The Twelve African Novels (A Collection). Edgar Wallace
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Название: The Twelve African Novels (A Collection)

Автор: Edgar Wallace

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Книги для детей: прочее

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isbn: 9788027201556

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СКАЧАТЬ reached the women as one grasped the girl by her hair and pulled back her head.

      Koforo saw him coming, and dropped his hand.

      “Ho, father!” he said, in his foolish, jocose way. “I am to kill you because you are a devil!”

      The women shrank back, and Sanders caught the fainting girl by the waist and swung her out of reach.

      Koforo came at him mouthing and grimacing, the little spade-shaped razor in his hand.

      Sanders shot definitely because he had only five more cartridges, then he turned his attention to Abiboo.

      He was lying on the ground insensible; his assailants had fled, for the sentry and his relief were firing through the wire-netting — and your trained Houssa is a tolerably good shot.

      Together they bore the girl to the boat, and Abiboo was revived, stitched, and bandaged.

      At four in the afternoon the crestfallen guard returned, and Sanders made an inspection of both camps.

      “Lord,” said one who had been but a passive conspirator, “it was the plan to take you in the women’s quarters. Therefore certain men concealed themselves in the huts, thinking your lordship would not carry your little gun amongst women. All this was dreamt by M’dali, who has escaped.”

      “No man escapes from the Village of Irons,” said Sanders. “Which way did M’dali go?”

      The man pointed to the wire fence by the little canal.

      Sanders made his way to the fence and looked down into the weed-grown stream.

      “I saw him climb the first fence,” said his informant; “but the second I did not see him climb.”

      The Commissioner stooped, and, picking up a handful of grass, threw it at a green log that lay on the water.

      The log opened a baleful eye and growled hatefully, for he had fed well, and resented the interruption to his slumbers.

       Table of Contents

      There are three things which are beyond philosophy and logic.

      Three things which turn mild men to rage and to the performance of heroic deeds. The one is love, the other is religion, and the third is land.

      There was a man of the Isisi people who was a great thinker. He thought about things which were beyond thought, such as the stars and the storms and time, which began and ended nowhere.

      Often he would go to the edge of the river and, sitting with his chin on his knees, ponder on great matters for days at a time. The people of the village — it was Akalavi by the creek — thought, not unnaturally, that he was mad, for this young man kept himself aloof from the joyous incidents of life, finding no pleasure in the society of maidens, absenting himself from the dances and the feasts that make up the brighter side of life on the river.

      K’maka — such was this man’s name — was the son of Yoko, the son of N’Kema, whose father was a fierce fighter in the days of the Great King. And on the dam side he went back to Pikisamoko, who was also a strong and bloody man, so that there was no hint of softness in his pedigree. “Therefore,” said Yoko, his father, “he must be mad, and if the matter can be arranged without Sandi knowing, we will put out his eyes and take him a long way into the forest. There he will quickly die from hunger or wild beasts.”

      And all the relations who were bidden to the family palaver agreed, because a mad son is an abomination. He wanders about the village, and in his wanderings or in the course of his antics, he breaks things and does damage for which the family is legally responsible. They talked this matter over for the greater part of the night and came to no decision. The palaver was resumed the next day, and the elder of the family, a very old and a very wise chief from another village, gave his decision. “If he is mad,” he said, “by all laws and customs he should be destroyed. Now I am a very clever man, as you all know, for I have lived for more years than any of you can remember. Let me, therefore, test K’maka, lest he be not mad at all, but only silly, as young men are when they come to the marrying age.”

      So they summoned K’maka to the council, and those who went in search of him found him lying on a soft bank in the forest. He was lying face downwards, his head in his hands, watching a flower.

      “K’maka,” said the man who sought him out, “what do you do?”

      “I am learning,” said K’maka simply; “for this weed teaches me many things that I did not know before.”

      The other looked down and laughed.

      “It is a weed,” he said, “bearing no fruit, so therefore it is nothing.”

      “It is alive,” said K’maka, not removing his eyes from the thing of delicate petals; “and I think it is greater than I because it is obedient to the law.”

      “You are evidently mad,” said his cousin, with an air of finality; “this is very certain.”

      He led him back to the family conference.

      “I found him,” he said importantly, “looking at weeds and saying that they were greater than he.”

      The family looked darkly upon K’maka and the old chief opened the attack.

      “K’maka, it is said that you are mad; therefore, I, being the head of the family, have called the blood together that we may see whether the charge is true. Men say you have strange thoughts — such as the stars being land afar.”

      “That is true, my father,” said the other.

      “They also say that you think the sun is shining at night.”

      “That also I think,” said K’maka; “meaning that it shines somewhere. For it is not wise to believe that the river is greater than the sun.”

      “I perceive that you are indeed mad,” said the old man calmly; “for in what way do the sun and the river meet?”

      “Lord,” said the young man earnestly, “behold the river runs whether it is day or night, whether you walk or sleep, whether you see it or whether it is unseen. Yet the foolish think that if they do not see a thing, then that thing does not exist. And is the river greater than the sun? For if the river runs by night, being part of the Great Way, shall the sun, which is so much mightier and so much more needful to the lands, cease to shine?”

      The old chief shook his head.

      “None but a man who is very mad would say such a thing as this,” he said; “for does not the sun become the moon by night, save on the night when it sleeps? And if men sleep and goats sleep, and even women sleep, shall not the sun sleep, creeping into a hole in the ground, as I myself have seen it?”

      They dismissed K’maka then and there. It seemed useless to talk further.

      He slept in a hut by СКАЧАТЬ