How the MS came to be posted I have been quite
unable to discover;
but I
presume, from the fact of its being posted at all, that
the little Frenchman, Alphonse,
accomplished his
hazardous journey
in safety. I have, however, advertised for him and caused various
inquiries to be made in Marseilles and
elsewhere with a view
of discovering his
whereabouts, but so far without the slightest
success. Possibly he is dead, and the
packet was posted by another
hand; or possibly he is now happily
wedded to his Annette, but
still fears the
vengeance of the law, and prefers to remain incognito.
I cannot say, I have not yet
abandoned my hopes of
finding him,
but I am bound to say that they grow fainter day by day, and
one great
obstacle to my search is that
nowhere in the whole
history does Mr Quatermain mention his
surname. He is always
spoken of as 'Alphonse', and there are so many Alphonses.
The letters which my brother Henry says he is sending with the
packet of
manuscript have never arrived, so I
presume that they
are lost or destroyed.
George Curtis
AUTHORITIES
A
novelist is not usually asked, like a
historian, for his 'Quellen'.
As I have, however, judging from certain experiences in the
past, some reason to
anticipate such a demand, I wish to acknowledge
my indebtedness to Mr Thomson's
admirable history of travel 'Through
Masai Land' for much information as to the habits and customs
of the tribes inhabiting that
portion of the East Coast, and
the country where they live; also to my brother, John G. Haggard,
RN, HBM's
consul at Madagascar, and
formerlyconsul at Lamu,
for many details furnished by him of the mode of life and war
of those engaging people the Masai; also to my sister-in-law,
John Haggard, who kindly put the lines of p. 183 into rhyme for
me; also to an
extract in a
review from some book of travel of
which I cannot
recollect the name, to which I owe the idea of
the great crabs in the
valley of the subterranean river.
{Endnote 23} But if I remember right, the crabs in the book
when irritated projected their eyes quite out of their heads.
I regret that I was not able to 'plagiarize' this effect, but
I felt that, although crabs may, and
doubtless do,
behave thus
in real life, in
romance they 'will not do so.'
There is an
underground river in 'Peter Wilkins', but at the
time of
writing the
foregoing pages I had not read that quaint
but entertaining work.
It has been
pointed out to me that there exists a similarity
between the scene of Umslopogaas frightening Alphonse with his
axe and a scene in Far from the Madding Crowd. I regret this
coincidence, and believe that the
talented author of that work
will not be inclined to
accuse me of
literary immorality on
its
account.
Finally, I may say that Mr Quatermain's little Frenchman appears
to belong to the same class of beings as those English ladies
whose long yellow teeth and feet of
enormous size
excite our
hearty
amusement in the pages of the illustrated Gallic press.
The Writer of 'Allan Quatermain'
Endnote 1
Among the Zulus a man assumes the ring, which is made of a species
of black gum twisted in with the hair, and polished a brilliant
black, when he has reached a certain
dignity and age, or is the
husband of a sufficient number of wives. Till he is in a position
to wear a ring he is looked on as a boy, though he may be thirty-five
years of age, or even more. -- A. Q.}
Endnote 2
One of the fleetest of the African antelopes. -- A. Q.
Endnote 3
Alluding to the Zulu custom of
opening the
stomach of a dead
foe. They have a
superstition that, if this is not done, as
the body of their enemy swells up so will the bodies of those
who killed him swell up. -- A. Q.
Endnote 4
No doubt this owl was a wingless bird. I afterwards
learnt that
the hooting of an owl is a favourite signal among the Masai tribes.
-- A. Q.
Endnote 5
Since I saw the above I have examined hundreds of these swords,
but have never been able to discover how the gold plates were
inlaid in the fretwork. The armourers who make them in Zu-vendis
bind themselves by oath not to reveal the secret. -- A. Q.
Endnote 6
The Masai Elmoran or young warriors can own no property, so all
the booty they may win in battle belongs to their fathers
alone. -- A. Q.
Endnote 7
As I think I have already said, one of Umslopogaas's Zulu names
was the 'Woodpecker'. I could never make out why he was called
so until I saw him in action with Inkosi-kaas, when I at once
recognized the
resemblance. -- A. Q.
Endnote 8
By a sad
coincidence, since the above was written by Mr Quatermain,
the Masai have, in April 1886, mas
sacred a
missionary and his
wife -- Mr and Mrs Houghton -- on this very Tana River, and at
the spot described. These are, I believe, the first white people
who are known to have fallen victims to this cruel tribe. -- Editor.
Endnote 9
Mr Allan Quatermain misquotes -- Pleasure sat at the helm. -- Editor.
Endnote 10
Where Alph the
sacred river ran
Through caverns measureless to man
Down to a sunless sea
Endnote 11
Mr Quatermain does not seem to have been aware that it is common
for animal-
worshipping people to
annually sacrifice the beasts
they adore. See Herodotus, ii. 45. -- Editor.
Endnote 12
There is another theory which might
account for the
origin of
the Zu-Vendi which does not seem to have struck my friend Mr
Quatermain and his companions, and that is, that they are descendants
of the Phoenicians. The
cradle of the Phoenician race is
supposedto have been have been on the
western shore of the Persian Gulf.
Thence, as there is good evidence to show, they emigrated in