<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
<p class="p2">But Pomona Island, now and then, had its own
little cares and anxieties. How much longer was
Cradock Nowell to live upon fruit, and fish, and
turtle, with ship–biscuit for dessert? When would
the trader come for his goods, or had he quite forgotten
them? What would Amy and Uncle John
think, if the <i>Taprobane</i> went home without him?
And the snakes, the snakes, that cared not a rap
for the enmity of man, since the rainy season set
in, but came almost up to be roasted! And worst
of all and most terrible thing, Crad was obliged to
go about barefooted, while the thorns were of natureʼs
invention, and went every way all at once,
like a hedgehog upon a frying–pan.</p>
<p>For that last evil he found a cure before he had
hopped many hundred yards. He discovered a
pumpkin about a foot long, pointed, and with a
horny rind, and contracted towards the middle.
He sliced this lengthwise, and took out the seeds,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</SPAN></span>
and planted his naked foot there. The coolness
was most delicious, and a few strips of baobab bark
made a first–rate shoe of it. He wore out one pair
every day, and two when he went exploring; but
what did that matter, unless the supply failed?
and he kept some hung up for emergency.</p>
<p>As to the snakes, though he did not find out the
snake–wood, or the snake–stone, or the fungoid
substance, like a morel, which pumices up the
venom; he invented something much better, as
prevention is better than cure. He discovered a
species of aspalathus, perfectly smooth near the
root, and not very hard to pull up, yet so barbed,
and toothed, and fanged upon all except the seed–leaves,
that even a python—whereof he had none—could
scarcely have got through it. Of this he
strewed a ring all round his great mowana–tree,
and then a fenced path down the valley toward
his bathing–place, and then he defied the whole of
that genus so closely akin to the devil.</p>
<p>But Wena had saved his life ere this from
one of those slimy demons. Of course we know
how hateful it is to hate anything at all,
except sin and crime in the abstract; but I do
hope a fellow may be forgiven for hating snakes
and scorpions. At any rate, if he cannot be, he
ought to be able to help it. While Cradock was
making his fence aspalathine, and before he had
finished the ring yet, a little snake about two feet
long, semi–transparent, and jellified, of a dirty
bottle–green colour, like the caterpillar known as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</SPAN></span>
the pear–leech (<i>Selandria Æthiops</i>), only some
hundreds of sizes bigger, that loathsome reptile
sneaked in through and crouched in a corner,
while Cradock thought that he smelled something
very nasty, as he smoked a pipe of the traderʼs
tobacco, before turning into his locker.</p>
<p>He had cut himself a good broad coving from
the inside of the mowana–tree, about three feet
from the ground, fitted up with a flap and a pillow–place,
and strewn with fresh plantain–leaves. Across
the niche he had fastened a new mosquito net,
borrowed from his friend the trader, whose goods
he began to look upon now as placed under his
trusteeship. And in that rude couch he slept as
snugly, after a hard dayʼs work, as the pupa does
of the goat moth, or of the giant sirex. Under
his feet was Wenaʼs hole, wherein she crouched
like a rabbit, and pricked her ears every now and
then, and barked if ever the wind moaned. <i>Fortunatos
nimium</i>; there was nobody to rogue them.</p>
<p>And yet no sooner was Craddy asleep, upon the
night I am telling of, than that dirty bottle–green
snake, flat–headed, and with a yearʼs supply of
venom in its tooth–bag, came wriggling on its
dappled belly around the hollow ring, while the
dying embers of the fire—for the night was rather
chilly and wet, and Cradock had cooked some fish—showed
the mean sneak, poking its head up,
feeling the temper of the time, ready to wriggle
to anything. Then it came to the bedposts of
Cradockʼs couch, which he had cut, in a dry sort of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</SPAN></span>
humour, from the soft baobab wood. It lifted its
head, and heard him snoring, and tapped its tail,
and listened again. Very likely it was warm up
there, and the snake was a little chilly, in this
depth of the winter. So without any evil forethought—for
I must be just, even to a snake—though
ready to bite, at a move or a turn, of the
animal known as “man,” up went that little serpent,
cleverly and elegantly, as on a Bohemian
vase. Cradock would have died in two hours after
that snake had bitten him. But before that lissom
coil of death had got all its tail off the ground,
fangs as keen as its own, though not poisonous, had
it by the nape of the neck. Wena knew a snake
by this time, and could treat them aright. She
gave the devilish miscreant not a chance to twist
upon her, but tore him from his belly–hold, and
walked pleasantly to the fire, and with a spit of
execration threw him into it, and ran back, and
then ran to again, and barked at the noise he made
in fizzing. Therewith Cradock awoke, and got
out of bed, and saw the past danger, and coaxed
the little dog, and kissed her, and talked to her
about Amy, whose name she knew quite as well as
her own.</p>
<p>After all his works were finished, and when he
hardly knew what great public improvement he
should next attempt, Cradock received visitors, unexpected
and unfashionable. In fact, they were all stark
naked; although that proves very little. Climbing
his tree, one beautiful morning, he saw four or five<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</SPAN></span>
little marks on the sea, as of so many housemaidsʼ
thumbs, when the cheek of the grate has been
polished. Staring thereat with all his eyes—as we
loosely express it—he found that the thumb–marks
got bigger and bigger, until they became long
canoes, paddling, like good ones, towards him.</p>
<p>This was not not by any means the sort of
thing he had bargained for; and he became, to state
the matter mildly, most decidedly nervous. He
saw that there were invading him five great
double canoes, each containing ten or twelve men;
and he had no gun, nor a pinch of powder. Very
likely they were cannibals, and would roast him
slowly, to brown him nicely, and then serve up
Wena for garnish. He shook so up there among
the rough branches—for he did not so very much
mind, being killed, but he could not bear to be
eaten—that Wena began to howl down below, and
he was obliged to come down to quiet her.</p>
<p>Then he tied up black Wena, and muzzled her,
to her immense indignation, with a capistrum of
mowana bark, which quite foreclosed her own, and
then he crept warily through the woods to observe
his black brethrenʼs proceedings. They were very
near the shore by this time, and making straight
for the traderʼs hut, of which they had doubtless
received some account. Cradock felt his courage
rising, and therewith some indignation, for he
knew that the goods could not be theirs, and by
this time he considered himself in commission as
supercargo. So he resolved to save the store from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</SPAN></span>
pillage, if it were possible, even at the risk of his
life.</p>
<p>For this purpose he lay down in a hollow place
by the water–side, where he could just see over the
tide–bank without much fear of discovery, at least,
till the robbers had passed the shed, which, of
course, was their principal object. It was evidently
a king of men who stood at the prow of the foremost
canoe, with a javelin in his great black hand,
poised and ready for casting. His apparel consisted
of two great ear–drops, two rings upon his
right wrist, and one below either knee; also a
chain of teeth was dangling down his brawny
bosom. He was painted red, and polished highly,
which had to be done every morning; and he
looked as dignified and more powerful than a don
or dean. One man in each boat was painted and
polished—doubtless the sign of high rank and great
birth.</p>
<p>When the bottom of the double canoe grated
upon the beach, the negro king flung back his
strong arm, and cast at the shed his javelin. It
passed through the roof and buried itself in the
body of the fetich, which swung horribly to and
fro, while the crinoline moved round it. Hereupon
a yell arose from the invading flotilla, and
every man trembled, waiting to see what would
come of such an impiety. Finding that nothing
at all ensued, for Cradock had not the presence of
mind to advance at the moment, they gave another
yell and landed, washing a great deal of red from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</SPAN></span>
their legs. But the king was brought ashore, dry
and bright, sitting on some officers’ shoulders. Then
they came up the bank, without any order, but
each with his javelin ready, and his eyes intent on
the idol. How Cradock longed for a piece of
packthread, to have set the dried codfish dancing!</p>
<p>At last they came quite up to the shed, and held
a consultation, in which it seemed the better
counsel to allow the god, who looked ever so much
more awful now they were near him, a certain
time to vindicate himself, if he possessed the power
to do so. Cradock was watching them closely,
through a tussock of long sea–grass, and, in spite
of their powerful frames and elastic carriage,
he began to despise them in the wholesale
Britannic manner. They should not steal <i>his</i>
property, that he was quite resolved upon, although
there were fifty of them. They were so near to
him now that he could see their great white teeth,
and hear them snapping as they talked.</p>
<p>When the time allowed, which their Agamemnon
was telling upon his fingers, had quite expired,
and Olympian Jove had sent as yet no lightnings,
the king, who was clearly in front of his age, cast
another javelin through the frame of crinoline, and
leaped boldly, like Patroclus, following his dart.
Suddenly he fell back, howling and yelling, cured
for ever of scepticism, and with both his great eyes
quite slewed up, and all his virtue in his heels.
Away went every nigger, drowning the royal
screams with their own, pell–mell down the beach,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</SPAN></span>
anyhow, only caring to cut hawser. Words like
these came back to Cradock, as they rolled over
one another—</p>
<p>“Mbongo, pongo; warakai, urelwäi;” which
mean, as interpreted afterwards by the Yankee
trader,</p>
<p>“He is a God, a great God; he maketh rain,
yea, very great rain!”</p>
<p>Headlong they tumbled into their boats, not
stopping to carry the king even, for which he
kicked them heartily, as soon as he got on board,
and every son of a woman of them plied his knotted
arms at the paddle, as if grim Death was behind
him.</p>
<p>Cradock laughed so heartily, that he rolled over
with the hydropult on him, and threw his heels up
in the air, and if they had not yelled so, they
would have been sure to hear him. Very skilfully
he had brought the nose of that noble engine to
bear full upon the royal countenance, and the jet
of water from the little stream passed through the
ribs of the fetich. That god had asserted himself
to such purpose, that henceforth you might hang
him with beads, and give him a wig of tobacco,
and no black man would dare to look at them.</p>
<p>Cradock Nowell felt almost too proud of his
mighty volunteer movement, and began to think
more than ever that the whole of the island was
his. These things show, more than anything else
can, his return to human reason; for of the rational
human being—as discovered ordinarily—the very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</SPAN></span>
first instinct and ambition is the ownership of a
peculium. What man cannot sympathize with that
feeling who has got three fields and six children?
Therefore when a beautiful schooner, of the true
American rig, which made such lagging neddies of
our yachts a few years since, came into view one
afternoon, and fetched up, with the sails all shaking
in the wind, abreast of the shed, ere sun–down, Cradock
felt like the owner of a house who sees a man
at his gate. Then he came down quietly with
Wena, and sat upon a barrel, with a pipe of
Cavendish in his mouth, and Wena crouched, like
a chrysalis, between his pumpkinʼd feet.</p>
<p>Even the Yankee, who had not been surprised at
any incident of life since his nurse dropped him
down an oil–well, when he was two years old,
even he experienced some sensation, when he saw
a white man sitting and smoking upon his barrel of
knowingest notions, with a black dog at his feet.
But Recklesome Young was not the man to be
long taken aback.</p>
<p>“Darn me, but yoo are a cool hand. Britisher,
for ten dollars. Never see none like ‘em, I
donʼt.”</p>
<p>“You are right,” answered Cradock, “I am
an Englishman. Very much at your service.
What is your business upon my island?”</p>
<p>“Waal,” said the Yankee, turning round to the
four men who had rowed him ashore; “Zebedee,
this is just what I likes, and no mistark about it.
One of them old islanders come to dispute possession.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</SPAN></span>
And perhaps a cannon up the hill, and a
company of sojers. Ainʼt it good, Zeb, ainʼt it?
Lor, how I do love them!”</p>
<p>“Now, donʼt be too premature,” said Cradock,
“it is the fault of your nation, as the opposite is
ours.”</p>
<p>“Darned well said, young Britisher, give us
your hand’ upon it; for, arter all, I likes yoo.”</p>
<p>Cradock shook hands with him heartily, for
there was something in the manʼs face and manner,
when you let his chaff drift by, which an Englishman
recognises, as kindly, strong, and sincere, although
now and then contemptuous. The contempt
alone is not genuine, but assumed to meet
ours or anybodyʼs. The active, for fear of the
passive voice.</p>
<p>“You are welcome to all the island,” said Cradock,
“and all my improvements, if you will only
take me home again. The whole of it belongs to
me, no doubt; but I will make it all over to you,
for a passage to Southampton.”</p>
<p>“Canʼt take you that way, young Boss, and
donʼt want your legal writings. How come you
here, to begin with?”</p>
<p>Cradock told him all his story, while the men
were busy; and the keen American saw at once
that every word was true.</p>
<p>“Strikes me,” he said, with a serious drawl,
which the fun in his eyes contradicted, “that yoo,
after the way of the British, have made a trifle
free, young man, with some of my goods and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</SPAN></span>
chattels he–ar; and even yoor encro–aching country
canʼt prove tittle to them.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied Cradock; “and I will pay you,
if I have not done so already. I will give you the
thing which has saved the whole from plunder, and
perhaps fire afterwards.”</p>
<p>Then he fetched the little machine, which the
Yankee recognised at once as an American invention,
and he laughed till his yellow cheeks were
reeking at the description of the “darned naygursʼ
retreat.”</p>
<p>“Rip me up, young man,” he said, “but yooʼd
be a credit to us aʼmost. Darnʼd if I thought as
any Britisher wud ever be up to so cute a dodge.
Shake hands agin, young chap, I likes yoo. And
yooʼve airned your ticket anywhor, and a hunderd
dollars to back of it. Weʼll take yoo to the centre
of the univarsal world, and make yoo open your
eyes a bit. Ship aboard of us for Noo Yerk, and
if that donʼt make a man of yoo, call me small
pumpkins arterwards.”</p>
<p>“But I want to get to England,” said Cradock,
looking very black; “and I have no money for
passage from New York to Southampton.”</p>
<p>“Thur now, yoo be all over a Britisher agin,
and reck–wirin enlightʼment. Yoo allays spies out
fifty raisons agin a thin’ smarter than one in itʼs
favior. Harken, now, Iʼll have yoo sot down in
the docks of Suthanton, free, and with fifty dollars
to trade upon, sure as my name is Recklesome<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</SPAN></span>
Young. Thur, now! Bet, I donʼt, will yoo, and
pay me out o’ my spisshy?”</p>
<p>Not to dwell too long upon these little side–paths,
it is enough to record that Captain Recklesome
Young, of New York, and the schooner, <i>Donʼt you
wish you may catch me</i>, made sail two days afterwards,
with half of his best cabin allotted to Cradock
and to Wena. And, keen as he was to the
shave of a girlʼs lip, in striking a contract or
cutting it, upon a large scale, he came down as
nobly as the angels on Jacobʼs ladder. No English
duke or prince of the blood could or would have
behaved to Cradock more grandly than Recklesome
Young did, when once he understood him.
In such things the Yankees are far ahead of us.
Keen as they are, and for that same reason, they
have far more trust than we have, in large and
good human nature. Of the best of them I have
heard many a true tale, such as I never could hope
to hear of our noblest London merchants. Proofs
of grand faith, and Godlike confidence in a man
once approved, which enlarge the heart of him
who hears them, and makes him hate small satire.</p>
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