<h2 class='c007'>CHAPTER X</h2>
<p class='c011'>SOUNDS OF HUMAN VOICES—I ENCOUNTER REGUNDO
AND HIS WIFE, SLAVES OF KING MOMBO—OTHER
SLAVES—HUNTERS AND WARRIORS OF MOMBO.</p>
<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c012'>I followed the path. I had hardly walked
fifteen steps when I heard the sound of an axe—some
one evidently was chopping wood. The path
was a well beaten one, showing that many people
passed over it. The sound made by the axe became
louder and louder as I advanced inland. Then I
heard human voices, and stopped to listen. After
a while I found that two people were talking to each
other, but I was too far away to hear the language
they spoke. I wondered if these two people would
be friendly, or would run away at sight of me.</p>
<p class='c013'>I advanced cautiously, and soon saw the roof of a
house, then the whole house, which had a veranda; and
under the veranda were a man and a woman talking
to each other. The house was built of the bark of
trees. The man was gray-headed, the woman likewise;
they were almost naked and only wore a little strip of
soft bark round their loins.</p>
<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>I appeared suddenly before them, so that they did
not even have time to rise. Both looked at me, appearing
dumbfounded. They tried to get up, but fear
had paralyzed both and they could not rise. I showed
to them “Omemba,” the stick of King Mombo, which
they recognized at once. Then I saluted them in the
Commi language by saying, “Mbolo.” They answered,
“A-ee,” and returned the salutation by saying
“Mbolo,” and I answered “A-ee.” This is the mode
of salutation in King Mombo’s country.</p>
<p class='c013'>The sight of “Omemba” had somewhat calmed
their fears. I saw by their appearance that they were
slaves, for both had their front teeth filed to a point.
The Commi people do not file theirs—these two
people came evidently from a far country. The man
said to me, in the Commi language, “Both my wife
and I are slaves of King Mombo, and many more
slaves owned by him are in the neighborhood, on different
plantations.”</p>
<p class='c013'>His wife went inside of her house and brought me
out a stool and the tail of an elephant to kill the flies
which bothered me, and they both bade me welcome
and asked me to stay with them.</p>
<p class='c013'>Strange indeed was the appearance of Regundo, for
such was the man’s name. One side of his face was
painted with red ochre, the other with white; a broad
<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>yellow stripe adorned the middle of his chest; the circuits
of his eyes were also daubed with color. In the
middle of his forehead was a round, white spot. He
had evidently just made his toilet, for the colors
looked fresh. He was also covered with charms or
“mondahs.” His wife’s face was also painted. She
wore large iron rings in her ears.</p>
<p class='c013'>On the roof of Regundo’s house were skulls of antelopes
with their horns, skulls of wild boars, leopards,
monkeys, and other animals, evidently apes, unknown
to me, but the heads of which resembled, somewhat,
human heads. Six large elephants’ skulls were lying
in front of the veranda—under which hung in a line
sixty-three elephants’ tails.</p>
<p class='c013'>As I was looking at them, Regundo said, “These are
the tails of the elephants I have killed. I have been a
great hunter all my life, but now I have given up
hunting, and I send but very little game to my master,
King Mombo. But there are hunters here who
are younger than I am, and who go much into the
forest in search of elephants and other game.”</p>
<p class='c013'>While Regundo was talking his wife went away,
but soon returned with a chicken that was a kind of
bantam, tied by the legs, a basket of sweet potatoes,
a bunch of plantains, and four eggs, and laid these at
my feet. My talking to them in a language they
<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>could understand, and the sight of “Omemba,” had
reconciled them to me. They had also heard, before
I came, that I was a great friend of King Mombo.</p>
<p class='c013'>I looked round. I saw, at a little distance, a number
of small houses together, also built of the bark of
trees. As soon as Regundo saw me looking at them
he said: “Those are houses of slaves belonging to
King Mombo. He has many slaves; some of them
are old, and he has inherited them from one of his
brothers.”</p>
<p class='c013'>He had hardly uttered these words when I saw a
number of men and women coming towards the
houses. The women carried heavy bunches of plantains,
or baskets filled with manioc roots. Most of
the men had axes with them, and were returning from
the forest, where they had been felling trees for new
plantations.</p>
<p class='c013'>“Those people are the slaves of King Mombo,”
said Regundo. “There are others that live further
on in the forest. The brothers of the king, and some
of his people, also have plantations and slaves not very
far from here, higher up the river and in the forest.”</p>
<p class='c013'>I went towards them, and when they saw me they
stood still. I raised “Omemba,” which they recognized
at once as the stick of King Mombo, their master,
and which reassured them.</p>
<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>These slaves, from their appearance, seemed to belong
to many different tribes. Some belonged to
tribes which filed their front teeth sharp to a point.
Others had their four upper and lower front teeth
pulled, this being considered beautiful among some
tribes. Some had two upper middle front teeth somewhat
filed in the middle. They also varied in the color
of their skins; some were quite black, others less so,
and some dark-brown color. Many shaved their eyebrows,
and two women wore rings in their noses.</p>
<p class='c013'>They were all more or less tattooed. This form of
adornment among the Africans is not done without
pain; the skin is cut in such a manner that it is made
to stand up in small ridges.</p>
<p class='c013'>Regundo soon rejoined me, and told the slaves that
the great Oguizi, of whom they had heard, was before
them.</p>
<p class='c013'>When I was talking to these slaves, four or five
men made their appearance. They looked like great
warriors. They carried with them long, single-barrelled
flint-lock guns, of heavy calibre—the only
kind of guns the natives like. They are called
“tower guns,” and are made in England especially
for the West African trade.</p>
<p class='c013'>They were followed by queer-looking hunting-dogs,
which at once began to bark furiously at me.</p>
<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>These dogs seemed half starved, they were so lean.
They had short hair, straight ears, a somewhat elongated
muzzle, with powerful jaws and sharp teeth.
Their tails were curly, a sign of their being thoroughbred.
They were not large, and had rather long legs
for their size. They were yellow and white, or black
and white. Some were almost all of one color.</p>
<p class='c013'>Then Regundo, pointing to one of these four men,
said: “This man is Oshoria; he is the greatest hunter
among us all, and knows not what fear is. He hunts
all the time, and spends many days in the forest by
himself; and when he finds no game he has to feed
on berries, nuts, and fruit. He knows every part of
the forest for a long way.”</p>
<p class='c013'>I looked at Oshoria. He was a fine-looking man,
about five feet seven in height, well proportioned, with
broad chest, and strong, muscular arms and legs, and
small feet. He had broad, thick lips, deep, searching,
and suspicious-looking eyes, which seemed to look all
round at the same time, as if expecting danger everywhere,
and he had a very determined face. He was
not much tattooed. His teeth were not filed. After
eying him I said to myself: “Regundo is right.
The whole appearance of Oshoria shows that he is
a cool and brave man, who knows not what fear is.”</p>
<div id='t68' class='figcenter id001'>
<ANTIMG src='images/p0681_ill.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic001'>
<p><i>“He had a very determined face”</i></p>
</div>
</div>
<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>Then Regundo, pointing out three other men,
who had come with Oshoria, said to me: “These
three men are great hunters also, and the equal of
Oshoria in fearlessness, but are not quite as successful
in killing game. Their names are Ogoola, Ngola, and
Quabi. When King Mombo makes war, he always
calls upon these four men to follow him, and they are
always in his canoe.”</p>
<p class='c013'>I looked at Ngola. He was tall, very thin, of reddish-black
color, with piercing eyes and a bold, daring
countenance. The scars on his body showed that he
had followed King Mombo in war. One cut on one
of his shoulders had been a terrible one, judging from
the scar, and had been inflicted by a heavy machete.</p>
<p class='c013'>Quabi was thick and short, the counterpart of
Ngola, and was very black. No negro could have
been blacker. He was blue-black. He also had
scars on his body—from the wounds he had received
when he followed King Mombo in warfare. He
came from a far country and had been sold by his
relations when very young, so he had forgotten the
language of his people. By merely looking at him
one could see that he was brave.</p>
<p class='c013'>Ogoola was of medium height, with a bold countenance,
a real fighting chin; his eyes like those of
Oshoria seemed to look all around at the same time in
the same wandering and restless way. No scars were
<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>to be seen on his body, for he was so quick of motion
and so expert with his shield that no spears, arrows, or
bullets had ever been able to strike him. So quick
were his eyes when watching the motions of his antagonist,
that he seemed always to guess the time when
a spear was thrown or an arrow shot or a gun fired
at him. Then he would either jump sideways, or bend
low, or even fall on the ground to escape the shot. He
attributed his escape to a powerful “mondah,” or
charm, in which he had great faith. He was of medium
height, and he had come into the possession of King
Mombo when a boy.</p>
<p class='c013'>“No leopard,” said Regundo to me, “can approach
its prey as these hunters can the wild beasts. They
are the bravest and best hunters of King Mombo.”</p>
<p class='c013'>I called these four fierce-looking fellows to me and
shook hands with them. They looked shyly at me,
for they had never seen a white man before, though
Regundo had. I gave each of them a steel disc and
a flint, to make fire with, with which they were
delighted. When I returned to Regundo’s house his
wife had prepared a meal for me of boiled antelope
meat and plantains. In the meantime she had made
ready the little house that I was to occupy while with
them. It was quite small, about nine feet long and
six feet wide. The walls, made of bark, were about
<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>five feet in height, the top of the roof about eight feet,
and made of palm leaves; the sticks supporting the
leaves were close together and made very secure to
prevent leopards at night getting through and seizing
the inmates in their sleep. The door was made of
the bottom of an old canoe.</p>
<p class='c013'>Being tired, I bade good-night to Regundo, who
handed me a lighted torch, and after getting inside I
looked carefully all round and under the bed to see if
there were snakes, scorpions, or centipedes about.
Then I lay down to sleep without undressing, wearing
my shoes. I took my two revolvers from my belt
and put them under my head, and laid “Bulldog”
by my side. Such was the way I went to sleep
almost every night, and even without fearing danger,
prudence made me do so. In that way I was ready
for a fight at once in case of any sudden emergency.
As I fell asleep I heard the voice of Regundo calling
on the spirits of his ancestors.</p>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>
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