SEPTEMBER - NOVEMBER 1888
BRANDEIS had held all day by Mulinuu, expecting the reported real
attack. He woke on the 13th to find himself cut off on that
unwatered promontory, and the Mataafa villagers parading Apia. The
same day Fritze received a letter from Mataafa summoning him to
withdraw his party from the isthmus; and Fritze, as if in answer,
drew in his ship into the small harbour close to Mulinuu, and
trained his port
battery to
assist in the defence. From a step so
decisive, it might be thought the German plans were unaffected by
the
disastrous issue of the battle. I
conceive nothing would be
further from the truth. Here was Tamasese penned on Mulinuu with
his troops; Apia, from which alone these could be subsisted, in the
hands of the enemy; a battle
imminent, in which the German
vesselmust
apparently take part with men and
battery, and the buildings
of the German firm were
apparently destined to be the first target
of fire. Unless Becker re-established that which he had so lately
and so artfully thrown down - the
neutral territory - the firm
would have to suffer. If he re-established it, Tamasese must
retire from Mulinuu. If Becker saved his goose, he lost his
cabbage. Nothing so well depicts the man's effrontery as that he
should have
conceived the design of saving both, - of re-
establishing only so much of the
neutral territory as should hamper
Mataafa, and leaving in abeyance all that could incommode Tamasese.
By
drawing the
boundary where he now proposed, across the isthmus,
he protected the firm, drove back the Mataafas out of almost all
that they had conquered, and, so far from disturbing Tamasese,
actually fortified him in his old position.
The real story of the negotiations that followed we shall perhaps
never learn. But so much is plain: that while Becker was thus
outwardly straining
decency in the interest of Tamasese, he was
privately intriguing, or pretending to intrigue, with Mataafa. In
his
despatch of the 11th, he had given an
extendedcriticism of
that
chieftain, whom he depicts as very dark and artful; and while
admitting that his
assumption of the name of Malietoa might raise
him up followers, predicted that he could not make an orderly
government or support himself long in sole power "without very
energetic foreign help." Of what help was the
consul thinking?
There was no
helper in the field but Germany. On the 15th he had
an
interview with the
victor; told him that Tamasese's was the only
government recognised by Germany, and that he must continue to
recognise it till he received "other instructions from his
government, whom he was now advising of the late events"; refused,
accordingly, to
withdraw the guard from the isthmus; and desired
Mataafa, "until the
arrival of these fresh instructions," to
refrain from an attack on Mulinuu. One thing of two: either this
language is
extremely perfidious, or Becker was preparing to change
sides. The same
detachment appears in his
despatch of October 7th.
He computes the losses of the German firm with an easy
cheerfulness. If Tamasese get up again (GELINGT DIE
WIEDERHERSTELLUNG DER REGIERUNG TAMASESE'S), Tamasese will have to
pay. If not, then Mataafa. This is not the language of a
partisan. The tone of
indifference, the easy
implication that the
case of Tamasese was already
desperate, the hopes held
secretlyforth to Mataafa and
secretly reported to his government at home,
trenchantly
contrast with his
external conduct. At this very time
he was feeding Tamasese; he had German sailors mounting guard on
Tamasese's battlements; the German war-ship lay close in, whether
to help or to destroy. If he meant to drop the cause of Tamasese,
he had him in a corner,
helpless, and could
stifle him without a
sob. If he meant to rat, it was to be with every condition of
safety and every circumstance of infamy.
Was it
conceivable, then, that he meant it? Speaking with a
gentleman who was in the confidence of Dr. Knappe: "Was it not a
pity," I asked, "that Knappe did not stick to Becker's
policy of
supporting Mataafa?" "You are quite wrong there; that was not
Knappe's doing," was the reply. "Becker had changed his mind
before Knappe came." Why, then, had he changed it? This
excellent, if ignominious, idea once entertained, why was it let
drop? It is to be remembered there was another German in the
field, Brandeis, who had a respect, or rather, perhaps, an
affection, for Tamasese, and who thought his own honour and that of
his country engaged in the support of that government which they
had provoked and founded. Becker described the captain to Laupepa
as "a quiet,
sensible gentleman." If any word came to his ears of
the intended
manoeuvre, Brandeis would certainly show himself very
sensible of the
affront; but Becker might have been tempted to
withdraw his former epithet of quiet. Some such passage, some such
threatened change of front at the
consulate, opposed with outcry,
would explain what seems
otherwiseinexplicable, the bitter,
indignant, almost
hostile tone of a
subsequent letter from Brandeis
to Knappe - "Brandeis's inflammatory letter," Bismarck calls it -
the proximate cause of the German
landing and
reverse at Fangalii.
But whether the advances of Becker were
sincere or not - whether he
meditated
treachery against the old king or was practising
treachery upon the new, and the choice is between one or other - no
doubt but he contrived to gain his points with Mataafa, prevailing
on him to change his camp for the better
protection of the German
plantations, and persuading him (long before he could
persuade his
brother
consuls) to accept that
miraculous new
neutral territory of
his, with a piece cut out for the immediate needs of Tamasese.
During the rest of September, Tamasese continued to decline. On
the 19th one village and half of another deserted him; on the 22nd
two more. On the 21st the Mataafas burned his town of Leulumoenga,
his own splendid house
flaming with the rest; and there are few
things of which a native thinks more, or has more reason to think
well, than of a fine Samoan house. Tamasese women and children
were marched up the same day from Atua, and handed over with their
sleeping-mats to Mulinuu: a most
unwelcomeaddition to a party
already
suffering from want. By the 20th, they were being watered
from the ADLER. On the 24th the Manono fleet of sixteen large
boats, fortified and rendered unmanageable with tons of firewood,
passed to windward to
intercept supplies from Atua. By the 27th
the hungry
garrison flocked in great numbers to draw rations at the
German firm. On the 28th the same business was
repeated with a
different issue. Mataafas
crowded to look on; words were
exchanged, blows followed; sticks, stones, and bottles were caught
up; the detested Brandeis, at great risk, threw himself between the
lines and expostulated with the Mataafas - his only personal
appearance in the wars, if this could be called war. The same
afternoon, the Tamasese boats got in with provisions, having passed
to
seaward of the
lumbering Manono fleet; and from that day on,
whether from a high degree of
enterprise on the one side or a great
lack of
capacity on the other, supplies were maintained from the
sea with regularity. Thus the
spectacle of battle, or at least of
riot, at the doors of the German firm was not
repeated. But the
memory must have hung heavy on the hearts, not of the Germans only,
but of all Apia. The Samoans are a gentle race, gentler than any
in Europe; we are often enough reminded of the circumstance, not
always by their friends. But a mob is a mob, and a
drunken mob is
a
drunken mob, and a
drunken mob with weapons in its hands is a
drunken mob with weapons in its hands, all the world over:
elementary propositions, which some of us upon these islands might
do worse than get by rote, but which must have been
evident enough
to Becker. And I am amazed by the man's
constancy, that, even
while blows were going at the door of that German firm which he was
in Samoa to protect, he should have stuck to his demands. Ten days
before, Blacklock had offered to recognise the old territory,
including Mulinuu, and Becker had refused, and still in the midst
of these "alarums and excursions," he continued to refuse it.
On October 2nd, anchored in Apia bay H.B.M.S. CALLIOPE, Captain
Kane, carrying the flag of Rear-Admiral Fairfax, and the gunboat
LIZARD, Lieutenant-Commander Pelly. It was rumoured the admiral
had come to recognise the government of Tamasese, I believe in