Captain
Fellows returns in a canoe from his work on the banana plantation.
He is happy and feels at one with nature. In his bungalow, he
expects to be greeted warmly by his daughter, but this does
not happen. There is an outbreak of fever in the impoverished
town, and his fearful wife tells him she is sick. His daughter
Coral is with a policeman who has stayed the night on the verandah.
The policeman was looking for someone.
The thirteen-year-old
girl appears in the doorway. She is a self-assured girl with
a lot of common sense, and she says it is time for her mother
to be evacuated from the disease-torn village. Fellows then
meets the policeman, who is the lieutenant from the previous
chapter. The lieutenant tells him the priest he is searching
for is wanted for treason, and that he expects Fellows to report
him if he is seen.
After the lieutenant
has gone, Coral reveals to her father that the priest is hiding
in their barn. She says they couldn’t let the police catch
him. They go to their barn, where they keep the bananas before
sending them down river to the port. In the barn they find the
same man Mr. Tench encountered in Chapter 1. The man begs for
some brandy, which disgusts Captain Fellows. He is also angry
with Coral for giving the man shelter.
Coral brings food
and beer to the man, who says he will be safe when the rains
come in six weeks, because then the police are unable to move
about. But he also says he would sooner be caught. He cannot
just turn himself in, however, because he is afraid of the pain
of being shot; it is also his duty not to be caught. Nor is
he willing to renounce his faith. Coral says he can always come
back to the barn and she will look after him, even though she
confesses that she does not believe in God. She lost her faith
when she was ten. The man says he will pray for her, and insists
that he must go.
After leaving the
Fellows’ home, he comes upon half a dozen huts in a clearing.
He asks an old man for a hammock for the night. He also asks
for drink, but all the man has is coffee. They have no food
to offer him. The priest sleeps in a hut on a straw mat (there
is no hammock). The old man asks him to baptize his son and
say Mass in the morning, as well as hear their confessions;
it has been five years since a priest came to the village. The
priest agrees to hear the man’s confession immediately.
The man then brings all the women of the village for confession.
A boy is posted to watch for soldiers.
Analysis
The theme of sickness and pain is continued in this chapter,
with the sick wife of Captain Fellows. Fellows is the only happy
man in the novel, but he appears to be happy only when he is
alone with nature. As soon as he makes contact with the suffering
human world, his happiness evaporates. He has difficulty in
coming to terms with things as they are.
The lieutenant is
characterized further. Once again, the author draws attention
to his well-polished appearance. His pistol-holster “winked
in the sunlight.” He also shows himself to be ruthless
and intolerant of lifestyles, such as that enjoyed by the Fellows,
that he does not approve of. He has contempt for “ a different
way of life, for ease, safety, toleration, complacency.”
This chapter also
gives more insight into the priest’s thoughts about himself.
He regards himself as completely unworthy. His priestly office
is a burden to him. He does not want to take confessions but
he cannot escape his duties. He is a priest and will always
be one, which shows his ambivalence about trying to escape.
He can never really achieve freedom, no matter where he goes,
because he will always be judging and condemning himself for
his inadequacies. |