Aloha Oe
by Jack London
Never are there such departures as from the dock at
Honolulu. The great transport lay with steam up, ready to pull out.
A thousand persons were on her decks; five thousand stood on the
wharf. Up and down the long gangway passed native princes and
princesses, sugar kings and the high officials of the Territory.
Beyond, in long lines, kept in order by the native police, were the
carriages and motor-cars of the Honolulu aristocracy. On the wharf
the Royal Hawaiian Band played "Aloha Oe," and when it finished, a
stringed orchestra of native musicians on board the transport took
up the same sobbing strains, the native woman singer's voice rising
birdlike above the instruments and the hubbub of departure. It was
a silver reed, sounding its clear, unmistakable note in the great
diapason of farewell.
Forward, on the lower deck, the rail was lined six deep
with khaki- clad young boys, whose bronzed faces told of three
years' campaigning under the sun. But the farewell was not for
them. Nor was it for the white-clad captain on the lofty bridge,
remote as the stars, gazing down upon the tumult beneath him. Nor
was the farewell for the young officers farther aft, returning from
the Philippines, nor for the white-faced, climate-ravaged women by
their sides. Just aft the gangway, on the promenade deck, stood a
score of United States Senators with their wives and daughters--the
Senatorial junketing party that for a month had been dined and
wined, surfeited with statistics and dragged up volcanic hill and
down lava dale to behold the glories and resources of Hawaii. It
was for the junketing party that the transport had called in at
Honolulu, and it was to the junketing party that Honolulu was
saying good-bye.
The Senators were garlanded and bedecked with flowers.
Senator Jeremy Sambrooke's stout neck and portly bosom were
burdened with a dozen wreaths. Out of this mass of bloom and
blossom projected his head and the greater portion of his freshly
sunburned and perspiring face. He thought the flowers an
abomination, and as he looked out over the multitude on the wharf
it was with a statistical eye that saw none of the beauty, but that
peered into the labour power, the factories, the railroads, and the
plantations that lay back of the multitude and which the multitude
expressed. He saw resources and thought development, and he was too
busy with dreams of material achievement and empire to notice his
daughter at his side, talking with a young fellow in a natty summer
suit and straw hat, whose eager eyes seemed only for her and never
left her face. Had Senator Jeremy had eyes for his daughter, he
would have seen that, in place of the young girl of fifteen he had
brought to Hawaii a short month before, he was now taking away with
him a woman.
Hawaii has a ripening climate, and Dorothy Sambrooke had
been exposed to it under exceptionally ripening circumstances.
Slender, pale, with blue eyes a trifle tired from poring over the
pages of books and trying to muddle into an understanding of
life--such she had been the month before. But now the eyes were
warm instead of tired, the cheeks were touched with the sun, and
the body gave the first hint and promise of swelling lines. During
that month she had left books alone, for she had found greater joy
in reading from the book of life. She had ridden horses, climbed
volcanoes, and learned surf swimming. The tropics had entered into
her blood, and she was aglow with the warmth and colour and
sunshine. And for a month she had been in the company of a
man--Stephen Knight, athlete, surf- board rider, a bronzed god of
the sea who bitted the crashing breakers, leaped upon their backs,
and rode them in to shore.
Dorothy Sambrooke was unaware of the change. Her
consciousness was still that of a young girl, and she was surprised
and troubled by Steve's conduct in this hour of saying good-bye.
She had looked upon him as her playfellow, and for the month he had
been her playfellow; but now he was not parting like a playfellow.
He talked excitedly and disconnectedly, or was silent, by fits and
starts. Sometimes he did not hear what she was saying, or if he
did, failed to respond in his wonted manner. She was perturbed by
the way he looked at her. She had not known before that he had such
blazing eyes. There was something in his eyes that was terrifying.
She could not face it, and her own eyes continually drooped before
it. Yet there was something alluring about it, as well, and she
continually returned to catch a glimpse of that blazing, imperious,
yearning something that she had never seen in human eyes before.
And she was herself strangely bewildered and excited.
The transport's huge whistle blew a deafening blast, and
the flower- crowned multitude surged closer to the side of the
dock. Dorothy Sambrooke's fingers were pressed to her ears; and as
she made a moue of distaste at the outrage of sound, she noticed
again the imperious, yearning blaze in Steve's eyes. He was not
looking at her, but at her ears, delicately pink and transparent in
the slanting rays of the afternoon sun. Curious and fascinated, she
gazed at that strange something in his eyes until he saw that he
had been caught. She saw his cheeks flush darkly and heard him
utter inarticulately. He was embarrassed, and she was aware of
embarrassment herself. Stewards were going about nervously begging
shore-going persons to be gone. Steve put out his hand. When she
felt the grip of the fingers that had gripped hers a thousand times
on surf-boards and lava slopes, she heard the words of the song
with a new understanding as they sobbed in the Hawaiian woman's
silver throat:
"Ka halia ko aloha kai hiki mai,
Ke hone ae nei i ku'u manawa,
O oe no kan aloha
A loko e hana nei."
Steve had taught her air and words and meaning--so she had
thought, till this instant; and in this instant of the last finger
clasp and warm contact of palms she divined for the first time the
real meaning of the song. She scarcely saw him go, nor could she
note him on the crowded gangway, for she was deep in a memory maze,
living over the four weeks just past, rereading events in the light
of revelation.
When the Senatorial party had landed, Steve had been one of
the committee of entertainment. It was he who had given them their
first exhibition of surf riding, out at Waikiki Beach, paddling his
narrow board seaward until he became a disappearing speck, and
then, suddenly reappearing, rising like a sea-god from out of the
welter of spume and churning white--rising swiftly higher and
higher, shoulders and chest and loins and limbs, until he stood
poised on the smoking crest of a mighty, mile-long billow, his feet
buried in the flying foam, hurling beach-ward with the speed of an
express train and stepping calmly ashore at their astounded feet.
That had been her first glimpse of Steve. He had been the youngest
man on the committee, a youth, himself, of twenty. He had not
entertained by speechmaking, nor had he shone decoratively at
receptions. It was in the breakers at Waikiki, in the wild cattle
drive on Manna Kea, and in the breaking yard of the Haleakala Ranch
that he had performed his share of the entertaining.
She had not cared for the interminable statistics and
eternal speechmaking of the other members of the committee. Neither
had Steve. And it was with Steve that she had stolen away from the
open-air feast at Hamakua, and from Abe Louisson, the coffee
planter, who had talked coffee, coffee, nothing but coffee, for two
mortal hours. It was then, as they rode among the tree ferns, that
Steve had taught her the words of "Aloha Oe," the song that had
been sung to the visiting Senators at every village, ranch, and
plantation departure.
Steve and she had been much together from the first. He had
been her playfellow. She had taken possession of him while her
father had been occupied in taking possession of the statistics of
the island territory. She was too gentle to tyrannize over her
playfellow, yet she had ruled him abjectly, except when in canoe,
or on horse or surf-board, at which times he had taken charge and
she had rendered obedience. And now, with this last singing of the
song, as the lines were cast off and the big transport began
backing slowly out from the dock, she knew that Steve was something
more to her than playfellow.
Five thousand voices were singing "Aloha Oe,"--"MY LOVE BE
WITH YOU TILL WE MEET AGAIN,"--and in that first moment of known
love she realized that she and Steve were being torn apart. When
would they ever meet again? He had taught her those words himself.
She remembered listening as he sang them over and over under the
hau tree at Waikiki. Had it been prophecy? And she had admired his
singing, had told him that he sang with such expression. She
laughed aloud, hysterically, at the recollection. With such
expression!--when he had been pouring his heart out in his voice.
She knew now, and it was too late. Why had he not spoken? Then she
realized that girls of her age did not marry. But girls of her age
did marry--in Hawaii--was her instant thought. Hawaii had ripened
her--Hawaii, where flesh is golden and where all women are ripe and
sun-kissed.
Vainly she scanned the packed multitude on the dock. What
had become of him? She felt she could pay any price for one more
glimpse of him, and she almost hoped that some mortal sickness
would strike the lonely captain on the bridge and delay departure.
For the first time in her life she looked at her father with a
calculating eye, and as she did she noted with newborn fear the
lines of will and determination. It would be terrible to oppose
him. And what chance would she have in such a struggle? But why had
Steve not spoken? Now it was too late. Why had he not spoken under
the hau tree at Waikiki?
And then, with a great sinking of the heart, it came to her
that she knew why. What was it she had heard one day? Oh, yes, it
was at Mrs. Stanton's tea, that afternoon when the ladies of the
"Missionary Crowd" had entertained the ladies of the Senatorial
party. It was Mrs. Hodgkins, the tall blonde woman, who had asked
the question. The scene came back to her vividly--the broad lanai,
the tropic flowers, the noiseless Asiatic attendants, the hum of
the voices of the many women and the question Mrs. Hodgkins had
asked in the group next to her. Mrs. Hodgkins had been away on the
mainland for years, and was evidently inquiring after old island
friends of her maiden days. "What has become of Susie Maydwell?"
was the question she had asked. "Oh, we never see her any more; she
married Willie Kupele," another island woman answered. And Senator
Behrend's wife laughed and wanted to know why matrimony had
affected Susie Maydwell's friendships.
"Hapa-haole," was the answer; "he was a half-caste, you
know, and we of the Islands have to think about our children."
Dorothy turned to her father, resolved to put it to the
test.
"Papa, if Steve ever comes to the United States, mayn't he
come and see us some time?"
"Who? Steve?"
"Yes, Stephen Knight--you know him. You said good-bye to
him not five minutes ago. Mayn't he, if he happens to be in the
United States some time, come and see us?"
"Certainly not," Jeremy Sambrooke answered shortly.
"Stephen Knight is a hapa-haole and you know what that means."
"Oh," Dorothy said faintly, while she felt a numb despair
creep into her heart.
Steve was not a hapa-haole--she knew that; but she did not
know that a quarter-strain of tropic sunshine streamed in his
veins, and she knew that that was sufficient to put him outside the
marriage pale. It was a strange world. There was the Honourable A.
S. Cleghorn, who had married a dusky princess of the Kamehameha
blood, yet men considered it an honour to know him, and the most
exclusive women of the ultra-exclusive "Missionary Crowd" were to
be seen at his afternoon teas. And there was Steve. No one had
disapproved of his teaching her to ride a surf-board, nor of his
leading her by the hand through the perilous places of the crater
of Kilauea. He could have dinner with her and her father, dance
with her, and be a member of the entertainment committee; but
because there was tropic sunshine in his veins he could not marry
her.
And he didn't show it. One had to be told to know. And he
was so good-looking. The picture of him limned itself on her inner
vision, and before she was aware she was pleasuring in the memory
of the grace of his magnificent body, of his splendid shoulders, of
the power in him that tossed her lightly on a horse, bore her
safely through the thundering breakers, or towed her at the end of
an alpenstock up the stern lava crest of the House of the Sun.
There was something subtler and mysterious that she remembered, and
that she was even then just beginning to understand--the aura of
the male creature that is man, all man, masculine man. She came to
herself with a shock of shame at the thoughts she had been
thinking. Her cheeks were dyed with the hot blood which quickly
receded and left them pale at the thought that she would never see
him again. The stem of the transport was already out in the stream,
and the promenade deck was passing abreast of the end of the dock.
"There's Steve now," her father said. "Wave good-bye to
him, Dorothy."
Steve was looking up at her with eager eyes, and he saw in
her face what he had not seen before. By the rush of gladness into
his own face she knew that he knew. The air was throbbing with the
song -
My love to you.
My love be with you till we meet again.
There was no need for speech to tell their story. About
her, passengers were flinging their garlands to their friends on
the dock. Steve held up his hands and his eyes pleaded. She slipped
her own garland over her head, but it had become entangled in the
string of Oriental pearls that Mervin, an elderly sugar king, had
placed around her neck when he drove her and her father down to the
steamer.
She fought with the pearls that clung to the flowers. The
transport was moving steadily on. Steve was already beneath her.
This was the moment. The next moment and he would be past. She
sobbed, and Jeremy Sambrooke glanced at her inquiringly.
"Dorothy!" he cried sharply.
She deliberately snapped the string, and, amid a shower of
pearls, the flowers fell to the waiting lover. She gazed at him
until the tears blinded her and she buried her face on the shoulder
of Jeremy Sambrooke, who forgot his beloved statistics in
wonderment at girl babies that insisted on growing up. The crowd
sang on, the song growing fainter in the distance, but still
melting with the sensuous love-languor of Hawaii, the words biting
into her heart like acid because of their untruth.
Aloha oe, Aloha oe, e ke onaona no ho ika lipo,
A fond embrace, ahoi ae au, until we meet again.
End of story
About the author
Jack London (Jan 12, 1876 - Nov 22, 1916) was an American
author best known for writing The Call of the Wild. Jack London was
his pen name, likely born in San Francisco, California as John
Griffith Chaney. Like the restive characters in his works, London
sought a variety of experiences as a young man including sailor,
hobo and an agitator for jobs during the depression. He also wrote
some of the earliest Dystopian Fiction, including The Iron Heel
which portrays America under tyrannical rule, written ten years
before the Bolsheviks took over Russia.
During his vagrant period, he spent thirty days in the Erie
County jail in New York:
"Man-handling was merely one of the very minor unprintable
horrors of the Erie County Pen. I say 'unprintable'; and in justice
I must also say 'unthinkable'. They were unthinkable to me until I
saw them, and I was no spring chicken in the ways of the world and
the awful abysses of human degradation. It would take a deep
plummet to reach bottom in the Erie County Pen, and I do but skim
lightly and facetiously the surface of things as I there saw them."
London became a well-known writer and was one of the first
to achieve true financial success from his writings. His success
brought controversy as well. He was prodigious writer producing
over 500 works and was often accused of plagiarism. The manner in
which he chose to work contributed to those accusations; he bought
plots for stories and novels from a young Sinclair Lewis and he
used incidents read in newspapers as material for his stories.
London's most famous short story, particularly popular in
both middle- and high school language arts classes, is To Build a
Fire. His best-selling book during his lifetime was his 1910 novel
Burning Daylight.
A couple of favorite Jack London quotes:
"Life is not always a matter of holding good cards, but
sometimes, playing a poor hand well."
"The most beautiful stories always start with wreckage."
"A bone to the dog is not charity. Charity is the bone
shared with the dog, when you are just as hungry as the dog."