THE HUMAN DRIFT by Jack London
Contents:
The Human Drift Small-Boat Sailing Four Horses and a Sailor Nothing that Ever Came to Anything That Dead Men Rise up Never A Classic of the Sea A Wicked Woman (Curtain Raiser) The Birth Mark (Sketch)
THE HUMAN DRIFT
"The Revelations of Devout and Learn'd Who rose before us, and as Prophets Burn'd, Are all but stories, which, awoke from Sleep, They told their comrades, and to Sleep return'd."
The history of civilisation is a history of wandering, sword in hand, in search of food. In the misty younger world we catch glimpses of phantom races, rising, slaying, finding food, building rude civilisations, decaying, falling under the swords of stronger hands, and passing utterly away. Man, like any other animal, has roved over the earth seeking what he might devour; and not romance and adventure, but the hunger-need, has urged him on his vast adventures. Whether a bankrupt gentleman sailing to colonise Virginia or a lean Cantonese contracting to labour on the sugar plantations of Hawaii, in each case, gentleman and coolie, it is a desperate attempt to get something to eat, to get more to eat than he can get at home.
It has always been so, from the time of the first pre-human anthropoid crossing a mountain-divide in quest of better berry-bushes beyond, down to the latest Slovak, arriving on our shores to-day, to go to work in the coal-mines of Pennsylvania. These migratory movements of peoples have been called drifts, and the word is apposite. Unplanned, blind, automatic, spurred on by the pain of hunger, man has literally drifted his way around the planet. There have been drifts in the past, innumerable and forgotten, and so remote that no records have been left, or composed of such low-typed humans or pre-humans that they made no scratchings on stone or bone and left no monuments to show that they had been.
These early drifts we conjecture and know must have occurred, just as we know that the first upright-walking brutes were descended from some kin of the quadrumana through having developed "a pair of great toes out of two opposable thumbs." Dominated by fear, and by their very fear accelerating their development, these early ancestors of ours, suffering hunger-pangs very like the ones we experience to-day, drifted on, hunting and being hunted, eating and being eaten, wandering through thousand-year- long odysseys of screaming primordial savagery, until they left their skeletons in glacial gravels, some of them, and their bone-scratchings in cave-men's lairs.
There have been drifts from east to west and west to east, from north to south and back again, drifts that have criss-crossed one another, and drifts colliding and recoiling and caroming off in new directions. From Central Europe the Aryans have drifted into Asia, and from Central Asia the Turanians have drifted across Europe. Asia has thrown forth great waves of hungry humans from the prehistoric "round-barrow" "broad-heads" who overran Europe and penetrated to Scandinavia and England, down through the hordes of Attila and Tamerlane, to the present immigration of Chinese and Japanese that threatens America. The Phoenicians and the Greeks, with unremembered drifts behind them, colonised the Mediterranean. Rome was engulfed in the torrent of Germanic tribes drifting down from the north before a flood of drifting Asiatics. The Angles, Saxons, and Jutes, after having drifted whence no man knows, poured into Britain, and the English have carried this drift on around the world. Retreating before stronger breeds, hungry and voracious, the Eskimo has drifted to the inhospitable polar regions, the Pigmy to the fever-rotten jungles of Africa. And in this day the drift of the races continues, whether it be of Chinese into the Philippines and the Malay Peninsula, of Europeans to the United States or of Americans to the wheat- lands of Manitoba and the Northwest.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Collection of Stories by Jack London
- 2: Only the monuments of these Aryans remain
- 3: Woodruff is responsible for the assertion that 10
- 4: That country had a population of 500
- 5: Or three quarters of a billion
- 6: And also a slowly decreasing fecundity
- 7: Of already existing breeds of micro organisms
- 8: The principle of all these evolutions remains
- 9: As my shipmates promptly informed me
- 10: And the topmast reels over drunkenly above you
- 11: My crew were Japanese fishermen
- 12: Bow line and stern line were drawn taut
- 13: Illest appearing muck to be seen in many a day's ride
- 14: With the winch out of commission
- 15: And we are off for Vallejo where the little Roamer lies
- 16: Charmian suggested driving a span
- 17: But Charmian climbed up alongside
- 18: And down the slopes to Petaluma Valley
- 19: Milda immediately rabbit jumps to the side
- 20: Maybe I am as wrong as Ingersoll was
- 21: Then to the right and across to Calistoga in Napa Valley
- 22: At Gualala Charmian caught her first one
- 23: As soon as this is mailed from Eureka
- 24: I learned that the boy's name was Eliceo
- 25: At seven o'clock Eliceo was back
- 26: Ends this intercourse with Captain Ernesto Becucci
- 27: Contenting ourselves with calling him the Bricklayer
- 28: Grinning at us his hatred and malignancy
- 29: Everything had gone wrong with the Bricklayer
- 30: Twice already must they have seen me run aft
- 31: And there was the shadow of the topmast
- 32: Not because there was anything extraordinary about Dana
- 33: That larboard was changed to port
- 34: Dana was the thorough going type of man
- 35: LORETTA shows disappointment at interruption
- 36: Enter abruptly ALICE HEMINGWAY from right
- 37: Which she brings to ALICE HEMINGWAY
- 38: LORETTA trips swiftly across to table
- 39: Hudging her chair back maternally
- 40: Never mind what Daisy says LORETTA
- 41: Discovers that LORETTA is alone
- 42: LORETTA buries her face and sobs afresh
- 43: LORETTA breaks down into violent weeping
- 44: And flinging away match and cigarette
- 45: LORETTA looks at JACK HEMINGWAY
- 46: And I know you You are Robert Fitzsimmons
- 47: You had your arms around my neck MAUD
- 48: I'd rather see you punch the bag
- 49: FITZSIMMONS takes off coat and gives exhibition
- 50: I never saw such an appetite MAUD
- 51: Did you er ever fake a fight
- 52: He fails to find cigarette case
- 53: MAUD removes hands and looks at him indignantly
