SORAIS' SONG
After our escape from Agon and his pious crew we returned to
our quarters in the palace and had a very good time. The two
Queens, the nobles and the people vied with each other in doing
us honour and showering gifts upon us. As for that
painful little
incident of the hippopotami it sank into
oblivion, where we were
quite content to leave it. Every day deputations and individuals
waited on us to examine our guns and clothing, our chain shirts,
and our instruments, especially our watches, with which they
were much
delighted. In short, we became quite the rage, so
much so that some of the
fashionable young swells among the Zu-Vendi
began to copy the cut of some of our clothes,
notably Sir Henry's
shooting
jacket. One day, indeed, a deputation waited on us
and, as usual, Good donned his full-dress uniform for the occasion.
This deputation seemed somehow to be a different class to those
who generally came to visit us. They were little insignificant
men of an excessively
polite, not to say servile, demeanour;
and their attention appeared to be
chiefly taken up with observing
the details of Good's full-dress uniform, of which they took
copious notes and measurements. Good was much flattered at the
time, not suspecting that he had to deal with the six leading
tailors of Milosis. A
fortnight afterwards, however, when on
attending court as usual he had the pleasure of
seeing some seven
or eight Zu-Vendi 'mashers' arrayed in all the glory of a very
fair
imitation of his full-dress uniform, he changed his mind.
I shall never forget his face of
astonishment and
disgust.
It was after this,
chiefly to avoid remark, and also because
our clothes were wearing out and had to be saved up, that we
resolved to adopt the native dress; and a very comfortable one
we found it, though I am bound to say that I looked sufficiently
ridiculous in it, and as for Alphonse! Only Umslopogaas would
have none of these things; when his moocha was worn out the
fierceold Zulu made him a new one, and went about unconcerned, as grim
and naked as his own battleaxe.
Meanwhile we pursued our study of the language
steadily and made
very good progress. On the morning following our adventure in
the
temple, three grave and
reverend signiors presented themselves
armed with
manuscript books, ink-horns and
feather pens, and
indicated that they had been sent to teach us. So, with the
exception of Umslopogaas, we all buckled to with a will, doing
four hours a day. As for Umslopogaas, he would have none of
that either. He did not wish to learn that 'woman's talk', not
he; and when one of the teachers
advanced on him with a book
and an ink-horn and waved them before him in a mild persuasive
way, much as a churchwarden invitingly shakes the offertory bag
under the nose of a rich but niggardly parishioner, he sprang
up with a
fierce oath and flashed Inkosi-kaas before the eyes
of our
learned friend, and there was an end of the attempt to
teach him Zu-Vendi.
Thus we spent our mornings in useful
occupation which grew more
and more interesting as we proceeded, and the afternoons were
given up to
recreation. Sometimes we made trips,
notably one
to the gold mines and another to the
marble quarries both of
which I wish I had space and time to describe; and sometimes
we went out
hunting buck with dogs trained for that purpose,
and a very exciting sport it is, as the country is full of agricultural
enclosures and our horses were
magnificent. This is not to be
wondered at,
seeing that the royal stables were at our command,
in
addition to which we had four splendid
saddle horses given
to us by Nyleptha.
Sometimes, again, we went hawking, a pastime that is in great
favour among the Zu-Vendi, who generally fly their birds at a
species of
partridge which is
remarkable for the
swiftness and
strength of its
flight. When attacked by the hawk this bird
appears to lose its head, and, instead of seeking cover, flies
high into the sky, thus
offering wonderful sport. I have seen
one of these
partridges soar up almost out of sight when followed
by the hawk. Still better sport is offered by a
variety of solitary
snipe as big as a small woodcock, which is
plentiful in this
country, and which is flown at with a very small, agile, and
highly-trained hawk with an almost red tail. The zigzagging
of the great snipe and the
lightningrapidity of the
flight and
movements of the red-tailed hawk make the pastime a delightful
one. Another
variety of the same
amusement is the
hunting of
a very small
species of
antelope with trained eagles; and it
certainly is a marvellous sight to see the great bird soar and
soar till he is nothing but a black speck in the
sunlight, and
then suddenly come
dashing down like a cannon-ball upon some
cowering buck that is
hidden in a patch of grass from everything
but that
piercing eye. Still finer is the
spectacle when the
eagle takes the buck running.
On other days we would pay visits to the country seats at some
of the great lords' beautiful fortified places, and the villages
clustering beneath their walls. Here we saw vineyards and corn-fields
and well-kept park-like grounds, with such
timber in them as
filled me with delight, for I do love a good tree. There it
stands so strong and
sturdy, and yet so beautiful, a very type
of the best sort of man. How
proudly it lifts its bare head
to the winter storms, and with what a full heart it rejoices
when the spring has come again! How grand its voice is, too,
when it talks with the wind: a thousand aeolian harps cannot
equal the beauty of the sighing of a great tree in leaf. All
day it points to the
sunshine and all night to the stars, and
thus passionless, and yet full of life, it endures through the
centuries, come storm, come shine,
drawing its sustenance from
the cool bosom of its mother earth, and as the slow years roll
by,
learning the great mysteries of growth and of decay. And
so on and on through generations, outliving individuals, customs,
dynasties -- all save the
landscape it adorns and human nature
-- till the ap
pointed day when the wind wins the long battle
and rejoices over a reclaimed space, or decay puts the last stroke
to his fungus-fingered work.
Ah, one should always think twice before one cuts down a tree!
In the evenings it was
customary for Sir Henry, Good, and myself
to dine, or rather sup, with their Majesties -- not every night,
indeed, but about three or four times a week,
whenever they had
not much company, or the affairs of state would allow of it.
And I am bound to say that those little suppers were quite the
most
charming things of their sort that I ever had to do with.
How true is the
saying that the very highest in rank are always
the most simple and kindly. It is from your half-and-half sort
of people that you get pomposity and vulgarity, the difference
between the two being very much what you one sees every day in
England between the old, out-at-elbows, broken-down county family,
and the overbearing, purse-proud people who come and 'take the
place'. I really think that Nyleptha's greatest charm is her
sweet
simplicity, and her kindly
genuine interest even in little
things. She is the simplest woman I ever knew, and where her
passions are not involved, one of the sweetest; but she can look
queenly enough when she likes, and be as
fierce as any
savage too.
For
instance, never shall I forget that scene when I for the
first time was sure that she was really in love with Curtis.
It came about in this way -- all through Good's
weakness for
ladies' society. When we had been employed for some three months
in
learning Zu-Vendi, it struck Master Good that he was getting
rather tired of the old gentlemen who did us the honour to lead
us in the way that we should go, so he proceeded, without
sayinga word to anybody else, to inform them that it was a peculiar
fact, but that we could not make any real progress in the deeper
intricacies of a foreign language unless we were taught by ladies
-- young ladies, he was careful to explain. In his own country,
he
pointed out, it was
habitual to choose the very best-looking