and only using the broad cutting edge for a
circular sweep, or
sometimes in a melee. I think he considered the punch a neater
and more sportsmanlike tool, and it was from his habit of pecking
at his enemy with it that he got his name of 'Woodpecker'. Certainly
in his hands it was a
terriblyefficient one.
Such was Umslopogaas' axe, Inkosi-kaas, the most
remarkable and
fatal hand-to-hand
weapon that I ever saw, and one which he cherished
as much as his own life. It scarcely ever left his hand except
when he was eating, and then he always sat with it under his
leg.
Just as I returned his axe to Umslopogaas, Miss Flossie came
up and took me off to see her
collection of flowers, African
liliums, and
blooming shrubs, some of which are very beautiful,
many of the varieties being quite unknown to me and also, I believe,
to botanical science. I asked her if she had ever seen or heard
of the 'Goya' lily, which Central African explorers have told
me they have
occasionally met with and whose wonderful loveliness
has filled them with
astonishment. This lily, which the natives
say blooms only once in ten years, flourishes in the most arid
soil. Compared to the size of the bloom, the bulb is small,
generally weighing about four pounds. As for the flower itself
(which I afterwards saw under circumstances likely to impress
its appearance fixedly in my mind), I know not how to describe
its beauty and splendour, or the
indescribablesweetness of its
perfume. The flower -- for it has only one bloom -- rises from
the crown of the bulb on a thick fleshy and flat-sided stem,
the
specimen that I saw measured fourteen inches in diameter,
and is somewhat trumpet-shaped like the bloom of an ordinary
'longiflorum' set vertically. First there is the green sheath,
which in its early stage is not
unlike that of a water-lily,
but which as the bloom opens splits into four portions and curls
back
gracefully towards the stem. Then comes the bloom itself,
a single dazzling arch of white enclosing another cup of richest
velvety
crimson, from the heart of which rises a golden-coloured
pistil. I have never seen anything to equal this bloom in beauty
or
fragrance, and as I believe it is but little known, I take
the liberty to describe it at length. Looking at it for the
first time I well remember that I realized how even in a flower
there dwells something of the
majesty of its Maker. To my great
delight Miss Flossie told me that she knew the flower well and
had tried to grow it in her garden, but without success, adding,
however, that as it should be in bloom at this time of the year
she thought that she could
procure me a
specimen.
After that I fell to asking her if she was not
lonely up here
among all these
savage people and without any
companions of her
own age.
'Lonely?' she said. 'Oh, indeed no! I am as happy as the day
is long, and besides I have my own
companions. Why, I should
hate to be buried in a crowd of white girls all just like myself
so that nobody could tell the difference! Here,' she said, giving
her head a little toss, 'I am I; and every native for miles around
knows the "Water-lily", -- for that is what they call me -- and
is ready to do what I want, but in the books that I have read
about little girls in England it is not like that. Everybody
thinks them a trouble, and they have to do what their schoolmistress
likes. Oh! it would break my heart to be put in a cage like
that and not to be free -- free as the air.'
'Would you not like to learn?' I asked.
'So I do learn. Father teaches me Latin and French and arithmetic.'
'And are you never afraid among all these wild men?'
'Afraid? Oh no! they never
interfere with me. I think they
believe that I am "Ngai" (of the Divinity) because I am so white
and have fair hair. And look here,' and diving her little hand
into the bodice of her dress she produced a double-barrelled
nickel-plated Derringer, 'I always carry that loaded, and if
anybody tried to touch me I should shoot him. Once I shot a
leopard that jumped upon my
donkey as I was riding along. It
frightened me very much, but I shot it in the ear and it fell
dead, and I have its skin upon my bed. Look there!' she went
on in an altered voice,
touching me on the arm and pointing to
some far-away object, 'I said just now that I had
companions;
there is one of them.'
I looked, and for the first time there burst upon my sight the
glory of Mount Kenia. Hitherto the mountain had always been
hidden in mist, but now its
radiant beauty was unveiled for many
thousand feet, although the base was still wrapped in vapour
so that the lofty peak or
pillar,
towering nearly twenty thousand
feet into the sky, appeared to be a fairy
vision,
hanging between
earth and heaven, and based upon the clouds. The
solemnmajestyand beauty of this white peak are together beyond the power of
my poor pen to describe. There it rose straight and sheer --
a glittering white glory, its crest
piercing the very blue of
heaven. As I gazed at it with that little girl I felt my whole
heart lifted up with an
indescribableemotion, and for a moment
great and wonderful thoughts seemed to break upon my mind, even
as the arrows of the
setting sun were breaking upon Kenia's snows.
Mr Mackenzie's natives call the mountain the 'Finger of God',
and to me it did seem
eloquent of
immortal peace and of the pure
high calm that surely lies above this fevered world. Somewhere
I had heard a line of poetry,
A thing of beauty is a joy for ever,
and now it came into my mind, and for the first time I thoroughly
understood what it meant. Base, indeed, would be the man who
could look upon that
mighty snow-wreathed pile -- that white
old tombstone of the years -- and not feel his own utter insignificance,
and, by
whatever name he calls Him,
worship God in his heart.
Such sights are like
visions of the spirit; they throw wide
the windows of the
chamber of our small
selfishness and let in
a
breath of that air that rushes round the rolling spheres, and
for a while illumine our darkness with a
far-off gleam of the
white light which beats upon the Throne.
Yes, such things of beauty are indeed a joy for ever, and I can
well understand what little Flossie meant when she talked of
Kenia as her
companion. As Umslopogaas,
savage old Zulu that
he was, said when I
pointed out to him the peak
hanging in the
glittering air: 'A man might look thereon for a thousand years
and yet be hungry to see.' But he gave rather another colour
to his
poetical idea when he added in a sort of chant, and with
a touch of that weird
imagination for which the man was
remarkable,
that when he was dead he should like his spirit to sit upon that
snow-clad peak for ever, and to rush down the steep white sides
in the
breath of the
whirlwind, or on the flash of the lightning,
and 'slay, and slay, and slay'.
'Slay what, you old bloodhound?' I asked.
This rather puzzled him, but at length he answered --
'The other shadows.'
'So thou wouldst continue thy murdering even after death?' I said.
'I murder not,' he answered hotly; 'I kill in fair fight. Man
is born to kill. He who kills not when his blood is hot is a
woman, and no man. The people who kill not are slaves. I say
I kill in fair fight; and when I am "in the shadow", as you white
men say, I hope to go on killing in fair fight. May my shadow
be
accursed and chilled to the bone for ever if it should fall
to murdering like a bushman with his poisoned arrows!' And he
stalked away with much
dignity, and left me laughing.
Just then the spies whom our host had sent out in the morning
to find out if there were any traces of our Masai friends about,
returned, and reported that the country had been scoured for
fifteen miles round without a single Elmoran being seen, and
that they believed that those
gentry had given up the pursuit