Lord Jim.

Originally he came from a parsonage.  Many commanders of fine merchant-ships come from these abodes of piety and peace.  Jim’s father possessed such certain knowledge of the Unknowable as made for the righteousness of people in cottages without disturbing the ease of mind of those whom an unerring Providence enables to live in mansions.  The little church on a hill had the mossy greyness of a rock seen through a ragged screen of leaves.  It had stood there for centuries, but the trees around probably remembered the laying of the first stone.  Below, the red front of the rectory gleamed with a warm tint in the midst of grass-plots, flower-beds, and fir-trees, with an orchard at the back, a paved stable-yard to the left, and the sloping glass of greenhouses tacked along a wall of bricks.  The living had belonged to the family for generations; but Jim was one of five sons, and when after a course of light holiday literature his vocation for the sea had declared itself, he was sent at once to a ’training-ship for officers of the mercantile marine.’

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Lord Jim from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.