The Last White Man
      
      By
          Robert E. Howard
        (1920)
      
      Source:  Howard
          Collector # 05 [1964-Summer] 
 
      THE
          MAN SHIVERED in the coolness of the early morning. He shifted
        his body to relieve the pressure on his elbows. 
 
      Cautiously he peered up over
        the great boulder in front of him, and down the mountain side. Fire
        twinkled there and the man cursed. An obscene song floated up to him and
        his curses deepened. The song was in a rich, guttural voice. 
 
      The man was a wonder,
        physically. Over six feet in height, his chest and shoulders were those
        of a giant. Weighing far over two hundred pounds, he yet gave the
        impression of sinuous speed. His face was sullen, savage, almost
        primitive, small black eyes glittering through tangled strands of sandy
        hair. In one hand he clutched a rifle. A curved scimitar of surprising
        proportions lay beside him. 
 
      He was a splendid example of a
        wonderful race. A race which reached physical perfection, sank to the
        depths of degeneracy and then regained the heights just before their
        fall. He was the last. He was thinking as he lay there, watching the
        camps of his enemies. 
 
      What heights his race had
        reached before luxuries, idleness and pleasures had sapped their might;
        had made of them a race of degenerate weaklings. He cursed beneath his
        breath. 
 
      There had been an age when his
        race had ruled the world. Their cities dotted the fertile plains. Their
        ships had furrowed the seas, bringing back the wealth of every land.
        Their armies had gone forth conquering and subjugating.
      
      None could stand before them
        in the more peaceful sports. Their athletes defeated all others with
        ease. They were all giants, physically and mentally
      
      Then the decadence set in. It
        had been first noticeable in the sports and athletics. Fewer and fewer
        of the race had gained fame in the great games. More and more men of
        other races seized the prizes. 
 
      The ruling race forgot the art
        of war, forgot all except the search for newer pleasures, and in so
        doing, they descended to the depths of degeneracy.
      
      Always some new strong race
        sprang up then, the man reflected, thinking of the hazy legends of the
        ancients, of great empires known as Greece, Rome, Nineveh, Sumeria.
    
 
      And a new, strong race had
        risen. A race whose people had been enslaved for ages. 
 
      They were a mighty, a prolific
        race. First they overran their own continent. Rebellions swept Africa.
        The negroes pushed the Arab races to the north and the Arabs and
        Europeans slew each other, until from Cape Town to Tangiers, and from
        Kimberly to Suez only black men ruled. 
 
      The whites should have seen
        that they could not stand before them. The black race doubles itself in
        forty years, the brown in sixty, the white in eighty. And the white race
        was exhausted by dissipation; birth rate almost ceased. Moreover, the
        race was decimated by fierce wars, wherein white man fought white man.
    
 
      The whites had taught
        sanitation to the negroes, and had stopped massacres and tribal wars.
        The growth of the black race was uninterrupted.
      
      In the almost incessant wars
        between the white nations, black men were pressed into service, taught
        the arts of war and then sent to their native lands -- to teach others
        how the white man fought. 
 
      They were a strong, young
        race. Their day was yet to come. All they lacked was a leader. And a
        leader had risen, a mixed-breed Arab, whose ambition was without
        measure, whose genius was Satanic. 
 
      He welded them into one great
        mass, gave them white man's weapons, furnished by Americans and
        Europeans who would have as quickly and readily sold their own sisters'
        souls if the price were high enough. He led them to the slaughter. 
    
At first the white race held its own.
But not for long. The blacks were physical giants, mighty fighting organisms, whose highest wish was slaughter and plunder.
That century long warfare! The man thrilled with a savage pride as he reviewed the wonderful battle the whites gave, overwhelmed as they were with odds of a hundred to one.
Asia had stood firm -- but Asia did not stand. Whirlwinds of revolt swept from Kamchatka to Stamboul.
Japan called upon the East to strike for liberty and loot and put herself at their head. Like a pack of tigers the East rose and Japan herself, unable to stem the tide she had loosed, was the first to go down.
 
      The Orientals allied
        themselves with the negroes to slaughter the hated whites. Only the
        Sikhs and Gurkas in India and the Shans in Burma stood firm.
      
      Spain, Portugal, Italy, the
        Balkans were overwhelmed with one rush. The black hordes, spread out,
        until the tip of that vast army reached from Gibraltar to Siam. 
 
      They swept over Europe like a
        wave. In America a savage struggle was going on, for her black
        Inhabitants, who numbered nearly half of her entire population, had
        risen. 
 
      Then over the ocean came the
        invaders from Africa. In less than ten years, the fight had changed from
        a war between two great nations, to a hunting down and slaughtering of
        scattered remnants of the great nation which once had ruled the world.
        Not with ease was this accomplished. The hunted life brought back the
        primitive might of the race and those who survived became giants such as
        the man who crouched among the boulders and cursed. 
 
      Once the white race was
        scattered, the blacks turned upon their Oriental allies and slaughtered
        them. The Orientals always warred among themselves and had no unity,
        whereas the black were held together by the hand of their Arab ruler.
    
 
      The Sikhs, the Ghurkas and the
        Shans had fallen with the whites. The Ghurkas withstood the negroes
        longest, for with the fall of British rule, they had retreated to their
        Nepal hills and there they held the blacks at bay for a hundred years.
    
In the hills north of the Khyber, too, a long fierce battle was waged, and the Afghans, fierce and war-like as the blacks, held out longer than any other Asian race.
 
      Followed years of slaughter
        and fleeing. All over the world, small bands of whites and Orientals
        fled, fought, stole into the camps of their conquerors to slay and burn,
        fled, fought, and were slaughtered, fighting and slaying to the last.
    
 
      The last man reviewed the
        history and deep curse slipped from between his bearded lips. 
 
      Over a hundred years had
        passed since the first of the black horde swept up out of the Congo. A
        hundred years of battle, slaughter, pillage and rapine.
      
      Now, over all the world, which
        the rising sun would soon light, to send the blacks bounding up the
        mountain, he was the only white man. 
 
      A world of black men. No white
        men, no brown or yellow men. No mulattoes. The women of the other races
        had slain themselves ere they could bear the children of the hated
        ravishers. 
 
      One white man in all the
        world. 
 
      And, he reflected, it would
        not be many years before the jackal and the wolf would wander unchecked.
        For sixty-five years the Satanic Arab emperor had held the blacks
        together but when he was murdered, they fell into wars and even now a
        thousand small chiefs were fighting for ascendency. The last white man
        laughed with savage, unholy glee. 
 
      The black race was doomed.
        They were destroyers, not builders. When they slew the white men,
        progress ceased. The blacks reverted to savagery. They did not even know
        the art of making weapons. 
 
      They had destroyed and could
        not rebuild. And they were going back to bestial savagery, and to a
        slaughtering of one another which even their animal-like rate of birth
        could not control. 
 
      It was dawning. The last white
        man looked about him; gathered his weapons. The rush would soon come.
    
 
      And soon it came. A fierce
        shout, a chorus of yells, a glitter of spears, a firing of ancient
        rifles, and the black devils came leaping up the mountain slope.
      
      Unable to make weapons
        themselves, the negroes had in truth gone back to the ways of their
        remote ancestors. 
 
      They were not the ebony giants
        who had smashed the armies of Europe, America and the Orient. Even as
        the whites had degenerated so had the blacks.
      
      The white man grinned
        savagely, shoved the muzzle of his rifle forward, and began firing. He
        had not many cartridges, but he wasted not one. Again and again his
        single rifle broke the rush and sent the remaining blacks scurrying for
        cover. 
 
      But the rush came when the
        white man stood up and hurled his empty weapon at the attackers. For a
        moment they halted, staring silently, fearfully, at the silent, savage
        white giant who faced them, great scimitar held aloft. 
 
      No five of them were a match
        for him; but there were thousands. They came with a rush, leaping over
        and across the boulders, spears flashing. 
 
      And the white man leaped to
        meet them, great blade swishing among the thrusting spears, hewing
        through limbs and bodies, smiting off heads.
      
      They gave back before him and
        for an instant he stood free. There, ringed about by his foes, he stood,
        the last white man, bleeding from a hundred spear-thrusts, his fallen
        enemies piled about him in a thigh-deep heap.
      
      A moment he stood, drawn to
        his full great height, eyes fixed on the far-away skies, scimitar raised
        high above his head as if in salute to the spirits of the great ones he
        saw there -- then a hundred spears whirled through the air. 
 
      The sun that rose above the
        mighty mountain shone upon a world of one race.