<h2><SPAN name="the-strangest-thing"></SPAN>The Strangest Thing</h2>
<p><br/></p>
<p><span>The best days in the voyage from the Cape
to Southampton are those that come
immediately before and immediately after that
upon which you cross the line, when the ship is as
steady as a billiard table, and the ocean is as smooth
and shiny and coloured as the mosaic floor of a
basilica church, when the deck is covered with
awning from stem to stern, and the resin bubbles
out of the masts, and the thermometer in the
companion-way at the entrance to the dining-saloon
climbs higher and higher with every turn of the
screw. Of course all the men people aboard must
sleep on deck these nights. There is a pleasure in
this that you will find nowhere else. At six your
steward wakes you up with your morning cup of
coffee, and you sit cross-legged in your pajamas on
the skylight and drink your coffee and smoke your
cigarettes and watch the sun shooting up over the
rim of that polished basilica floor, and take
pleasure in the mere fact of your existence, and talk and
talk and tell stories until it's time for bath and
breakfast.</span></p>
<p><span>We came back from the Cape in </span><em class="italics">The Moor</em><span>,
with a very abbreviated cabin list. Only three of
the smaller tables in the saloon were occupied,
and those mostly by men—diamond-brokers from
Kimberly, gold-brokers from the Rand, the manager
of a war correspondent on a lecture tour, cut
short by the Ashanti war, an English captain of
twenty-two, who had been with Jameson at
Krugersdorp and somehow managed to escape, an
Australian reporter named Miller, and two or
three others of a less distinct personality.</span></p>
<p><span>Miller told the story that follows early one
morning, sitting on the Bull board, tailor-fashion,
and smoking pipefuls of straight perique, black as
a nigger's wool. We were grouped around him
on the deck in pajamas and bath robes. It was
half after six, the thermometer was at 70 degrees,
</span><em class="italics">The Moor</em><span> cut the still water with a soothing
rumble of her screw, and at intervals flushed whole
schools of flying fish. Somehow the talk had drifted
to the inexplicable things that we had seen, and we
had been piecing out our experiences with some
really beautiful lies. Captain Thatcher, the
Krugersdorp chap, held that the failure of the Jameson
Raid was the most inexplicable thing he had ever
experienced, but none of the rest of us could think
of anything we had seen or heard of that did not
have some stealthy, shadowy sort of explanation
sneaking after it and hunting it down.</span></p>
<p><span>"Well, I saw something a bit thick once,"
observed Miller, pushing down the tobacco in his
pipe bowl with the tip of a callous finger, and
in the abrupt silence that followed we heard the
noise of dishes from the direction of the galley.</span></p>
<p><span>"It was in Johannesburg three years back, when
I was down on me luck. I had been rooked
properly by a Welsh gaming chap who was no end of
a bounder, and three quid was all that stood
between me and—well," he broke in, suddenly, "I
had three quid left. I wore down me feet walking
the streets of that bally town looking for
anything that would keep me going for a while, and
give me a chance to look around and fetch breath,
and there was nothing, but I tell ye nothing, and I
was fair desperate. One dye, and a filthy wet
dye it was, too, I had gone out to the race track,
beyond Hospital Hill, where the pony races are
run, thinking as might be I'd find a berth, handling
ponies there, but the season was too far gone,
and they turned me awye. I came back to town
by another road—then by the waye that fetches
around by the Mahomedan burying-ground. Well,
the pauper burying-ground used to be alongside
in those dyes, and as I came up, jolly well blown,
I tell ye, for I'd but tightened me belt by wye of
breakfast, I saw a chap diggin' a gryve. I was
in a mind for gryves meself just then, so I pulled
up and leaned over the fence and piped him off
at his work. Then, like the geeser I'd come to be,
I says:</span></p>
<p><span>"'What are ye doing there, friend?' He
looked me over between shovelfuls a bit, and then
says:</span></p>
<p><span>"'Oh, just setting out early violets;' and that
shut me up properly.</span></p>
<p><span>"Well, I piped him digging that gryve for
perhaps five minutes, and then, s' help me, I asked
him for a job. I did—I asked that gryve-digger
for a job—I was that low. He leans his back
against the side of the gryve and looks me over,
then by and bye, says he:</span></p>
<p><span>"'All right, pardner!'</span></p>
<p><span>"'I'm thinking your from the Stytes,' says I.</span></p>
<p><span>"'Guess yes,' he says, and goes on digging.</span></p>
<p><span>"Well, we came to terms after a while. He was
to give me two bob a dye for helping him at his
work, and I was to have a bunk in his 'shack', as
he called it—a box of a house built of four boards,
as I might sye, that stood just on the edge of the
gryveyard. He was a rum 'un, was that Yankee
chap. Over pipes that night he told me something
of himself, and do y' know, that gryve-digger
in the pauper burying-ground in Johannesburg,
South Africa, was a Harvard graduate! Strike
me straight if I don't believe he really was. The
man was a wreck from strong drink, but that was
the one thing he was proud of.</span></p>
<p><span>"'Yes, sir,' he'd say, over and over again,
looking straight ahead of him, 'Yes, sir, I was a
Harvard man once, and pulled at number five in the
boat'—the 'varsity boat, mind ye; and then he'd
go on talking half to himself. 'And now what
am I? I'm digging gryves for hire—burying
dead people for a living, when I ought to be dead
meself. I am dead and buried long ago. Its just
the whiskey that keeps me alive, Miller,' he would
say; 'when I stop that I'm done for.'</span></p>
<p><span>"The first morning I came round for work I met
him dressed as if to go to town, and carrying a
wickered demijohn. 'Miller',' he says, 'I'm going
into town to get this filled. You must stop here
and be ready to answer any telephone call from
the police station.' S' help me if there wasn't a
telephone in that beastly shack. 'If a pauper cops
off they'll ring you up from town and notify you
to have the gryve ready. If I'm awye, you'll have
to dig it. Remember, if it's a man, you must dig
a six foot six hole; if it's a woman, five feet will
do, and if it's a kid, three an' half'll be a plenty.
S'long.' And off he goes.</span></p>
<p><span>"Strike me blind but that was a long dye, that
first one. I'd the pauper gryves for view and
me own thoughts for company. But along about
noon, the Harvard graduate not showing up, I
found a diversion. The graduate had started to
paint the shack at one time, but had given over
after finishing one side, but the paint pot and the
brushes were there. I got hold of 'em and mixed
a bit o' paint and went the rounds of the gryves.
Ye know how it is in a pauper burying-ground—no
nymes at all on the headboards—naught but
numbers, and half o' them washed awye by the
rynes; so I, for a diversion, as I sye, started in to
paint all manner o' fancy nymes and epitaphs on
the headboards—any nyme that struck me fancy,
and then underneath, an appropriate epitaph, and
the dytes, of course—I didn't forget the dytes.
Ye know, that was the rarest enjoyment I ever
had. Ye don't think so? Try it once! Why, Gawd
blyme me, there's a chance for imagination in it,
and genius and art—highest kind of art. For
instance now, I'd squat down in front of a blank
headboard and think a bit, and the inspiration
would come, and I'd write like this, maybe:
'Jno. K. Boggart, of New Zealand. Born Dec. 21, 1870;
died June 5, 1890,' and then, underneath, 'He
Rests in Peace'; or else, 'Elsie, Youngest
Daughter of Mary B. and William H. Terhune; b. May
1st, 1880; d. Nov. 25, 1889—Not Lost, but Gone
Before'; or agyne, 'Lucas, Lieutenant T. V.
Killed in Battle at Wady Halfa, Egypt, August
30, 1889; born London, England, Jan. 3, 1850—He
Lies Like a Warrior, Tyking His Rest with
His Martial Cloak Around Him'; or something
humorous, as 'Bohunkus, J. J.; born Germany;
Oct. 3d, 1880; died (by request) Cape Town,
Sept. 4, 1890'; or one that I remember as my very
best effort, that read, 'Willie, Beloved Son of Anna
and Gustave Harris; b. April 1st, 1878; d. May
5th, 1888—He was a Man Before His Mother.' Then
I wrote me own nyme, with the epitaph,
'More Sinned Against Than Sinning;' and the
Harvard chap's too. His motto, I remember, was
'He Pulled 5 in His 'Varsity's Boat.'</span></p>
<p><span>"Well, I had more sport that afternoon than I've
ever had since. Y'know I felt as if I really were
acquainted with all those people—with John
Boggart, and Lieutenant Lucas, and Bohunkus,
and Willie and all. Ah, that was a proper
experience. But right in the middle of me work
here comes a telephone message from town:
'Body of dead baby found at mouth of city
sewer—prepare gryve at once.' Well, I dug that
gryve, the first, last and only gryve I ever hope to
dig. It came on to ryne like a water-spout, and
oh, but it was jolly tough work. Then about
four o'clock, just as I was finishing, the Harvard
chap comes home, howling drunk. I see him go
into the shack, and pretty soon out he comes, with
a hoe in one hand and a table leg in the other.
Soon as ever he sees me he makes a staggering
run at me, swinging the hoe and the table leg and
yelling like a Zulu indaba. Just to make everything
agreeable and appropriate, I was down in
the gryve, and it occurred to me that the situation
was too uncommon convenient. I scrambled out and
made a run for it, for there was murder in his eye,
and for upwards of ten minutes we two played
blindman's buff in that gryveyard, me dodging
from one headboard to another, and he at me
heels, chivying me like a fox and with intent to
kill. All at once he trips over a headboard, and
goes down and can't get up, and at the same
minute here comes the morgue wagon over Hospital Hill.</span></p>
<p><span>"Now here comes the queer part of this lamentable
history. A trap was following that morgue
wagon, a no-end swell trap, with a cob in the
shafts that was worth an independent fortune.
There was an old gent in the trap and a smart Cape
boy driving. The old gent was the heaviest kind
of a swell, but I'd never seen him before. The
morgue wagon drives into the yard, and I—the
Harvard chap being too far gone—points out the
gryve. The driver of the morgue wagon chucks out
the coffin, a bit of a three-foot box, and drives back
to town. Then up comes the trap, and the old
gent gets down—dressed up to the nines he was,
in that heartbreaking ryne—and says he, 'My
man, I would like to have that coffin opened.' By
this time the Harvard chap had pulled himself
together. He staggered up to the old gent and
says, 'No, can't op'n no coffin, 'tsgainst all
relugations—all regalutions, can't permit no coffin
tobeopp'n.' I wish you would have seen the old
gent. Excited! The man was shaking like a
flagstaff in a gyle, talked thick and stammered, he
was so phased. Gawd strike me, what a scene! I
can see it now—that pauper burying ground wye
down there in South Africa—no trees, all open and
bleak. The pelting ryne, the open gryve and the
drunken Harvard chap, and the excited old swell
arguing over a baby's coffin."</span></p>
<p><span>Pretty soon the old gent brings up a sovereign
and gives it to the Harvard chap.</span></p>
<p><span>"'Let her go,' says he then, and with that he
gives the top board of the coffin such a kick as
started it an inch or more. With that—now
listen to what I'm telling—with that the old gent
goes down on his knees in the mud and muck, and
kneels there waiting and fair gasping with
excitement while the Harvard chap wrenches off the
topboard. Before he had raised it four inches
me old gent plunges his hand in quick, gropes there
a second and takes out something—something shut
in the palm of his hand.</span></p>
<p><span>"'That's all,' says he: 'Thank you, my man,'
and gives us a quid apiece. We stood there like
stuck swine, dotty with the queerness, the
horribleness of the thing.</span></p>
<p><span>"'That's all,' he says again, with a long
breath of relief, as he climbs into his trap with his
clothes all foul with mud. 'That's all, thank
Gawd.' Then to the Cape boy: 'Drive her home,
Jim.' Five minutes later we lost him in the blur of
the rain over Hospital Hill."</span></p>
<p><span>"But what was it he took out of the baby's
coffin?" said half a dozen men in a breath at this
point. "What was it? What could it have been?"</span></p>
<p><span>"Ah, what was it?" said Miller. "I'll be
damned if I know what it was. I never knew, I
never will know."</span></p>
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