Black Ivory by R. M. Ballantyne (world of reading TXT) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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âNow,â said Disco, after Yambo left them, âthis is wot I call the most uncommon fix that ever wos got into by man since Adam anâ Eve began housekeepinâ in the garden of Eden.â
âIâm not quite sure,â replied Harold, with a rueful look, âthat it is absolutely the worst fix, but it is bad enough. The worst of it is that this Yambo has let these rascals off with all our fire-arms and camp-equipage, so that we are absolutely helplessâmight as well be prisoners, for we canât quit this village in such circumstances.â
âWotâs wuss than that to my mind, sir, is, that here we are at sea, in the heart of Afriky, without chart, quadrant, compass, or rudder, anâ no more idea of our whereabouts than one oâ them spider monkeys that grins among the trees. Howsâever, weâre in luck to fall into the hands of a friendly chief, so, like these same monkeys, we must grin anâ bear it; only I canât help feelinâ a bit cast down at the loss of our messmates. I fear thereâs no chance of their findinâ us.â
âNot the least chance in the world, I should say,â returned Harold. âThey could not guess in which direction we had gone, and unless they had hit on the right road at first, every step they took afterwards would only widen the distance between us.â
âItâs lucky I was beginninâ to mend before we was catched,â said Disco, feeling the muscles of his legs; âtrue, I ainât much to boast of yet but Iâm improvinâ.â
âThat is more than I can say for myself,â returned Harold, with a sigh, as he passed his hand across his forehead; âI feel as if this last push through the woods in the hot sun, and the weight of that terrible slave-stick had been almost too much for me.â
Disco looked earnestly and anxiously into the face of his friend.
âWot,â asked he, âdoes you feel?â
âI can scarcely tell,â replied Harold, with a faint smile. âOh, I suppose Iâm a little knocked up, thatâs all. A nightâs rest will put me all right.â
âSo I thought myself, but I wos wrong,â said Disco. âLetâs hear wot your feelinâs is, sir; Iâm as good as any doctor now, I am, in regard to symptoms.â
âWell, I feel a sort of all-overishness, a kind of lassitude and sleepiness, with a slight headache, and a dull pain which appears to be creeping up my spine.â
âYouâre in for it sir,â said Disco. âItâs lucky you have always carried the physic in your pockets, âcause youâll need it, anâ itâs lucky, too, that I am here and well enough to return tit for tat and nurse you, âcause youâll have that âere pain in your spine creep up your back and round your ribs till it lays hold of yer shoulders, where itâll stick as if it had made up its mind to stay there for ever anâ a day. Arter that youâll get cold anâ shivering like iceâoh! doesnât I know it wellâanâ then hot as fire, with heavy head, anâ swimming eyes, anâ twisted sight, anâ confusion ofââ
âHold! hold!â cried Harold, laughing, âif you go on in that way I shall have more than my fair share of it! Pray stop, and leave me a little to find out for myself.â
âWell, sir, take a purge, and turn in at once, thatâs my advice. Iâll dose you with quinine to-morrow morninâ, first thing,â said Disco, rising and proceeding forthwith to arrange a couch in a corner of the hut, which Yambo had assigned them.
Harold knew well enough that his follower was right. He took his advice without delay, and next morning found himself little better than a child, both physically and mentally, for the disease not only prostrated his great strengthâas it had that of his equally robust companionâbut, at a certain stage, induced delirium, during which he talked the most ineffable nonsense that his tongue could pronounce, or his brain conceive.
Poor Disco, who, of course, had been unable to appreciate the extent of his own delirious condition, began to fear that his leaderâs mind was gone for ever, and Jumbo was so depressed by the unutterably solemn expression of the marinerâs once jovial countenance, that he did not once show his teeth for a whole week, save when engaged with meals.
As for Antonio, his nature not being very sympathetic, and his health being good, he rather enjoyed the quiet life and good living which characterised the native village, and secretly hoped that Harold might remain on the sick-list for a considerable time to come.
How long this state of affairs lasted we cannot tell, for both Harold and Disco lost the correct record of time during their respective illnesses.
Up to that period they had remembered the days of the week, in consequence of their habit of refraining from going out to hunt on Sundays, except when a dearth of meat in the larder rendered hunting a necessity. Upon these Sundays Haroldâs conscience sometimes reproached him for having set out on his journey into Africa without a Bible. He whispered, to himself at first, and afterwards suggested to Disco, the excuse that his Bible had been lost in the wreck of his fatherâs vessel, and that, perhaps, there were no Bibles to be purchased in Zanzibar, but his conscience was a troublesome one, and refused to tolerate such bad reasoning, reminding him, reproachfully, that he had made no effort whatever to obtain a Bible at Zanzibar.
As time had passed, and some of the horrors of the slave-trade had been brought under his notice, many of the words of Scripture leaped to his remembrance, and the regret that he had not carried a copy with him increased. That touch of thoughtlessness, so natural to the young and healthyâto whom life has so far been only a garden of rosesâwas utterly routed by the stern and dreadful realities which had been recently enacted around him, and just in proportion as he was impressed with the lies, tyranny, cruelty, and falsehood of man, so did his thoughtful regard for the truth and the love of God increase, especially those truths that were most directly opposed to the traffic in human flesh, such asââlove your enemies,â âseek peace with all men,â âbe kindly affectioned one to another,â âwhatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, do ye even so to them.â An absolute infidel, he thought, could not fail to perceive that a most blessed change would come over the face of Africa if such principles prevailed among its inhabitants, even in an extremely moderate degree.
But to return, the unfortunate travellers were now âat seaâ altogether in regard to the Sabbath as well as the day of the month. Indeed their minds were not very clear as to the month itself!
âHowsâever,â said Disco, when this subject afterwards came to be discussed, âit donât matter much. Wot is it that the Scripturâ says,ââSix days shalt thou labour anâ do all that thou hast to do, but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God. In it thou shalt do no work.â I wos used always to stick at that pint wâen my poor mother was a-teachinâ of me. Never got past it. But itâs enough for present use anyhow, for the orders is, work six days anâ donât work the seventh. Werry good, weâll begin to-day anâ call it Monday; weâll work for six days, anâ wâen the seventh day comes weâll call it Sunday. If it ainât the right day, we canât help it; moreover, wotâs the odds? Itâs the seventh day, so that to us itâll be the Sabbath.â
But we anticipate. Harold was stillâat the beginning of this digressionâin the delirium of fever, though there were symptoms of improvement about him.
One afternoon one of these symptoms was strongly manifested in a long, profound slumber. While he slept Disco sat on a low stool beside him, busily engaged with a clasp-knife on some species of manufacture, the nature of which was not apparent at a glance.
His admirer, Jumbo, was seated on a stool opposite, gazing at him open-mouthed, with a countenance that reflected every passing feeling of his dusky bosom.
Both men were so deeply absorbed in their occupationâDisco in his manufacture, and Jumbo in staring at Discoâthat they failed for a considerable time to observe that Harold had wakened suddenly, though quietly, and was gazing at them with a look of lazy, easy-going surprise.
The mariner kept up a running commentary on his work, addressed to Jumbo indeed, but in a quiet interjectional manner that seemed to imply that he was merely soliloquising, and did not want or expect a reply.
âItâs the most âstrorânary notion, Jumbo, between you and me and the post, that I ever did see. Now, then, this here bullet-head wants a pair oâ eyes anâ a nose on it; the mouthâll do, but itâs the mouth as is most troublesome, for you niggers have got such wappinâ muzzlesâitâs quite a caution, as the Yankees say,ââ(a pause)ââon the whole, however, the nose is very difficult to manage on a flat surface, âcause wây?âif I leaves it quite flat, it donât look like a nose, anâ if I carves it out ever so little, itâs too prominent for a nigger nose. There, ainât that a good head, Jumbo?â
Thus directly appealed to, Jumbo nodded his own head violently, and showed his magnificent teeth from ear to ear, gums included.
Disco laid down the flat piece of board which he had carved into the form of a human head, and took up another piece, which was rudely blocked out into the form of a human legâboth leg and head being as large as life.
âNow this limb, Jumbo,â continued Disco, slowly, as he whittled away with the clasp-knife vigorously, âis much more troublesome than I would have expected; for you niggers have got such abominably ill-shaped legs below the knee. Thereâs such an unnatâral bend forâard oâ the shin-bone, anâ such a rediklous sticking out oâ the heel astarn, dâee see, that a feller with white man notions has to make a study of it, if he sets up for a artist; in course, if he donât set up for a artist any sort oâ shapeâll do, for it donât affect the jumpinâ. Ha! there they go,â he exclaimed, with a humorous smile at a hearty shout of laughter which was heard just outside the hut, âenjoyinâ the old âun; but itâs nothinâ to wot the noo âunâll be wâen itâs finished.â
At this exhibition of amusement on the countenance of his friend, Jumbo threw back his head and again showed not only his teeth and gums but the entire inside of his mouth, and chuckled softly from the region of his breast-bone.
âIâm dreaming, of course,â thought Harold, and shut his eyes.
Poor fellow! he was very weak, and the mere act of shutting his eyes induced a half-slumber. He awoke again in a few minutes, and re-opening his eyes, beheld the two men still sitting, and occupied as before.
âIt is a wonderfully pertinacious dream,â thought Harold. âIâll try to dissipate it.â
Thinking thus, he called out aloud,ââI say, Disco!â
âHallo! thatâs uncommon like the old tones,â exclaimed the seaman, dropping his knife and the leg of wood as he looked anxiously at his friend.
âWhat old tones?â asked Harold.
âThe tones of your voice,â said Disco.
âHave they changed so much of late?â inquired Harold in surprise.
âHave they? I
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