The
Handsomest Drowned Man In The World
by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
THE FIRST
CHILDREN who saw the dark and slinky bulge approaching through the sea
let themselves think it was an enemy ship. Then they saw it had no flags
or masts and they thought it was a whale. But when it washed up on the
beach, they removed the clumps of seaweed, the jellyfish tentacles, and
the remains of fish and flotsam, and only then did they see that it was
a drowned man.
They had been playing
with him all afternoon, burying him in the sand and digging him up
again, when someone chanced to see them and spread the alarm in the
village. The men who carried him to the nearest house noticed that he
weighed more than any dead man they had ever known, almost as much as a
horse, and they said to each other that maybe he'd been floating too
long and the water had got into his bones. When they laid him on the
floor they said he'd been taller than all other men because there was
barely enough room for him in the house, but they thought that maybe the
ability to keep on growing after death was part of the nature of certain
drowned men. He had the smell of the sea about him and only his shape
gave one to suppose that it was the corpse of a human being, because the
skin was covered with a crust of mud and scales.
They did not even have
to clean off his face to know that the dead man was a stranger. The
village was made up of only twenty-odd wooden houses that had stone
courtyards with no flowers and which were spread about on the end of a
desert-like cape. There was so little land that mothers always went
about with the fear that the wind would carry off their children and the
few dead that the years had caused among them had to be thrown off the
cliffs. But the sea was calm and bountiful and all the men fitted into
seven boats. So when they found the drowned man they simply had to look
at one another to see that they were all there.
That night they did not
go out to work at sea. While the men went to find out if anyone was
missing in neighboring villages, the women stayed behind to care for the
drowned man. They took the mud off with grass swabs, they removed the
underwater stones entangled in his hair, and they scraped the crust off
with tools used for scaling fish. As they were doing that they noticed
that the vegetation on him came from faraway oceans and deep water and
that his clothes were in tatters, as if he had sailed through labyrinths
of coral. They noticed too that he bore his death with pride, for he did
not have the lonely look of other drowned men who came out of the sea or
that haggard, needy look of men who drowned in rivers. But only when
they finished cleaning him off did they become aware of the kind of man
he was and it left them breathless. Not only was he the tallest,
strongest, most virile, and best built man they had ever seen, but even
though they were looking at him there was no room for him in their
imagination.
They could not find a
bed in the village large enough to lay him on nor was there a table
solid enough to use for his wake. The tallest men's holiday pants would
not fit him, nor the fattest ones' Sunday shirts, nor the shoes of the
one with the biggest feet. Fascinated by his huge size and his beauty,
the women then decided to make him some pants from a large piece of sail
and a shirt from some bridal brabant linen so that he could continue
through his death with dignity. As they sewed, sitting in a circle and
gazing at the corpse between stitches, it seemed to them that the wind
had never been so steady nor the sea so restless as on that night and
they supposed that the change had something to do with the dead man.
They thought that if that magnificent man had lived in the village, his
house would have had the widest doors, the highest ceiling, and the
strongest floor, his bedstead would have been made from a midship frame
held together by iron bolts, and his wife would have been the happiest
woman. They thought that he would have had so much authority that he
could have drawn fish out of the sea simply by calling their names and
that he would have put so much work into his land that springs would
have burst forth from among the rocks so that he would have been able to
plant flowers on the cliffs. They secretly compared him to their own
men, thinking that for all their lives theirs were incapable of doing
what he could do in one night, and they ended up dismissing them deep in
their hearts as the weakest, meanest and most useless creatures on
earth. They were wandering through that maze of fantasy when the oldest
woman, who as the oldest had looked upon the drowned man with more
compassion than passion, sighed: 'He has the face of someone called
Esteban.'
It was true. Most of
them had only to take another look at him to see that he could not have
any other name. The more stubborn among them, who were the youngest,
still lived for a few hours with the illusion that when they put his
clothes on and he lay among the flowers in patent leather shoes his name
might be Lautaro. But it was a vain illusion. There had not been enough
canvas, the poorly cut and worse sewn pants were too tight, and the
hidden strength of his heart popped the buttons on his shirt. After
midnight the whistling of the wind died down and the sea fell into its
Wednesday drowsiness. The silence put an end to any last doubts: he was
Esteban. The women who had dressed him, who had combed his hair, had cut
his nails and shaved him were unable to hold back a shudder of pity when
they had to resign themselves to his being dragged along the ground. It
was then that they understood how unhappy he must have been with that
huge body since it bothered him even after death. They could see him in
life, condemned to going through doors sideways, cracking his head on
crossbeams, remaining on his feet during visits, not knowing what to do
with his soft, pink, sea lion hands while the lady of the house looked
for her most resistant chair and begged him, frightened to death, sit
here, Esteban, please, and he, leaning against the wall, smiling, don't
bother, ma'am, I'm fine where I am, his heels raw and his back roasted
from having done the same thing so many times whenever he paid a visit,
don't bother, ma'am, I'm fine where I am, just to avoid the
embarrassment of breaking up the chair, and never knowing perhaps that
the ones who said don't go, Esteban, at least wait till the coffee's
ready, were the ones who later on would whisper the big boob finally
left, how nice, the handsome fool has gone. That was what the women were
thinking beside the body a little before dawn. Later, when they covered
his face with a handkerchief so that the light would not bother him, he
looked so forever dead, so defenseless, so much like their men that the
first furrows of tears opened in their hearts. It was one of the younger
ones who began the weeping. The others, coming to, went from sighs to
wails, and the more they sobbed the more they felt like weeping, because
the drowned man was becoming all the more Esteban for them, and so they
wept so much, for he was the more destitute, most peaceful, and most
obliging man on earth, poor Esteban. So when the men returned with the
news that the drowned man was not from the neighboring villages either,
the women felt an opening of jubilation in the midst of their tears.
'Praise the Lord,' they sighed, 'he's ours!'
The men thought the
fuss was only womanish frivolity. Fatigued because of the difficult
nighttime inquiries, all they wanted was to get rid of the bother of the
newcomer once and for all before the sun grew strong on that arid,
windless day. They improvised a litter with the remains of foremasts and
gaffs, tying it together with rigging so that it would bear the weight
of the body until they reached the cliffs. They wanted to tie the anchor
from a cargo ship to him so that he would sink easily into the deepest
waves, where fish are blind and divers die of nostalgia, and bad
currents would not bring him back to shore, as had happened with other
bodies. But the more they hurried, the more the women thought of ways to
waste time. They walked about like startled hens, pecking with the sea
charms on their breasts, some interfering on one side to put a scapular
of the good wind on the drowned man, some on the other side to put a
wrist compass on him , and after a great deal of get away from there,
woman, stay out of the way, look, you almost made me fall on top of the
dead man, the men began to feel mistrust in their livers and started
grumbling about why so many main-altar decorations for a stranger,
because no matter how many nails and holy-water jars he had on him, the
sharks would chew him all the same, but the women kept piling on their
junk relics, running back and forth, stumbling, while they released in
sighs what they did not in tears, so that the men finally exploded with since
when has there ever been such a fuss over a drifting corpse, a drowned
nobody, a piece of cold Wednesday meat. One of the women, mortified
by so much lack of care, then removed the handkerchief from the dead
man's face and the men were left breathless too.
He was Esteban. It was
not necessary to repeat it for them to recognize him. If they had been
told Sir Walter Raleigh, even they might have been impressed with his
gringo accent, the macaw on his shoulder, his cannibal-killing
blunderbuss, but there could be only one Esteban in the world and there
he was, stretched out like a sperm whale, shoeless, wearing the pants of
an undersized child, and with those stony nails that had to be cut with
a knife. They only had to take the handkerchief off his face to see that
he was ashamed, that it was not his fault that he was so big or so heavy
or so handsome, and if he had known that this was going to happen, he
would have looked for a more discreet place to drown in, seriously, I
even would have tied the anchor off a galleon around my nick and
staggered off a cliff like someone who doesn't like things in order not
to be upsetting people now with this Wednesday dead body, as you people
say, in order not to be bothering anyone with this filthy piece of cold
meat that doesn't have anything to do with me. There was so much truth
in his manner that even the most mistrustful men, the ones who felt the
bitterness of endless nights at sea fearing that their women would tire
of dreaming about them and begin to dream of drowned men, even they and
others who were harder still shuddered in the marrow of their bones at
Esteban's sincerity.
That was how they came
to hold the most splendid funeral they could ever conceive of for an
abandoned drowned man. Some women who had gone to get flowers in the
neighboring villages returned with other women who could not believe
what they had been told, and those women went back for more flowers when
they saw the dead man, and they brought more and more until there were
so many flowers and so many people that it was hard to walk about. At
the final moment it pained them to return him to the waters as an orphan
and they chose a father and mother from among the best people, and aunts
and uncles and cousins, so that through him all the inhabitants of the
village became kinsmen. Some sailors who heard the weeping from a
distance went off course and people heard of one who had himself tied to
the mainmast, remembering ancient fables about sirens. While they fought
for the privilege of carrying him on their shoulders along the steep
escarpment by the cliffs, men and women became aware for the first time
of the desolation of their streets, the dryness of their courtyards, the
narrowness of their dreams as they faced the splendor and beauty of
their drowned man. They let him go without an anchor so that he could
come back if he wished and whenever he wished, and they all held their
breath for the fraction of centuries the body took to fall into the
abyss. They did not need to look at one another to realize that they
were no longer all present, that they would never be. But they also knew
that everything would be different from then on, that their houses would
have wider doors, higher ceilings, and stronger floors so that Esteban's
memory could go everywhere without bumping into beams and so that no one
in the future would dare whisper the big boob finally died, too bad, the
handsome fool has finally died, because they were going to paint their
house fronts gay colors to make Esteban's memory eternal and they were
going to break their backs digging for springs among the stones and
planting flowers on the cliffs so that in future years at dawn the
passengers on great liners would awaken, suffocated by the smell of
gardens on the high seas, and the captain would have to come down from
the bridge in his dress uniform, with his astrolabe, his pole star, and
his row of war medals and, pointing to the promontory of roses on the
horizon, he would say in fourteen languages, look there, where the wind
is so peaceful now that it's gone to sleep beneath the beds, over there,
where the sun's so bright that the sunflowers don't know which way to
turn, yes, over there, that's Esteban's village. |