<h2 class='c007'>CHAPTER XII</h2>
<p class='c011'>KING MOMBO’S PLANTATION—WORK OF THE SLAVES
IN CLEARING AND CULTIVATING THE FOREST—STRANGE
VILLAGE OF THE SLAVES—HOUSES OF THE
SPIRITS—REGUNDO’S ACCOUNT OF WITCHCRAFT AND
ITS PUNISHMENT—OVENGUA.</p>
<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c012'>In the midst of this forest, far away from their
master, lived these slaves of King Mombo, and
none tried to escape, because they were sure to be
caught by the people of some other tribes, and become
the slaves of their captors, and having a good
master they knew that it was better for them to be
under his protection.</p>
<p class='c013'>The plantains or cassava or manioc fields were
scattered all over the forest. One day, as Regundo
and I were seated together, he said, “I am an old man.
I rule over the slaves of King Mombo, and tell them
what to do on the plantation. My wife and I are
Apinjis, and I remember that we passed through
several tribes coming down a big river, changing
masters at different times until we came to King
Mombo. But that was long ago; many rainy seasons
have passed away since, for I was then a boy and
now I am gray-headed.”</p>
<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>The slaves had a great deal to do to clear the forest.
These clearings were in large patches. In some the
trees had been cut and burned and only the huge
trunks were standing. Thousands of plantain trees
had been planted. In some patches or fields the
plantain trees were large and bore heavy bunches,
some bunches weighing over one hundred and fifty
pounds each. In other patches the plantain trees
were on the point of bearing; in others the trees were
smaller. In a word, the plantations or patches were
so arranged as to bear fruit all the year round. The
plantain tree, like the banana tree, bears only one
bunch and then dies. During its life several shoots
spring from the ground from the base of the trunk, and
these are transplanted and in time bear fruit. No two
crops are gathered on the same spot, for the bunches
become quite small. So new parts of the forest have
to be constantly cleared for new plantations.</p>
<p class='c013'>There were also large fields of cassava or manioc.
The manioc yields a large return. It is cultivated by
cuttings, and one little stem is stuck carelessly into the
ground, and produces in a season two or three large
roots of the size of a yam. The natives boil the
roots. When taken from the ground, they are very
poisonous and have to be laid in running streams from
three to five days before being eaten. Near the dwellings
<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>were large patches of ginger, of sweet potatoes,
of yams, Indian corn, tobacco, peanuts, and wild
hemp which the natives smoke. The ground in
many places was covered with squashes and gourds of
different sizes and shapes. There were vines running
in every direction. The gourds were used as water
vessels, or to hold palm oil and other kinds of vegetable
oils made from the nuts of the forest.</p>
<p class='c013'>These fields were cultivated by the women. Numerous
lime trees, covered with limes of different sizes
were to be seen in different directions. There were
many plants covered with small red peppers.</p>
<p class='c013'>Almost every day one or two canoes were loaded
with the products of the plantations, and with game,
and were despatched to King Mombo.</p>
<p class='c013'>Not far from Regundo’s house was the sacred or
holy tree. It was a kind of india-rubber tree, which
had grown to its present size from a cutting Regundo
had planted years before. The people believed that
as long as the tree flourished the place where they
lived was a good one for their settlement; but if the
tree were to die it would be a sign that the spot had
become unlucky, and that witchcraft had taken possession
of the place. If the cutting when planted dies,
it is an omen that the place chosen will not be a lucky
one and in that case the place is abandoned at once.</p>
<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>As usual on such occasions, a powerful charm or
“mondah” had been buried by the medicine doctor,
with many incantations to keep witchcraft away from
the settlement.</p>
<p class='c013'>“The ‘mondah’ that is buried there,” said Regundo,
“was made of three skulls of chimpanzees, five heads of
monkeys, three heads of snakes, one leopard’s skull, the
talons of several eagles, and charms made by the medicine
doctor, of which nobody but he knew the composition.
Under the gate or arch through which you
passed when you came, another powerful ‘mondah’ was
buried by another great medicine-man, who had come
from a far country and had been sold to King Mombo.
He is now dead, but the power of the ‘mondah’ he
made, and which is buried there, is very great.”</p>
<p class='c013'>Regundo had implicit faith in the powers of these
two “mondahs” under the arch and by the india-rubber
tree, for he and his wife had always been well since he
had settled on that spot.</p>
<p class='c013'>Not far from Regundo’s house were several little
houses, standing by themselves, and not big enough
for human beings to live in. Calling Regundo, I asked
him what these houses were for? He answered with a
great deal of solemnity—“The nearest one to us, which
is also the largest, is the house of Okookoo, a great
spirit; the second is that of Abamboo, called also
<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>Jockoo by some of the slaves; the third one is that of
Mbuiri, another spirit; and the fourth is the great and
powerful idol Makambi, who watches over us and
often talks to us during the night.”</p>
<p class='c013'>On our way back to his house Regundo said:
“Oguizi, we all dread Ovengua.”</p>
<p class='c013'>“Who is Ovengua, and to what tribe does he belong?”
I asked.</p>
<p class='c013'>“Oh,” replied Regundo, “if he were a man I should
not be afraid of him, for I am afraid of no man when
I have my gun with me. He is a spirit, and we dread
him very much. He is a great catcher of men. He
wanders incessantly through the forest, seeking always
to kill men. We never see again those who are caught
by him. By day he lives in a dark cavern, but at
night he roams freely, and sometimes even gets into
the body of a man, and beats and kills all those who
come out in the dark. When Ovengua gets into the
body of a man, that man must be killed and his body
burned to ashes—not a single piece of bone must
remain, lest a new Ovengua arise from it. When a
bad man dies, the bones of his body leave the place
where he was left, one by one, and become an Ovengua.
There is much witchcraft in our land, Oguizi.
You have seen slaves of many different countries
here; witchcraft is in their country also. There is
<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>witchcraft in all the countries inhabited by the black
man.”</p>
<p class='c013'>Then, after a pause, he added: “Wizards and
witches are the worst kind of people, for they bewitch
men and women and cause them no end of sickness
and trouble, and make them die. The spirit of witchcraft
goes into the body of a man or woman, sometimes
against his will; but often envy and hatred cause men
and women to become wizards and witches. These are
so cunning that they carry out their evil designs unknown
to the people for months, nay, even for years,
and keep on killing and giving bad luck to people
without detection. They smile and appear friendly
to those they want to bewitch, so they may not be
suspected. When witchcraft enters people and gets
possession of them, it gives them the greatest power
for evil and they can do all they wish. They can
make one have a long and painful illness, or make one
die suddenly. They can also give one bad luck in
hunting and fishing, they can bewitch your food and
water and the road upon which you pass. Through
witchcraft people sometimes appear in the eyes of
other people to be animals or birds.” Then he
shouted, with fierceness in his eyes, “Yes, our medicine
doctors can find out wizards and witches after they
have drunk the ‘mboundou.’”</p>
<p class='c013'><span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>“What is the ‘mboundou?’” I asked Regundo,
though I had of course learned about it at the village
of King Mombo.</p>
<p class='c013'>“It is a tree,” he answered, “that Aniambie, the good
spirit, has given to us poor black men to enable us to
discover those who possess the power of witchcraft.
Our doctors drink the ‘mboundou’ without dying, and
when they are under the influence of it, they have the
power of divination, and find out who the sorcerers
are. Then those accused of witchcraft appeal to the
‘mboundou’ to prove their innocence, and they drink it
in presence of the people and of the doctor, who drinks
it from the same bowl. If the accused falters and falls
to the ground, he is a sorcerer, and we kill him and
put him on a road where the bashikouay ant is, or
we tie him to a tree and make cuts in different parts of
his body, and fill these cuts with those little red peppers
that are so strong, or we burn him slowly, or we
cut him to pieces as soon as he falls.”</p>
<p class='c013'>“But,” I said, “Regundo, this is terribly wicked,
to make poor creatures die by being eaten slowly by
the bashikouay ants, or from the fearful tortures of red
peppers in their wounds, or by slow burning. If I
were present, I think I would take ‘Bulldog’ with
me and shoot the perpetrators of such deeds.”</p>
<p class='c013'>“But,” Regundo replied, with much animation,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>“no punishment is big enough for wizards and witches.
Our land is full of them. Still,” he added, as if to
soften my displeasure and sorrow at such a story,
“Oguizi, wizards and witches are almost always sold to
the people of other tribes instead of being killed.”</p>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>
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