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man is a commonplace。  The king; Raa Kook; is at least six inches

above six feet; and though he would weigh fully three hundred

pounds; is so equitably proportioned that one could not call him

fat。  Many of his chiefs are as large; while the women are not much

smaller than the men。



There are numerous islands in the group; over all of which Raa Kook

is king; although the cluster of islands to the south is restive and

occasionally in revolt。  These natives with whom I live are

Polynesian; I know; because their hair is straight and black。  Their

skin is a sun…warm golden…brown。  Their speech; which I speak

uncommonly easy; is round and rich and musical; possessing a paucity

of consonants; being composed principally of vowels。  They love

flowers; music; dancing; and games; and are childishly simple and

happy in their amusements; though cruelly savage in their angers and

wars。



I; Adam Strang; know my past; but do not seem to think much about

it。  I live in the present。  I brood neither over past nor future。

I am careless; improvident; uncautious; happy out of sheer well…

being and overplus of physical energy。  Fish; fruits; vegetables;

and seaweeda full stomachand I am content。  I am high in place

with Raa Kook; than whom none is higher; not even Abba Taak; who is

highest over the priest。  No man dare lift hand or weapon to me。  I

am taboosacred as the sacred canoe…house under the floor of which

repose the bones of heaven alone knows how many previous kings of

Raa Kook's line。



I know all about how I happened to be wrecked and be there alone of

all my ship's companyit was a great drowning and a great wind; but

I do not moon over the catastrophe。  When I think back at all;

rather do I think far back to my childhood at the skirts of my milk…

skinned; flaxen…haired; buxom English mother。  It is a tiny village

of a dozen straw…thatched cottages in which I lived。  I hear again

blackbirds and thrushes in the hedges; and see again bluebells

spilling out from the oak woods and over the velvet turf like a

creaming of blue water。  And most of all I remember a great; hairy…

fetlocked stallion; often led dancing; sidling; and nickering down

the narrow street。  I was frightened of the huge beast and always

fled screaming to my mother; clutching her skirts and hiding in them

wherever I might find her。



But enough。  The childhood of Adam Strang is not what I set out to

write。



I lived for several years on the islands which are nameless to me;

and upon which I am confident I was the first white man。  I was

married to Lei…Lei; the king's sister; who was a fraction over six

feet and only by that fraction topped me。  I was a splendid figure

of a man; broad…shouldered; deep…chested; well…set…up。  Women of any

race; as you shall see; looked on me with a favouring eye。  Under my

arms; sun…shielded; my skin was milk…white as my mother's。  My eyes

were blue。  My moustache; beard and hair were that golden…yellow

such as one sometimes sees in paintings of the northern sea…kings。

AyI must have come of that old stock; long…settled in England;

and; though born in a countryside cottage; the sea still ran so salt

in my blood that I early found my way to ships to become a sea…cuny。

That is what I wasneither officer nor gentleman; but sea…cuny;

hard…worked; hard…bitten; hard…enduring。



I was of value to Raa Kook; hence his royal protection。  I could

work in iron; and our wrecked ship had brought the first iron to Raa

Kook's land。  On occasion; ten leagues to the north…west; we went in

canoes to get iron from the wreck。  The hull had slipped off the

reef and lay in fifteen fathoms。  And in fifteen fathoms we brought

up the iron。  Wonderful divers and workers under water were these

natives。  I learned to do my fifteen fathoms; but never could I

equal them in their fishy exploits。  On the land; by virtue of my

English training and my strength; I could throw any of them。  Also;

I taught them quarter…staff; until the game became a very contagion

and broken heads anything but novelties。



Brought up from the wreck was a journal; so torn and mushed and

pulped by the sea…water; with ink so run about; that scarcely any of

it was decipherable。  However; in the hope that some antiquarian

scholar may be able to place more definitely the date of the events

I shall describe; I here give an extract。  The peculiar spelling may

give the clue。  Note that while the letter S is used; it more

commonly is replaced by the letter F。





The wind being favourable; gave us an opportunity of examining and

drying some of our provifion; particularly; fome Chinefe hams and

dry filh; which conftituted part of our victualling。  Divine service

alfo was performed on deck。  In the afternoon the wind was

foutherly; with frefh gales; but dry; fo that we were able the

following morning to clean between decks; and alfo to fumigate the

fhip with gunpowder。





But I must hasten; for my narrative is not of Adam Strang the

shipwrecked sea…cuny on a coral isle; but of Adam Strang; later

named Yi Yong…ik; the Mighty One; who was one time favourite of the

powerful Yunsan; who was lover and husband of the Lady Om of the

princely house of Min; and who was long time beggar and pariah in

all the villages of all the coasts and roads of Cho…Sen。  (Ah; ha; I

have you thereCho…Sen。  It means the land of the morning calm。  In

modern speech it is called Korea。)



Remember; it was between three and four centuries back that I lived;

the first white man; on the coral isles of Raa Kook。  In those

waters; at that time; the keels of ships were rare。  I might well

have lived out my days there; in peace and fatness; under the sun

where frost was not; had it not been for the Sparwehr。  The Sparwehr

was a Dutch merchantman daring the uncharted seas for Indies beyond

the Indies。  And she found me instead; and I was all she found。



Have I not said that I was a gay…hearted; golden; bearded giant of

an irresponsible boy that had never grown up?  With scarce a pang;

when the Sparwehrs' water…casks were filled; I left Raa Kook and his

pleasant land; left Lei…Lei and all her flower…garlanded sisters;

and with laughter on my lips and familiar ship…smells sweet in my

nostrils; sailed away; sea…cuny once more; under Captain Johannes

Maartens。



A marvellous wandering; that which followed on the old Sparwehr。  We

were in quest of new lands of silk and spices。  In truth; we found

fevers; violent deaths; pestilential paradises where death and

beauty kept charnel…house together。  That old Johannes Maartens;

with no hint of romance in that stolid face and grizzly square head

of his; sought the islands of Solomon; the mines of Golcondaay; he

sought old lost Atlantis which he hoped to find still afloat

unscuppered。  And he found head…hunting; tree…dwelling anthropophagi

instead。



We landed on strange islands; sea…pounded on their shores and

smoking at their summits; where kinky…haired little animal…men made

monkey…wailings in the jungle; planted their forest run…ways with

thorns and stake…pits; and blew poisoned splinters into us from out

the twilight jungle bush。  And whatsoever man of us was wasp…stung

by such a splinter died horribly and howling。  And we encountered

other men; fiercer; bigger; who faced us on the beaches in open

fight; showering us with spears and arrows; while the great tree

drums and the little tom…toms rumbled and rattled war across the

tree…filled hollows; and all the hills were pillared with signal…

smokes。



Hendrik Hamel was supercargo and part owner of the Sparwehr

adventure; and what he did not own was the property of Captain

Johannes Maartens。  The latter spoke little English; Hendrik Hamel

but little more。  The sailors; with whom I gathered; spoke Dutch

only。  But trust a sea…cuny to learn Dutchay; and Korean; as you

shall see。



Toward the end we came to the charted country of Japan。  But the

people would have no dealings with us; and two sworded officials; in

sweeping robes of silk that made Captain Johannes Maartens' mouth

water; came aboard of us and politely requested us to begone。  Under

their suave manners was the iron of a warlike race; and we knew; and

went our way。



We crossed the Straits of Japan and were entering the Yellow Sea on

our way to China; when we laid the Sparwehr on the rocks。  She was a

crazy tub the old Sparwehr; so clumsy and so dirty with whiskered

marine…life on her bottom that she could not get out of her own way。

Close…hauled; the closest she could come was to six points of the

wind; and then she bobbed up and down; without way; like a derelict

turnip。  Galliots were clippers compared with her。  To tack her

about was undreamed of; to wear her required all hands and half a

watch。  So situated; we were caught on a lee shore in an eight…point

shift of wind at the height of a hurricane that had beaten our souls

sick for forty…eight

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