登陆注册
15710600000012

第12章 KING BEMBA'S POINTA WEST AFRICAN STORY(1)

BY

J. LANDERS

We were for the most part a queer lot out on that desolate southwest African coast, in charge of the various trading stations that were scattered along the coast, from the Gaboon River, past the mouth of the mighty Congo, to the Portuguese city of St. Paul de Loanda. Amixture of all sorts, especially bad sorts: broken-down clerks, men who could not succeed anywhere else, sailors, youths, and some whose characters would not have borne any investigation; and we very nearly all drank hard, and those who didn't drink hard took more than was good for them.

I don't know exactly what induced me to go out there. I was young for one thing, the country was unknown, the berth was vacant, and the conditions of it easy.

Imagine a high rocky point or headland, stretching out sideways into the sea, and at its base a small river winding into a country that was seemingly a blank in regard to inhabitants or cultivation; a land continuing for miles and miles, as far as the eye could see, one expanse of long yellow grass, dotted here and there with groups of bastard palms. In front of the headland rolled the lonely South Atlantic; and, as if such conditions were not dispiriting enough to existence upon the Point, there was yet another feature which at times gave the place a still more ghastly look. A long way off the shore, the heaving surface of the ocean began, in anything like bad weather, to break upon the shoals of the coast. Viewed from the top of the rock, the sea at such times looked, for at least two miles out, as if it were scored over with lines of white foam; but lower down, near the beach, each roller could be distinctly seen, and each roller had a curve of many feet, and was an enormous mass of water that hurled itself shoreward until it curled and broke.

When I first arrived on the Point there was, I may say, only one house upon it, and that belonged to Messrs. Flint Brothers, of Liverpool. It was occupied by one solitary man named Jackson; he had had an assistant, but the assistant had died of fever, and I was sent to replace him. Jackson was a man of fifty at least, who had been a sailor before he had become an African trader. His face bore testimony to the winds and weather it had encountered, and wore habitually a grave, if not melancholy, expression. He was rough but kind to me, and though strict was just, which was no common feature in an old African hand to one who had just arrived on the coast.

He kept the factory--we called all houses on the coast factories--as neat and clean as if it had been a ship. He had the floor of the portion we dwelt in holystoned every week; and numberless little racks and shelves were fitted up all over the house. The outside walls glittered with paint, and the yard was swept clean every morning; and every Sunday, at eight o'clock and sunset, the ensign was hoisted and lowered, and an old cannon fired at the word of command. Order and rule were with Jackson observed from habit, and were strictly enforced by him on all the natives employed in the factory.

Although I have said the country looked as if uninhabited, there were numerous villages hidden away in the long grass and brushwood, invisible at a distance, being huts of thatch or mud, and not so high as the grass among which they were placed. From these villages came most of our servants, and also the middlemen, who acted as brokers between us, the white men, and the negroes who brought ivory and gum and india-rubber from the far interior for sale. Our trade was principally in ivory, and when an unusually large number of elephants'

tusks arrived upon the Point for sale, it would be crowded with Bushmen, strange and uncouth, and hideously ugly, and armed, and then we would be very busy; for sometimes as many as two hundred tusks would be brought to us at the same time, and each of these had to be bargained for and paid for by exchange of cotton cloths, guns, knives, powder, and a host of small wares.

For some time after my arrival our factory, along with the others on the coast belonging to Messrs. Flint Brothers, was very well supplied by them with goods for the trade; but by degrees their shipments became less frequent, and small when they did come. In spite of repeated letters we could gain no reason from the firm for this fact, nor could the other factories, and gradually we found ourselves with an empty storehouse, and nearly all our goods gone. Then followed a weary interval, during which we had nothing whatever to do, and day succeeded day through the long hot season. It was now that I began to feel that Jackson had become of late more silent and reserved with me than ever he had been. I noticed, too, that he had contracted a habit of wandering out to the extreme end of the Point, where he would sit for hours gazing upon the ocean before him. In addition to this, he grew morose and uncertain in his temper toward the natives, and sometimes he would fall asleep in the evenings on a sofa, and talk to himself at such a rate while asleep that I would grow frightened and wake him, when he would stare about him for a little until he gathered consciousness, and then he would stagger off to bed to fall asleep again almost immediately. Also, his hands trembled much, and he began to lose flesh. All this troubled me, for his own sake as well as my own, and I resolved to ask him to see the doctor of the next mail-steamer that came. With this idea I went one day to the end of the Point, and found him in his usual attitude, seated on the long grass, looking seaward. He did not hear me approach, and when I spoke he started to his feet, and demanded fiercely why I disturbed him. Ireplied, as mildly as I could, for I was rather afraid of the glittering look that was in his eyes, that I wished to ask him if he did not feel ill.

He regarded me with a steady but softened glance for a little, and then said:

同类推荐
  • 安溪县志

    安溪县志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 明代散文阅读参考书目

    明代散文阅读参考书目

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 天机经

    天机经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 正易心法

    正易心法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 怪术

    怪术

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 环体世纪

    环体世纪

    人类最终还是没有选择的穿上了环体的外衣,从此海洋成为家园,星空不再遥远,终极的自由已经呈现。既然已经看透了未来,为什么还要回忆。回忆和现实都是那么沉重,穿透坚固的外衣,传来了星空那头再次响起的战鼓声。
  • 清代琉球纪录续辑

    清代琉球纪录续辑

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 甲申战事记

    甲申战事记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 系统之末世

    系统之末世

    1733年,机械师凯伊发明了“飞梭”,大大提高了织布的速度,纺纱顿时,供不应求。2033年,病毒降临,生命异化,短时间内,地球人口,不足一成。随之而来的还有战争!病毒星人侵略地球,与原先渗透地球的机械星人,爆发殖民争夺战。战争天幕,遮天蔽日,从此太阳消失,一天24小时,只有几小时的天明,黑夜笼罩全球。机械大军,无穷无尽,地球联邦统治全球,人类被圈养在一座座改造后的城市中。要么变成口粮,被黑化生物吃掉。要么像个傀儡,失去自由,被机械星人圈养。人类岌岌可危!人类苟且偷生!人类,从食物链最顶端,沦为二脚羊!世界为什么会变的如此?人类的出路又在何方?世界的面纱,随着旅途,一点点揭开。
  • 权野天下之摄政王爷惹不起

    权野天下之摄政王爷惹不起

    一朝公主,因恶毒皇后陷害不成而暗杀,却不料想七年后,化身摄政王而归。“我凤九夜以已亡九公主的身份发誓,定让仇人血债血偿!”看九公主如何逆转乾坤。
  • 魔凤契约

    魔凤契约

    【停更!坑品移步!】现代黑帮统治者,夜家独女夜麟舞。生赋异能,善剑和近身战!天性冷酷如冰山。因一个从小随身的血玉而穿越异世,为烈家废物小姐。他,充满神秘如迷般的男子,冷傲,狂妄,睥睨一切,拥有另人咋舌,痴迷的强大能力。初次见,他冷酷而忧郁,仿佛不食人间烟火的神仙!她却在他的乐声中沉迷,对他引起了兴趣。第二次相见,他处于生死之中,她予命相救,从此,牵上了不可磨灭的情缘。她开始为他走上强者道路,只为配他,却不知,那上族的恩怨阴谋,正在悄临……??
  • 我在别人的梦里看花开

    我在别人的梦里看花开

    我叫路本墨。名字是在一天之前取的,当然我不是刚出生的婴儿,只是因为我出了车祸,失忆了。其实我并不叫路本墨。我的原名叫左青青。
  • 末日之超级异能

    末日之超级异能

    当整个世界面临末日,原本普通的方玉该如何让自己在末日中生存下去,当他已经能够平淡的面对丧尸之时,他却发现,原来整个世界都是一场阴谋...PS:建了个群,嗯,虽然知道加的人肯定会少,但是还是请喜欢的朋友加一下,平时无聊的时候一起吹个牛也不错~群号:123578878
  • 出路取决于思路

    出路取决于思路

    思路问题具有科学性、目的性、趣味性特征。我们可以根据自己的需要,选择相应的例题进行有目的、有方向性的训练。使自己在思维品质的某一方面得到迅速的强化。如脑筋急转弯就可以训练思维的敏捷性和灵活性。在解决问题时我们要提醒自己不要受条条框框的限制。如能打破框框,独立思考,另辟蹊径,有时会使我们摆脱困境。因此,当我们遇到问题时要充分利用自己的知识经验反复地去思考,想想种种可能性。如果进行了结合实际的广泛思考之后,仍然找不到解决问题的答案时,那么就有理由怀疑自己的思想是否有什么框框。一旦打破框框或思维定式,新奇的想法就会从脑子里跳出来,问题也就会迎刃而解了。
  • 黑白谋

    黑白谋

    分手后,他的花边新闻时常见报,她知道他有很多女人。多年后再遇时他却说,“陶然,我只给你一年的时间,一年足够你和林百川离婚,一年后,若你还没回到我身边,我不会再保证,你陶然还是我慕时丰唯一的女人。”某天,林百川真的以为她要离开,撂下句狠话,“除非哪天我死了,你改嫁,否则你这辈子都别想离开。”